The M$_BH$ - L$_rad$ Relation for Flat-Spectrum Quasars
Coevolution of Black Holes and Galaxies (2004)
The PA alpha deficit in IRAS 20100-4156
(2004) 101-102
Abstract:
IRAS 20100-4156, being one of the most luminous local Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies (ULIRCs), is one of the best templates for the analysis of high redshift dust enshrouded galaxies. We present the results of a NIR medium resolution spectroscopic study of this object, carried out with SOFI at ESO 3.5m NTT. Our detection of the Pa alpha line provides ideal constraints on the dust extinction, SFR and presence of an AGN.The accretion history of the universe with the SKA
NEW ASTRONOMY REVIEWS 48:11-12 (2004) 1173-1185
The second generation VLT instrument MUSE: Science drivers and instrument design
P SOC PHOTO-OPT INS 5492 (2004) 1145-1149
Abstract:
The Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) is a second generation VLT panoramic integral-field spectrograph operating in the visible wavelength range. MUSE has a field of 1x1 arcmin(2) sampled at 0.20.2 arcsec(2) and is assisted by a ground layer adaptive optics system using four laser guide stars. The simultaneous spectral range is 0.465-0.93 mum, at a resolution of Rsimilar to3000. MUSE couples the discovery potential of a large imaging device to the measuring capabilities of a high-quality spectrograph, while taking advantage of the increased spatial resolution provided by adaptive optics. This makes MUSE a unique and tremendously powerful instrument for discovering and characterizing objects that lie beyond the reach of even the deepest imaging surveys. MUSE has also a high spatial resolution mode with 7.5x7.5 arcsec(2) field of view sampled at 25 milli-arcsec. In this mode MUSE should be able to get diffraction limited data-cube in the 0.6-1 mum wavelength range. Although MUSE design has been optimized for the study of galaxy formation and evolution, it has a wide range of possible applications; e.g. monitoring of outer planets atmosphere, young stellar objects environment, supermassive black holes and active nuclei in nearby galaxies or massive spectroscopic survey of stellar fields.Three Lyα emitters at z ≈ 6:: Early GMOS/Gemini data from the GLARE project
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL 604:1 (2004) L13-L16