751 results on '"Vollmer B"'
Search Results
202. Ram pressure stripping of the multiphase ISM and star formation in the Virgo spiral galaxy NGC 4330
- Author
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Vollmer, B., primary, Soida, M., additional, Braine, J., additional, Abramson, A., additional, Beck, R., additional, Chung, A., additional, Crowl, H. H., additional, Kenney, J. D. P., additional, and van Gorkom, J. H., additional
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
203. A method for determining radio continuum spectra, and its application to large surveys
- Author
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Vollmer, B., Davoust, E., Dubois, P., Genova, F., Ochsenbein, F., van Driel, W., Vollmer, B., Davoust, E., Dubois, P., Genova, F., Ochsenbein, F., and van Driel, W.
- Abstract
A new tool to extract cross-identifications and radio continuum spectra from radio catalogues contained in the VIZIER database of the CDS is presented. The code can handle radio surveys at different frequencies with different resolutions. It has been applied to 22 survey catalogues at 11 different frequencies containing a total of 3.5 million sources, which resulted in over 700000 independent radio cross-identifications and ~67000 independent radio spectra with more than two frequency points. A validation of the code has been performed using independent radio cross-correlations from the literature. The mean error of the determined spectral index is +-0.3. The code produces an output of variable format that can easily be adapted to the purpose of the user., Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
204. A Virgo high-resolution Halpha kinematical survey
- Author
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Chemin, L., Balkowski, C., Cayatte, V., Adami, C., Amram, P., Boselli, A., Boulesteix, J., Carignan, C., Garrido, O., Hernandez, O., Marcelin, M., Vollmer, B., Chemin, L., Balkowski, C., Cayatte, V., Adami, C., Amram, P., Boselli, A., Boulesteix, J., Carignan, C., Garrido, O., Hernandez, O., Marcelin, M., and Vollmer, B.
- Abstract
We have completed a survey of 30 Virgo cluster galaxies in the Halpha emission-line using Fabry-Perot interferometry. The goal of the survey is to obtain a high angular resolution sample of velocity fields of spirals and to study the environmental effects on their kinematics and dynamics., Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, Proceedings SF2A 2004, eds.: F. Combes, D. Barret, T. Contini, F. Meynadier and L. Pagani
- Published
- 2004
205. Detection of a radio halo in the Virgo cluster
- Author
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Vollmer, B., Reich, W., Wielebinski, R., Vollmer, B., Reich, W., and Wielebinski, R.
- Abstract
New Effelsberg 1.4 GHz observations of the central 10\degr x 10\degr of the Virgo cluster are presented. NVSS data are used to subtract point sources from our map. During the data reduction process special care is taken (i) to disentangle emission from the North Polar Spur from emission from the Virgo cluster, (ii) to disentangle emission from the strong M87 sidelobes from emission from the Virgo cluster, and (iii) to correct for non-linear ground emission due to the long scans. We detect a low surface brightness radio halo with a flux density of 5 +/- 1.5 Jy centered close to the elliptical galaxy M86. This halo is much weaker than that observed in the Coma cluster. It is reminiscent of a past interaction between the intracluster medium of M86 and a low density gas, belonging most probably to the Virgo cluster., Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
206. Radio continuum observations of the Virgo cluster spiral NGC 4522 The signature of ram pressure
- Author
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Vollmer, B., Beck, R., Kenney, J. D. P., van Gorkom, J. H., Vollmer, B., Beck, R., Kenney, J. D. P., and van Gorkom, J. H.
- Abstract
Radio continuum observations at 20 and 6 cm of the highly inclined Virgo spiral galaxy NGC 4522 are presented. Both, 20 and 6 cm total emission distributions are asymmetric with an extended component to the west where extraplanar atomic gas and Halpha emission are found. The 6 cm polarized emission is located at the eastern edge of the galactic disk. Its peak is located about 1 kpc to the east of the total emission peak. We argue that this phenomena is a characteristic feature for cluster galaxies which are experiencing significant pressure from the intracluster medium. The degree of polarization decreases from the east to the west. The flattest spectral index between 20 and 6 cm coincides with the peak of the 6 cm polarized emission. These findings are consistent with a picture of a large scale shock due to ram pressure located at the east of the galaxy where cosmic rays are accelerated. We conclude that it is likely that the galaxy experiences active ram pressure., Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in AJ
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
207. NGC 4569: recent evidence for a past ram pressure stripping event
- Author
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Vollmer, B., Balkowski, C., Cayatte, V., van Driel, W., Huchtmeier, W., Vollmer, B., Balkowski, C., Cayatte, V., van Driel, W., and Huchtmeier, W.
- Abstract
Deep 21-cm HI line observations of the Virgo cluster spiral galaxy NGC 4569 have been obtained with the VLA in its D configuration and with the Effelsberg 100-m telescope. A low surface density arm was discovered in the west of the galaxy, whose velocity field is distinct from that of the overall disk rotation. The observed gas distribution, velocity field, and velocity dispersion are compared to snapshots of dynamical simulations that include the effects of ram pressure. Two different scenarios were explored: (i) ongoing stripping and (ii) a major stripping event that took place about 300 Myr ago. It is concluded that only the post-stripping scenario can reproduce the main observed characteristics of NGC 4569. It is not possible to determine if the gas disk of NGC 4569 had already been truncated before it underwent the ram pressure event that lead to its observed HI deficiency., Comment: 13 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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208. Radio continuum spectra of galaxies in the Virgo cluster region
- Author
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Vollmer, B., Thierbach, M., Wielebinski, R., Vollmer, B., Thierbach, M., and Wielebinski, R.
- Abstract
