25 results on '"Dalcanton, J. J."'
Search Results
2. MCR-TRGB: A Multiwavelength-covariant, Robust Tip of the Red Giant Branch Measurement Method.
- Author
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Durbin, M. J., Beaton, R. L., Dalcanton, J. J., Williams, B. F., and Boyer, M. L.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The dust in M31.
- Author
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Whitworth, A P, Marsh, K A, Cigan, P J, Dalcanton, J J, Smith, M W L, Gomez, H L, Lomax, O, Griffin, M J, and Eales, S A
- Subjects
DUST ,STAR-branched polymers ,MOLECULAR clouds ,PHOSPHORESCENCE ,INTERPLANETARY dust ,RED giants ,OPTICAL depth (Astrophysics) - Abstract
We have analysed Herschel observations of M31, using the ppmap procedure. The resolution of ppmap images is sufficient (|$\sim 31\, {\rm pc}$| on M31) that we can analyse far-IR dust emission on the scale of giant molecular clouds. By comparing ppmap estimates of the far-IR emission optical depth at |$300\, \mu {\rm m}\, (\tau _{{300}})$| , and the near-IR extinction optical depth at |$1.1\, \mu {\rm m}\, (\tau _{{1.1}})$| obtained from the reddening of Red Giant Branch (RGB) stars, we show that the ratio |${\cal R}^{\mathrm{ obs.}}_\tau \equiv \tau _{{1.1}}/\tau _{{300}}$| falls in the range |$500\lesssim {\cal R}^{\mathrm{ obs.}}_\tau \lesssim 1500$|. Such low values are incompatible with many commonly used theoretical dust models, which predict values of |${\cal R}^{\mathrm{ model}}_\kappa \equiv \kappa _{{1.1}}/\kappa _{{300}}$| (where κ is the dust opacity coefficient) in the range |$2500\lesssim {\cal R}^{\mathrm{ model}}_\kappa \lesssim 4000$|. That is, unless a large fraction, |$\gtrsim 60{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$| , of the dust emitting at |$300\, \mu {\rm m}$| is in such compact sources that they are unlikely to intercept the lines of sight to a distributed population like RGB stars. This is not a new result: variants obtained using different observations and/or different wavelengths have already been reported by other studies. We present two analytic arguments for why it is unlikely that |$\gtrsim 60{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$| of the emitting dust is in sufficiently compact sources. Therefore it may be necessary to explore the possibility that the discrepancy between observed values of |${\cal R}^{\mathrm{ obs.}}_\tau$| and theoretical values of |${\cal R}^{\mathrm{ model}}_\kappa$| is due to limitations in existing dust models. ppmap also allows us to derive optical-depth weighted mean values for the emissivity index, β ≡ −dln (κ
λ )/dln (λ), and the dust temperature, T , denoted |${\bar{\beta }}$| and |${\bar{T}}$|. We show that, in M31, |${\cal R}^{\mathrm{ obs.}}_\tau$| is anticorrelated with |${\bar{\beta }}$| according to |${\cal R}^{\mathrm{ obs.}}_\tau \simeq 2042(\pm 24)-557(\pm 10){\bar{\beta }}$|. If confirmed, this provides a challenging constraint on the nature of interstellar dust in M31. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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4. Baryonic distributions in galaxy dark matter haloes - I. New observations of neutral and ionized gas kinematics.
- Author
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Richards, Emily E., van Zee, L., Barnes, K. L., Staudaher, S., Dale, D. A., Braun, T. T., Wavle, D. C., Dalcanton, J. J., Bullock, J. S., and Chandar, R.
- Subjects
BARYONICHIDAE ,DARK matter ,INTERSTELLAR medium ,IONIZED gases ,VERY large array telescopes - Abstract
We present a combination of new and archival neutral hydrogen (H
I ) observations and new ionized gas spectroscopic observations for 16 galaxies in the statistically representative Extended Disk Galaxy Explore Science kinematic sample. HI rotation curves are derived from new and archival radio synthesis observations from the Very Large Array (VLA) as well as processed data products from the Westerbork Radio Synthesis Telescope (WSRT). The HI rotation curves are supplemented with optical spectroscopic integral field unit (IFU) observations using SparsePak on the WIYN 3.5 m telescope to constrain the central ionized gas kinematics in 12 galaxies. The full rotation curves of each galaxy are decomposed into baryonic and dark matter halo components using 3.6μm images from the Spitzer Space Telescope for the stellar content, the neutral hydrogen data for the atomic gas component, and, when available, CO data from the literature for the molecular gas component. Differences in the inferred distribution of mass are illustrated under fixed stellar mass-to-light ratio (M/L) and maximum disc/bulge assumptions in the rotation curve decomposition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury XIII: The Cepheid period-luminosity relation in M31.
