193 results on '"Schuster, P. F."'
Search Results
2. Submillimeter pulsations from the magnetar XTE J1810-197
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Torne, Pablo, Bell, Graham, Bintley, Dan, Desvignes, Gregory, Berry, David, Dempsey, Jessica T., Ho, Paul T. P., Parsons, Harriet, Eatough, Ralph P., Karuppusamy, Ramesh, Kramer, Michael, Kramer, Carsten, Liu, Kuo, Paubert, Gabriel, Sanchez-Portal, Miguel, and Schuster, Karl F.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first detection of pulsations from a neutron star in the submillimeter range. The source is the magnetar XTE J1810-197, observed with the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) on 2020 February 27, 2020 July 9 and 2021 May 15. XTE J1810-197 is detected at 353 GHz ($\lambda=0.85\,$mm) in the three epochs, but not detected in the simultaneously-observed band at 666 GHz ($\lambda=0.45\,$mm). We measure an averaged flux density at 353 GHz of 6.7$\pm$1.0, 4.0$\pm$0.6, and 1.3$\pm$0.3 mJy and set 3$\sigma$ flux density upper limits at 666 GHz of 11.3, 4.7 and 4.3 mJy, at each of the three observing epochs, respectively. Combining close-in-time observations with the Effelsberg 100m and IRAM 30m telescopes covering non-contiguously from 6 to 225 GHz (5.0 cm$>\lambda>$1.33 mm), we investigate the spectral shape and frequency range of a potential spectral turn-up predicted by some pulsar radio emission models. The results demonstrate that the beamed radio emission from neutron stars can extend into the submillimeter regime, but are inconclusive on the existence and location of a potential spectral turn-up within the covered frequency range. The observed properties of the submillimeter emission resemble those of the longer wavelengths, and support a coherent mechanism for the production of pulsations at 353 GHz., Comment: 14 pages, 2 tables, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 2022
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3. Recent trends in the chemistry of major northern rivers signal widespread Arctic change
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Tank, Suzanne E., McClelland, James W., Spencer, Robert G. M., Shiklomanov, Alexander I., Suslova, Anya, Moatar, Florentina, Amon, Rainer M. W., Cooper, Lee W., Elias, Greg, Gordeev, Vyacheslav V., Guay, Christopher, Gurtovaya, Tatiana Yu., Kosmenko, Lyudmila S., Mutter, Edda A., Peterson, Bruce J., Peucker-Ehrenbrink, Bernhard, Raymond, Peter A., Schuster, Paul F., Scott, Lindsay, Staples, Robin, Striegl, Robert G., Tretiakov, Mikhail, Zhulidov, Alexander V., Zimov, Nikita, Zimov, Sergey, and Holmes, Robert M.
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- 2023
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4. The proteomic landscape of soft tissue sarcomas
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Burns, Jessica, Wilding, Christopher P., Krasny, Lukas, Zhu, Xixuan, Chadha, Madhumeeta, Tam, Yuen Bun, PS, Hari, Mahalingam, Aswanth H., Lee, Alexander T. J., Arthur, Amani, Guljar, Nafia, Perkins, Emma, Pankova, Valeriya, Jenks, Andrew, Djabatey, Vanessa, Szecsei, Cornelia, McCarthy, Frank, Ragulan, Chanthirika, Milighetti, Martina, Roumeliotis, Theodoros I., Crosier, Stephen, Finetti, Martina, Choudhary, Jyoti S., Judson, Ian, Fisher, Cyril, Schuster, Eugene F., Sadanandam, Anguraj, Chen, Tom W., Williamson, Daniel, Thway, Khin, Jones, Robin L., Cheang, Maggie C. U., and Huang, Paul H.