New radio continuum observations of galaxies in the Virgo cluster region at 4.85, 8.6, and 10.55 GHz are presented. These observations are combined with existing measurements at 1.4 and 0.325 GHz. The sample includes 81 galaxies were spectra with more than two frequencies could be derived. Galaxies that show a radio-FIR excess exhibit central activity (HII, LINER, AGN). The four Virgo galaxies with the highest absolute radio excess are found within 2 degrees of the center of the cluster. Galaxies showing flat radio spectra also host active centers. There is no clear trend between the spectral index and the galaxy's distance to the cluster center., Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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209. Diffusion MRI in corticofugal fibers correlates with hand function in unilateral cerebral palsy
- Author
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Holmstrom, L., primary, Lennartsson, F., additional, Eliasson, A.- C., additional, Flodmark, O., additional, Clark, C., additional, Tedroff, K., additional, Forssberg, H., additional, and Vollmer, B., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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210. Hot gas in Mach cones around Virgo cluster spiral galaxies
- Author
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Weżgowiec, M., primary, Vollmer, B., additional, Ehle, M., additional, Dettmar, R.-J., additional, Bomans, D. J., additional, Chyży, K. T., additional, Urbanik, M., additional, and Soida, M., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
211. A Simultaneous Multi-Band Technique to Detect LSB Galaxies Applied to Virgo Cluster NGVS Images
- Author
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Ferriere, E., primary, Duc, P-A., additional, Mei, S., additional, Vollmer, B., additional, Perret, B., additional, Collet, Ch., additional, van Driel, W., additional, Bonnarel, F., additional, Louys, M., additional, and Sabatini, S., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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212. Measurement of the mass difference m(D-s(+))-m(D+) at CDF II
- Author
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Acosta, D., Affolder, T., Ahn, M. H., Akimoto, T., Albrow, M. G., Alcorn, B., Alexander, C., Allen, D., Allspach, D., Amaral, P., Ambrose, D., Amendolia, S. R., Amidei, D., Amundson, J., Anastassov, A., Anderson, J., Anikeev, K., Annovi, A., Antos, J., Aoki, M., Apollinari, G., Arguin, J. F., Arisawa, T., Artikov, A., Asakawa, T., Ashmanskas, W., Attal, A., Avanzini, C., Azfar, F., Azzi-Bacchetta, P., Babik, M., Bacchetta, N., Bachacou, H., Badgett, W., Bailey, S., Bakken, J., Barbaro-Galtieri, A., Bardi, A., Bari, M., Barker, G., Barnes, V. E., Barnett, B. A., Baroiant, S., Barone, M., Barsotti, E., Basti, A., Bauer, G., Beckner, D., Bedeschi, F., Behari, S., Belforte, S., Bell, W. H., Bellendir, G., Bellettini, G., Bellinger, J., Benjamin, D., Beretvas, A., Berg, B., Bhatti, A., Binkley, M., Bisello, D., Bishai, M., Blair, R. E., Blocker, C., Bloom, K., Blumenfeld, B., Bocci, A., Bodek, A., Bogdan, M., Bolla, G., Bolshov, A., Booth, P. S. L., Bortoletto, D., Boudreau, J., Bourov, S., Bowden, M., Box, D., Bromberg, C., Brown, W., Brozovic, M., Brubaker, E., Buckley-Geer, L., Budagov, J., Budd, H. S., Burkett, K., Busetto, G., Bussey, P., Byon-Wagner, A., Byrum, K. L., Cabrera, S., Calafiura, P., Campanelli, M., Campbell, M., Canal, P., Canepa, A., Carithers, W., Carlsmith, D., Carosi, R., Carrell, K., Carter, H., Caskey, W., Castro, A., Cauz, D., Cerri, A., Cerri, C., Cerrito, L., Chandler, J. T., Chapman, J., Chappa, S., Chen, C., Chen, Y. C., Cheng, M. T., Chertok, M., Chiarelli, G., Chirikov-Zorin, I., Chlachidze, G., Chlebana, F., Cho, I., Cho, K., Chokheli, D., Chu, M. L., Chung, J. Y., Chung, W. H., Chung, Y. S., Ciobanu, C. I., Ciocci, M. A., Cisko, S., Clark, A. G., Coca, M., Coiley, K., Colijn, A. P., Colombo, R., Connolly, A., Convery, M., Conway, J., Cooper, G., Cordelli, M., Cortiana, G., Cranshaw, J., Cudzewicz, R., Culbertson, R., Currat, C., Cyr, D., Dagenhart, D., DalMonte, L., DaRonco, S., D'Auria, S., Davila, R., Dawson, J., Dawson, T., de Barbaro, P., DeBaun, C., De Cecco, S., Dell'Agnello, S., Dell'Orso, M., DeMaat, R., Demar, P., Demers, S., Demortier, L., Deninno, M., De Pedis, D., Derwent, P. F., Derylo, G., Devlin, T., Dionisi, C., Dittmann, J. R., Doksus, P., Dominguez, A., Donati, S., Donno, F., D'Onofrio, M., Dorigo, T., Downing, R., Drake, G., Drennan, C., Drollinger, V., Dunietz, I., Dyer, A., Ebina, K., Eddy, N., Ely, R., Engels, E., Erbacher, R., Erdmann, M., Errede, D., Errede, S., Eusebi, R., Fang, H. C., Farrington, S., Feild, R. G., Feindt, M., Fernandez, J. P., Ferretti, C., Field, R. D., Fiori, I., Fischler, M., Flanagan, G., Flaugher, B., Flores-Castillo, L. R., Foland, A., Forrester, S., Foster, G. W., Franklin, M., Frisch, H., Fromm, J., Fujii, Y., Furic, I., Galeotti, S., Galet, G., Gallas, A., Gallinaro, M., Ganel, O., Garcia, C., Garcia-Sciveres, M., Garfinkel, A. F., Garwacki, M., Garzoglio, G., Gay, C., Gerberich, H., Gerdes, D. W., Gerchtein, E., Gerstenslager, J., Giacchetti, L., Giagu, S., Giannetti, P., Gibson, A., Gillespie, G., Gingu, C., Ginsburg, C., Giolo, K., Giordani, M., Glagolev, V., Glenzinski, D., Glossen, R., Gold, M., Goldschmidt, N., Goldstein, D., Goldstein, J., Gomez, G., Goncharov, M., Gonzalez, H., Gordon, S., Gorelov, I., Goshaw, A. T., Gotra, Y., Goulianos, K., Grado, J., Gregori, M., Gresele, A., Griffin, T., Grim, G., Grimm, C., Gromoll, S., Grosso-Pilcher, C., Gu, C., Guarino, V., Guenther, M., da Costa, J. G., Haber, C., Hahn, A., Hahn, K., Hahn, S. R., Halkiadakis, E., Hall, C., Handler, R., Haney, M., Hao, W., Happacher, F., Hara, K., Hare, M., Harr, R. F., Harrington, J., Harris, R. M., Hartmann, F., Hatakeyama, K., Hauser, J., Hawke, T., Hays, C., Heider, E., Heinemann, B., Heinrich, J., Heiss, A., Hennecke, M., Herber, R., Herndon, M., Herren, M., Hicks, D., Hill, C., Hirschbuehl, D., Hocker, A., Hoff, J., Hoffman, K. D., Hoftiezer, J., Holloway, A., Holloway, L., Holm, S., Holmgren, D., Hou, S., Houlden, M. A., Howell, J., Hrycyk, M., Hubbard, P., Hughes, R. E., Huffman, B. T., Humbert, J., Huston, J., Ikado, K., Incandela, J., Introzzi, G., Iori, M., Ishizawa, I., Issever, C., Ivanov, A., Iwata, Y., Iyutin, B., James, E., Jang, D., Jarrell, J., Jeans, D., Jensen, H., Jetton, R., Johnson, M., Jones, M., Jones, T., Jun, S. Y., Junk, T., Kallenbach, J., Kamon, T., Kang, J., Unel, M. K., Karchin, P. E., Kartal, S., Kasha, H., Kasten, M., Kato, Y., Kemp, Y., Kennedy, R. D., Kephart, K., Kephart, R., Khazins, D., Khotilovich, V., Kilminster, B., Kim, B. J., Kim, D. H., Kim, H. S., Kim, J., Kim, M. J., Kim, M. S., Kim, S. B., Kim, S. H., Kim, T. H., Kim, Y. K., King, B. T., Kirby, M., Kirk, M., Kirsch, L., Klein, R., Klimenko, S., Knapp, M., Knoblauch, D., Knuteson, B., Kobayashi, H., Koehn, P., Kondo, K., Kong, D. J., Konigsberg, J., Kononenko, W., Kordas, K., Korn, A., Korytov, A., Kotelnikov, K., Kotwal, A., Kovalev, A., Kowalkowski, J., Kraus, J., Kravchenko, I., Kreymer, A., Kroll, J., Kruse, M., Krutelyov, V., Kuhlmann, S. E., Kumar, A., Kuznetsova, N., Laasanen, A. T., Lai, S., Lami, S., Lammel, S., Lamore, D., Lancaster, J., Lancaster, M., Lander, R., Lanfranco, G., Lannon, K., Lath, A., Latino, G., Lauhakangas, R., Lazzizzera, I., Le, Y., LeCompte, T., Lee, J., Lee, K., Lee, S. W., Lei, C. M., Leininger, M., Leonardi, G. L., Leonardo, N., Leone, S., Levshina, T., Lewis, F., Lewis, J. D., Li, K., Lin, C. S., Lindgren, M., Liss, T. M., Litvintsev, D. O., Liu, T., Liu, Y., Lobban, O., Lockyer, N. S., Loginov, A., Loken, J., Loreti, M., Loskot, J., Loverre, P. F., Lucchesi, D., Lukens, P., Lutz, P., Lyons, L., Lys, J., MacNerland, J., MacQueen, D., Madorsky, A., Madrak, R., Maeshima, K., Maksimovic, P., Malferrari, L., Mammini, P., Manca, G., Mandrichenko, I., Manea, C., Marginean, R., Marrafino, J., Martin, A., Martin, M., Martin, V., Martinez, M., Maruyama, T., Matsunaga, H., Mayer, J., Mayers, G. M., Mazzanti, P., McFarland, K. S., McGivern, D., McIntyre, P. M., McNamara, P., McNulty, R., Menzemer, S., Menzione, A., Merkel, P., Mesropian, C., Messina, A., Meyer, A., Miao, T., Michael, N., Miller, J. S., Miller, L., Miller, R., Miquel, R., Miscetti, S., Mitselmakher, G., Miyamoto, A., Miyazaki, Y., Mizicko, D., Moccia, S., Moggi, A., Moggi, N., Montero, S., Moore, R., Moore, T., Morris, L., Morsani, F., Moulik, T., Mukherjee, A., Mulhearn, M., Muller, T., Mumford, R., Munar, A., Murat, P., Murgia, S., Nachtman, J., Nagaslaev, V., Nahn, S., Nakamura, I., Nakano, I., Napier, A., Napora, R., Necula, V., Nelson, C., Nelson, T., Neu, C., Neubauer, M. S., Neuberger, D., Newby, W., Newcomer, F. M., Newman-Holmes, C., Niell, F., Nielsen, J., Nicollerat, A. S., Nigmanov, T., Niu, H., Nodulman, L., Noe, W., Oesterberg, K., Ogawa, T., Oh, S., Oh, Y. D., Ohl, K., Ohsugi, T., Oishi, R., Okusawa, T., Oldeman, R., Orava, R., Orejudos, W., Orr, S., Pagani, G., Pagliarone, C., Palmonari, F., Ramos, I., Panacek, S., Pantano, D., Paoletti, R., Papadimitriou, V., Pasetes, R., Pashapour, S., Passuello, D., Paterno, M., Patrick, J., Pauletta, G., Paulini, M., Pauly, T., Paus, C., Pavlicek, V., Pavlon, S., Pellett, D., Penzo, A., Perington, B., Petragnani, G., Petravick, D., Phillips, T. J., Photos, F., Piacentino, G., Picciolo, C., Piccoli, L., Piedra, J., Pitts, K. T., Plunkett, R., Pompos, A., Pondrom, L., Pope, G., Poukhov, O., Prakoshyn, F., Pratt, T., Profeti, A., Pronko, A., Proudfoot, J., Punzi, G., Rademacker, J., Rafaelli, F., Rakitine, A., Rappoccio, S., Ratnikov, F., Rauch, J., Ray, H., Rechenmacher, R., Reia, S., Reichold, A., Rekovic, V., Renton, P., Rescigno, M., Rimondi, F., Rinnert, K., Ristori, L., Riveline, M., Rivetta, C., Robertson, W. J., Robson, A., Rodrigo, T., Rolli, S., Roman, M., Rosenberg, S., Rosenson, L., Roser, R., Rossin, R., Rott, C., Ruiz, A., Russ, J., Ryan, D., Saarikko, H., Sabik, S., Sadler, L., Safonov, A., St Denis, R., Sakumoto, W. K., Saltzberg, D., Sanchez, C., Sanders, H., Sanders, R., Sandrew, M., Sansoni, A., Santi, L., Sarkar, S., Sarraj, H., Sarraj, J., Sato, H., Savard, P., Schemitz, P., Schlabach, P., Schmidt, E. E., Schmidt, J., Schmidt, M. P., Schmitt, M., Schmitt, R., Schmitz, M., Schofield, G., Schuh, K., Schultz, K., Scodellaro, L., Scott, L., Scribano, A., Scuri, F., Sedov, A., Segler, S., Seidel, S., Seiya, Y., Semenov, A., Semeria, F., Sexton-Kennedy, L., Sfiligoi, I., Shallenberger, J., Shapiro, M. D., Shaw, T., Shears, T., Shenai, A., Shepard, P. F., Shimojima, M., Shochet, M., Shon, Y., Shoun, M., Sidoti, A., Siegrist, J., Sieh, C., Siket, M., Sill, A., Silva, R., Simaitis, V., Sinervo, P., Sirotenko, I., Sisakyan, A., Skiba, A., Slaughter, A. J., Sliwa, K., Smith, J., Snider, F. D., Snihur, R., Somalwar, S. V., Spalding, J., Spezziga, M., Spiegel, L., Spinella, F., Spiropulu, M., Stadie, H., Stanek, R., Stanfield, N., Stelzer, B., Stelzer-Chilton, O., Strologas, J., Stuart, D., Stuermer, W., Sukhanov, A., Sumorok, K., Sun, H., Suzuki, T., Syu, J., Szymulanski, A., Taffard, A., Takach, S. F., Takano, H., Takashima, R., Takeuchi, Y., Takikawa, K., Tamburello, P., Tanaka, M., Tanaka, R., Tang, D., Tanimoto, N., Tannenbaum, B., Tapprogge, S., Taylor, R. D., Teafoe, G., Tecchio, M., Teng, P. K., Terashi, K., Terentieva, T., Tesarek, R. J., Tether, S., Thom, J., Thomas, A., Thompson, A. S., Thomson, E., Thurman-Keup, R., Timm, S., Tipton, P., Tkaczyk, S., Toback, D., Tollefson, K., Tonelli, D., Tonnesmann, M., Torretta, D., Trimby, C., Trischuk, W., Trumbo, J., Tseng, J., Tsuchiya, R., Tsuno, S., Tsybychev, D., Turini, N., Turner, M., Ukegawa, F., Unverhau, T., Uozumi, S., Usynin, D., Vacavant, L., Vaiciulis, T., Van Berg, R., Varganov, A., Vataga, E., Vejcik, S., Velev, G., Veramendi, G., Vickey, T., Vidal, R., Vila, I., Vilar, R., Vittone, M., Voirin, J., Vollmer, B., Vollrath, I., Volobouev, I., von der Mey, M., Votava, M., Wagner, R. G., Wagner, R. L., Wagner, W., Wallace, N., Walter, T., Walters, A., Wan, Z., Wandersee, A., Wang, M. J., Wang, S. M., Ward, B., Waschke, S., Waters, D., Watts, T., Weber, M., Weems, L., Wenzel, H., Wester, W., Whitehouse, B., Wickenberg, W., Wicklund, A. B., Wicklund, E., Wigmans, R., Wike, C., Wilkes, T., Williams, H. H., Wilson, P., Winer, B. L., Wittich, P., Wolbers, S., Wolter, M., Wong, M., Worcester, M., Worland, R., Worm, S., Wright, T., Wu, J., Wu, X., Wurthwein, F., Wyatt, A., Yagil, A., Yamamoto, K., Yamashita, T., Yang, U. K., Yao, W., Yarema, R., Yeh, G. P., Yi, K., Yocum, D., Yoh, J., Yoon, P., Yorita, K., Yoshida, T., Yu, I., Yu, S., Yu, Z., Yun, J. C., Zalokar, M., Zanello, L., Zanetti, A., Zaw, I., Zetti, F., Zhou, J., Zimmerman, T., Zsenei, A., Zucchelli, S., Acosta, D., Affolder, T., Ahn, M. H., Akimoto, T., Albrow, M. G., Alcorn, B., Alexander, C., Allen, D., Allspach, D., Amaral, P., Ambrose, D., Amendolia, S. R., Amidei, D., Amundson, J., Anastassov, A., Anderson, J., Anikeev, K., Annovi, A., Antos, J., Aoki, M., Apollinari, G., Arguin, J. F., Arisawa, T., Artikov, A., Asakawa, T., Ashmanskas, W., Attal, A., Avanzini, C., Azfar, F., Azzi-Bacchetta, P., Babik, M., Bacchetta, N., Bachacou, H., Badgett, W., Bailey, S., Bakken, J., Barbaro-Galtieri, A., Bardi, A., Bari, M., Barker, G., Barnes, V. E., Barnett, B. A., Baroiant, S., Barone, M., Barsotti, E., Basti, A., Bauer, G., Beckner, D., Bedeschi, F., Behari, S., Belforte, S., Bell, W. H., Bellendir, G., Bellettini, G., Bellinger, J., Benjamin, D., Beretvas, A., Berg, B., Bhatti, A., Binkley, M., Bisello, D., Bishai, M., Blair, R. E., Blocker, C., Bloom, K., Blumenfeld, B., Bocci, A., Bodek, A., Bogdan, M., Bolla, G., Bolshov, A., Booth, P. S. L., Bortoletto, D., Boudreau, J., Bourov, S., Bowden, M., Box, D., Bromberg, C., Brown, W., Brozovic, M., Brubaker, E., Buckley-Geer, L., Budagov, J., Budd, H. S., Burkett, K., Busetto, G., Bussey, P., Byon-Wagner, A., Byrum, K. L., Cabrera, S., Calafiura, P., Campanelli, M., Campbell, M., Canal, P., Canepa, A., Carithers, W., Carlsmith, D., Carosi, R., Carrell, K., Carter, H., Caskey, W., Castro, A., Cauz, D., Cerri, A., Cerri, C., Cerrito, L., Chandler, J. T., Chapman, J., Chappa, S., Chen, C., Chen, Y. C., Cheng, M. T., Chertok, M., Chiarelli, G., Chirikov-Zorin, I., Chlachidze, G., Chlebana, F., Cho, I., Cho, K., Chokheli, D., Chu, M. L., Chung, J. Y., Chung, W. H., Chung, Y. S., Ciobanu, C. I., Ciocci, M. A., Cisko, S., Clark, A. G., Coca, M., Coiley, K., Colijn, A. P., Colombo, R., Connolly, A., Convery, M., Conway, J., Cooper, G., Cordelli, M., Cortiana, G., Cranshaw, J., Cudzewicz, R., Culbertson, R., Currat, C., Cyr, D., Dagenhart, D., DalMonte, L., DaRonco, S., D'Auria, S., Davila, R., Dawson, J., Dawson, T., de Barbaro, P., DeBaun, C., De Cecco, S., Dell'Agnello, S., Dell'Orso, M., DeMaat, R., Demar, P., Demers, S., Demortier, L., Deninno, M., De Pedis, D., Derwent, P. F., Derylo, G., Devlin, T., Dionisi, C., Dittmann, J. R., Doksus, P., Dominguez, A., Donati, S., Donno, F., D'Onofrio, M., Dorigo, T., Downing, R., Drake, G., Drennan, C., Drollinger, V., Dunietz, I., Dyer, A., Ebina, K., Eddy, N., Ely, R., Engels, E., Erbacher, R., Erdmann, M., Errede, D., Errede, S., Eusebi, R., Fang, H. C., Farrington, S., Feild, R. G., Feindt, M., Fernandez, J. P., Ferretti, C., Field, R. D., Fiori, I., Fischler, M., Flanagan, G., Flaugher, B., Flores-Castillo, L. R., Foland, A., Forrester, S., Foster, G. W., Franklin, M., Frisch, H., Fromm, J., Fujii, Y., Furic, I., Galeotti, S., Galet, G., Gallas, A., Gallinaro, M., Ganel, O., Garcia, C., Garcia-Sciveres, M., Garfinkel, A. F., Garwacki, M., Garzoglio, G., Gay, C., Gerberich, H., Gerdes, D. W., Gerchtein, E., Gerstenslager, J., Giacchetti, L., Giagu, S., Giannetti, P., Gibson, A., Gillespie, G., Gingu, C., Ginsburg, C., Giolo, K., Giordani, M., Glagolev, V., Glenzinski, D., Glossen, R., Gold, M., Goldschmidt, N., Goldstein, D., Goldstein, J., Gomez, G., Goncharov, M., Gonzalez, H., Gordon, S., Gorelov, I., Goshaw, A. T., Gotra, Y., Goulianos, K., Grado, J., Gregori, M., Gresele, A., Griffin, T., Grim, G., Grimm, C., Gromoll, S., Grosso-Pilcher, C., Gu, C., Guarino, V., Guenther, M., da Costa, J. G., Haber, C., Hahn, A., Hahn, K., Hahn, S. R., Halkiadakis, E., Hall, C., Handler, R., Haney, M., Hao, W., Happacher, F., Hara, K., Hare, M., Harr, R. F., Harrington, J., Harris, R. M., Hartmann, F., Hatakeyama, K., Hauser, J., Hawke, T., Hays, C., Heider, E., Heinemann, B., Heinrich, J., Heiss, A., Hennecke, M., Herber, R., Herndon, M., Herren, M., Hicks, D., Hill, C., Hirschbuehl, D., Hocker, A., Hoff, J., Hoffman, K. D., Hoftiezer, J., Holloway, A., Holloway, L., Holm, S., Holmgren, D., Hou, S., Houlden, M. A., Howell, J., Hrycyk, M., Hubbard, P., Hughes, R. E., Huffman, B. T., Humbert, J., Huston, J., Ikado, K., Incandela, J., Introzzi, G., Iori, M., Ishizawa, I., Issever, C., Ivanov, A., Iwata, Y., Iyutin, B., James, E., Jang, D., Jarrell, J., Jeans, D., Jensen, H., Jetton, R., Johnson, M., Jones, M., Jones, T., Jun, S. Y., Junk, T., Kallenbach, J., Kamon, T., Kang, J., Unel, M. K., Karchin, P. E., Kartal, S., Kasha, H., Kasten, M., Kato, Y., Kemp, Y., Kennedy, R. D., Kephart, K., Kephart, R., Khazins, D., Khotilovich, V., Kilminster, B., Kim, B. J., Kim, D. H., Kim, H. S., Kim, J., Kim, M. J., Kim, M. S., Kim, S. B., Kim, S. H., Kim, T. H., Kim, Y. K., King, B. T., Kirby, M., Kirk, M., Kirsch, L., Klein, R., Klimenko, S., Knapp, M., Knoblauch, D., Knuteson, B., Kobayashi, H., Koehn, P., Kondo, K., Kong, D. J., Konigsberg, J., Kononenko, W., Kordas, K., Korn, A., Korytov, A., Kotelnikov, K., Kotwal, A., Kovalev, A., Kowalkowski, J., Kraus, J., Kravchenko, I., Kreymer, A., Kroll, J., Kruse, M., Krutelyov, V., Kuhlmann, S. E., Kumar, A., Kuznetsova, N., Laasanen, A. T., Lai, S., Lami, S., Lammel, S., Lamore, D., Lancaster, J., Lancaster, M., Lander, R., Lanfranco, G., Lannon, K., Lath, A., Latino, G., Lauhakangas, R., Lazzizzera, I., Le, Y., LeCompte, T., Lee, J., Lee, K., Lee, S. W., Lei, C. M., Leininger, M., Leonardi, G. L., Leonardo, N., Leone, S., Levshina, T., Lewis, F., Lewis, J. D., Li, K., Lin, C. S., Lindgren, M., Liss, T. M., Litvintsev, D. O., Liu, T., Liu, Y., Lobban, O., Lockyer, N. S., Loginov, A., Loken, J., Loreti, M., Loskot, J., Loverre, P. F., Lucchesi, D., Lukens, P., Lutz, P., Lyons, L., Lys, J., MacNerland, J., MacQueen, D., Madorsky, A., Madrak, R., Maeshima, K., Maksimovic, P., Malferrari, L., Mammini, P., Manca, G., Mandrichenko, I., Manea, C., Marginean, R., Marrafino, J., Martin, A., Martin, M., Martin, V., Martinez, M., Maruyama, T., Matsunaga, H., Mayer, J., Mayers, G. M., Mazzanti, P., McFarland, K. S., McGivern, D., McIntyre, P. M., McNamara, P., McNulty, R., Menzemer, S., Menzione, A., Merkel, P., Mesropian, C., Messina, A., Meyer, A., Miao, T., Michael, N., Miller, J. S., Miller, L., Miller, R., Miquel, R., Miscetti, S., Mitselmakher, G., Miyamoto, A., Miyazaki, Y., Mizicko, D., Moccia, S., Moggi, A., Moggi, N., Montero, S., Moore, R., Moore, T., Morris, L., Morsani, F., Moulik, T., Mukherjee, A., Mulhearn, M., Muller, T., Mumford, R., Munar, A., Murat, P., Murgia, S., Nachtman, J., Nagaslaev, V., Nahn, S., Nakamura, I., Nakano, I., Napier, A., Napora, R., Necula, V., Nelson, C., Nelson, T., Neu, C., Neubauer, M. S., Neuberger, D., Newby, W., Newcomer, F. M., Newman-Holmes, C., Niell, F., Nielsen, J., Nicollerat, A. S., Nigmanov, T., Niu, H., Nodulman, L., Noe, W., Oesterberg, K., Ogawa, T., Oh, S., Oh, Y. D., Ohl, K., Ohsugi, T., Oishi, R., Okusawa, T., Oldeman, R., Orava, R., Orejudos, W., Orr, S., Pagani, G., Pagliarone, C., Palmonari, F., Ramos, I., Panacek, S., Pantano, D., Paoletti, R., Papadimitriou, V., Pasetes, R., Pashapour, S., Passuello, D., Paterno, M., Patrick, J., Pauletta, G., Paulini, M., Pauly, T., Paus, C., Pavlicek, V., Pavlon, S., Pellett, D., Penzo, A., Perington, B., Petragnani, G., Petravick, D., Phillips, T. J., Photos, F., Piacentino, G., Picciolo, C., Piccoli, L., Piedra, J., Pitts, K. T., Plunkett, R., Pompos, A., Pondrom, L., Pope, G., Poukhov, O., Prakoshyn, F., Pratt, T., Profeti, A., Pronko, A., Proudfoot, J., Punzi, G., Rademacker, J., Rafaelli, F., Rakitine, A., Rappoccio, S., Ratnikov, F., Rauch, J., Ray, H., Rechenmacher, R., Reia, S., Reichold, A., Rekovic, V., Renton, P., Rescigno, M., Rimondi, F., Rinnert, K., Ristori, L., Riveline, M., Rivetta, C., Robertson, W. J., Robson, A., Rodrigo, T., Rolli, S., Roman, M., Rosenberg, S., Rosenson, L., Roser, R., Rossin, R., Rott, C., Ruiz, A., Russ, J., Ryan, D., Saarikko, H., Sabik, S., Sadler, L., Safonov, A., St