- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/401/2113
- Title:
- GHASP: H{alpha} data cubes for 153 galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/401/2113
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Due to their large distances, high-redshift galaxies are observed at a very low spatial resolution. In order to disentangle the evolution of galaxy kinematics from low-resolution effects, we have used Fabry-Perot 3D H{alpha} data cubes of 153 nearby isolated galaxies selected from the Gassendi H{alpha} survey of SPirals (GHASP) to simulate data cubes of galaxies at redshift z=1.7 using a pixel size of 0.125" and a 0.5" seeing. We have derived H{alpha} flux, velocity and velocity dispersion maps.
Number of results to display per page
Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/390/466
- Title:
- GHASP: H{alpha} data cubes for 97 galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/390/466
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Gassendi HAlpha survey of SPirals survey (GHASP) consists of 3D H{alpha} data cubes for 203 spiral and irregular galaxies, covering a large range in morphological types and absolute magnitudes, for kinematics analysis. It is the largest sample of Fabry-Perot data published up to now. In order to provide an homogenous sample, reduced and analysed using the same procedure, we present in this paper the new reduction and analysis for a set of 97 galaxies already published in previous papers but now using the new data reduction procedure adopted for the whole sample. The GHASP survey is now achieved and the whole sample is reduced using the adaptive binning techniques based on Voronoi tessellations. We have derived H{alpha} data cubes from which are computed H{alpha} maps, radial velocity fields as well as residual velocity fields, position-velocity diagrams, rotation curves and kinematical parameters for almost all galaxies. The rotation curves, the kinematical parameters and their uncertainties are computed homogeneously using the new method based on the power spectrum of the residual velocity field. This paper provides the kinematical parameters for the whole sample. For the first time, the integrated H{alpha} profiles have been computed and are presented for the whole sample. The total H{alpha} fluxes deduced from these profiles have been used in order to provide a flux calibration for the 203 GHASP galaxies. This paper confirms the conclusions already drawn from half the sample concerning (i) the increased accuracy of position angles measurements using kinematical data, (ii) the difficulty to have robust determinations of both morphological and kinematical inclinations in particular for low-inclination galaxies and (iii) the very good agreement between the Tully-Fisher relationship derived from our data and previous determinations found in the literature.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/901/123
- Title:
- Ghostly damped Ly{alpha} systems in SDSS DR14
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/901/123
- Date:
- 18 Feb 2022 09:18:37
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We report the discovery of 59 new ghostly absorbers from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 14. These absorbers, with z_abs_~z_QSO_, reveal no Ly{alpha} absorption, and they are mainly identified through the detection of strong metal absorption lines in the spectra. The number of such previously known systems is 30. The new systems are found with the aid of machine-learning algorithms. The spectra of 41 (out of total of 89) absorbers also cover the Ly{beta} spectral region. By fitting the damping wings of the Ly{beta} absorption in the stacked spectrum of 21 (out of 41) absorbers with relatively stronger Ly{beta} absorption, we measured an HI column density of log N(HI)=21.50. This column density is 0.5dex higher than that of the previous work. We also found that the metal absorption lines in the stacked spectrum of the 21 ghostly absorbers with stronger Ly{beta} absorption have similar properties as those in the stacked spectrum of the remaining systems. This circumstantial evidence strongly suggests that the majority of our ghostly absorbers are indeed DLAs.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/888/85
- Title:
- Ghostly strong Lya absorbers in SDSS DR12
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/888/85
- Date:
- 25 Oct 2021 10:15:53