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- 2023
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5. The Diverse Molecular Gas Content of Massive Galaxies Undergoing Quenching at z~1
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Belli, Sirio, Contursi, Alessandra, Genzel, Reinhard, Tacconi, Linda J., Förster-Schreiber, Natascha M., Lutz, Dieter, Combes, Françoise, Neri, Roberto, García-Burillo, Santiago, Schuster, Karl F., Herrera-Camus, Rodrigo, Tadaki, Ken-ichi, Davies, Rebecca L., Davies, Richard I., Johnson, Benjamin D., Lee, Minju M., Leja, Joel, Nelson, Erica J., Price, Sedona H., Shangguan, Jinyi, Shimizu, T. Taro, Tacchella, Sandro, and Übler, Hannah
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present a detailed study of the molecular gas content and stellar population properties of three massive galaxies at 1 < z < 1.3 that are in different stages of quenching. The galaxies were selected to have a quiescent optical/near-infrared spectral energy distribution and a relatively bright emission at 24 micron, and show remarkably diverse properties. CO emission from each of the three galaxies is detected in deep NOEMA observations, allowing us to derive molecular gas fractions Mgas/Mstar of 13-23%. We also reconstruct the star formation histories by fitting models to the observed photometry and optical spectroscopy, finding evidence for recent rejuvenation in one object, slow quenching in another, and rapid quenching in the third system. To better constrain the quenching mechanism we explore the depletion times for our sample and other similar samples at z~0.7 from the literature. We find that the depletion times are highly dependent on the method adopted to measure the star formation rate: using the UV+IR luminosity we obtain depletion times about 6 times shorter than those derived using dust-corrected [OII] emission. When adopting the star formation rates from spectral fitting, which are arguably more robust, we find that recently quenched galaxies and star-forming galaxies have similar depletion times, while older quiescent systems have longer depletion times. These results offer new, important constraints for physical models of galaxy quenching., Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 2021
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6. Event-by-Event Multiplicity Correlations in $^{252}$Cf(sf)
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Marin, Stefano, Protopopescu, Vladimir A., Vogt, Ramona, Marcath, Matthew J., Okar, M. Stephan, Hua, Michael Y., Talou, Patrick, Schuster, Patricia F., Clarke, Shaun D., and Pozzi, Sara A.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
Excited nuclear fragments are emitted during nuclear fission. The de-excitation of these fission fragments takes place as sequential emission of neutrons followed by photons. A correlation between neutron and photon multiplicities accompanying fission is thus expected. Fission event generators based on established statistical nuclear physics models predict a negative event-by-event correlation in neutron-photon multiplicity. A survey of published experimental results of an event-by-event covariance between the neutron and photon multiplicities emitted following the spontaneous fission of $^{252}$Cf is presented. Analytic unfolding expressions are developed in this work to determine the bias introduced by background sources, particle misclassification, pulse pileup, and inelastic photon production. The published experimental data are re-analyzed using these unfolding techniques and are found to be in qualitative agreement with the predictions of model-based calculations. In particular, we have concluded that there exists a significant event-by-event neutron-photon emission competition following the spontaneous fission of $^{252}$Cf., Comment: 8pages, 3 figures, 2 table
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- 2019
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7. High resolution measurement of tagged two-neutron energy and angle correlations in Cf-252(sf)
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Schuster, P. F., Marcath, M. J., Marin, S., Clarke, S. D., Devlin, M., Haight, R. C., Vogt, R., Talou, P., Stetcu, I., Kawano, T., Randrup, J., and Pozzi, S. A.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Background: Spontaneous fission events emit prompt neutrons correlated with one another in emission angle and energy. Purpose: We explore the relationship in energy and angle between correlated prompt neutrons emitted from 252Cf spontaneous fission. Methods: Measurements with the Chi-Nu array provide experimental data for coincident neutrons tagged with a fission chamber signal with 10 degree angular resolution and 1 ns timing resolution for time-of-flight energy calculations. The experimental results are compared to simulations produced by the fission event generators CGMF, FREYA, and MCNPX-POLIMI IPOL(1)=1. Results: We find that the measurements and the simulations all exhibit anisotropic neutron emission, though differences exist between fission event generators. Conclusions: This work shows that the dependence of detected neutron energy on the energy of a neutron detected in coincidence, although weak, is non-negligible, indicating that there may be correlations in energy between two neutrons emitted in the same fission event.
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- 2018
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8. Recurrent bacteremia with a hypermucoviscous Escherichia coli isolated from a patient with perihilar cholangiocarcinoma: insights from a comprehensive genome-based analysis
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Neumann, Bernd, Lippmann, Norman, Wendt, Sebastian, Karlas, Thomas, Lübbert, Christoph, Werner, Guido, Pfeifer, Yvonne, and Schuster, Christopher F.
