Unveiling the central parsec region of an AGN: the Circinus nucleus in the near infrared with the VLT
ArXiv astro-ph/0406620 (2004)
Abstract:
VLT J- to M\p-band adaptive optics observations of the Circinus Galaxy on parsec scales resolve a central bright Ks-band source with a FWHM size of 1.9 $\pm$ 0.6 pc. This source is only visible at wavelengths longward of 1.6 $\mu$m and coincides in position with the peak of the [Si VII]~2.48 $\mu$m coronal line emission. With respect to the peak of the central optical emission, the source is shifted by $\sim$ 0.15\arcsec (2.8 pc) to the south-east. Indeed, it defines the vertex of a fairly collimated beam which extends for $\sim$ 10 pc, and which is seen in both continuum light shortward of 1.6 $\mu$m and in H$\alpha$ line emission. The source also lies at the center of a $\sim$ 19 pc size [Si VII] ionization {\it bicone}. Identifying this source as the nucleus of Circinus, its size is compatible with a putative parsec-scale torus. Its spectral energy distribution, characterized by a prominent narrow peak, is compatible with a dust temperature of 300 K. Hotter dust within a 1 pc radius of the center is not detected. The AGN luminosity required to heat this dust is in the range of X-ray luminosities that have been measured toward the central source. This in turn supports the existence of highly obscuring material, with column densities of $10^{24}$ cm$^{-2}$, that must be located within 1 pc of the core.Is the Giant Elliptical Galaxy NGC5018 a Post-Merger Remnant?
(2004)
The 2dF Galaxy Redshift Survey: Spherical Harmonics analysis of fluctuations in the final catalogue
(2004)
The 2dF galaxy redshift survey: Hierarchical galaxy clustering
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 351:2 (2004)
Abstract:
We use the Two-Degree Field Galaxy Redshift Survey (2dFGRS) to test the hierarchical scaling hypothesis: namely, that the p-point galaxy correlation functions can be written in terms of the two-point correlation function or variance. This scaling is expected if an initially Gaussian distribution of density fluctuations evolves under the action of gravitational instability. We measure the volume-averaged p-point correlation functions using a counts-in-cells technique applied to a volume-limited sample of 44 931 L* galaxies. We demonstrate that L* galaxies display hierarchical clustering up to order p = 6 in redshift space. The variance measured for L* galaxies is in excellent agreement with the predictions from a Λ-cold dark matter N-body simulation. This applies to all cell radii considered, 0.3 < (R/h-1 Mpc) < 30. However, the higher order correlation functions of L* galaxies have a significantly smaller amplitude than is predicted for the dark matter for R < 10 h-1 Mpc. This disagreement implies that a non-linear bias exists between the dark matter and L* galaxies on these scales. We also show that the presence of two rare, massive superclusters in the 2dFGRS has an impact on the higher-order clustering moments measured on large scales.Deep SAURON spectral imaging of the diffuse Lyman α halo LAB1 in SSA 22
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 351:1 (2004) 63-69