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We have searched the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 12 for ghostly strong Ly{alpha} (DLA) systems. These systems, located at the redshift of the quasars, show strong absorption from low-ionization atomic species but reveal no HI Ly{alpha} absorption. Our search has, for the first time, resulted in a sample of 30 homogeneously selected ghostly absorbers with z_QSO_>2.0. Thirteen of the ghostly absorbers exhibit absorption from other HI Lyman series lines. The lack of Ly{alpha} absorption in these absorbers is consistent with them being dense and compact with projected sizes smaller than the broad-line region of the background quasar. Although uncertain, the estimated median HI column density of these absorbers is logN(HI)~21.0. We compare the properties of ghostly absorbers with those of eclipsing DLAs that are high-column-density absorbers, located within 1500km/s of the quasar emission redshift and showing strong Ly{alpha} emission in their DLA trough. We discover an apparent sequence in the observed properties of these DLAs, with ghostly absorbers showing wider HI kinematics, stronger absorptions from high-ionization species, CII and SiII excited states, and a higher level of dust extinction. Since we estimate that all these absorbers have similar metallicities, logZ/Z_{sun}_~-1.0, we conclude that ghostly absorbers are part of the same population as eclipsing DLAs, except that they are denser and located closer to the central active galactic nuclei.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/731/100
- Title:
- 148GHz ACT extragalactic sources catalog
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/731/100
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We report on extragalactic sources detected in a 455deg^2^ map of the southern sky made with data at a frequency of 148GHz from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) 2008 observing season. We provide a catalog of 157 sources with flux densities spanning two orders of magnitude: from 15mJy to 1500mJy. Comparison to other catalogs shows that 98% of the ACT detections correspond to sources detected at lower radio frequencies. Three of the sources appear to be associated with the brightest cluster galaxies of low-redshift X-ray-selected galaxy clusters. Estimates of the radio to millimeter-wave spectral indices and differential counts of the sources further bolster the hypothesis that they are nearly all radio sources, and that their emission is not dominated by re-emission from warm dust. In a bright (>50mJy) 148GHz selected sample with complete cross-identifications from the Australia Telescope 20GHz survey, we observe an average steepening of the spectra between 5, 20, and 148GHz with median spectral indices of {alpha}_5-20_=-0.07+/-0.06, {alpha}_20-148_=-0.39+/-0.04, and {alpha}_5-148_=-0.20+/-0.03. When the measured spectral indices are taken into account, the 148GHz differential source counts are consistent with previous measurements at 30GHz in the context of a source count model dominated by radio sources. Extrapolating with an appropriately rescaled model for the radio source counts, the Poisson contribution to the spatial power spectrum from synchrotron-dominated sources with flux density less than 20mJy is C^Sync^=(2.8+/-0.3)x10^-6^{mu}K^2^.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/742/27
- Title:
- 15GHz and jet properties of MOJAVE blazars
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/742/27
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We investigate the Fermi Large Area Telescope {gamma}-ray and 15GHz Very Long Baseline Array radio properties of a joint {gamma}-ray and radio-selected sample of active galactic nuclei (AGNs) obtained during the first 11 months of the Fermi mission (2008 August 4-2009 July 5). Our sample contains the brightest 173 AGNs in these bands above declination -30{deg} during this period, and thus probes the full range of {gamma}-ray loudness ({gamma}-ray to radio band luminosity ratio) in the bright blazar population. The latter quantity spans at least 4 orders of magnitude, reflecting a wide range of spectral energy distribution (SED) parameters in the bright blazar population. The BL Lac objects, however, display a linear correlation of increasing {gamma}-ray loudness with synchrotron SED peak frequency, suggesting a universal SED shape for objects of this class.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/740/59
- Title:
- 1.4GHz and X-ray sources in 12 clusters of galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/740/59
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Using Chandra imaging spectroscopy and Very Large Array (VLA) L-band radio maps, we have identified radio sources at P_1.4GHz_>=5x10^23^W/Hz and X-ray point sources (XPSs) at L_0.3-8keV_>=5x10^42^erg/s in L>L* galaxies in 12 high-redshift (0.4<z<1.2) clusters of galaxies. The radio galaxies and XPSs in this cluster sample, chosen to be consistent with Coma Cluster progenitors at these redshifts, are compared to those found at low-z analyzed in Hart et al. (Paper I, 2009ApJ...705..854H). Within a projected radius of 1Mpc of the cluster cores, we find 17 cluster radio galaxies (11 with secure redshifts, including one luminous FR II radio source at z=0.826, and six more with host galaxy colors similar to cluster ellipticals). Within this same projected radius, we identify seven spectroscopically confirmed cluster XPSs, all with cluster red-sequence (CRS) host galaxy colors. Consistent with the results from Martini et al. (2009ApJ...701...66M), we estimate a minimum X-ray active fraction of 1.4%+/-0.8% for cluster red-sequence galaxies in high-z clusters, corresponding to an approximate 10-fold increase from 0.15%+/-0.15% at low-z. Although complete redshift information is lacking for several XPSs in z>0.4 cluster fields, the increased numbers and luminosities of the CRS radio galaxies and XPSs suggest a substantial (9-10-fold) increase in the heat injected into high-redshift clusters by AGNs compared to the present epoch.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/65/485