- Author
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Wagner-Kaiser, R., Sarajedini, A., Dalcanton, J. J., Williams, B. F., and Dolphin, A.
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CEPHEID Luminosity Scale ,STELLAR photometry ,ASTROPHYSICS research ,ANDROMEDA Galaxy - Abstract
Using Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys (HST/ACS) and Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) observations from the Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury (PHAT), we present new period-luminosity (P-L) relations for Cepheid variables in M31. Cepheids from several ground-based studies are identified in the PHAT photometry to derive new P-L and Wesenheit P-L relations in the near infrared and visual filters. We derive a distance modulus to M31 of 24.51 ± 0.08 in the IR bands and 24.32 ± 0.09 in the visual bands, including the first P-L relations in the F475W and F814W filters for M31. Our derived visual and IR distance moduli disagree at slightly more than a 1s level. Differences in the P-L relations between ground-based and HST observations are investigated for a subset of Cepheids. We find a significant discrepancy between ground- based and HSTP-L relations with the same Cepheids, suggesting adverse effects from photometric contamination in groundbased Cepheid observations. Additionally, a statistically significant radial trend in the P-L relation is found which does not appear to be explained by metallicity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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6. Baryonic distributions in the dark matter halo of NGC 5005.
- Author
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Richards, Emily E., van Zee, L., Barnes, K. L., Staudaher, S., Dale, D. A., Braun, T. T., Wavle, D. C., Calzetti, D., Dalcanton, J. J., Bullock, J. S., and R. Chandar
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BARYONS ,DARK matter ,BLACK holes ,STAR observations ,STELLAR rotation ,STELLAR magnetic fields ,TELESCOPES - Abstract
We present results from multiwavelength observations of the galaxy NGC 5005. We use new neutral hydrogen (HI) observations from the Very Large Array to examine the neutral gas morphology and kinematics. We find an HI disc with a well-behaved flat rotation curve in the radial range 20-140 arcsec. Ionized gas observations from the SparsePak integral field unit on the WIYN 3.5 m telescope provide kinematics for the central 70 arcsec. We use both the SparsePak and HI velocity fields to derive a rotation curve for NGC 5005. Deep 3.6 μm observations from the Spitzer Space Telescope probe the faint extended stellar population of NGC 5005. The images reveal a large stellar disc with a high surface brightness component that transitions to a low surface brightness component at a radius nearly 1.6 times farther than the extent of the gas disc detected in HI. The 3.6 μm image is also decomposed into bulge and disc components to account for the stellar light distribution. Optical broad-band B and R and narrowband Hα from the WIYN 0.9 m telescope complement the 3.6 μm data by providing information about the dominant stellar population and current star formation activity. The neutral and ionized gas rotation curve is used along with the stellar bulge and disc light profiles to decompose the mass distributions in NGC 5005 and determine a dark matter halo model. The maximum stellar disc contribution to the total rotation curve is only about 70 per cent, suggesting that dark matter makes a significant contribution to the dynamics at all radii. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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7. IS THERE A METALLICITY CEILING TO FORM CARBON STARS?--A NOVEL TECHNIQUE REVEALS A SCARCITY OF C STARS IN THE INNER M31 DISK.
- Author
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BOYER, M. L., GIRARDI, L., MARIGO, P., WILLIAMS, B. F., ARINGER, B., NOWOTNY, W., ROSENFIELD, P., DORMAN, C. E., GUHATHAKURTA, P., DALCANTON, J. J., MELBOURNE, J. L., OLSEN, K. A. G., and WEISZ, D. R.