Denis, R., Sakumoto, W. K., Saltzberg, D., Sanchez, C., Sanders, H., Sanders, R., Sandrew, M., Sansoni, A., Santi, L., Sarkar, S., Sarraj, H., Sarraj, J., Sato, H., Savard, P., Schemitz, P., Schlabach, P., Schmidt, E. E., Schmidt, J., Schmidt, M. P., Schmitt, M., Schmitt, R., Schmitz, M., Schofield, G., Schuh, K., Schultz, K., Scodellaro, L., Scott, L., Scribano, A., Scuri, F., Sedov, A., Segler, S., Seidel, S., Seiya, Y., Semenov, A., Semeria, F., Sexton-Kennedy, L., Sfiligoi, I., Shallenberger, J., Shapiro, M. D., Shaw, T., Shears, T., Shenai, A., Shepard, P. F., Shimojima, M., Shochet, M., Shon, Y., Shoun, M., Sidoti, A., Siegrist, J., Sieh, C., Siket, M., Sill, A., Silva, R., Simaitis, V., Sinervo, P., Sirotenko, I., Sisakyan, A., Skiba, A., Slaughter, A. J., Sliwa, K., Smith, J., Snider, F. D., Snihur, R., Somalwar, S. V., Spalding, J., Spezziga, M., Spiegel, L., Spinella, F., Spiropulu, M., Stadie, H., Stanek, R., Stanfield, N., Stelzer, B., Stelzer-Chilton, O., Strologas, J., Stuart, D., Stuermer, W., Sukhanov, A., Sumorok, K., Sun, H., Suzuki, T., Syu, J., Szymulanski, A., Taffard, A., Takach, S. F., Takano, H., Takashima, R., Takeuchi, Y., Takikawa, K., Tamburello, P., Tanaka, M., Tanaka, R., Tang, D., Tanimoto, N., Tannenbaum, B., Tapprogge, S., Taylor, R. D., Teafoe, G., Tecchio, M., Teng, P. K., Terashi, K., Terentieva, T., Tesarek, R. J., Tether, S., Thom, J., Thomas, A., Thompson, A. S., Thomson, E., Thurman-Keup, R., Timm, S., Tipton, P., Tkaczyk, S., Toback, D., Tollefson, K., Tonelli, D., Tonnesmann, M., Torretta, D., Trimby, C., Trischuk, W., Trumbo, J., Tseng, J., Tsuchiya, R., Tsuno, S., Tsybychev, D., Turini, N., Turner, M., Ukegawa, F., Unverhau, T., Uozumi, S., Usynin, D., Vacavant, L., Vaiciulis, T., Van Berg, R., Varganov, A., Vataga, E., Vejcik, S., Velev, G., Veramendi, G., Vickey, T., Vidal, R., Vila, I., Vilar, R., Vittone, M., Voirin, J., Vollmer, B., Vollrath, I., Volobouev, I., von der Mey, M., Votava, M., Wagner, R. G., Wagner, R. L., Wagner, W., Wallace, N., Walter, T., Walters, A., Wan, Z., Wandersee, A., Wang, M. J., Wang, S. M., Ward, B., Waschke, S., Waters, D., Watts, T., Weber, M., Weems, L., Wenzel, H., Wester, W., Whitehouse, B., Wickenberg, W., Wicklund, A. B., Wicklund, E., Wigmans, R., Wike, C., Wilkes, T., Williams, H. H., Wilson, P., Winer, B. L., Wittich, P., Wolbers, S., Wolter, M., Wong, M., Worcester, M., Worland, R., Worm, S., Wright, T., Wu, J., Wu, X., Wurthwein, F., Wyatt, A., Yagil, A., Yamamoto, K., Yamashita, T., Yang, U. K., Yao, W., Yarema, R., Yeh, G. P., Yi, K., Yocum, D., Yoh, J., Yoon, P., Yorita, K., Yoshida, T., Yu, I., Yu, S., Yu, Z., Yun, J. C., Zalokar, M., Zanello, L., Zanetti, A., Zaw, I., Zetti, F., Zhou, J., Zimmerman, T., Zsenei, A., and Zucchelli, S.
- Abstract
We present a measurement of the mass difference m(D-s(+))-m(D+), where both the D-s(+) and D+ are reconstructed in the phipi(+) decay channel. This measurement uses 11.6 pb(-1) of data collected by CDF II using the new displaced-track trigger. The mass difference is found to be m(D-s(+))-m(D+)=99.41+/-0.38(stat)+/-0.21(syst) MeV/c(2).
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- 2003
213. From the Circumnuclear Disk in the Galactic Center to thick, obscuring tori of AGNs
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Vollmer, B., Beckert, T., Duschl, W. J., Vollmer, B., Beckert, T., and Duschl, W. J.
- Abstract
We compare three different models of clumpy gas disk and show that the Circumnuclear Disk (CND) in the Galactic Center and a putative, geometrically thick, obscuring torus are best explained by a collisional model consisting of quasi-stable, self-gravitating clouds. Kinetic energy of clouds is gained by mass inflow and dissipated in cloud collisions. The collisions give rise to a viscosity in a spatially averaged gas dynamical picture, which connects them to angular momentum transport and mass inflow. It is found that CND and torus share the same gas physics in our description, where the mass of clouds is 20 - 50 M_sun and their density is close to the limit of disruption by tidal shear. We show that the difference between a transparent CND and an obscuring torus is the gas mass and the velocity dispersion of the clouds. A change in gas supply and the dissipation of kinetic energy can turn a torus into a CND-like structure and vice versa. Any massive torus will naturally lead to sufficiently high mass accretion rates to feed a luminous AGN. For a geometrically thick torus to obscure the view to the center even super-Eddington accretions rates with respect to the central black hole are required., Comment: 9 pages, no figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2003
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214. Environmental Effects on the Kinematics of Virgo Cluster Galaxies
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Chemin, L., Cayatte, V., Balkowski, C., Amram, P., Marcelin, M., Garrido, O., Boulesteix, J., Carignan, C., Boselli, A., Vollmer, B., Adami, C., Hernandez, O., Chemin, L., Cayatte, V., Balkowski, C., Amram, P., Marcelin, M., Garrido, O., Boulesteix, J., Carignan, C., Boselli, A., Vollmer, B., Adami, C., and Hernandez, O.
- Abstract
We present results from an ongoing survey dedicated to the ionized gas kinematics of Virgo cluster spiral galaxies using Fabry-Perot interferometry. Our goal is to study the environmental effects on galaxy evolution in the Virgo cluster. We report here on the Halpha distribution map and velocity field of NGC 4438, the prototype of an interacting galaxy near the centre of the cluster., Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, to be published in "IAU Symposium 217, Recycling intergalactic and interstellar matter", ASP Conf Series
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- 2003
215. Gas physics and dynamics in the central 50 pc of the Galaxy
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Vollmer, B., Duschl, W. J., Zylka, R., Vollmer, B., Duschl, W. J., and Zylka, R.
