373 research outputs found
Large-Scale Structures Behind the Southern Milky Way from Observations of Partially Obscured Galaxies
We report here on extragalactic large-scale structures uncovered by a deep
optical survey for galaxies behind the southern Milky Way. Systematic visual
inspection of the ESO/SRC-survey revealed over 10000 previously unknown
galaxies in the region 265 < l < 340, |b| < 10. With subsequently obtained
redshifts of more than 10% of these galaxies, new structures across the Milky
Way are unveiled, such as a filament at ~ 2500 km/s connecting to the Hydra
and Antlia clusters, a shallow extended supercluster in Vela (~ 6000km/s), and
a nearby (4882 km/s), very massive (M ~ 2-5 10^15 Msun), rich Coma-like cluster
which seems to constitute the previously unidentified center of the Great
Attractor. The innermost part of the Milky Way where the foreground obscuration
in the blue is 5mag, respectively HI-column densities greater than 6 10^21 /
cm^2 remains fully opaque. In this approximately 8 degrees wide strip, the
forthcoming blind HI-survey with the multi-beam system at Parkes will provide
the only tool to unveil this part of the extragalactic sky.Comment: Presented at the Multibeam Workshop on ``HI in the Local Universe'',
Sydney, May 13-15 1996. Accepted 2.11.1996 for publication by PASA.
Latex-file with 4 encapsulated postscript files. Version with original
figures available at
http://www.atnf.csiro.au/~lstavele/13beam/proceedings/korteweg/korteweg.htm
The SED of the nearby HI-massive LIRG HIZOA J0836-43: from the NIR to the radio domain
HIZOA J0836-43is one of the most HI-massive galaxies in the local (z<0.1)
Universe. Not only are such galaxies extremely rare, but this "coelacanth"
galaxy exhibits characteristics -- in particular its active, inside-out stellar
disk-building -- that appear more typical of past (z ~ 1) star formation, when
large gas fractions were more common. Unlike most local giant HI galaxies, it
is actively star forming. Moreover, the strong infrared emission is not induced
by a merger event or AGN, as is commonly found in other local LIRGs. The galaxy
is suggestive of a scaled-up version of local spiral galaxies; its extended
star formation activity likely being fueled by its large gas reservoir and, as
such, can aid our understanding of star formation in systems expected to
dominate at higher redshifts. The multi-wavelength imaging and spectroscopic
observations that have led to these deductions will be presented. These include
NIR (J H K) and MIR (Spitzer; 3-24micron) imaging and photometry, MIR
spectroscopy, ATCA HI-interferometry and Mopra CO line emission observations.
But no optical data, as the galaxy is heavily obscured due to its location in
Vela behind the Milky Way.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of IAU Symposium
284, "The Spectral Energy Distribution of Galaxies" (SED2011), 5-9 September
2011, Preston, UK, editors R.J. Tuffs & C.C.Popesc
An Overview of Uncovered and Suspected Large-Scale Structures behind the Milky Way
Various dynamically important extragalactic large-scale structures in the
local Universe lie behind the Milky Way. Most of these structures (predicted
and unexpected) have only recently been made ``visible'' through dedicated deep
surveys at various wavelengths. The wide range of observational searches
(optical, near infrared, far infrared, radio and X-ray) for galaxies in the
Zone of Avoidance (ZOA) will be reviewed and the uncovered and suspected
large-scale structures summarised. Particular emphasis is given to the Great
Attractor region where the existence of yet another cluster is suspected (Woudt
1998). Predictions from reconstructions of the density field in the ZOA are
discussed and compared with observational evidence. Although no major
structures are predicted out to about v < 10000 km/s for which no observational
evidence exists, the comparison between reconstructed density fields and the
observed galaxy distribution remain important as they allow derivations of the
density and biasing parameters.Comment: To appear in PASA 16. Proceedings of workshop "HI in the Local
Universe, II", held in Melbourne, Sept. 1998. 9 pages, LaTeX2e, 1
encapsulated PS figur
DENIS Observations of Multibeam Galaxies in the Zone of Avoidance
Roughly 25% of the optical extragalactic sky is obscured by the dust and
stars of our Milky Way. Dynamically important structures might still lie hidden
in this zone. Various surveys are presently being employed to uncover the
galaxy distribution in the Zone of Avoidance (ZOA) but all suffer from
(different) limitations and selection effects.
