154 research outputs found
A study of silicon thin films produced by electron beam induced decomposition
The formation of silicon by the electron beam dissociation of absorbed tetramethylsilane has been investigated. The growth rate of the thin films of silicon was studied as a function of the vapor pressure of the reactive gas, the temperature of the substrate onto which the gas was absorbed and the current density of the electron beam
Hubble Space Telescope Planetary Camera Images of NGC 1316
We present HST Planetary Camera V and I~band images of the central region of
the peculiar giant elliptical galaxy NGC 1316. The inner profile is well fit by
a nonisothermal core model with a core radius of 0.41" +/- 0.02" (34 pc). At an
assumed distance of 16.9 Mpc, the deprojected luminosity density reaches \sim
2.0 \times 10^3 L_{\sun} pc.
Outside the inner two or three arcseconds, a constant mass-to-light ratio of
is found to fit the observed line width measurements. The
line width measurements of the center indicate the existence of either a
central dark object of mass 2 \times 10^9 M_{\sun}, an increase in the
stellar mass-to-light ratio by at least a factor of two for the inner few
arcseconds, or perhaps increasing radial orbit anisotropy towards the center.
The mass-to-light ratio run in the center of NGC 1316 resembles that of many
other giant ellipticals, some of which are known from other evidence to harbor
central massive dark objects (MDO's).
We also examine twenty globular clusters associated with NGC 1316 and report
their brightnesses, colors, and limits on tidal radii. The brightest cluster
has a luminosity of 9.9 \times 10^6 L_{\sun} (), and the
faintest detectable cluster has a luminosity of 2.4 \times 10^5 L_{\sun}
(). The globular clusters are just barely resolved, but their core
radii are too small to be measured. The tidal radii in this region appear to be
35 pc. Although this galaxy seems to have undergone a substantial merger
in the recent past, young globular clusters are not detected.Comment: 21 pages, latex, postscript figures available at
ftp://delphi.umd.edu/pub/outgoing/eshaya/fornax
M32+/-1
WFPC-2 images are used to study the central structure of M31, M32, and M33.
The dimmer peak, P2, of the M31 double nucleus is centered on the bulge to
0.1", implying that it is the dynamical center of M31. P2 contains a compact
source discovered by King et al. (1995) at 1700 A. This source is resolved,
with r_{1/2} approx0.2 pc. It dominates the nucleus at 3000 A, and is
consistent with late B-early A stars. This probable cluster may consist of
young stars and be an older version of the cluster of hot stars at the center
of the Milky Way, or it may consist of heavier stars built up from collisions
in a possible cold disk of stars orbiting P2. In M32, the central cusp rises
into the HST limit with gamma approx0.5, and the central density
rho_0>10^7M_sol pc^-3. The V-I and U-V color profiles are flat, and there is no
sign of an inner disk, dust, or any other structure. This total lack of
features seems at variance with a nominal stellar collision time of 2 X 10^10
yr, which implies that a significant fraction of the light in the central pixel
should come from blue stragglers. InM33, the nucleus has an extremely steep
gamma=1.49 power-law profile for 0.05"<r<0.2" that becomes shallower as the HST
resolution limit is approached. The profile for r<0.04" has either a gamma
approx 0.8 cusp or a small core with r_c ~<0.13 pc. The central density is
rho_0 > 2 10^6M_sol pc^-3, and the implied relaxation time is only ~3 X 10^6
yr, indicating that the nucleus is highly relaxed. The accompanying short
collision time of 7 X 10^9 yr predicts a central blue straggler component
quantitatively consistent with the strong V-I and B-R color gradients seen with
HST and from the ground.Comment: 44 pages, 22 figures (7 as separate JPEG images), submitted to The
Astronomical Journal. Full postscript image available at
http://www.noao.edu/noao/staff/lauer/lauer_paper
The relationship between galaxy and dark matter halo size from z ∼ 3 to the present
