SWIFT observations of the Arp 147 ring galaxy system
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 417:2 (2011) 835-844
Abstract:
We present observations of Arp 147, a galaxy system comprising a collisionally created ring galaxy and an early-type galaxy, using the Oxford SWIFT integral field spectrograph (IFS) at the 200-inch Hale telescope. We derive spatially resolved kinematics from the IFS data and use these to study the interaction between the two galaxies. We find the edge-to-edge expansion velocity of the ring is 225 ± 8kms-1, implying an upper limit on the time-scale for the collision of 50Myr. We also calculate that the angle of impact for the collision is between, where 0° would imply a perpendicular collision. The ring galaxy is strongly star forming with the star formation likely to have been triggered by the collision between the two galaxies. We also measure some key physical parameters in an integrated and spatially resolved manner for the ring galaxy. Using the observed B-I colours and the Hα equivalent widths, we conclude that two stellar components (a young and an old population) are required everywhere in the ring to simultaneously match both observed quantities. We are able to constrain the age range, light and mass fractions of the young star formation activity in the ring, finding a modest age range, a light fraction of less than a third, and a negligible (<1 per cent) mass fraction. We postulate that the redder colours observed in the south-east corner of the ring galaxy could correspond to the nuclear bulge of the original disc galaxy from which the ring was created, consistent with the stellar mass in the south-east quadrant being 30-50 per cent of the total. The ring appears to have been a typical disc galaxy prior to the encounter. The ring shows electron densities consistent with typical values for star-forming Hii regions. The eastern half of the ring exhibits a metallicity a factor of ~2 higher than the western half. The ionization parameter, measured across the ring, roughly follows the previously observed trend with metallicity. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.Oxford SWIFT IFS and multi-wavelength observations of the Eagle galaxy at z=0.77
ArXiv 1107.2931 (2011)
Abstract:
The `Eagle' galaxy at a redshift of 0.77 is studied with the Oxford Short Wavelength Integral Field Spectrograph (SWIFT) and multi-wavelength data from the All-wavelength Extended Groth strip International Survey (AEGIS). It was chosen from AEGIS because of the bright and extended emission in its slit spectrum. Three dimensional kinematic maps of the Eagle reveal a gradient in velocity dispersion which spans 35-75 +/- 10 km/s and a rotation velocity of 25 +/- 5 km/s uncorrected for inclination. Hubble Space Telescope images suggest it is close to face-on. In comparison with galaxies from AEGIS at similar redshifts, the Eagle is extremely bright and blue in the rest-frame optical, highly star-forming, dominated by unobscured star-formation, and has a low metallicity for its size. This is consistent with its selection. The Eagle is likely undergoing a major merger and is caught in the early stage of a star-burst when it has not yet experienced metal enrichment or formed the mass of dust typically found in star-forming galaxies.Achieving high contrasts with slicer based integral field spectrographs
AO for ELT 2011 - 2nd International Conference on Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes (2011)
Abstract:
We demonstrate experimentally that slicer based integral field spectrographs are an attractive choice for the next generation of exoplanet direct detection instruments. By propagating a single simulated speckle though a slicer based integral field spectrograph (IFS) and performing the post processing technique of spectral deconvolution we are able to achieve a speckle rejection factor of ∼600 in broadband images (and ∼100 in individual wavelength channels) with contrasts only appearing to be limited by calibration errors in the IFS datacube. This is over an order of magnitude improvement on the current state-of-the-art and well within the requirements of EPICS (Exo Planet Imaging Camera and Spectrograph for the E-ELT) for post coronagraphic speckle rejection thus proving that slicers will not impose a limit on the achievable contrast. When using prior knowledge of the diffraction-limited size of real objects we further improve the speckle rejection factor such that it exceeds 103.HARMONI: A first light spectrograph for the E-ELT
AO for ELT 2011 - 2nd International Conference on Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes (2011)
Abstract:
We describe the current status of the HARMONI instrument design, which will form the basis for the first-light integral field spectrograph on the European Extremely Large Telescope. We review the phase A design, and highlight current on-going work to evolve the design in-line changing telescope requirements and lessons learned during the Phase A work. We also outline the key science drivers for the instrument, and describe briefly the requirements for the laser tomographic adaptive optics system which is expected to feed HARMONI.Laser Tomographic AO system for an integral field spectrograph on the E-ELT: ATLAS project
AO for ELT 2011 - 2nd International Conference on Adaptive Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes (2011)