- Subjects
N stars ,ANDROMEDA Galaxy ,ASTRONOMICAL photometry ,ASYMPTOTIC giant branch stars - Abstract
We use medium-band near-infrared (NIR) Hubble Space Telescope WFC3 photometry with model NIR spectra of asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars to develop a new tool for efficiently distinguishing carbon-rich (C-type) AGB stars from oxygen-rich (M-type) AGB stars in galaxies at the edge of and outside the Local Group. We present the results of a test of this method on a region of the inner disk of M31, where we find a surprising lack of C stars, contrary to the findings of previous C star searches in other regions of M31. We find only one candidate C star (plus up to six additional, less certain C star candidates), resulting in an extremely low ratio of C to M stars (C/M = (3.3
+20 -0.1 ) × 10-4 ) that is one to two orders of magnitude lower than other C/M estimates in M31. The low C/M ratio is likely due to the high metallicity in this region which impedes stars from achieving C/O > 1 in their atmospheres. These observations provide stringent constraints to evolutionary models of metal-rich AGB stars and suggest that there is a metallicity threshold above which M stars are unable to make the transition to C stars, dramatically affecting AGB mass loss and dust production and, consequently, the observed global properties of metal-rich galaxies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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8. Herschel/SPIRE observations of the dusty disk of NGC 4244.
- Author
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Holwerda, B. W., Bianchi, S., Böker, T., Radburn-Smith, D., De Jong, R. S., Baes, M., Van der Kruit, P. C., Xilouris, M., Gordon, K. D., and Dalcanton, J. J.
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SPIRAL galaxies ,GALAXIES ,ASTRONOMY ,SPECTRAL energy distribution ,RADIATION - Abstract
We present Herschel/SPIRE images at 250, 350, and 500 μm of NGC 4244, a typical low-mass, disk-only and edge-on spiral galaxy. The dust disk is clumpy and shows signs of truncation at the break radius of the stellar disk. This disk coincides with the densest part of the Hi disk. We compare the spectral energy distribution (SED), including the new SPIRE fluxes, to 3D radiative transfer models; a smooth model disk and a clumpy model with embedded heating. Each model requires a very high value for the dust scale-length (h
d = 2-5 h" ), higher dust masses than previous models of NGC 4244 (Md = 0.47-1.39 ×107 M☉ ) and a face-on optical depth of τf.o. V = 0.4-1.12, in agreement with previous disk opacity studies. The vertical scales of stars and dust are similar. The clumpy model much better mimics the general morphology in the sub-mm images and the general SED. The inferred gas-to-dust mass ratio is compatible with those of similar low-mass disks. The relatively large radial scale-length of the dust disk points to radial mixing of the dusty ISM within the stellar disk. The large vertical dust scale and the clumpy dust distribution of our SED model are both consistent with a scenario in which the vertical structure of the ISM is dictated by the balance of turbulence and self-gravity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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9. A STUDY OF THE DARK CORE IN A520 WITH THE HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE: THE MYSTERY DEEPENS.
- Author
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M. J. JEE, MAHDAVI, A., HOEKSTRA, H., BABUL, A., DALCANTON, J. J., CARROLL, P., and CAPAK, P.
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DARK matter ,GALAXIES ,METAPHYSICAL cosmology ,STELLAR luminosity function ,GRAVITATIONAL lenses - Abstract
We present a Hubble Space Telescope/Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 weak-lensing study of A520, where a previous analysis of ground-based data suggested the presence of a dark mass concentration. We map the complex mass structure in much greater detail, leveraging more than a factor of three increase in the number density of source galaxies available for lensing analysis. The "dark core" that is coincident with the X-ray gas peak, but not with any stellar luminosity peak, is now detected with more than 10σ significance. The ~1.5 Mpc filamentary structure elongated in the NE-SW direction is also clearly visible. Taken at face value, the comparison among the centroids of dark matter, intracluster medium, and galaxy luminosity is at odds with what has been observed in other merging clusters with a similar geometric configuration. To date, the most remarkable counterexample might be the Bullet Cluster, which shows a distinct bow-shock feature as in A520, but no significant weak-lensing mass concentration around the X-ray gas. With the most up-to-date data, we consider several possible explanations that might lead to the detection of this peculiar feature in A520. However, we conclude that none of these scenarios can be singled out yet as the definite explanation for this puzzle [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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10. New HErschel Multi-wavelength Extragalactic Survey of Edge-on Spirals (NHEMESES).
- Author
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Holwerda, B. W., Bianchi, S., Baes, M., de Jong, R. S., Dalcanton, J. J., Radburn-Smith, D., Gordon, K., and Xilouris, M.
