- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/878/71
- Title:
- ULXs with multiepoch Spitzer/IRAC obs.
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/878/71
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a mid-infrared (IR) sample study of nearby ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) using multiepoch observations with the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) on the Spitzer Space Telescope. Spitzer/IRAC observations taken after 2014 were obtained as part of the Spitzer Infrared Intensive Transients Survey. Our sample includes 96 ULXs located within 10 Mpc. Of the 96 ULXs, 12 have candidate counterparts consistent with absolute mid-IR magnitudes of supergiants, and 16 counterparts exceeded the mid-IR brightness of single supergiants and are thus more consistent with star clusters or non-ULX background active galactic nuclei. The supergiant candidate counterparts exhibit a bimodal color distribution in a Spitzer/IRAC color-magnitude diagram, where "red" and "'blue" ULXs fall in IRAC colors [3.6]-[4.5]~0.7 and [3.6]-[4.5]~0.0, respectively. The mid-IR colors and absolute magnitudes of four "red" and five "blue" ULXs are consistent with those of supergiant B[e] (sgB[e]) and red supergiant (RSG) stars, respectively. Although "blue," RSG-like mid-IR ULX counterparts likely host RSG mass donors; we propose that "red" counterparts are ULXs exhibiting the "B[e] phenomenon" rather than hosts of sgB[e] mass donors. We show that the mid-IR excess from the "red" ULXs is likely due to thermal emission from circumstellar or circumbinary dust. Using dust as a probe for total mass, we estimate mass-loss rates of dM/dt~1x10^-4^M_{sun}_/yr in dust-forming outflows of red ULXs. Based on the transient mid-IR behavior and its relatively flat spectral index, {alpha}=-0.19+/-0.1, we suggest that the mid-IR emission from Holmberg IX X-1 originates from a variable jet.
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Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/895/71
- Title:
- 8um Cores in NGC 891, NGC 3628 and IC 5052
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/895/71
- Date:
- 11 Mar 2022
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- To study the vertical distribution of the earliest stages of star formation in galaxies, three edge-on spirals, NGC891, NGC3628, and IC5052, observed by the Spitzer Space Telescope InfraRed Array Camera (IRAC) were examined for compact 8{mu}m cores using an unsharp mask technique; 173, 267, and 60 cores were distinguished, respectively. Color-color distributions suggest a mixture of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and highly extincted photospheric emission from young stars. The average V-band extinction is ~20mag, equally divided between foreground and core. IRAC magnitudes for the clumps are converted to stellar masses assuming an age of 1Myr, which is about equal to the ratio of the total core mass to the star formation rate in each galaxy. The extinction and stellar mass suggest an intrinsic core radius of ~18pc for 5% star formation efficiency. The half-thickness of the disk of 8{mu}m cores is 105pc for NGC891 and 74pc for IC5052, varying with radius by a factor of ~2. For NGC3628, which is interacting, the half-thickness is 438pc, but even with this interaction, the 8{mu}m disk is remarkably flat, suggesting vertical stability. Small-scale structures like shingles or spirals are seen in the core positions. Very few of the 8{mu}m cores have optical counterparts.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJS/245/14
- Title:
- 8um cores in the spiral arms of nearby galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/ApJS/245/14
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Spitzer Space Telescope observations of 15 spiral galaxies show numerous dense cores at 8{mu}m that are revealed primarily in unsharp mask images. The cores are generally invisible in optical bands because of extinction, and they are also indistinct at 8{mu}m alone because of contamination by more widespread diffuse emission. Several hundred core positions, magnitudes, and colors from the four InfraRed Array Camera bands are measured and tabulated for each galaxy. The larger galaxies, which tend to have longer and more regular spiral arms, often have their infrared cores aligned along these arms, with additional cores in spiral arm spurs. Galaxies without regular spirals have their cores in more irregular spiral-like filaments, with typically only one or two cores per filament. Nearly every elongated emission feature has 8{mu}m cores strung out along its length. The occurrence of dense cores in long and thin filaments is reminiscent of filamentary star formation in the solar neighborhood, although on a scale 100 times larger in galaxies. The cores most likely form by gravitational instabilities and cloud agglomeration in the filaments. The simultaneous occurrence of several cores with regular spacings in some spiral arms suggests that in these cases, all of the cores formed at about the same time and the corresponding filaments are young. Total star formation rates for the galaxies correlate with the total embedded stellar masses in the cores with an average ratio corresponding to a possible age between 0.2 and 2Myr. This suggests that the identified cores are the earliest phase for most star formation.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/836/34
