The optical jet in 3C 31 on 15 arcsec scales

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 339:1 (2003) 82-86

Authors:

JH Croston, M Birkinshaw, E Conway, RL Davies

Abstract:

Evidence has been found for optical emission from the northern radio jet of 3C 31, the radio source associated with NGC 383. The jet emerges from the dust disc and ring of emission at a radius of 5 arcsec, and within 10.4 arcsec is measured to have a B-band flux of 2.1 μJy and an R-band flux of 2.3 μJy. The radio-to-optical spectral index of this region is 0.78. A second connected region, 11.8 arcsec along the jet in position angle 340°, found to have similar optical colours and radio-to-optical spectral index may also be jet emission. We combine our new data with recent radio and X-ray results to conclude that the emission of the jet is synchrotron from the radio to the X-ray.

A mir spectroscopic survey of starburst galaxies

European Space Agency, (Special Publication) ESA SP (2003) 263-266

Authors:

A Verma, D Lutz, E Sturm, A Sternberg, R Genzel

Abstract:

We present a mid-infrared (MIR) spectroscopic survey of starburst galaxies as an example of analysis of scientifically focused samples selected from the ISO Data Archive (IDA). We use fine structure lines (FSL) ratios of Ne, Ar and S to construct diagnostic excitation diagrams and, in combination with hydrogen recombination lines (HRL), we determine their elemental abundances. For Ne and Ar, we find that excitation indicators are positively correlated with each other and negatively with abundance. On comparison with a complementary sample of galactic H II regions we find that starbursts are generally of lower excitation. Starbursts exhibiting Wolf-Rayet (WR) features are separated both in excitation and abundance from the remaining starbursts. Most surprisingly, S is found to be underabundant by a factor of ∼ 3 in our low excitation starbursts with respect to the Ne and Ar, contrary to expectations from nucleosynthesis theory. Our results are combined with those of a related sub-sample of Seyfert galaxies (Sturm et al. 2002) to derive diagnostic diagrams discriminating the two types of activity on the basis of excitation traced by MIR lines. The data presented will be useful as a reference for observations of fainter and/or higher redshift sources with future IR observatories such as SIRTF, SOFIA and Herschel.

Near-infrared imaging and the K-z relation for radio galaxies in the 7C Redshift Survey 

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 339:1 (2003) 173-188

Authors:

SG Rawlings, Blundell, K, Jarvis, M, Willott, C

Axisymmetric dynamical models of the central regions of galaxies

Astrophysical Journal 583:1 I (2003) 92-115

Authors:

K Gebhardt, D Richstone, S Tremaine, TR Lauer, R Bender, G Bower, A Dressler, SM Faber, AV Filippenko, R Green, C Grillmair, LC Ho, J Kormendy, J Magorrian, J Pinkney

Abstract:

We present axisymmetric, orbit superposition models for 12 galaxies using data taken with the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) and ground-based observatories. In each galaxy, we detect a central black hole (BH) and measure its mass to accuracies ranging from 10% to 70%. We demonstrate that in most cases the BH detection requires both the HST and ground-based data. Using the ground-based data alone does provide an unbiased measure of the BH mass (provided that they are fitted with fully general models), but at a greatly reduced significance. The most significant correlation with host galaxy properties is the relation between the BH mass and the velocity dispersion of the host galaxy; we find no other equally strong correlation and no second parameter that improves the quality of the mass-dispersion relation. We are also able to measure the stellar orbital properties from these general models. The most massive galaxies are strongly biased to tangential orbits near the BH, consistent with binary BH models, while lower mass galaxies have a range of anisotropies, consistent with an adiabatic growth of the BH.

A SAURON view of galaxies

(2003)

Authors:

EK Verolme, M Cappellari, G van de Ven, PT de Zeeuw, R Bacon, M Bureau, Y Copin, RL Davies, E Emsellem, H Kuntschner, R McDermid, BW Miller, RF Peletier