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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: High resolution near-infrared images of the type 1 Seyfert galaxy NGC 7469 have been obtained to probe its dusty nuclear environment. Direct J, H, and K images are relatively featureless, but residual images created by subtracting a smooth model based on best-fitting elliptical isophotes reveal a tight inner spiral whose high surface-brightness portions correspond to a previously detected 3 sec (1 kpc) diameter ring of radio continuum emission. The inner infrared spiral arms extended approximately equal to 4 sec NW and SE from the nucleus, and the NW arm joins up with large-scale spiral structure visible in the R band. The residual images also show a bar-like structure aligned with the brightest infrared/radio hotspots at PA approximately equal to 50 deg. Three infrared hotspots are detected which align remarkably well with 6 cm radio continuum sources. The near-infrared ring and the hotspots are visible in the residual images, and in a high-resolution direct K-band image restored to an effective resolution of 0.65 sec (FWHM) using the Richardson-Lucy algorithm. The infrared hotspots have luminosities of nuL(sub nu) (2.2 micrometer(s)) approximately equal to 10(exp 8) solar luminosity (M(sub k) approximately equal to -16 mag), suggesting they are either giant H II regions or individual supernovae. The two brightest regions may be associated with enhanced star formation triggered by orbit crowding of gas where spiral arms emerge from an inner bar. Narrowband (delta lambda/lambda approximately 1.5%) imaging in the 3.28 micrometer(s) dust emission feature and surrounding continuum confirms the 3 sec diameter 3.28 micrometer(s) emission region detected previously using multiaperture photometry. The extended polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) emission is slightly elongated and aligned with published 1O III1 line emission and 12.5 micrometer(s) continuum emission, apparently tracing the starburst. The presence of approximately equal to 25% of the total 3.28 micrometer(s) PAH emission within R less than 1 sec demonstrates that a starburst within the central few hundred parsecs must supply a significant fraction of the infrared continuum from the nucleus, and there is apparently sufficient shielding material between the starburst and the active galactic nucleus (AGN) to preserve the PAHs along our line of sight to the nucleus.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: The Astronomical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256); 107; 4; o. 1274-1282
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: A sample of 47 previously uncatalogued objects located above a Galactic latitude of 50 deg, and detected at 12 microns by the IRAS, is studied using near-infrared photometry. Ground-based observations show that the objects consist primarily of late-type M giant stars with long-wavelength excesses probably due to emission from dust associated with mass loss. The sample contains one oxygen-rich giant star undergoing rapid mass loss; an extremely cool (1230 K) carbon star 12560-1656 that may be as far as 10 kpc away; and a luminious quasar 13349-2438. The absence of nearby, low-luminosity infrared sources in this sample limits the space density of field brown dwarf stars. The fact that almost all the IRAS 12 micron sources have stellar counterparts visible on both the red and blue Palomar Observatory Sky Survey prints provides a tool for discriminating ordinary red stars.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Astronomical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256); 99; 1569-158
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: This paper presents the results of 1-10-micron observations and coadded IRAS data on 61 galaxies from the Bright Galaxy Sample, with IR luminosities, L(IR), equal to or greater than 10 to the 11th solar luminosities. It was found that an increase in the total L(IR) above 10 to the 11th solar luminosity is correlated with increased emission from hot dust with characteristic temperatures about 800 K. This hot dust contributes a substantial fraction of the 2.2- and 3.7-micron emission, resulting in a greatly increased dispersion in R(3.7/1.6) and R(2.2/1.6) for these high-luminosity galaxies, relative to lower-luminosity galaxies. This excess hot-dust emission appears to 'turn on' at luminosities of about 10 to the 11th solar luminosity. The spatial distribution of the 10-micron emission indicated a substantial extended component for most of the galaxies in this sample, implying that star-formation processes contribute significantly to the luminosities.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Astronomical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256); 95; 356-373
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Near-infrared images (1.3-3.7 microns) are presented for the nuclear region of Arp 220. Color maps in J - H and H - K reveal steep gradients, and the two nuclei previously detected at 20 cm and 2.2 microns appear on the J - H image as peaks separated by 1 arcsec. Hot dust emission (T about 1000 K) at 3.7 microns and extremely red J - H and H - K colors are found for both nuclei. The increasingly red color approaching the center of the galaxy are explained most naturally by a mixture of extinction and emission by increasing amounts of hot dust. The near-infrared emission is consistent with a circumnuclear starburst extending to a radius of about 1.5 kpc from the nuclei; further from the center the colors are consistent with a normal late-type stellar population. Inside a radius of 1 kpc the color maps show a NE-SW elongation that aligns with the concentration of molecular gas seen in CO images. The observed 3.7-micron luminosity, when corrected for nuclear extinction determined by 10-micron silicate absorption measurements and normalized by the bolometric luminosity, is consistent with UV-excess quasars and is about 10 times greater than that found in infrared luminous starburst galaxies.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Astronomical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256); 103; 413-421
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: We are engaged in a program of infrared imaging photometry of high redshift radio galaxies. The observations are being done using NICMOS2 and NICMOS3 arrays on the DuPont 100-inch telescope at Las Campanas Observatory. In addition, Persson and Matthews are measuring the spectral energy distributions of normal cluster galaxies in the redshift range 0 to 1. These measurements are being done with a 58 x 62 InSb array on the Palomar 5-m telescope. During the course of these observations we have imaged roughly 20 square arcminutes of sky to limiting magnitudes greater than 20 in the J, H, and K passbands (3 sigma in 3 square arcseconds). We have detected several relatively bright, extremely red, extended objects during the course of this work. Because the radio galaxy program requires Thuan-Gunn gri photometry, we are able to construct rough photometric energy distributions for many of the objects. A sample of the galaxy magnitudes within 4 arcseconds diameter is given. All the detections are real; either the objects show up at several wavelengths, or in subsets of the data. The reddest object in the table, 9ab'B' was found in a field of galaxies in a rich cluster at z = 0.4; 9ab'A' lies 8 arcseconds from it.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: NASA. Ames Research Center, The Evolution of Galaxies and Their Environment; p 78-79