We illustrate the promise of using a multi-wavelength approach for
extragalactic large-scale studies behind the ZOA, i.e. a combination of three
surveys -- optical, systematic blind HI and near-infrared (NIR), which will
allow the mapping of the peculiar velocity field in the ZOA through the NIR
Tully-Fisher relation. In particular, we present here the results of
cross-identifying HI-detected galaxies with the DENIS NIR survey, and the use
of NIR colours to determine foreground extinctions.Comment: Accepted for publication in PASA. Proceedings of workshop "HI in the
Local Universe, II", held in Melbourne, Sept. 1998. 9 pages, LaTeX2e, 2
encapsulated PS figures, 3 JPEG figures, Full resolution figures 2, 3 and 4
and full resolution paper are at
ftp://ftp.iap.fr/pub/from_users/gam/PAPERS/HICONF
Cosmological Structures behind the Milky Way
This paper provides an update to the review on extragalactic large-scale
structures uncovered in the Zone of Avoidance (ZOA) by Kraan-Korteweg & Lahav
2000, in particular in the Great Attractor region. Emphasis is given to the
penetration of the ZOA with the in 2003 released NIR 2MASX Catalog. The
distribution is little affected by the foreground dust. Galaxies can be
identified to extinction levels of over A(B) < 10m except in the wider Galactic
Bulge region (see Fig. 9) where star density is a strong delimiting factor. The
shape of the NIR-ZOA is quite asymmetric due to Galactic features such as
spiral arms and the Bulge, something that should not be ignored when using NIR
samples for studies such as dipole determinations.
Results are presented from the deep blind HI ZOA survey performed with the
Multibeam Receiver at the Parkes telescope (v < 12700km/s). The distribution of
the roughly one thousand discovered spiral galaxies in the optically and NIR
impenetratable part of the ZOA clearly depict the prominence of the Norma
Supercluster. With the optically identified galaxies in the ZOA, a picture
emerges that bears a striking resemblance to the Coma cluster in the Great
Wall: the rich Norma cluster (ACO 3627) lies within a great-wall like structure
that can be traced at the redshift range of the cluster over 90dg on the sky,
with two foreground filaments - reminiscent of the legs in the famous stick man
- that merge in an overdensity at slightly lower redshifts around the radio
galaxy PKS 1343-601 (see Figs. 14 & 16). (abridged)Comment: Invited Review at the joint conference of the Czech Astron. Society
and the Astron. Gesellschaft. To appear in Reviews in Modern Astronomy 18, on
``From Cosmological Structures to the Milky Way'', ed. S. Roeser, 30pages, 16
ps-figures. Full resolution gzipped ps-version (16Mb) available at
http://mensa.ast.uct.ac.za/~kraan/AGreview/AGreview.ps.g
A Catalog of Galaxies behind the Southern Milky Way. - I. The Hydra/Antlia Extension (l: 266 - 296 deg)
A deep optical galaxy search in the southern Milky Way - aimed at reducing
the width of the Zone of Avoidance - revealed 3279 galaxy candidates above the
diameter limit of D > 0.2 arcmin, of which only 112 (3.4%) were previously
catalogued. The surveyed region (266 < l < 296 and -10 < b < +8) lies in the
extension of the Hydra and Antlia clusters - where a supercluster is suspected
- and in the approximate direction of the dipole anisotropy in the Cosmic
Microwave Background radiation. Here we present the optical properties of the
unveiled galaxies such as positions, diameters, magnitudes, morphological
types, including a detailed discussion on the quality of these data and the
completeness limits as a function of the foreground dust extinction. For 127 of
the 227 positional matches in the IRAS PSC, a reliable cross-identification
could be found. Several distinct overdensities and filaments of galaxies can be
identified that are apparently uncorrelated with the Galactic foreground
extinction hence the probable signature of extragalactic large-scale
structures. This catalog constitutes the first part in a series of five equally
conducted optical searches for galaxies in the southern Milky Way (245 < l <
350). With these surveys, the entire Zone of Avoidance will have been covered
by means of visual inspection. The catalogs build the basis for various
spectroscopic and photometric follow-up programs which eventually will allow a
thorough analyse of the galaxy distribution in redshift space and the peculiar
velocity fields within the Zone of Avoidance, as well an an improved
understanding of the Galactic foreground extinction.Comment: Accepted for publication by A&ASS, 50 pages, LaTex, 7 encapsulated
figures, requires aa.cls end epsf.sty. Full-resolution, color figures 1, 2, 6
and 7 are available upon request (E-mail: [email protected]
Extragalactic Large-Scale Structures behind the Southern Milky Way. IV. Redshifts Obtained with MEFOS
Abbreviated: As part of our efforts to unveil extragalactic large-scale
structures behind the southern Milky Way, we here present redshifts for 764
galaxies in the Hydra/Antlia, Crux and Great Attractor region (266deg < l <
338deg, |b| < 10deg), obtained with the Meudon-ESO Fibre Object Spectrograph
(MEFOS) at the 3.6-m telescope of ESO. The observations are part of a redshift
survey of partially obscured galaxies recorded in the course of a deep optical
galaxy search behind the southern Milky Way. A total of 947 galaxies have been
observed, a small percentage of the spectra (N=109, 11.5%) were contaminated by
foreground stars, and 74 galaxies (7.8%) were too faint to allow a reliable
redshift determination. With MEFOS we obtained spectra down to the faintest
galaxies of our optical galaxy survey, and hence probe large-scale structures
out to larger distances (v <~ 30000 km/s) than our other redshift follow-ups.