- Title:
- 24um excesses in clusters & membership of NGC2244
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/836/34
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We characterize the first 40 Myr of evolution of circumstellar disks through a unified study of the infrared properties of members of young clusters and associations with ages from 2Myr up to ~40Myr: NGC1333, NGC1960, NGC2232, NGC2244, NGC2362, NGC2547, IC348, IC2395, IC4665, ChamaeleonI, OrionOB1a and OB1b, Taurus, the {beta} Pictoris Moving Group, {rho} Ophiuchi, and the associations of Argus, Carina, Columba, Scorpius-Centaurus, and Tucana-Horologium. Our work features: (1) a filtering technique to flag noisy backgrounds; (2) a method based on the probability distribution of deflections, P(D), to obtain statistically valid photometry for faint sources; and (3) use of the evolutionary trend of transitional disks to constrain the overall behavior of bright disks. We find that the fraction of disks three or more times brighter than the stellar photospheres at 24{mu}m decays relatively slowly initially and then much more rapidly by ~10Myr. However, there is a continuing component until ~35Myr, probably due primarily to massive clouds of debris generated in giant impacts during the oligarchic/chaotic growth phases of terrestrial planets. If the contribution from primordial disks is excluded, the evolution of the incidence of these oligarchic/chaotic debris disks can be described empirically by a log-normal function with the peak at 12-20Myr, including ~13% of the original population, and with a post-peak mean duration of 10-20Myr.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/446/3199
- Title:
- 24um fluxes of GOODS-S AGN
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/446/3199
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a study of galaxies showing mid-infrared variability in data taken in the deepest Spitzer/MIPS 24{mu}m surveys in the Great Observatory Origins Deep Survey South field. We divide the data set in epochs and subepochs to study the long-term (months-years) and the short-term (days) variability. We use a {chi}^2^-statistics method to select active galactic nucleus (AGN) candidates with a probability <=1% that the observed variability is due to statistical errors alone. We find 39 (1.7% of the parent sample) sources that show long-term variability and 55 (2.2% of the parent sample) showing short-term variability. That is, 0.03sources/arcmin^2^ for both, long-term and short-term variable sources. After removing the expected number of false positives inherent to the method, the estimated percentages are 1.0 and 1.4% of the parent sample for the long term and short term, respectively. We compare our candidates with AGN selected in the X-ray and radio bands, and AGN candidates selected by their IR emission. Approximately, 50% of the MIPS (Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer) 24{mu}m variable sources would be identified as AGN with these other methods. Therefore, MIPS 24{mu}m variability is a new method to identify AGN candidates, possibly dust obscured and low-luminosity AGN, that might be missed by other methods. However, the contribution of the MIPS 24{mu}m variable identified AGN to the general AGN population is small (<=13%) in GOODS-South.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/693/370
- Title:
- 24um flux-limited sample of galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/693/370
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The mid-infrared spectroscopic analysis of a flux-limited sample of galaxies with f_{nu}_(24um)>10mJy is presented. Sources observed are taken from the Spitzer First Look Survey (FLS) catalog and from the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey region in Bootes (NDWFS). The spectroscopic sample includes 60 of the 100 sources in these combined catalogs having f_{nu}_(24um)>10 mJy. New spectra from the Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph are presented for 25 FLS sources and for 11 Bootes active galactic nuclei (AGNs); these are combined with 24 Bootes starburst galaxies previously published to determine the distribution of mid-infrared spectral characteristics for the total 10mJy sample. Sources have 0.01<z<2.4 and 41.8<log{nu}L_{nu}_(15um)<46.2(ergs/s).