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- 2022
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9. Relationship between ER expression by IHC or mRNA with Ki67 response to aromatase inhibition: a POETIC study
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Lopez-Knowles, Elena, Detre, Simone, Hills, Margaret, Schuster, Eugene F., Cheang, Maggie C. U., Tovey, Holly, Kilburn, Lucy S., Bliss, Judith M., Robertson, John, Mallon, Elizabeth, Skene, Anthony, Evans, Abigail, Smith, Ian, and Dowsett, Mitch
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- 2022
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10. The PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS). The Role of Spiral Arms in Cloud and Star Formation
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Schinnerer, E., Meidt, S. E., Colombo, D., Chandar, R., Dobbs, C. L., Garcia-Burillo, S., Hughes, A., Leroy, A. K., Pety, J., Querejeta, M., Kramer, C., and Schuster, K. F.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The process that leads to the formation of the bright star forming sites observed along prominent spiral arms remains elusive. We present results of a multi-wavelength study of a spiral arm segment in the nearby grand-design spiral galaxy M51 that belongs to a spiral density wave and exhibits nine gas spurs. The combined observations of the(ionized, atomic, molecular, dusty) interstellar medium (ISM) with star formation tracers (HII regions, young <10Myr stellar clusters) suggest (1) no variation in giant molecular cloud (GMC) properties between arm and gas spurs, (2) gas spurs and extinction feathers arising from the same structure with a close spatial relation between gas spurs and ongoing/recent star formation (despite higher gas surface densities in the spiral arm), (3) no trend in star formation age either along the arm or along a spur, (4) evidence for strong star formation feedback in gas spurs: (5) tentative evidence for star formation triggered by stellar feedback for one spur, and (6) GMC associations (GMAs) being no special entities but the result of blending of gas arm/spur cross-sections in lower resolution observations. We conclude that there is no evidence for a coherent star formation onset mechanism that can be solely associated to the presence of the spiral density wave. This suggests that other (more localized) mechanisms are important to delay star formation such that it occurs in spurs. The evidence of star formation proceeding over several million years within individual spurs implies that the mechanism that leads to star formation acts or is sustained over a longer time-scale., Comment: 52 pages, 9 figures, 8 tables, accepted to ApJ
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- 2017
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11. Measured and simulated Cf-252(sf) prompt neutron-photon competition
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Marcath, Matthew J, Haight, Robert C, Vogt, Ramona, Devlin, Matthew, Talou, Patrick, Stetcu, Ionel, Randrup, Jorgen, Schuster, Patricia F, Clarke, Shaun D, and Pozzi, Sara A
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- 2018
12. Measured and simulated Cf(sf)252 prompt neutron-photon competition
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Marcath, Matthew J, Haight, Robert C, Vogt, Ramona, Devlin, Matthew, Talou, Patrick, Stetcu, Ionel, Randrup, Jørgen, Schuster, Patricia F, Clarke, Shaun D, and Pozzi, Sara A
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Synchrotrons and Accelerators ,Physical Sciences ,Nuclear and plasma physics - Published
- 2018
13. Uniform non-stoichiometric titanium nitride thin films for improved kinetic inductance detector array
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Coiffard, G., Schuster, K-F., Driessen, E. F. C., Pignard, S., Calvo, M., Catalano, A., Goupy, J., and Monfardini, A.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
We describe the fabrication of homogeneous sub-stoichiometric titanium nitride films for microwave kinetic inductance detector (mKID) arrays. Using a 6 inch sputtering target and a homogeneous nitrogen inlet, the variation of the critical temperature over a 2 inch wafer was reduced to <25 %. Measurements of a 132-pixel mKID array from these films reveal a sensitivity of 16 kHz/pW in the 100 GHz band, comparable to the best aluminium mKIDs. We measured a noise equivalent power of NEP = 3.6e-15 W/Hz^(1/2). Finally, we describe possible routes to further improve the performance of these TiN mKID arrays., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Journal of low temperature physics, Proceedings of LTD-16
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- 2015
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14. Simultaneous multifrequency radio observations of the Galactic Centre magnetar SGR J1745-2900
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Torne, P., Eatough, R. P., Karuppusamy, R., Kramer, M., Paubert, G., Klein, B., Desvignes, G., Champion, D. J., Wiesemeyer, H., Kramer, C., Spitler, L. G., Thum, C., Güsten, R., Schuster, K. F., and Cognard, I.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on simultaneous observations of the magnetar SGR J1745-2900 at frequencies $\nu = 2.54$ to $225\,\rm{GHz}$ using the Nancay 94-m equivalent, Effelsberg 100-m, and IRAM 30-m radio telescopes. We detect SGR J1745-2900 up to 225 GHz, the highest radio frequency detection of pulsed emission from a neutron star to date. Strong single pulses are also observed from 4.85 up to 154 GHz. At the millimetre band we see significant flux density and spectral index variabilities on time scales of tens of minutes, plus variability between days at all frequencies. Additionally, SGR J1745-2900 was observed at a different epoch at frequencies 296 to 472 GHz using the APEX 12-m radio telescope, with no detections. Over the period MJD 56859.83-56862.93 the fitted spectrum yields a spectral index of $\left<\alpha\right> = -0.4 \pm 0.1$ for a reference flux density $\left< S_{154} \right> = 1.1 \pm 0.2\rm{\,mJy}$ (with $S_{\nu} \propto {\nu}^{\alpha})$, a flat spectrum alike those of the other radio-loud magnetars. These results show that strongly magnetized neutron stars can be effective radio emitters at frequencies notably higher to what was previously known and that pulsar searches in the Galactic Centre are possible in the millimetre band., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Published in MNRAS Letters; v2: minor typos corrected, one reference updated