The most distinct large-scale structures revealed in the southern Zone of
Avoidance are discussed in context to known structures adjacent to the Milky
Way.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures; accepted for publication in A&A. Tables 1 and 2
will be available in electronic format at the CDS. Figure 1 at full
resolution, and both tables are available at
http://mensa.ast.uct.ac.za/~pwoudt/data/H4462/
A catalogue of galaxies behind the southern Milky Way. - II. The Crux and Great Attractor regions (l = 289deg - 338deg)
In this second paper of the catalogue series of galaxies behind the southern
Milky Way, we report on the deep optical galaxy search in the Crux region
(289deg <= l <= 318deg and -10deg <= b <= 10deg) and the Great Attractor region
(316deg <= l <= 338deg and -10deg <= b <= 10deg). The galaxy catalogues are
presented, a brief description of the galaxy search given, as well as a
discussion on the distribution and characteristics of the uncovered galaxies. A
total of 8182 galaxies with major diameters D >= 0.2 arcmin were identified in
this ~850 square degree area: 3759 galaxies in the Crux region and 4423
galaxies in the Great Attractor region. Of the 8182 galaxies, 229 (2.8%) were
catalogued before in the optical (3 in radio) and 251 galaxies have a reliable
(159), or likely (92) cross-identification in the IRAS Point Source Catalogue
(3.1%). A number of prominent overdensities and filaments of galaxies are
identified. They are not correlated with the Galactic foreground extinction and
hence indicative of extragalactic large-scale structures. Redshifts obtained at
the South African Astronomical Observatory (SAAO) for 518 of the newly
catalogued galaxies in the Crux and Great Attractor regions (Fairall et al.
1998; Woudt et al. 1999) confirm distinct voids and clusters in the area here
surveyed. With this optical galaxy search, we have reduced the width of the
optical `Zone of Avoidance' for galaxies with extinction-corrected diameters
larger than 1.3 arcmin from extinction levels A_B >= 1.0 mag to A_B >= 3.0 mag:
the remaining optical Zone of Avoidance is now limited by |b| <= 3deg (see Fig.
16).Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Tables will
shortly be available in electronic version at the CDS. Full resolution
(colour) copies of Figures 1, 2, 3 and 16 are available at
http://mensa.ast.uct.ac.za/~pwoud
Large-Scale Structures Behind the Milky Way from Near-IR Surveys
About 25% of the optical extragalactic sky is obscured by the dust and stars
of our Milky Way. Dynamically important structures might still lie hidden in
this zone. Various approaches are presently being employed to uncover the
galaxy distribution in the Zone of Avoidance (ZOA) but all suffer from
(different) limitations and selection effects.
We investigated the potential of using the DENIS NIR survey for studies of
galaxies behind the obscuration layer of our Milky Way and for mapping the
Galactic extinction. As a pilot study, we recovered DENIS I, J and K band
images of heavily obscured but optically still visible galaxies. We determined
the I, J and K band luminosity functions of galaxies on three DENIS strips that
cross the center of the nearby, low-latitude, rich cluster Abell 3627. The
extinction-corrected I-J and J-K colours of these cluster galaxies compare well
with that of an unobscured cluster. We searched for and identified galaxies at
latitudes where the Milky Way remains fully opaque (|b|
4-5mag) - in a systematic search as well as around positions of galaxies
detected with the blind HI survey of the ZOA currently conducted with the
Multibeam Receiver of the Parkes Radiotelescope.Comment: 12 pages, including 5 PS figures, LaTeX, uses crckapb.sty and
epsf.tex. Better resolved figures available upon request. To appear in
proceedings of the 3rd Euroconference (Meudon, France, June 1997) on ``The
Impact of Near IR Surveys'', Kluwer 199
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