- Abstract
Edge-on spiral galaxies offer a unique perspective on the vertical structure of spiral disks, both stars and the iconic dark dustlanes. The thickness of these dustlanes can now be resolved for the first time with Herschel in far-infrared and sub-mm emission. We present NHEMESES, an ongoing project that targets 12 edge-on spiral galaxies with the PACS and SPIRE instruments on Herschel. These vertically resolved observations of edge-on spirals will impact on several current topics.First and foremost, these Herschel observations will settle whether or not there is a phase change in the vertical structure of the ISM with disk mass. Previously, a dramatic change in dustlane morphology was observed as in massive disks the dust collapses into a thin lane. If this is the case, the vertical balance between turbulence and gravity dictates the ISM structure and consequently star-formation and related phenomena (spiral arms, bars etc.). We specifically target lower mass nearby edge-ons to complement existing Herschel observations of high-mass edge-on spirals (the HEROES project).Secondly, the combined data-set, together with existing Spitzer observations, will drive a new generation of spiral disk Spectral Energy Distribution models. These model how dust reprocesses starlight to thermal emission but the dust geometry remains the critical unknown.And thirdly, the observations will provide an accurate and unbiased census of the cold dusty structures occasionally seen extending out of the plane of the disk, when backlit by the stellar disk. To illustrate the NHEMESES project, we present early results on NGC 4244 and NGC 891, two well studies examples of a low and high-mass edge-on spiral. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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11. A DEEP CHANDRA VIEW OF THE NGC 404 CENTRAL ENGINE.
- Author
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BINDER, B., WILLIAMS, B. F., ERACLEOUS, M., SETH, A. C., DALCANTON, J. J., SKILLMAN, E. D., WEISZ, D. R., ANDERSON, S. F., GAETZ, T. J., and PLUCINSKY, P. P.
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STAR formation ,GALAXY spectra ,ASTRONOMICAL observations ,GALACTIC X-ray sources ,ACTIVE galaxies - Abstract
We present the results of a 100 ks Chandra observation of the NGC 404 nuclear region. The long exposure and excellent spatial resolution of Chandra have enabled us to critically examine the nuclear environment of NGC 404, which is known to host a nuclear star cluster and potentially an intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH; on the order of a few times 10
5 M⊙ ). We find two distinct X-ray sources: a hard, central point source coincident with the optical and radio centers of the galaxy, and a soft extended region that is coincident with areas of high Hα emission and likely recent star formation. When we fit the 0.3-8 keV spectra of each region separately, we find the hard nuclear point source to be dominated by a power law (Γ = 1.88), while the soft off-nuclear region is best fit by a thermal plasma model (kT = 0.67 keV). We therefore find evidence for both a power-law component and hot gas in the nuclear region of NGC 404. We estimate the 2-10 keV luminosity to be 1.3+0.8 -0.5 x 1037 erg s-1 . A low level of diffuse X-ray emission was detected out to ~15" (~0.2 kpc) from the nucleus. We compare our results to the observed relationships between power-law photon index and Eddington ratio for both X-ray binaries and low-luminosity active galaxies and find NGC 404 to be consistent with other low-luminosity active galaxies. We therefore favor the conclusion that NGC 404 harbors an IMBH accreting at a very low level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
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12. Feedback and the formation of dwarf galaxy stellar haloes.
- Author
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Stinson, G. S., Dalcanton, J. J., Quinn, T., Gogarten, S. M., Kaufmann, T., and Wadsley, J.
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DWARF galaxies , *STAR formation , *GALACTIC dynamics , *STELLAR spectra , *GALACTIC evolution , *SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
Stellar population studies show that low-mass galaxies in all environments exhibit stellar haloes that are older and more spherically distributed than the main body of the galaxy. In some cases, there is a significant intermediate age component that extends beyond the young disc. We examine a suite of Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamic simulations and find that elevated early star formation activity combined with supernova feedback can produce an extended stellar distribution that resembles these haloes for model galaxies ranging from to 35 km s−1, without the need for accretion of subhaloes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Correlations among the properties of galaxies found in a blind H i survey, which also have SDSS optical data.
- Author
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Garcia-Appadoo, D. A., West, A. A., Dalcanton, J. J., Cortese, L., and Disney, M. J.