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: Infrared and optical spectrophotometric observations of the hydrogen lines in a sample of 16 quasars are discussed. The addition of these observations to previously published observations of hydrogen lines in quasars brings to 12 the number of quasars for which the P-alpha/H-alpha/H-beta line ratios have been measured and to nine the number of quasars for which the L-alpha/H-alpha line ratio has been measured. It is noted that the P-alpha/H-alpha ratios in low-redshift quasars are distributed around the case B value with a tendency toward values lower than that predicted by case B. The H-alpha/H-beta values in these same quasars are for the most part greater than the case B value. The tendency in the P-alpha/H-alpha/H-beta ratios is for the P-alpha/H-alpha ratio to decrease as the H-alpha/H-beta ratio increases. The decrease of the P-alpha/H-alpha ratio with increasing H-alpha/H-beta ratio is the most significant correlation obtained from the present data that any valid model of the line-emitting regions must explain. The low values of the L-alpha/H-alpha in comparison with the case B value are confirmed for a large sample of high-redshift quasars. L-alpha is seemingly destroyed rather than H-alpha being enhanced. It is concluded that reddening external to the emission-line regions cannot satisfactorily explain all the observed hydrogen line ratios.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; vol. 243
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: Within the uncertainties, the P-alpha line profile is the same as those of H-beta, L-alpha, and C IV. It is therefore contended that if current models of broad-line-emitting clouds in quasars are correct, then the similarity of the P-alpha line profile to the L-alpha profile argues against a velocity field dominated by radial inflow or outflow. It is noted, however, that if the cloud motions are predominantly due to radial inflow or outflow, then the clouds must radiate more isotropically in L-alpha then current models predict. The observed similarity of the line profiles of P-alpha at 1.875 microns and of C IV at 1550 A leads to the conclusion that there is no differential reddening caused by dust between clouds moving at different velocities within the broad line region of 3C 273.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, Publications (ISSN 0004-6280); 95; May 1983
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2016-06-07
    Description: Cyclic species in the interstellar medium have been searched for almost since the first detection of interstellar polyatomic molecules. Eleven different C3H2 rotational transitions were detected; 9 of which were studied in TMC-1, a nearby dark dust cloud, are shown. The 1 sub 10 yields 1 sub 01 and 2 sub 20 yields 2 sub 11 transitions were observed with the 43 m NRAO telescope, while the remaining transitions were detected with the 14 m antenna of the Five College Radio Observatory (FCRAO). The lines detected in TMC-1 have energies above the ground state ranging from 0.9 to 17.1 K and consist of both ortho and para species. Limited maps were made along the ridge for several of the transitions. The HC3N J = 2 yields 1 transition were mapped simultaneously with the C3H2 1 sub 10 yields 1 sub 01 line and therefore can compare the distribution of this ring with a carbon chain in TMC-1. C3H2 is distributed along a narrow ridge with a SE - NW extension which is slightly more extended than the HC2N J = 2 yields 1. Gaussian fits gives a FWHP extension of 8'5 for C3H2 while HC3N has a FWHP of 7'. The data show variations of the two velocity components along the ridge as a function of transition. Most of the transitions show a peak at the position of strongest HC3N emission while the 2 sub 21 yields 2 sub 10 transition shows a peak at the NH3 position.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: NASA. Ames Research Center Summer School on Interstellar Processes: Abstracts of Contributed Papers; p 155-156
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2011-08-18
    Description: The paper reports combined visual imagery and spectroscopy, near-infrared spectroscopy, and broadband infrared photometry of comets P/Stephan-Oterma (1980g), Bowell (1980b), and Panther (1980u) at intermediate heliocentric distances. The visual data indicate the existence of solid grains in extended halos around the nuclei of the three comets. Broadband near-infrared and thermal infrared measurements of Comet Panther suggest the presence of 2-4-micron-radius particles in the coma which most likely contain molecules incorporating the N-H bond, but which are more complex and less volatile than NH3. Such molecules can be produced in the grains by cosmic-ray reprocessing. Near infrared spectral features identical to those seen in comet Panther similary suggest the presence of a molecule incorporating the N-H bond in comet Bowell.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Astronomical Journal; 87; Dec. 198
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: New imaging data are presented at radio, near-infrared, and optical wavelengths to elucidate the processes associated with the ongoing merger and nuclear activity in Mrk 463. Imaging at 20 cm reveals previously unknown components 4 arcsec north and 18 arcsec south of Mrk 463E, and a source 10 arcsec to the northwest which is believed to be linked to the nuclear region. The western nucleus, Mrk 463W, was detected at 6 and 20 cm; it has a radio luminosity comparable to that of a moderately luminous Seyfert galaxy or a highly luminous starburst galaxy. Near-infrared images at wavelengths less than 2.3 microns show the two nuclei; only Mrk 463E has been detected at 3.7 microns. Brightness profiles of Mrk 463E are unresolved at K and L-prime, but extended at J. It is inferred from the fact that radio continuum components 4-18 kpc from the nucleus are aligned with previously known 0.05-1.5 kpc radio structure and extended conical O-III forbidden omission lines that Mrk 463E is powering weak radio lobes and therefore exemplifies a transition between the confined linear sources in Seyfert galaxies and the extended lobes in classical quasars and radio galaxies.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: Astronomical Journal (ISSN 0004-6256); 102; 1241-125
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