K-band Spectroscopy of Clusters in NGC 4038/4039

ArXiv astro-ph/0010238 (2000)

Authors:

Sabine Mengel, Matthew D Lehnert, Niranjan Thatte, Lowell E Tacconi-Garman, Reinhard Genzel

Abstract:

Integral field spectroscopy in the K-band (1.9-2.4um) was performed on four IR-bright star clusters and the two nuclei in NGC 4038/4039 (``The Antennae''). Two of the clusters are located in the overlap region of the two galaxies, and together comprise ~25% of the total 15um and ~10% of the total 4.8 GHz emission from this pair of merging galaxies. The other two clusters, each of them spatially resolved into two components, are located in the northern galaxy, one in the western and one in the eastern loop of blue clusters. Comparing our analysis of Brgamma, CO band-heads, He I (2.058um), Halpha (from archival HST data), and V-K colors with stellar population synthesis models indicates that the clusters are extincted (A_V ~ 0.7 - 4.3 mags) and young, displaying a significant age spread (4-13 Myrs). The starbursts in the nuclei are much older (65 Myrs), with the nucleus of NGC 4038 displaying a region of recent star formation northward of its K-band peak. Using our derived age estimates and assuming the parameters of the IMF (Salpeter slope, upper mass cut-off of 100 M_sun, Miller-Scalo between 1 M_sun and 0.1 M_sun), we find that the clusters have masses between 0.5 and 5 * 10^6M_sun.

Stellar dynamics observations of a double nucleus in M 83

ArXiv astro-ph/0009392 (2000)

Authors:

N Thatte, M Tecza, R Genzel

Abstract:

We report on the discovery of a double nucleus in M 83, based on measurements of the line of sight velocity distribution of stars observed at near infrared wavelengths with the VLT ISAAC spectrograph. We observe two peaks separated by 2.7" in the velocity dispersion profile of light from late-type stars measured along a slit 0.6" wide, centered on the peak of K band emission and with P.A. 51.7 degrees. The first peak coincides with the peak of the K band light distribution, widely assumed to be the galaxy nucleus. The second peak, of almost equal strength, almost coincides with the center of symmetry of the outer isophotes of the galaxy. The secondary peak location has little K band emission, and appears to be significantly extincted, even at near infrared wavelengths. It also lies along a mid-infrared bar, previously identified by Gallais et al. (1991) and shows strong hydrogen recombination emission at 1.875 microns. If we interpret the observed stellar velocity dispersion as coming from a virialized system, the two nuclei would each contain an enclosed mass of 13.2 x 10^6 M_sun within a radius of 5.4pc. These could either be massive star clusters, or supermassive dark objects.

The European Large Area ISO Survey — I. Goals, definition and observations

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 316:4 (2000) 749-767

Authors:

Seb Oliver, Michael Rowan-Robinson, DM Alexander, O Almaini, M Balcells, AC Baker, X Barcons, M Barden, I Bellas-Velidis, F Cabrera-Guerra, R Carballo, CJ Cesarsky, P Ciliegi, DL Clements, H Crockett, L Danese, A Dapergolas, B Drolias, N Eaton, A Efstathiou, E Egami, D Elbaz, D Fadda, M Fox, A Franceschini, R Genzel, P Goldschmidt, M Graham, JI Gonzalez-Serrano, EA Gonzalez-Solares, GL Granato, C Gruppioni, U Herbstmeier, P Héraudeau, M Joshi, E Kontizas, M Kontizas, JK Kotilainen, D Kunze, F La Franca, C Lari, A Lawrence, D Lemke, MJD Linden-Vørnle, RG Mann, I Márquez, J Masegosa, K Mattila, RG McMahon, G Miley, V Missoulis, B Mobasher, T Morel, H Nørgaard-Nielsen, A Omont, P Papadopoulos, I Perez-Fournon, J-L Puget, D Rigopoulou, B Rocca-Volmerange, S Serjeant, L Silva, T Sumner, C Surace, P Vaisanen, PP van der Werf, A Verma, L Vigroux, M Villar-Martin, CJ Willott

Fiber multi-object spectrograph (FMOS) for the Subaru Telescope

Proceedings of SPIE--the International Society for Optical Engineering SPIE, the international society for optics and photonics 4008 (2000) 1111-1118

Authors:

Toshinori Maihara, Kouji Ohta, Naoyuki Tamura, Hiroshi Ohtani, Masayuki Akiyama, Junichi Noumaru, Norio Kaifu, Hiroshi Karoji, Masanori Iye, Gavin B Dalton, Ian R Parry, David J Robertson, Ray M Sharples, Deqing Ren, Jeremy R Allington-Smith, Keith Taylor, Peter R Gillingham

A population of very young brown dwarfs and free-floating planets in Orion

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 314:4 (2000) 858-864

Authors:

PW Lucas, PF Roche

Abstract:

We describe the results of a very deep imaging survey of the Trapezium cluster in the IJH bands, using the UKIRT high-resolution camera UFTI. Approximately 32 per cent of the 515 point sources detected are brown dwarf candidates, including several free-floating objects with masses below the deuterium-burning (planetary) threshold at 0.013 M⊙, which are detectable because of their extreme youth. We have confidence that almost all the sources detected are cluster members, since foreground contamination is minimal in the 33-arcmin2 area surveyed, and the dense backdrop of OMC-1 obscures all background stars at these wavelengths. Extinction is calculated from the (J - H) colours, permitting accurate luminosity estimates, and temperatures are derived from the dereddened (I - J) colours. There is some evidence for a cut-off in the luminosity function below the level corresponding to several Jupiter masses, which may represent the bottom end of the initial mass function. Since star formation is complete in the Trapezium, this limit could have wide significance, if confirmed. However, it could well be an effect of the dispersal of the molecular cloud by the central O-type stars, a process for which the time-scale will vary between star formation regions.