- Abstract
We present models the gas physics and dynamics of the inner 50 pc of the Galaxy. In a first step the gas properties of an isolated clumpy circumnuclear disk were analytically investigated. We took the external UV radiation field, the gravitational potential, and the observed gas temperature into account. The model includes a description of the properties of individual gas clumps on small scales, and a treatment of the circumnuclear disk as a quasi-continuous accretion disk on large scales. In a second step the dynamics of an isolated circumnuclear disk were investigated with the help of a collisional N-body code. The environment of the disk is taken into account in a third step, where we calculated a pro- and a retrograde encounter of an infalling gas cloud with a pre-existing circumnuclear disk. In order to constrain the dynamical model, we used the NIR absorption of the giant molecular clouds located within the inner 50 pc of the Galaxy to reconstruct their line-of-sight distribution., Comment: 7 pages with 6 figures. To be published in Astron. Nachr. Vol. 324, No. S1 (2003), Special Supplement "The central 300 parsecs of the Milky Way", eds. A. Cotera, H. Falcke, T.R. Geballe, S. Markoff
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- 2003
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216. The line-of-sight distribution of the gas in the inner 60 pc of the Galaxy
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Vollmer, B., Zylka, R., Duschl, W. J., Vollmer, B., Zylka, R., and Duschl, W. J.
- Abstract
2MASS K_S band data of the inner 60 pc of the Galaxy are used to reconstruct the line-of-sight distances of the giant molecular clouds located in this region. Using the 2MASS H band image of the same region, two different populations of point sources are identified according to their flux ratio in the two bands. The population of blue point sources forms a homogeneous foreground that has to be subtracted before analyzing the K_S band image. The reconstruction is made using two basic assumptions: (i) an axis-symmetric stellar distribution in the region of interest and (ii) optically thick clouds with an area filling factor of ~1 that block all light of stars located behind them. Due to the reconstruction method, the relative distance between the different cloud complexes is a robust result, whereas it is not excluded that the absolute distance with respect to Sgr A* of structures located more than 10 pc in front of Sgr A* are understimated by up to a factor of 2. It is shown that all structures observed in the 1.2 mm continuum and in the CS(2-1) line are present in absorption. We place the 50 km s^-1 cloud complex close to, but in front of, Sgr A*. The 20 km s^-1 cloud complex is located in front of the 50 km s^-1 cloud complex and has a large LOS distance gradient along the direction of the galactic longitude. The bulk of the Circumnuclear Disk is not seen in absorption. This leads to an upper limit of the cloud sizes within the Circumnuclear Disk of ~0.06 pc., Comment: 12 pages with 17 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2003
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217. Atomic gas far away from the Virgo cluster core galaxy NGC 4388. A possible link to isolated star formation in the Virgo cluster?
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Vollmer, B., Huchtmeier, W., Vollmer, B., and Huchtmeier, W.
- Abstract
We have discovered 6 10^7 M_{\odot} of atomic gas at a projected distance greater than 4' (20 kpc) from the highly inclined Virgo spiral galaxy NGC 4388. This gas is most probably connected to the very extended H\alpha plume detected by Yoshida et al. (2002). Its mass makes a nuclear outflow and its radial velocity a minor merger as the origin of the atomic and ionized gas very unlikely. A numerical ram pressure simulation can account for the observed HI spectrum and the morphology of the H\alpha plume. An additional outflow mechanism is still needed to reproduce the velocity field of the inner H\alpha plume. The extraplanar compact HII region recently found by Gerhard et al. (2002) can be explained as a stripped gas cloud that collapsed and decoupled from the ram pressure wind due to its increased surface density. The star-forming cloud is now falling back onto the galaxy., Comment: 8 pages with 7 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2003
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218. Turbulent viscosity in clumpy accretion disks II supernova driven turbulence in the Galaxy
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Vollmer, B., Beckert, T., Vollmer, B., and Beckert, T.
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An analytical model for a turbulent clumpy gas disk is presented where turbulence is maintained by the energy input due to supernovae. Expressions for the disk parameters, global filling factors, molecular fractions, and star formation rates are given as functions of the Toomre parameter $Q$, the ratio between the cloud size and the turbulent driving length scale $\delta$, the mass accretion rate within the disk $\dot{M}$, the constant of molecule formation $\alpha$, the disk radius, the angular velocity, and its radial derivative. Two different cases are investigated: a dominating stellar disk and a self-gravitating gas disk in $z$ direction. The turbulent driving wavelength is determined in a first approach by energy flux conservation, i.e. the supernovae energy input is transported by turbulence to smaller scales where it is dissipated. The results are compared to those of a fully gravitational model. For Q=1 and $\delta=1$ both models are consistent with each other. In a second approach the driving length scale is directly determined by the size of supernovae remnants. Both models are applied to the Galaxy and can reproduce its integrated and local gas properties. The influence of thermal and magnetic pressure on the disk structure is investigated. We infer $Q \sim 1$ and $\dot{M} \sim 0.05 - 0.1 M_{\odot} yr ^{-1}$ for the Galaxy., Comment: 15 pages with 10 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2003
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219. Magnetic field evolution in galaxies interacting with the intracluster medium. 3D numerical simulations
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Otmianowska-Mazur, K., Vollmer, B., Otmianowska-Mazur, K., and Vollmer, B.
- Abstract
A fully three-dimensional (3D) magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) model is applied to simulate the evolution of the large-scale magnetic field in cluster galaxies interacting with the intra-cluster medium (ICM). As the model input we use a time dependent gas velocity field resulting from 3D N-body sticky-particle simulations of a galaxy. The modeled clouds are affected by the ram pressure due to their rapid motion through the ICM in the central part of a cluster. Numerical simulations have shown that after the initial compression phase due to ram pressure a process of gas re-accretion onto the galactic disk takes place. We find that the gas re-accretion leads to an increase of the total magnetic energy without any dynamo action. The simulated magnetic fields are used to construct the model maps of high-frequency (Faraday rotation-free) polarized radio emission. We show that the evolution of the polarized intensity shows features that are characteristic for different evolutionary stages of an ICM-ISM interaction. The comparison of polarized radio continuum emission maps with our model permits to determine whether the galaxy is in the compression or in the re-accretion phase. It also provides an important constraint upon the dynamical modeling of an ICM-ISM interactions., Comment: 12 pages with 11 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2003
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220. 106 Neonatal Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Extremely Low Gestational Age Infants and Outcome at 30 Months
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Skiöld, B, primary, Vollmer, B, additional, Böhm, B, additional, Hallberg, B, additional, Horsch, S, additional, Mosskin, M, additional, Lagercrantz, H, additional, Ådén, U, additional, and Blennow, M, additional
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- 2010
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221. 580 Hypothermia Treatment Prolongs the Possible Time to Recovery of Aeeg to Predict Normal Cognitive and Motor Outcome
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Robertson-Grossmann, K, primary, Vollmer, B, additional, Blennow, M, additional, and Hallberg, B, additional
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- 2010
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222. Comparison of two different odorants in an olfactory detection threshold test of the Sniffin’ Sticks
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Zernecke, R, primary, Vollmer, B, additional, Albrecht, J, additional, Kleemann, AM, additional, Haegler, K, additional, Linn, J, additional, Fesl, G, additional, Bruckmann, H, additional, and Wiesmann, M, additional
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- 2010
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223. ChemInform Abstract: Synthesis and Crystal Structure of Tetraphenylphosphonium Aqua-bis( tetrasulfido)thionitrosyl Osmate, PPh4(Os(NS)(S4)2(H2O)).
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VOLLMER, B., primary, WOCADLO, S., additional, MASSA, W., additional, and DEHNICKE, K., additional
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- 2010
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224. Microstructural alterations of motor pathways in adolescents born preterm
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Gröschel, S, primary, Tournier, JD, additional, Northam, G, additional, Baldeweg, T, additional, Wyatt, J, additional, Vollmer, B, additional, and Connelly, A, additional
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- 2010
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225. Developmental changes in cerebral grey and white matter volume from infancy to adulthood
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Groeschel, S., primary, Vollmer, B., additional, King, M.D., additional, and Connelly, A., additional
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- 2010
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226. Pinning down the ram-pressure-induced halt of star formation in the Virgo cluster spiral galaxy NGC 4388
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Pappalardo, C., primary, Lançon, A., additional, Vollmer, B., additional, Ocvirk, P., additional, Boissier, S., additional, and Boselli, A., additional
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- 2010
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227. The influence of the cluster environment on the large-scale radio continuum emission of 8 Virgo cluster spirals
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Vollmer, B., primary, Soida, M., additional, Chung, A., additional, Beck, R., additional, Urbanik, M., additional, Chyży, K. T., additional, Otmianowska-Mazur, K., additional, and van Gorkom, J. H., additional
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- 2010
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228. The SPECFIND V2.0 catalogue of radio cross-identifications and spectra
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Vollmer, B., primary, Gassmann, B., additional, Derrière, S., additional, Boch, T., additional, Louys, M., additional, Bonnarel, F., additional, Dubois, P., additional, Genova, F., additional, and Ochsenbein, F., additional
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- 2010
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229. NGC 4654: gravitational interaction or ram pressure stripping?