We explore empirical constraints on the statistical relationship between the radial size of galaxies and the radius of their host dark matter haloes from z similar to 0.1-3 using the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) and Cosmic Assembly Near Infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) surveys. We map dark matter halo mass to galaxy stellar mass using relationships from abundance matching, applied to the Bolshoi-Planck dissipationless N-body simulation. We define SRHR equivalent to r(e)/R-h as the ratio of galaxy radius to halo virial radius, and SRHR lambda equivalent to r(e)/(lambda R-h) as the ratio of galaxy radius to halo spin parameter times halo radius. At z similar to 0.1, we find an average value of SRHR similar or equal to 0.018 and SRHR. similar or equal to 0.5 with very little dependence on stellar mass. Stellar radius-halo radius (SRHR) and SRHR lambda have a weak dependence on cosmic time since z similar to 3. SRHR shows a mild decrease over cosmic time for low-mass galaxies, but increases slightly or does not evolve formoremassive galaxies. We find hints that at high redshift (z similar to 2-3), SRHR. is lower for more massive galaxies, while it shows no significant dependence on stellar mass at z less than or similar to 0.5. We find that for both the GAMA and CANDELS samples, at all redshifts from z similar to 0.1-3, the observed conditional size distribution in stellar mass bins is remarkably similar to the conditional distribution of lambda R-h. We discuss the physical interpretation and implications of these results
Hubble Space Telescope Observations of M32: The Color-Magnitude Diagram
We present a V-I color-magnitude diagram for a region 1'-2' from the center
of M32 based on Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 images. The broad color-luminosity
distribution of red giants shows that the stellar population comprises stars
with a wide range in metallicity. This distribution cannot be explained by a
spread in age. The blue side of the giant branch rises to M_I ~ -4.0 and can be
fitted with isochrones having [Fe/H] ~ -1.5. The red side consists of a heavily
populated and dominant sequence that tops out at M_I ~ -3.2, and extends beyond
V-I=4. This sequence can be fitted with isochrones with -0.2 < [Fe/H] < +0.1,
for ages running from 15 Gyr to 5 Gyr respectively. We do not find the
optically bright asymptotic giant branch stars seen in previous ground-based
work and argue that the majority of them were artifacts of crowding. Our
results are consistent with the presence of the infrared-luminous giants found
in ground-based studies, though their existence cannot be directly confirmed by
our data. There is little evidence for an extended or even a red horizontal
branch, but we find a strong clump on the giant branch itself. If the age
spread is not extreme, the distribution of metallicities in M32 is considerably
narrower than that of the closed-box model of chemical evolution, and also
appears somewhat narrower than that of the solar neighborhood. Overall, the M32
HST color-magnitude diagram is consistent with the average luminosity-weighted
age of 8.5 Gyr and [Fe/H] = -0.25 inferred from integrated spectral indices.Comment: 22 pages, AASTeX, aaspp4 and flushrt style files included, 11
postscript figures, figures 1,2,5,7, and 8 available at
ftp://bb3.jpl.nasa.gov/pub/m32 . Submitted to the Astronomical Journa
Planetary camera observations of the central parsec of M32
Analysis of V band HST Planetary Camera images of the elliptical galaxy M32 shows that its nucleus is extremely dense and remains unresolved at even the HST diffraction limit. A combined approach of image deconvolution and model fitting is used to investigate the starlight distribution into limiting radii of 0".04 (0.14 pc at 700 kpc). The logarithmic slope of the brightness profile smoothly flattens from y= -1.2 at 3.4 pc to y= -0.5 at 0.34 pc; interior to this radius the profile is equally consistent with a singular µ(r)∝ r,^(-1/2) cusp or a small nonisothermal core with r_c<0.37 pc. The isophotes maintain
constant ellipticity into tlle center, and there is no evidence for a central point source, disk, dust, or
any other substructures. The cusp model implies central mass densities p_0 > 3 X 10^7 M_☉ pc^(-3) at the
resolution limit and is consistent with a central M_• = 3 X 10^6 M_☉ black hole; the core model implies p_0≈4 X 10^6 M_☉ pc^(-3). From the viewpoint of long-term stability, we argue that a starlight cusp surrounding a central black hole is the more plausible interpretation of the observations. A core at the implied density and size without a black hole has a relaxation time of only ~7 X 10^7 yr and a short stellar oollision timescale implying wholesale stellar merging over the age of the universe. The core would be strongly vulnerable to collapse and concomitant runaway stellar merging. Collapse may lead
