1,035 research outputs found
The dynamics and evolution of clusters of galaxies
Research was undertaken to produce a coherent picture of the formation and evolution of large-scale structures in the universe. The program is divided into projects which examine four areas: the relationship between individual galaxies and their environment; the structure and evolution of individual rich clusters of galaxies; the nature of superclusters; and the large-scale distribution of individual galaxies. A brief review of results in each area is provided
The UV variability of the Seyfert 1: Galaxies 3 Zw 2 and Markarian 509
The two galaxies differ markedly in their radio properties. III Zw 2 is a strong source with a highly variable compact component while MK 509 is a very weak source. Both galaxies show significant variations in X-rays and MK 509 has shown variations at optical wavelengths as well. Simultaneous observations were made in the ultraviolet, optical and infrared in order to examine three fundamental aspects of the origin of the continuum emission: are these thermal and nonthermal components; how large is the emitting region; and does the UV flux originate in the same region responsible for the optical, IR, radio and/or X-ray continuum emission
Spectroscopy of a Globular Cluster in the Local Group dIrr NGC 6822
We present low-resolution Keck spectroscopy for the globular cluster H VIII
in the Local Group dIrr galaxy NGC 6822. We find the metallicity of the cluster
to be [Fe/H]= -1.58 +/- 0.28 and the age of the cluster to be 3-4 Gyr, slightly
older than but consistent with previous age estimates. H VIII seems to be more
metal-poor than most intermediate-age globular clusters in the Local Group, and
appears most similar to the anomalous Small Magellanic Cloud clusters Lindsay
113 and NGC 339.Comment: 5 pages, including 3 figures. Accepted by MNRAS, uses mn2e.cl
Precision constrained simulation of the Local Universe
We use the formalism of constrained Gaussian random field to compute a
precise large scale simulation of the 60 Mpc/h volume of our Local Universe. We
derive the constraints from the reconstructed peculiar velocities of the 2MASS
Redshift Survey. We obtain a correlation of 0.97 between the log-density field
of the dark matter distribution of the simulation and the log-density of
observed galaxies of the Local Universe. We achieve a good comparison of the
simulated velocity field to the observed velocity field obtained from the
galaxy distances of the NBG-3k. At the end, we compare the two-point
correlation function of both the 2MRS galaxies and of the dark matter particles
of the simulation. We conclude that this method is a very promising technique
of exploring the dynamics and the particularities the Universe in our
neighbourhood.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted by MNRA
Testing population synthesis models with globular cluster colors
We have measured an extensive set of UBVRIJHK colors for M31 globular
clusters [Barmby et al. 2000]. We compare the predicted simple stellar
population colors of three population synthesis models to the intrinsic colors
of Galactic and M31 globular clusters. The best-fitting models fit the cluster
colors very well -- the weighted mean color offsets are all < 0.05 mag. The
most significant offsets between model and data are in the U and B passbands;
these are not unexpected and are likely due to problems with the spectral
libraries used by the models. The metal-rich clusters ([Fe/H] > -0.8) are best
fit by young (8 Gyr) models, while the metal-poor clusters are best fit by
older (12--16 Gyr) models. If this range of globular cluster ages is correct,
it implies that conditions for cluster formation must have existed for a
substantial fraction of the galaxies' lifetimes.Comment: To appear in ApJ Letters; 8 pages including 3 figures and 1 tabl
Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of the Globular Cluster System around NGC 5846
Bimodal globular cluster metallicity distributions have now been seen in a
handful of large ellipticals. Here we report the discovery of a bimodal
distribution in the dominant group elliptical NGC 5846, using the Hubble Space
Telescope's Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2). The two peaks are
located at V-I = 0.96 and 1.17, which roughly correspond to metallicities of
[Fe/H] = -1.2 and -0.2 respectively. The luminosity functions of the blue and
red subpopulations appear to be the same, indicating that luminosity does not
correlate with metallicity within an individual galaxy's globular cluster
system. Our WFPC2 data cover three pointings allowing us to examine the spatial
distribution of globular clusters out to 30 kpc (or 2.5 galaxy effective
radii). We find a power law surface density with a very flat slope, and a
tendency for globular clusters to align close to the galaxy minor axis. An
extrapolation of the surface density profile, out to 50 kpc, gives a specific
frequency S_N = 4.3 +/- 1.1. Thus NGC 5846 has a much lower specific frequency
than other dominant ellipticals in clusters but is similar to those in groups.
The central galaxy regions reveal some filamentary dust features, presumably
from a past merger or accretion of a gas-rich galaxy. This dust reaches to the
very nucleus and so provides an obvious source of fuel for the radio core. We
have searched for proto-globular clusters that may have resulted from the
merger/accretion and find none. Finally, we briefly discuss the implications of
our results for globular cluster formation mechanisms.Comment: 22 pages, Latex. To be published in the Astronomical Journal. Full
paper available at http://www.ucolick.org/~forbes/home.htm
The IRAS 1.2 Jy Survey: Redshift Data
We present the redshift data for a survey of galaxies selected from the data
base of the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS). This survey extends the
1.936 Jy sample of Strauss et al. (1992) from a flux limit of 1.936 Jy at 60
microns to 1.2 Jy. The survey extension consists of 3920 sources in the flux
interval 1.2 - 1.936 Jy, of which 2663 are galaxies with measured redshifts.
Fourteen objects (0.52%) do not have redshifts. The survey covers 87.6% of the
sky. The data for the complete 1.2 Jy survey (the data presented here in
addition to that of Strauss \etal 1992) may be obtained in a machine-readable
form from the National Space Science Data Center and from the anonymous ftp
site given above.Comment: uuencoded postscript file. Figures, data tables, and machine readable
data files can be obtained via anonymous ftp to (192.16.204.30)
ftp://eku.ias.edu/pub/fisher/12jy/12jy.tar.Z (a compressed tar file)
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