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Vollmer, B. and Vollmer, B.
- Abstract
The Virgo cluster spiral galaxy NGC 4654 is supposed to be a good candidate for ongoing ram pressure stripping based on its very asymmetric HI distribution. However, this galaxy also shows an asymmetric stellar distribution. Numerical simulations using ram pressure as the only perturbation can produce a tail structure of the gas content, but cannot account for its kinematical structure. It is shown that a strong edge-on stripping event can produce an asymmetric stellar distribution up to 800 Myr after the stripping event, i.e. the galaxy's closest passage to the cluster center. Simulations using a gravitational interaction with the companion galaxy NGC 4639 can account for the asymmetric stellar distribution of NGC 4654, but cannot reproduce the observed extended gas tail. Only a mixed interaction, gravitational and ram pressure, can reproduce all observed properties of NGC 4654. It is concluded that NGC 4654 had a tidal interaction ~500 Myr ago and is continuing to experience ram pressure., Comment: 16 pages with 19 PS figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2002
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- View/download PDF
230. The dynamics of the Circumnuclear Disk and its environment in the Galactic centre
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Vollmer, B., Duschl, W. J., Vollmer, B., and Duschl, W. J.
- Abstract
We address the question of the dynamics in the inner 50 pc of the Galactic Centre. In a first step we investigate the cloud-cloud collision rate in the Circumnuclear Disk (CND) with the help of a three dimensional N-body code using gas particles that can have inelastic collisions. The CND might be a longer lived structure than previously assumed. The whole disk-like structure of the CND can thus survive for several million years. A realistic simulation of the CND shows the observed disk height structure. In a second step the environment of the CND is taken into account. Retrograde and prograde encounters of a cloud of several 10^4 M_solar falling onto an already existing nuclear disk using different energy loss rates per collision are simulated. The influence of the energy loss rate per collision on the evolution of the mass accretion and cloud collision rates is strongest for a prograde encounter. A composite data cube of two different snapshots of a prograde encounter together with the CND shows striking similarity with the observed Sgr A cloud complex. The current appearance of the Galactic Centre environment can thus be explained by at least two dynamically distinct features together with the CND. The current mass accretion rate within the CND ranges between 10^-3 and 10^-4 M_solar yr^-1. It can rise up to several 10^-2 M_solar yr^-1 during massive accretion events., Comment: 14 pages with 22 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2002
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231. Chemosensory Properties of Human Sweat
- Author
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Zernecke, R., primary, Kleemann, A.M., additional, Haegler, K., additional, Albrecht, J., additional, Vollmer, B., additional, Linn, J., additional, Bruckmann, H., additional, and Wiesmann, M., additional
- Published
- 2009
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232. P026 Neurodevelopmental outcome of very low birth weight infants born in 2003 2005, Kaunas, Lithuania
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Jakuskiene, R., primary, Daugeliene, D., additional, and Vollmer, B., additional
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
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233. A holistic view on ram pressure stripping in the Virgo cluster
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Vollmer, B., primary
- Published
- 2009
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234. Ram pressure stripping of the multiphase ISM in the Virgo cluster spiral galaxy NGC 4438
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Vollmer, B., primary, Soida, M., additional, Chung, A., additional, Chemin, L., additional, Braine, J., additional, Boselli, A., additional, and Beck, R., additional
- Published
- 2009
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- View/download PDF
235. Evolution of Information Management at the GSFC Earth Sciences (GES) Data and Information Services Center (DISC): 2006–2007
- Author
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Kempler, S., primary, Lynnes, C., additional, Vollmer, B., additional, Alcott, G., additional, and Berrick, S., additional
- Published
- 2009
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236. Residual fuel treatment and handling at Connaught Bridge
- Author
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Vollmer, B. and Schmidt, M.
- Subjects
Electric power-plants -- Malaysia ,Petroleum refineries -- By-products ,Waste products as fuel ,Gas-turbine power-plants -- Design and construction ,Business ,Petroleum, energy and mining industries - Published
- 1985
237. Turbulent viscosity in clumpy accretion disks. Application to the Galaxy
- Author
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Vollmer, B., Beckert, T., Vollmer, B., and Beckert, T.
- Abstract
The equilibrium state of a turbulent clumpy gas disk is analytically investigated. The disk consists of distinct self-gravitating clouds. Gravitational cloud-cloud interactions transfer energy over spatial scales and produce a viscosity, which allows mass accretion in the gas disk. Turbulence is assumed to be generated by instabilities involving self-gravitation and to be maintained by the energy input from differential rotation and mass transfer. Disk parameters, global filling factors, molecular fractions, and star formation rates are derived. The application of our model to the Galaxy shows good agreement with observations. They are consistent with the scenario where turbulence generated and maintained by gravitation can account for the viscosity in the gas disk of spiral galaxies. The role of the galaxy mass for the morphological classification of spiral galaxies is investigated., Comment: 14 pages with 5 PS figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2001
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- View/download PDF
238. The stability of the Circumnuclear Disk clouds in the Galactic Centre
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Vollmer, B., Duschl, W. J., Vollmer, B., and Duschl, W. J.
- Abstract
The influence of rotation and magnetic fields on the physical properties of isothermal gas clouds is discussed. The presence of rotation and/or magnetic fields results in an increase of the critical cloud mass with respect to gravitational instability for clouds of a given temperature and external pressure. Rotating clouds have higher densities. Consequently, they are more stable against tidal shear than non-rotating clouds. They can approach the Galactic Centre up to a radius of ~2 pc without being disrupted by the tidal shear due to the gravitational potential. For smaller radii the clouds either collapse or become tidally disrupted. We suggest that this mechanism is responsible for the formation of the inner edge of the Circumnuclear Disk in the Galactic Centre., Comment: 7 pages with 2 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
239. Ram pressure stripping and galaxy orbits: The case of the Virgo cluster
- Author
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Vollmer, B., Cayatte, V., Balkowski, C., Duschl, W. J., Vollmer, B., Cayatte, V., Balkowski, C., and Duschl, W. J.
- Abstract
We investigate the role of ram pressure stripping in the Virgo cluster using N-body simulations. Radial orbits within the Virgo cluster's gravitational potential are modeled and analyzed with respect to ram pressure stripping. The N-body model consists of 10000 gas cloud complexes which can have inelastic collisions. Ram pressure is modeled as an additional acceleration on the clouds located at the surface of the gas distribution in the direction of the galaxy's motion within the cluster. We made several simulations changing the orbital parameters in order to recover different stripping scenarios using realistic temporal ram pressure profiles. We investigate systematically the influence of the inclination angle between the disk and the orbital plane of the galaxy on the gas dynamics. We show that ram pressure can lead to a temporary increase of the central gas surface density. In some cases a considerable part of the total atomic gas mass (several 10^8 M_solar) can fall back onto the galactic disk after the stripping event. A quantitative relation between the orbit parameters and the resulting HI deficiency is derived containing explicitly the inclination angle between the disk and the orbital plane. The comparison between existing HI observations and the results of our simulations shows that the HI deficiency depends strongly on galaxy orbits. It is concluded that the scenario where ram pressure stripping is responsible for the observed HI deficiency is consistent with all HI 21cm observations in the Virgo cluster., Comment: 29 pages with 21 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2001
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240. 12CO(1-0) observations of NGC 4848: a Coma galaxy after stripping
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Vollmer, B., Braine, J., Balkowski, C., Cayatte, V., Duschl, W. J., Vollmer, B., Braine, J., Balkowski, C., Cayatte, V., and Duschl, W. J.
