Near-infrared bandpass filters with improved transparency for 1000nm spectral region using sputtered silicon compound films

Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) 7018 (2008) 30-30

Authors:

HJB Orr, M Wallace, GB Dalton

Measuring the inclination and mass-to-light ratio of axisymmetric galaxies via anisotropic Jeans models of stellar kinematics

(2008)

Structure and kinematics of molecular disks in fast-rqtator early-type galaxies

Astrophysical Journal 676:1 (2008) 317-334

Authors:

LM Young, M Bureau, M Cappellari

Abstract:

We present interferometru; observations resolving the CO emission in the four gas-rich lenticular galaxies NGC 3 032, NGC 4150, NGC 4459, and NGC 4526, and we compare the CO distribution and kinematics to those of the stars and ionized gas. Counterrotation documents an external origin for the gas in at least one case (NGC 3032), and the comparisons to stellar and ionized gas substructures in all four galaxies offer insights into their formation histories. The molecular gas is found in kpc-scale disks with mostly regular kinematics and average surface densities of 100-200 M⊙ pc -2. The disks are well aligned with the stellar photometric and kinematic axes. In the two more luminous Virgo Cluster members NGC 4459 and NGC 4526 the molecular gas shows excellent agreement with circular velocities derived independently from detailed modeling of stellar kinematic data. There are also two puzzling instances of disagreements between stellar kinematics and gas kinematics on subkiloparsec scales. In the inner arcseconds of NGC 3032 the CO velocities are significantly lower than the inferred circular velocities, and the reasons may possibly be related to the external origin of the gas but are not well understood. In addition, the very young population of stars in the core of NGC 4150 appears to have the opposite sense of rotation from the molecular gas. © 2008. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.

MASH-II: more planetary nebulae from the AAO/UKST Hα survey

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 384:2 (2008) 525-534

Authors:

Brent Miszalski, QA Parker, A Acker, JL Birkby, DJ Frew, A Kovacevic

The Central Region of M83

ArXiv 0801.1213 (2008)

Authors:

RCW Houghton, N Thatte

Abstract:

We combine VLT/ISAAC NIR spectroscopy with archival HST/WFPC2 and HST/NICMOS imaging to study the central 20"x20" of M83. Our NIR indices for clusters in the circumnuclear star-burst region are inconsistent with simple instantaneous burst models. However, models of a single burst dispersed over a duration of 6 Myrs fit the data well and provide the clearest evidence yet of an age gradient along the star forming arc, with the youngest clusters nearest the north-east dust lane. The long slit kinematics show no evidence to support previous claims of a second hidden mass concentration, although we do observe changes in molecular gas velocity consistent with the presence of a shock at the edge of the dust lane.