to formation of a massive black hole in any case if it cannot be reversed by formation of a binary from high-mass merger products. Regardless of the ultimate fate of the core, however, structural evolution of the core will always be accompanied by strong evolution of the core population-the constant isophote shape and absence of a central color gradient appear to show that such evolution has not occurred. In contrast, the high velocities around a black hole imply long relaxation and stellar collision
times for the cusp population compared to the age of the universe
The Centers of Early-Type Galaxies with HST. IV. Central Parameter Relations
We analyze Hubble Space Telescope surface-brightness profiles of 61
elliptical galaxies and spiral bulges (hot galaxies). Luminous hot galaxies
have cuspy cores with steep outer power-law profiles that break at r ~ r_b to
shallow inner profiles with logslope less than 0.3. Faint hot galaxies show
steep, largely featureless power-law profiles at all radii and lack cores. The
centers of power-law galaxies are up to 1000 times denser in mass and
luminosity than the cores of large galaxies at a limiting radius of 10 pc. At
intermediate magnitudes (-22.0 < M_V < -20.5), core and power-law galaxies
coexist, and there is a range in r_b at a given luminosity of at least two
orders of magnitude. Central properties correlate with global rotation and
shape: core galaxies tend to be boxy and slowly rotating, whereas power-law
galaxies tend to be disky and rapidly rotating. The dense power-law centers of
disky, rotating galaxies are consistent with their formation in gas-rich
mergers. The parallel proposition that cores are simply the by-products of
gas-free stellar mergers is less compelling. For example, core galaxies accrete
small, dense, gas-free galaxies at a rate sufficient to fill in low-density
cores if the satellites survived and sank to the center. An alternative model
for core formation involves the orbital decay of massive black holes (BHs): the
BH may heat and eject stars from the center, eroding a power law if any exists
and scouring out a core. An average BH mass per spheroid of 0.002 times the
stellar mass yields reasonably good agreement with the masses and radii of
observed cores and in addition is consistent with the energetics of AGNs and
kinematic detections of BHs in nearby galaxies.Comment: 40 pages (Tex) with 10 figures and 4 tables (Postscript). To appear
in the November 1997 Astronomical Journal. The discussion section is
significantly revised from the original submission to Astro-ph, dated October
1996. One figure is slightly altered, and the data tables are the sam
Hubble Space Telescope Planetary Camera images of R136
The Planetary Camera of the Hubble Space Telescope has been used to obtain broad and narrowband images ofR136, the core of the massive star cluster 30 Doradus in the Large Magellanic Cloud. R136a, the brightest component ofR136, is shown to have at least 12 separate components, including the eight originally identified by speckle interferometry. Three of the 12 components are previously unidentified
close companions of the speckle components. The stars within R136a are found to have luminosities and colors of normal evolved (Wolf-Rayet and blue supergiants) and zero-age main-sequence (ZAMS) massive stars. A narrowband He II filter was used to investigate the Wolf-Rayet stellar population. We find that three stars in R136a are of the Wolf-Rayet type; of the two identified from ground-based data, one is now resolved into two components. We present color-magnitude diagrams and a luminosity function of the stars within the larger region (~2 pc) defined as R136. We find that the stars in R136 are similar in color and luminosity to those of cluster members that lie outside that crowded inner region. The lower end of the color-magnitude diagram corresponds to ZAMS spectral type B3. No red supergiants have been detected within R136. The luminosity per unit area in the inner 1" (0.25 pc) of
R136 is ≥ 50 times that of the center of Orion for a comparable area and seven times that of the core
of NGC 3603. The luminosity per unit area of all of R136 is comparable to that of Orion but is sustained over 130 times the area. An F336W surface brightness profile is constructed for R136 based on the stellar photometry. The distribution is found to be consistent with a pure power law with l(r}ɑ r^y with y=-1.72±0.06 or with a small core with r_c 5 X 10^4 M_☉ pc^(-3). The implied upper limit on the relaxation time for the cluster is much smaller than the age of 3.5 X 10^6 yrs required by the presence of Wolf-Rayet stars. This suggests that relaxation effects have been very important in determining the observed structure of the cluster unless a large population of lower mass stars is also present
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