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- 2015
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15. Short GMC lifetimes: an observational estimate with the PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS)
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Meidt, Sharon E., Hughes, Annie, Dobbs, Clare L., Pety, Jerome, Thompson, Todd A., Garcia-Burillo, Santiago, Leroy, Adam K., Schinnerer, Eva, Colombo, Dario, Querejeta, Miguel, Kramer, Carsten, Schuster, Karl F., and Dumas, Gaelle
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We describe and execute a novel approach to observationally estimate the lifetimes of giant molecular clouds (GMCs). We focus on the cloud population between the two main spiral arms in M51 (the inter-arm region) where cloud destruction via shear and star formation feedback dominates over formation processes. By monitoring the change in GMC number densities and properties from one side of the inter-arm to the other, we estimate the lifetime as a fraction of the inter-arm travel time. We find that GMC lifetimes in M51's inter-arm are finite and short, 20 to 30 Myr. Such short lifetimes suggest that cloud evolution is influenced by environment, in which processes can disrupt GMCs after a few free-fall times. Over most of the region under investigation shear appears to regulate the lifetime. As the shear timescale increases with galactocentric radius, we expect cloud destruction to switch primarily to star formation feedback at larger radii. We identify a transition from shear- to feedback-dominated disruption through a change in the behavior of the GMC number density. The signature suggests that shear is more efficient at completely dispersing clouds, whereas feedback transforms the population, e.g. by fragmenting high mass clouds into lower mass pieces. Compared to the characteristic timescale for molecular hydrogen in M51, our short lifetimes suggest that gas can remain molecular while clouds disperse and reassemble. We propose that galaxy dynamics regulates the cycling of molecular material from diffuse to bound (and ultimately star-forming) objects, contributing to long observed molecular depletion times in normal disk galaxies. We also speculate that, in more extreme environments such as elliptical galaxies and concentrated galaxy centers, star formation can be suppressed when the shear timescale becomes so short that some clouds can not survive to collapse and form stars., Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2015
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16. The IRAM M33 CO(2-1) Survey - A complete census of the molecular gas out to 7 kpc
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Druard, C., Braine, J., Schuster, K. F., Schneider, N., Gratier, P., Bontemps, S., Boquien, M., Combes, F., Corbelli, E., Henkel, C., Herpin, F., Kramer, C., van der Tak, F., and van der Werf, P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
In order to study the ISM and the interplay between the atomic and molecular components in a low-metallicity environment, we present a complete high angular and spectral resolution map and data cube of the 12CO(2-1) emission from the Local Group galaxy M33. Its metallicity is roughly half-solar, such that we can compare its ISM with that of the Milky Way with the main changes being the metallicity and the gas mass fraction. The data have a 12" angular resolution (50pc) with a spectral resolution of 2.6 km/s and a mean noise level of 20 mK per channel in antenna temperature. A radial cut along the major axis was also observed in the 12CO(1-0) line. The CO data cube and integrated intensity map are optimal when using HI data to define the baseline window and the velocities over which the CO emission is integrated. Great care was taken when building these maps, testing different windowing and baseline options and investigating the effect of error beam pickup. The total CO(2-1) luminosity is 2.8e7 K km/s pc2, following the spiral arms in the inner disk. There is no clear variation in the CO(2-1/1-0) intensity ratio with radius and the average value is roughly 0.8. The total molecular gas mass is estimated, using a N(H2)/Ico(1-0)=4e20 cm-2/(K km/s) conversion factor, to be 3.1e8 Msol. The CO spectra in the cube were shifted to zero velocity by subtracting the velocity of the HI peak from the CO spectra. Hence, the velocity dispersion between the atomic and molecular components is extremely low, independently justifying the use of the HI line in building our maps. Stacking the spectra in concentric rings shows that the CO linewidth and possibly the CO-HI velocity dispersion decrease in the outer disk. Using the CO(2-1) emission to trace the molecular gas, the probability distribution function of the H2 column density shows an excess at high column density above a log normal distribution., Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables, Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2014
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17. MicroSQUID Force microscopy in a dilution refrigerator
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Hykel, Danny, Wang, Zhao-Sheng, Castellazzi, Pauline, Crozes, Thierry, Shaw, Gorky, Hasselbach, Klaus, and Schuster, K. F.