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GALACTIC evolution ,H [infinity symbol] control ,OPTICAL spectroscopy ,STELLAR luminosity function - Abstract
We have used the Parkes Multibeam system and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey to assemble a sample of 195 galaxies selected originally from their H i signature to avoid biases against unevolved or low surface brightness objects. For each source nine intrinsic properties are measured homogeneously, as well as inclination and an optical spectrum. The sample, which should be almost entirely free of either misidentification or confusion, includes a wide diversity of galaxies ranging from inchoate, low surface brightness dwarfs to giant spirals. Despite this diversity there are five clear correlations among their properties. They include a common dynamical mass-to-light ratio within their optical radii, a correlation between surface brightness and luminosity and a common H i surface density. Such correlation should provide strong constrains on models of galaxy formation and evolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
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14. The Morphological Content of 10 EDisCS Clusters at 0.5 < z < 0.8Based on observations made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, obtained at the Space Telescope Science Institute, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA contract NAS 5-26555. These observations are associated with proposal 9476. Support for this proposal was provided by NASA through a grant from the Space Telescope Science Institute. Based on observations obtained at the ESO Very Large Telescope (VLT) and New Technology Telescope (NTT) as part of the large program 166.A-0162 (the ESO Distant Cluster Survey).
- Author
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Desai, V., Dalcanton, J. J., Aragón-Salamanca, A., Jablonka, P., Poggianti, B., Gogarten, S. M., Simard, L., Milvang-Jensen, B., Rudnick, G., Zaritsky, D., Clowe, D., Halliday, C., Pelló, R., Saglia, R., and White, S.
- Published
- 2007
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15. The observed and predicted spatial distribution of Milky Way satellite galaxies.
- Author
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Willman, B., Governato, F., Dalcanton, J. J., Reed, D., and Quinn, T.
- Subjects
MILKY Way ,DWARF galaxies ,GALAXIES ,METAPHYSICAL cosmology ,ASTRONOMY - Abstract
We review evidence that the census of Milky Way satellites similar to those known may be incomplete at low latitude due to obscuration and in the outer halo due to a decreasing sensitivity to dwarf satellites with distance. We evaluate the possible impact that incompleteness has on comparisons with substructure models by estimating corrections to the known number of dwarfs using empirical and theoretical models. Under the assumption that the true distribution of Milky Way satellites is uniform with latitude, we estimate a 33 per cent incompleteness in the total number of dwarfs due to obscuration at low latitude. Similarly, if the radial distribution of Milky Way satellites matches that of M31, or that of the oldest sub-haloes or the most massive sub-haloes in a simulation, then we estimate a total number of Milky Way dwarfs ranging from 1–3 times the known population. Although the true level of incompleteness is quite uncertain, the fact that our extrapolations yield average total numbers of MW dwarfs that are realistically 1.5–2 times the known population shows that incompleteness needs to be taken seriously when comparing models of dwarf galaxy formation. Interestingly, the radial distribution of the oldest sub-haloes in a ΛCDM simulation of a Milky Way-like galaxy is a close match to the observed distribution of M31's satellites, which suggests that reionization may be an important factor controlling the observability of sub-haloes. We also assess the prospects for a new SDSS search for Milky Way satellites to constrain the possible incompleteness in the outer halo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
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16. The cluster galaxy circular velocity function.
- Author
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Desai, V., Dalcanton, J. J., Mayer, L., Reed, D., Quinn, T., and Governato, F.
- Subjects
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GALAXY clusters , *REDSHIFT , *DARK matter , *DOPPLER effect , *INTERSTELLAR medium , *SPHERICAL astronomy , *EXPANDING universe - Abstract
We present galaxy circular velocity functions (GCVFs) for 34 low-redshift clusters identified in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), for 15 clusters drawn from dark matter simulations of hierarchical structure growth in a ΛCDM cosmology, and for ∼22 000 SDSS field galaxies. We find that the simulations successfully reproduce the shape, amplitude and scatter in the observed distribution of cluster galaxy circular velocities. The power-law slope of the observed cluster GCVF is ∼−2.4, independent of cluster velocity dispersion. The average slope of the simulated GCVFs is somewhat steeper, although formally consistent given the errors. We find that the effects of baryons on galaxy rotation curves is to flatten the simulated cluster GCVF into better agreement with observations. The cumulative GCVFs of the simulated clusters are very similar across a wide range of cluster masses, provided individual subhalo circular velocities are scaled by the circular velocities of the parent cluster. The scatter is consistent with that measured in the cumulative, scaled observed cluster GCVF. Finally, the observed field GCVF deviates significantly from a power law, being flatter than the cluster GCVF at circular velocities less than 200 km s−1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. GHOSTS: The Resolved Stellar Outskirts of Massive Disk Galaxies.
