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Molecular line observations of IC 443 - the interaction of a molecular cloud and an interstellar shock
The supernova remnant IC 443 is colliding with several molecular clouds which are now situated close to the expanding rim. Observations of CO, 13CO, HCO+, and HCN at frequencies between 88 and 356 GHz have been obtained toward several of these molecular clouds to examine the effects of the strong shock with the neutral gas in the clouds. The spatial distributions of CO, HCN and HCO+ are found to be very similar, and well correlated with that of shocked molecular hydrogen. The molecular lines observed from this area are very broad, having line-widths of up to 90 km s-1. The effect of the shock has been to cause extensive fragmentation of the cloud into dynamically unstable systems of fragments having typical size scales of 0.1-0.3 pc. A spectral line survey between 84 and 104 GHz has been carried out, which includes a number of molecular species which have been chosen as diagnostics of shock chemistry. Modeling carried out for several molecular species shows that CO emission from the high-velocity gas is usually optically thin, but for other species, the lines may be optically thick and subthermally excited
The Subaru Deep Field Project: Lyman Emitters at Redshift of 6.6
We present new results of a deep optical imaging survey using a narrowband
filter () centered at 9196 \AA ~ together with , ,
, , and broadband filters in the sky area of the Subaru
Deep Field which has been promoted as one of legacy programs of the 8.2m Subaru
Telescope. We obtained a photometric sample of 58 Ly emitter candidates
at 6.5 -- 6.6 among strong -excess () objects together with a color criterion of . We then obtained optical spectra of 20 objects in our -excess
sample and identified at least nine Ly emitters at -- 6.6
including the two emitters reported by Kodaira et al. (2003). Since our
Ly emitter candidates are free from strong amplification of
gravitational lensing, we are able to discuss their observational properties
from a statistical point of view. Based on these new results, we obtain a lower
limit of the star formation rate density of yr Mpc at , being
consistent with our previous estimate. We discuss the nature of star-formation
activity in galaxies beyond .Comment: 49 pages, 16 figures, PASJ, Vol. 57, No. 1, in pres
Subaru near infrared coronagraphic images of T Tauri
High angular resolution near-infrared (JHK) adaptive optics images of T Tau were obtained with the infrared camera Coronagraphic Imager with Adaptive Optics (CIAO) mounted on the 8.2m Subaru Telescope in 2002 and 2004. The images resolve a complex circumstellar structure around a multiple system. We resolved T Tau Sa and Sb as well as T Tau N and S. The estimated orbit of T Tau Sb indicates that it is probably bound to T Tau Sa. The K band flux of T Tau S decreased by ˜ 1.7 Jy in 2002 November compared with that in 2001 mainly because T Tau Sa became fainter. The arc-like ridge detected in our near-infrared images is consistent with what is seen at visible wavelengths, supporting the interpretation in previous studies that the arc is part of the cavity wall seen relatively pole-on. Halo emission is detected out to ˜2\u27\u27from T Tau N. This may be light scattered off the common envelope surrounding the T Tauri multiple system
Current Performance and On-Going Improvements of the 8.2 m Subaru Telescope
An overview of the current status of the 8.2 m Subaru Telescope constructed
and operated at Mauna Kea, Hawaii, by the National Astronomical Observatory of
Japan is presented. The basic design concept and the verified performance of
the telescope system are described. Also given are the status of the instrument
package offered to the astronomical community, the status of operation, and
some of the future plans. The status of the telescope reported in a number of
SPIE papers as of the summer of 2002 are incorporated with some updates
included as of 2004 February. However, readers are encouraged to check the most
updated status of the telescope through the home page,
http://subarutelescope.org/index.html, and/or the direct contact with the
observatory staff.Comment: 18 pages (17 pages in published version), 29 figures (GIF format),
This is the version before the galley proo
A Young Brown Dwarf Companion to DH Tauri
We present the detection of a young brown dwarf companion DH Tau B associated
with the classical T Tauri star DH Tau. Near-infrared coronagraphic
observations with CIAO on the Subaru Telescope have revealed DH Tau B with H =
\~15 mag located at 2.3" (330 AU) away from the primary DH Tau A. Comparing its
position with a Hubble Space Telescope archive image, we confirmed that DH Tau
A and B share the common proper motion, suggesting that they are physically
associated with each other. The near-infrared color of DH Tau B is consistent
with those of young stellar objects. The near-infrared spectra of DH Tau B show
deep water absorption bands, a strong K I absorption line, and a moderate Na I
absorption line. We derived its effective temperature and surface gravity of
Teff = 2700 -- 2800 K and log g = 4.0--4.5, respectively, by comparing the
observed spectra with synthesized spectra of low-mass objects. The location of
DH Tau B on the HR diagram gives its mass of 30 -- 50 M_Jupiter.Comment: 10 pages, 14 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Ap
High resolution imaging polarimetry of HL Tau and magnetic field structure
We present high quality near infrared imaging polarimetry of HL Tau at 0.4 to
0.6 arcsec resolution, obtained with Subaru/CIAO and UKIRT/IRCAM. 3-D Monte
Carlo modelling with aligned oblate grains is used to probe the structure of
the circumstellar envelope and the magnetic field, as well as the dust
properties. At J band the source shows a centrosymmetric pattern dominated by
scattered light. In the H and K bands the central source becomes visible and
its polarisation appears to be dominated by dichroic extinction, with a
position angle inclined by ~40 degrees to the disc axis. The polarisation
pattern of the environs on scales up to 200 AU is consistent with the same
dichroic extinction signature superimposed on the centrosymmetric scattering
pattern. These data can be modelled with a magnetic field which is twisted on
scales from tens to hundreds of AU, or alternatively by a field which is
globally misaligned with the disc axis. A unique solution to the field
structure will require spatially resolved circular polarisation data. The best
fit Monte Carlo model indicates a shallow near infrared extinction law. When
combined with the observed high polarisation and non-negligible albedo these
constraints can be fitted with a grain model involving dirty water ice mantles
in which the largest particles have radii slightly in excess of 1 um. The best
fit model has an envelope structure which is slightly flattened on scales up to
several hundred AU. Both lobes of the bipolar outflow cavity contain a
substantial optical depth of dust (not just within the cavity walls). Curved,
approximately parabolic, cavity walls fit the data better than a conical
cavity. The small inner accretion disc observed at millimetre wavelengths is
not seen at this spatial resolution.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS, 21 pages, 10 figure
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