- Abstract
We study the molecular gas content and distribution in the Coma cluster spiral galaxy NGC 4848. Plateau de Bure interferometric CO(1-0) observations reveal a lopsided H_2 distribution with an off-center secondary maximum coincident with the inner part of the HI. NGC 4848 is not at all deficient in molecular gas as it contains M_H_2~4x10^9 M_solar. At the interface between the CO and HI emission regions, about 8 kpc NW of the center, however, strong star formation is present as witnessed by Halpha and radio continuum emission. This is the region in which earlier Fabry-Perot observations revealed a double-peaked Halpha line, indicating gas at two different velocities at the same sky position. In order to understand these observations, we present the results of numerical simulations of the ISM-ICM interaction. We suggest that NGC 4848 already passed through the center of the cluster about 4x10^8 years ago. At the observed stage ram pressure has no more direct dynamical influence on the galaxy's ISM. We observe the galaxy when a fraction of the stripped gas is falling back onto the galaxy. Ram pressure is thus a short-lived event with longer-lasting consequences. The combination of ram-pressure and rotation results in gas at different velocities colliding where the double-peaked Halpha line is observed. Ram-pressure can thus result, after re-accretion, in displaced molecular gas without the H_2 itself being pushed efficiently by the ICM. A scenario where two interactions take place simultaneously is also consistent with the available data but less probable on the basis of our numerical simulations., Comment: 15 pages with 20 figures. A&A, in press
- Published
- 2001
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241. HI deficiency in the galaxy cluster ACO 3627. ATCA observations in the Great Attractor region
- Author
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Vollmer, B., Cayatte, V., van Driel, W., Henning, P. A., Kraan-Korteweg, R. C., Balkowski, C., Woudt, P. A., Duschl, W., Vollmer, B., Cayatte, V., van Driel, W., Henning, P. A., Kraan-Korteweg, R. C., Balkowski, C., Woudt, P. A., and Duschl, W.
- Abstract
ATCA 21 cm HI observations of the rich galaxy cluster ACO 3627 in the Great Attractor region are presented. Three fields of 30' diameter located within one Abell radius of ACO 3627 were observed with a resolution of 15'' and an rms noise of \sim 1 mJy/beam. Only two galaxies were detected in these fields. We compare their HI distribution to new optical R-band images and discuss their velocity fields. The first galaxy is a gas-rich unperturbed spiral whereas the second shows a peculiar HI distribution. The estimated 3-sigma HI mass limit of our observations is \sim 7 x 10^8 M_{\odot} for a line width of 150 km s^{-1}. The non-detection of a considerable number of luminous spiral galaxies indicates that the spiral galaxies are HI deficient. The low detection rate is comparable to the HI deficient Coma cluster (Bravo-Alfaro et al. 2000). ACO 3627 is a bright X-ray cluster. We therefore suspect that ram pressure stripping is responsible for the HI deficiency of the bright cluster spirals., Comment: 9 pages with 7 figures; A&A, in press
- Published
- 2001
242. Tropical oceanic rainfall - Estimation from SMMR and SSM/I
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Prabhakara, C, Dalu, Giuseppe, and Vollmer, B. E
- Subjects
Meteorology And Climatology - Abstract
A method of inferring rainfall over oceans with Nimbus-7 SMMR data (Prabhakara et al., 1986) is improved by including data from the DMSP Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSM/I). The microwave observations at low frequencies are compared with the SSM/I measurements at 85 GHz. The process used to analyze the microwave data and the retrieval method are described. A map of the monthly mean rainfall rate for July 1987 over the North and South Pacific Oceans is obtained using the SSM/I data.
- Published
- 1989
243. El Nino and atmospheric water vapor - Observations from Nimbus 7 SMMR
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Prabhakara, C, Short, D. A, and Vollmer, B. E
- Subjects
Meteorology And Climatology - Abstract
Atmospheric water vapor content over the global oceans is measured to study the air-sea interactions associated with El Nino/Southern Oscillation. A scanning multichannel microwave radiometer measured brightness temperatures of the earth-atmosphere system at 6.6, 10.7, 18, 21, and 37 GHz, and from these data water vapor content is derived. The seasonal mean distribution of water vapor for the regular season cycle from 1979-1981 are examined; the minima associated with the subtropical anticyclones in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans in the Northern and Southern hemispheres, and the Walker circulation in the tropical Pacific Ocean are analyzed. The positive and negative anomalies in water vapor during the 1982-1983 El Nino event, which correspond to convergence and enhanced convective activity, are investigated. It is concluded that during El Nino events a system of convection and subsidence exists; the subsidence slows the supply of water vapor and cloud growth in the convectively active center and the Walker circulation is reversed.
- Published
- 1985
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244. Ram-pressure stripped molecular gas in the Virgo spiral galaxy NGC 4522
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Vollmer, B., primary, Braine, J., additional, Pappalardo, C., additional, and Hily-Blant, P., additional
- Published
- 2008
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245. Starbursts and torus evolution in AGN
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Vollmer, B., primary, Beckert, T., additional, and Davies, R. I., additional
- Published
- 2008
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246. Quasi-simultaneous multi-frequency observations of inverted-spectrum GPS candidate sources
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Vollmer, B., primary, Krichbaum, T. P., additional, Angelakis, E., additional, and Kovalev, Y. Y., additional
- Published
- 2008
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- View/download PDF
247. Pre-peak ram pressure stripping in the Virgo cluster spiral galaxy NGC 4501
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Vollmer, B., primary, Soida, M., additional, Chung, A., additional, van Gorkom, J. H., additional, Otmianowska-Mazur, K., additional, Beck, R., additional, Urbanik, M., additional, and Kenney, J. D. P., additional
- Published
- 2008
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248. A cloudy model for the Circumnuclear Disk in the Galactic Centre
- Author
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Vollmer, B., Duschl, W. J., Vollmer, B., and Duschl, W. J.
- Abstract
We present a first attempt to construct an analytic model for a clumped gas and dust disk and apply it to the Galactic Centre. The clumps are described as isothermal spheres partially ionized by the external UV radiation field. The disk structure formed by the clouds is described as a quasi standard continuous accretion disk using adequately averaged parameters of the discrete cloud model. The viscosity in the Circumnuclear Disk is due to partially inelastic cloud-cloud collisions. We find two different solutions for the set of equations corresponding to two stable cloud regimes: (i) the observed molecular clouds and (ii) much lighter and smaller clouds which correspond to the stripped cores of the observed clouds. It is shown that the resulting physical characteristics of the heavy clouds and the disk are in very good agreement with all comparable observations at multiple wavelengths. A mass accretion rate of approx. 10^-4 M_solar/yr for the isolated Circumnuclear Disk is inferred. We propose that the Circumnuclear Disk has a much longer lifetime (approx. 10^7 yr) than previously assumed., Comment: 12 pages with 13 figures, A&A, in press
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. The consequences of ram pressure stripping on the Virgo cluster spiral galaxy NGC 4522
- Author
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Vollmer, B., Marcelin, M., Amram, P., Balkowski, C., Cayatte, V., Garrido, O., Vollmer, B., Marcelin, M., Amram, P., Balkowski, C., Cayatte, V., and Garrido, O.
- Abstract
New H-alpha Fabry-Perot interferometer observations of the Virgo cluster spiral galaxy NGC 4522 are presented. A velocity field up to a radius of 60'' was obtained. The observed rotation curve is symmetric. It is not perturbed in the inner disk. For radii >50'' it shows a solid body rotation. We compare these data with a numerical model which includes the effects of ram pressure stripping. The model can reproduce the main characteristics of the H-alpha emission distribution and velocity field. We therefore conclude that the stripping event which caused the HI deficiency and the distorted H-alpha distribution and velocity field has been due to ram pressure. The closest passage of the galaxy to the cluster center is estimated to be approx. 6.5 10^8 yr ago. The observed recent star formation is due to the re-accretion of gas clouds which were accelerated to velocities below the escape velocity during the stripping event. Furthermore, the gas which is located at radii >60'' is part of an asymmetric expanding ring of gas clouds. A substantial part of these clouds is located above the disk plane. We predict the HI gas distribution and velocity field as it would be observed by deep 21 cm observations., Comment: 11 pages with 11 figures, A&A, in press
- Published
- 2000
250. The magnetic fields of large Virgo Cluster spirals
- Author
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Weżgowiec, M., primary, Urbanik, M., additional, Vollmer, B., additional, Beck, R., additional, Chyży, K. T., additional, Soida, M., additional, and Balkowski, Ch., additional
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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