- Author
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de Jong, Roelof S., Seth, A. C., Bell, E. F., Brown, T. M., Bullock, J. S., Courteau, S., Dalcanton, J. J., Ferguson, H. C., Goudfrooij, P., Holfeltz, S., Purcell, C., Radburn-Smith, D., and Zucker, D.
- Abstract
We show initial results from our ongoing HST/ACS GHOSTS survey of the resolved stellar envelopes of 14 nearby, massive disk galaxies. In hierarchical galaxy formation the stellar halos and thick disks of galaxies are formed by accretion of minor satellites and therefore contain valuable information about the (early) assembly process of galaxies. We detect for the first time the very small halo of NGC 4244, a low mass edge-on galaxy. We find that massive galaxies have very extended halos, with equivalent surface brightnesses of 28-29 V-mag arcsec−2 at 20-30 kpc from the disk. The old RGB stars of the thick disk in the NGC 891 and NGC 4244 edge-on galaxies truncate at the same radius as the young thin disk stars, providing insights into the formation of both disk truncations and thick disks. We furthermore present the stellar populations of a very low surface brightness stream around M83, the first such a stream resolved into stars beyond those of the Milky Way and M31. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2006
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18. THE CHANDRA LOCAL VOLUME SURVEY: THE X-RAY POINT-SOURCE CATALOG OF NGC 300.
- Author
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Binder, B., Williams, B. F., Eracleous, M., Gaetz, T. J., Plucinsky, P. P., Skillman, E. D., Dalcanton, J. J., Anderson, S. F., Weisz, D. R., and Kong, A. K. H.
- Subjects
GALACTIC X-ray sources ,GALAXIES ,X-ray astronomy ,NGC 300 (Galaxy) ,SPIRAL galaxies - Abstract
We present the source catalog of a new Chandra ACIS-I observation of NGC 300 obtained as part of the Chandra Local Volume Survey. Our 63 ks exposure covers ∼88% of the D
25 isophote (R ≈ 6.3 kpc) and yields a catalog of 95 X-ray point sources detected at high significance to a limiting unabsorbed 0.35-8 keV luminosity of ∼1036 erg s–1 . Sources were cross-correlated with a previous XMM-Newton catalog, and we find 75 “X-ray transient candidate” sources that were detected by one observatory, but not the other. We derive an X-ray scale length of 1.7 ± 0.2 kpc and a recent star formation rate of 0.12 M☼ yr–1 in excellent agreement with optical observations. Deep, multi-color imaging from the Hubble Space Telescope, covering ∼32% of our Chandra field, was used to search for optical counterparts to the X-ray sources, and we have developed a new source classification scheme to determine which sources are likely X-ray binaries, supernova remnants, and background active galactic nucleus candidates. Finally, we present the X-ray luminosity functions (XLFs) at different X-ray energies, and we find the total NGC 300 X-ray point-source population to be consistent with other late-type galaxies hosting young stellar populations (≲ 50 Myr). We find that XLF of sources associated with older stellar populations has a steeper slope than the XLF of X-ray sources coinciding with young stellar populations, consistent with theoretical predictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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19. EVOLUTION IN THE DUST LANE FRACTION OF EDGE-ON L* V SPIRAL GALAXIES SINCE z = 0.8.
- Author
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Holwerda, B. W., Dalcanton, J. J., Radburn-Smith, D., de Jong, R. S., Guhathakurta, P., Koekemoer, A., Allen, R. J., and Böker, T.