- Title:
- 1.49GHz Atlas of Spiral Galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/65/485
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The VLA has been used in its most compact D- and C/D-configurations to make low-resolution ({theta}~0.9FWHM) 1.49GHz maps of the spiral galaxies north of DE=-45{deg} and brighter than B_T_=+12, the completeness limit of the Revised Shapley-Ames Catalog (Cat. VII/51). Most of these maps are confusion-limited at {sigma}>=0.1mJy per beam, and at least 94% of the galaxies were detected with S>=1mJy. The maps have sufficient sensitivity to low-brightness emission that accurate radio "photometry" is possible. An atlas of contour maps, a table of total flux densities plus other radio source parameters, and references to published radio maps are given.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/73/359
- Title:
- 1.49 GHz atlas of the IRAS bright galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/73/359
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- This catalog contains 1.49 GHz VLA observations of sources from the IRAS Bright Galaxy Sample. The original IRAS Bright Galaxy Sample (Soifer et al., 1987ApJ...320..238S) comprises 324 extragalactic objects with 60 micron flux densities above 5.4 Jy. It is the infrared analog of the radio 3CR or optical Shapley-Ames samples. Recalibration of the IRAS flux densities led to a revised Bright Galaxy Sample (Soifer et al., 1989AJ.....98..766S) containing 313 sources stronger than 5.24 Jy at 60 microns. Only one source from these samples was not detected (NGC1377) at 1.49 GHz. For most sources, multiple observations were conducted with different synthesized beam areas. Thus, for a given galaxy there may be several rows in the table reporting data at different angular resolution or reporting different radio components of the object. A low-resolution observation was used to yield an accurate total flux density and a high-resolution observation was used to resolve the brightest components clearly. These observations were originally presented in Condon, et al., (1990ApJS...73..359C).
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/616/A66
- Title:
- 6.7GHz CH_3_OH maser in G24.78+0.08
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/616/A66
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- G24.78+0.08 is a well known high-mass star-forming region, where several molecular cores harboring OB young stellar objects are found inside a clump of size ~=1pc. This article focuses on the most prominent of these cores, A1, where an intense hypercompact (HC) HII region has been discovered by previous observations. Our aim is to determine the physical conditions and the kinematics of core A1, and study the interaction of the HII region with the parental molecular core. We combine ALMA 1.4mm high-angular resolution (~=0.2'') observations of continuum and line emission with multi-epoch Very Long Baseline Interferometry data of water 22GHz and methanol 6.7GHz masers. These observations allow us to study the gas kinematics on linear scales from 10 to 10^4^au, and to accurately map the physical conditions of the gas over core A1. The 1.4mm continuum is dominated by free-free emission from the intense HC HII region (size~=1000au) observed to the North of core A1 (region A1N). Analyzing the H30{alpha} line, we reveal a fast bipolar flow in the ionized gas, covering a range of LSR velocities (VLSR) of ~=60km/s. The amplitude of the VLSR gradient, 22km/s/mpc, is one of the highest so far observed towards HC HII regions. Water and methanol masers are distributed around the HC HII region in A1N, and the maser three-dimensional (3D) velocities clearly indicate that the ionized gas is expanding at high speed (>=200km/s) into the surrounding molecular gas. The temperature distribution (in the range 100-400K) over core A1, traced with molecular (CH_3_OCHO, ^13^CH_3_CN, ^13^CH_3_OH, and CH_3_CH_2_CN) transitions with level energy in the range 30K<=E_u_/k<=300K, reflects the distribution of shocks produced by the fast-expansion of the ionized gas of the HII region. The high-energy (550K<=E_u_/k<=800K) transitions of vibrationally excited CH_3_CN are likely radiatively pumped, and their rotational temperature can significantly differ from the kinetic temperature of the gas. Over core A1, the VLSR maps from both the 1.4mm molecular lines and the 6.7GHz methanol masers consistently show a VLSR gradient (amplitude ~=0.3km/s/mpc) directed approximately S-N. Rather than gravitationally supported rotation of a massive toroid, we interpret this velocity gradient as a relatively slow expansion of core A1.