3307. 8.6um imaging of 47 Tuc
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/537/A2
- Title:
- 8.6um imaging of 47 Tuc
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/537/A2
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- There is an ongoing debate regarding the onset luminosity of dusty mass loss in population-II red giant stars. We present VLT/VISIR mid-infrared (MIR) 8.6um imaging of 47 Tuc, the centre of attention of a number of space-based Spitzer observations and studies. The VISIR high-resolution (diffraction limited) observations allow excellent matching to existing optical Hubble Space Telescope catalogues. The optical-MIR coverage of the inner core of the cluster provide the cleanest possible blending-free sampling of the upper 3mag of the giant branch. Our diagrams show no evidence of faint giants with MIR-excess. A combined near/mid-infrared diagram additionally confirms the near absence of dusty red giants. Dusty red giants and asymptotic giant stars are confined to the 47 Tuc long-period variable population. In particular, dusty red giants are limited to the upper one N8.6um magnitude below the giant branch tip. This particular luminosity level corresponds to ~1000L_{sun}_, which was suggested in previous determinations to mark the onset of dusty mass loss. Interestingly, starting from this luminosity level we detected a gradual deviation between the colours of red giants and the theoretical isochrones.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/475/791
- Title:
- 12um ISOCAM survey of the ESO-Sculptor field
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/475/791
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a detailed reduction of a mid-infrared 12um (LW10 filter) ISOCAM open time observation performed on the ESO-Sculptor Survey field (Arnouts et al., 1997A&AS..124..163A). A complete catalogue of 142 sources (120 galaxies and 22 stars), detected with high significance (equivalent to 5{sigma}), is presented above an integrated flux density of 0.31mJy. Star/galaxy separation is performed by a detailed study of colour-colour diagrams. The catalogue is complete to 1mJy and, below this flux density, the incompleteness is corrected using two independent methods. The first method uses stars and the second uses optical counterparts of the ISOCAM galaxies; these methods yield consistent results. We also apply an empirical flux density calibration using stars in the field. For each star, the 12um flux density is derived by fitting optical colours from a multi-band {chi}^2^ to stellar templates (BaSel-2.0) and using empirical optical-IR colour-colour relations. This article is a companion analysis to our 2007 paper (Rocca-Volmerange et al. 2007A&A...475..801R) where the 12um faint galaxy counts are presented and analysed per galaxy type with the evolutionary code PEGASE.3.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/750/98
- Title:
- 24um observations of AFGKM stars of 3 clusters
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/750/98
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We use Spitzer Space Telescope 24 {mu}m data to search for debris disks among 122 AFGKM stars from the ~670 Myr clusters Hyades, Coma Ber, and Praesepe, utilizing a number of advances in data reduction and determining the intrinsic colors of main-sequence stars. For our sample, the 1{sigma} dispersion about the main-sequence V-K_S_, K_S_-[24] locus is approximately 3.1%. We identify seven debris disks at 10% or more ( >=3{sigma} confidence level) above the expected K_S_-[24] for purely photospheric emission. The incidence of excesses of 10% or greater in our sample at this age is 5.7^+3.1^_-1.7_%. Combining with results from the literature, the rate is 7.8^+4.2^_-2.1_% for early-type (B9-F4) stars and 2.7^+3.3^_-1.7_% for solar-like (F5-K9) stars. Our primary sample has strict criteria for inclusion to allow comparison with other work; when we relax these criteria, three additional debris disks are detected. They are all around stars of solar-like type and hence reinforce our conclusion that disks around such stars are still relatively common at 670Myr and are similar to the rate around early-type stars. The apparently small difference in decay rates between early-type and solar-like stars is inconsistent with the first-order theoretical predictions that the later type stellar disks would decay an order of magnitude more quickly than the earlier type ones.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+AS/101/59
- Title:
- 1-20um observations of Herbig-Haro objects
- Short Name:
- J/A+AS/101/59
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- For 58 exciting sources of Herbig-Haro objects/jets (HHES) we present a catalogue of photometric data for the infrared spectral bands JHKLMNQ (1-20 um). This catalog is based on our own observations and published information available up to May 1992. For each source, these data are presented in chronological order. In addition to the broad-band data, narrow-band N(8-13 um) photometric data are also provided. The flux calibration for each observational equipment is explicitly noted as the diaphragm sizes are used. The same kind of information for the established members of the FU Ori class is complementing the HHES catalogue. The frequency of observations and the photometric quality of the catalogued data are shortly discussed.