- Subjects
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SPIRAL galaxies , *GRAVITATIONAL collapse , *INTERSTELLAR medium , *COSMIC dust - Abstract
The presence of a well-defined and narrow dust lane in an edge-on spiral galaxy is the observational signature of a thin and dense molecular disk, in which gravitational collapse has overcome turbulence. Using a sample of galaxies out to z ∼ 1 extracted from the COSMOS survey, we identify the fraction of massive (L*V) disks that display a dust lane. Our goal is to explore the evolution in the stability of the molecular interstellar medium (ISM) disks in spiral galaxies over a cosmic timescale. We check the reliability of our morphological classifications against changes in rest-frame wavelength, resolution, and cosmic dimming with (artificially redshifted) images of local galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We find that the fraction of L*V disks with dust lanes in COSMOS is consistent with the local fraction (≈80%) out to z ∼ 0.7. At z = 0.8, the dust lane fraction is only slightly lower. A somewhat lower dust lane fraction in starbursting galaxies tentatively supports the notion that a high specific star formation rate can efficiently destroy or inhibit a dense molecular disk. A small subsample of higher redshift COSMOS galaxies display low internal reddening (E[B – V]), as well as a low incidence of dust lanes. These may be disks in which the growth of the dusty ISM disk lags behind that of the stellar disk. We note that at z = 0.8, the most massive galaxies display a lower dust lane fraction than lower mass galaxies. A small contribution of recent mergers or starbursts to this most massive population may be responsible. The fact that the fraction of galaxies with dust lanes in COSMOS is consistent with little or no evolution implies that models to explain the spectral energy distribution or the host galaxy dust extinction of supernovae based on local galaxies are still applicable to higher redshift spirals. It also suggests that dust lanes are long-lived phenomena or can be reformed over very short timescales. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
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20. THE SPITZER LOCAL VOLUME LEGACY: SURVEY DESCRIPTION AND INFRARED PHOTOMETRY.
- Author
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Dale, D. A., Cohen, S. A., Johnson, L. C., Schuster, M. D., Calzetti, D., Engelbracht, C. W., Gil de Paz, A., Kennicutt, R. C., Lee, J. C., Begum, A., Block, M., Dalcanton, J. J., Funes, J. G., Gordon, K. D., Johnson, B. D., Marble, A. R., Sakai, S., Skillman, E. D., van Zee, L., and Walter, F.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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21. AN EXTENDED DUST DISK IN A SPIRAL GALAXY: AN OCCULTING GALAXY PAIR IN THE ACS NEARBY GALAXY SURVEY TREASURY.
- Author
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Holwerda, B. W., Keel, W. C., Williams, B., Dalcanton, J. J., and de Jong, R. S.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Breathing in Low-Mass Galaxies: A Study of Episodic Star Formation.
- Author
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Stinson, G. S., Dalcanton, J. J., Quinn, T., Kaufmann, T., and Wadsley, J.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Stellar Populations across the NGC 4244 Truncated Galactic Disk.
- Author
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de Jong, Roelof S., Seth, A. C., Radburn-Smith, D. J., Bell, E. F., Brown, T. M., Bullock, J. S., Courteau, S., Dalcanton, J. J., Ferguson, H. C., Goudfrooij, P., Holfeltz, S., Holwerda, B. W., Purcell, C., Sick, J., and Zucker, D. B.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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24. The Role of the Radial Orbit Instability in Dark Matter Halo Formation and Structure.
- Author
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Meyer, J. M., Dalcanton, J. J., Quinn, T. R., Williams, L. L. R., Barnes, E. I., Babul, A., Austin, C. G., and Maas, R.
- Abstract
For nearly a decade, N-body simulations have revealed a nearly universal dark matter density profile. This density profile appears to be robust to changes in the overall density of the universe and the underlying power spectrum. Despite its universality, however, the physical origin of this profile has not yet been well understood. Semi-analytic models have suggested that scale lengths in dark matter halos may be determined by the onset of the radial orbit instability. We have tested this theory using N-body simulations of collapsing dark matter halos. The resulting halo structures are prolate in shape, due to the mild aspect of the instability. We find that the radial orbit instability sets a scale length at which the velocity dispersion changes rapidly from isotropic to radially anisotropic. Preliminary analysis suggests that this scale length is proportional to the radius at which the density profile changes shape, as is the case in the semi-analytic models; however, the coefficient of proportionality is different by a factor of ~2. We conclude that the radial orbit instability may be a key physical mechanism responsible for the nearly universal profiles of simulated dark matter halos. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Real-time magnetic resonance imaging of laser heat deposition in tissue.
- Author
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Bleier AR, Jolesz FA, Cohen MS, Weisskoff RM, Dalcanton JJ, Higuchi N, Feinberg DA, Rosen BR, McKinstry RC, and Hushek SG
- Subjects
- Animals, Brain surgery, Hot Temperature, Models, Structural, Rabbits, Brain pathology, Laser Therapy, Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Abstract
We applied diffusion-sensitive echo planar (Instascan) imaging to study thermal changes caused by a Nd:YAG laser. Images of phantom materials and normal rabbit brain tissue in vivo, acquired in 150 ms, every 2s, clearly showed the dynamics of temperature-related signal intensity changes in the regions irradiated by the laser.
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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