2,650 research outputs found
Deep I-band Imaging of z=5.99 Quasar
Deep I-band imaging was carried out to search for the optical counterpart of
the X-ray jet candidate near SDSS 1306+0356, reported by Schwartz (2002,
astro-ph/0202190). The data suggest that the extended X-ray source may be a
jet, related to a galaxy rather than to the quasar itself.Comment: 2 page letter, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
Slight changes to the figure
United by skies, divided by language -- astronomy publishing in languages with small reader base
The mysteries of the Universe are international, the skies are not crossed by
borders. However, the knowledge is transmitted by language, imposing linguistic
barriers that are often difficult to break through. Bulgaria is considered as
an example of a country with relatively small reader base -- it has a
population of about 6.5 million (2021) and the Bulgarian language has probably
7 million speakers, if the diaspora in US, Germany and elsewhere is
accounted for. The smaller-scale market, in comparison with larger non-English
speaking countries, poses a number of limitation to the publishing landscape:
(i) the local authors are discouraged to pen both popular and scientific
astronomy books, because of the limited financial incentive; (ii) the market is
heavily dominated by translations (from Russian before 1989, from English
nowdays), but even those are fewer than in bigger countries, because the
translation overhead costs are spread over smaller print runs. The history of
the astronomy publishing in Bulgaria is summarized, with some distinct periods:
pre-1944, the communist era 1944-1989, the modern times post 1989. A few
notable publications are reviewed. Finally, some practices to help astronomy
book publishing in languages with smaller reader bases are suggested, taking
advantage of the recent technological developments.Comment: This is an extended write up of a poster presented at the European
Week of Astronomy and Space Science (EAS) held in Valencia, Spain, Jun 26 --
Jul 1, 2022, Special Session 34: Diversity and Inclusion in European
Astronomy (8 pages, 5 figures
Confirmation of a cluster of galaxies hidden behind the Galactic bulge using the VVV Survey
Suzaku and Chandra X-ray observations detected a new cluster of galaxies,
Suzaku J1759-3450, at a redshift z=0.13. It is located behind the Milky Way,
and the high Galactic dust extinction renders it nearly invisible at optical
wavelengths. We attempt here to confirm the galaxy cluster with near-infrared
imaging observations, and to characterize its central member galaxies. Images
from the VVV survey were used to detect candidate member galaxies of Suzaku
J1759-3450 within the central region of the cluster, up to 350 kpc from the
X-ray peak emission. Color-magnitude and color-color diagrams and morphology
criteria allowed us to select the galaxies among the numerous foreground
sources. Fifteen candidate cluster members were found very close to a modeled
red-sequence at the redshift of the cluster. Five members are extremely bright,
and one is possibly a cD galaxy. The asymmetry in the spatial distribution of
the galaxies respect to the X-ray peak emission is an indicator of that this
cluster is still suffering a virialization process. Our investigation of Suzaku
J1759-3450 demonstrates the potential of the VVV Survey to study the hidden
population of galaxies in the Zone of Avoidance.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for Publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Spectroscopy of Young Planetary Mass Candidates with Disks
It is now well established that many young brown dwarfs exhibit
characteristics similar to classical T Tauri stars, including infrared excess
from disks and emission lines related to accretion. Whether the same holds true
for even lower mass objects, namely those near and below the Deuterium-burning
limit, is an important question. Here we present optical spectra of six
isolated planetary mass candidates in Chamaeleon II, Lupus I and Ophiuchus
star-forming regions, recently identified by Allers and collaborators to harbor
substantial mid-infrared excesses. Our spectra, from ESO's Very Large Telescope
and New Technology Telescope, show that four of the targets have spectral types
in the ~M9-L1 range, and three of those also exhibit H_alpha. Their
luminosities are consistent with masses of ~5-15 M_{Jupiter} according to
models of Chabrier, Baraffe and co-workers, thus placing these four objects
among the lowest mass brown dwarfs known to be surrounded by circum-sub-stellar
disks. Our findings bolster the idea that free-floating planetary mass objects
could have infancies remarkably similar to those of Sun-like stars and suggest
the intriguing possibility of planet formation around primaries whose masses
are comparable to those of extra-solar giant planets. Another target appears to
be a brown dwarf (~M8) with prominent H_alpha emission, possibly arising from
accretion. The sixth candidate is likely a background source, underlining the
need for spectroscopic confirmation.Comment: to appear in The Astrophysical Journal Letter
The structure and dynamics of the AC114 galaxy cluster revisited
We present a dynamical analysis of the galaxy cluster AC114 based on a
catalogue of 524 velocities. Of these, 169 (32%) are newly obtained at ESO
(Chile) with the VLT and the VIMOS spectrograph. Data on individual galaxies
are presented and the accuracy of the measured velocities is discussed.
Dynamical properties of the cluster are derived. We obtain an improved mean
redshift value z= 0.31665 +/- 0.0008 and velocity dispersion \sigma= 1893+73-82
\kms. A large velocity dispersion within the core radius and the shape of the
infall pattern suggests that this part of the cluster is in a radial phase of
relaxation with a very elongated radial filament spanning 12000 \kms. A radial
foreground structure is detected within the central 0.5/h Mpc radius,
recognizable as a redshift group at the same central redshift value. We analyze
the color distribution for this archetype Butcher-Oemler galaxy cluster and
identify the separate red and blue galaxy sequences. The latter subset contains
44% of confirmed members of the cluster, reaching magnitudes as faint as R_{f}=
21.1 (1.0 magnitude fainter than previous studies). We derive a mass M_{200}=
(4.3 \pm 0.7) x 10^15 Msun/h. In a subsequent paper we will utilize the
spectral data presented here to explore the mass-metallicity relation for this
intermediate redshift cluster.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
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