Turbulent ambipolar diffusion: Numerical studies in two dimensions

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL 603:1 (2004) 165-179

Authors:

F Heitsch, EG Zweibel, AD Slyz, JEG Devriendt

The detailed optical light curve of GRB 030329

(2003)

Authors:

YM Lipkin, EO Ofek, A Gal-Yam, EM Leibowitz, D Poznanski, S Kaspi, D Polishook, SR Kulkarni, DW Fox, E Berger, N Mirabal, J Halpern, M Bureau, K Fathi, PA Price, BA Peterson, A Frebel, B Schmidt, JA Orosz, JB Fitzgerald, JS Bloom, PG van Dokkum, CD Bailyn, MM Buxton, M Barsony

Active galactic nuclei and the minor merger hypothesis

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 346:4 (2003) 1078-1088

Authors:

P Kendall, J Magorrian, JE Pringle

Abstract:

We have investigated the dynamics of the merging process in the minor merger hypothesis for active galactic nuclei. We find that for a satellite galaxy to be able to merge directly with the nucleus of the host galaxy (for example, to give rise to the compact dust discs which are seen in early-type active galaxies), the initial orbit of the satellite is required to be well aimed. For the case of the host galaxy being a disc galaxy, if the initial orbits of the satellites are randomly oriented with respect to the host galaxy, then the orbits of those which reach the host nuclear regions in a reasonable time are also fairly randomly oriented once they reach the nucleus. We note that this result might be able to provide an explanation of why the jet directions in the nuclei of Seyfert galaxies are apparently unrelated to the plane of the galaxy discs.

The K-band Hubble diagram of submillimetre galaxies and hyperluminous galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 346:4 (2003)

Authors:

S Serjeant, D Farrah, J Geach, T Takagi, A Verma, A Kaviani, M Fox

Abstract:

We present the K-baad Hubble diagrams (K-z relations) of submillimetre-selected galaxies and hyperluminous galaxies (HLIRGs). We report the discovery of a remarkably tight K-z relation of HLIRGs, indistinguishable from that of the most luminous radio galaxies. Like radio galaxies, the HLIRG K-z relation at z ∼ 3 is consistent with a passively evolving ∼3L* instantaneous starburst starting from a redshift of z ∼ 10. In contrast, many submillimetre-selected galaxies are ≳2 mag fainter, and the population has a much larger dispersion. We argue that dust obscuration and/or a larger mass range may be responsible for this scatter. The galaxies so far proved to be hyperluminous may have been biased towards higher AGN bolometric contributions than submillimetre-selected galaxies due to the 60-μm selection of some, so the location on the K-z relation may be related to the presence of the most massive active galactic nucleus. Alternatively, a particular host galaxy mass range may be responsible for both extreme star formation and the most massive active nuclei.

Three Lyman-alpha Emitters at z approx 6: Early GMOS/Gemini Data from the GLARE Project

(2003)

Authors:

Elizabeth R Stanway, Karl Glazebrook, Andrew J Bunker, Roberto G Abraham, Isobel Hook, James Rhoads, Patrick J McCarthy, Brian Boyle, Matthew Colless, David Crampton, Warrick Couch, Inger Jørgensen, Sangeeta Malhotra, Rick Murowinski, Kathy Roth, Sandra Savaglio, Zlatan Tsvetanov