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Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
We present a new generation of a scanning MicroSQUID microscope operating in an inverted dilution refrigerator. The MicroSQUIDs have a size of 1.21$ \ \mu$m\textsuperscript{2} and a magnetic flux sensitivity of 120 $\mu\Phi_{0} / \sqrt{\textrm{Hz}}$ and thus a field sensitivity of %$550^{-6} \ \Phi_{0} / \sqrt{\textrm{Hz}}$ 550$ \ \mu \textrm{G}/ \sqrt{\textrm{Hz}}$. The scan range at low temperatures is about 80 $\mu$m and a coarse displacement of 5 mm in x and y direction has been implemented. The MicroSQUID-to-sample distance is regulated using a tuning fork based force detection. A MicroSQUID-to-sample distance of 420 nm has been obtained. The reliable knowledge of this distance is necessary to obtain a trustworthy estimate of the absolute value of the superconducting penetration depth. An outlook will be given on the ongoing direction of development.
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- 2014
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18. The PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS): Multi-phase cold gas kinematic of M51
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Colombo, Dario, Meidt, Sharon E., Schinnerer, Eva, Garcia-Burillo, Santiago, Hughes, Annie, Pety, Jerome, Leroy, Adam K., Dobbs, Clare L., Dumas, Gaelle, Thompson, Todd A., Schuster, Karl F., and Kramer, Carsten
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Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The kinematic complexity and the favorable position of M51 on the sky make this galaxy an ideal target to test different theories of spiral arm dynamics. Taking advantage of the new high resolution PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS) data, we undertake a detailed kinematic study of M51 to characterize and quantify the origin and nature of the non-circular motions. Using a tilted-ring analysis supported by several other archival datasets we update the estimation of M51's position angle (PA=(173 +/- 3) deg) and inclination (i=(22 +/- 5) deg). Harmonic decomposition of the high resolution (40 pc) CO velocity field shows the first kinematic evidence of an m=3 wave in the inner disk of M51 with a corotation at R(CR,m=3)=1.1 +/- 0.1 kpc and a pattern speed of Omega_p(m=3) = 140 km/(s kpc). This mode seems to be excited by the nuclear bar, while the beat frequencies generated by the coupling between the m=3 mode and the main spiral structure confirm its density-wave nature. We observe also a signature of an m=1 mode that is likely responsible for the lopsidedness of M51 at small and large radii. We provide a simple method to estimate the radial variation of the amplitude of the spiral perturbation (Vsp) attributed to the different modes. The main spiral arm structure has
=50-70 km/s, while the streaming velocity associated with the m=1 and m=3 modes is, in general, 2 times lower. Our joint analysis of HI and CO velocity fields at low and high spatial resolution reveals that the atomic and molecular gas phases respond differently to the spiral perturbation due to their different vertical distribution and emission morphology., Comment: 42 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ - Published
- 2014
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19. The PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS): Environmental Dependence of Giant Molecular Cloud Properties in M51
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Colombo, Dario, Hughes, Annie, Schinnerer, Eva, Meidt, Sharon E., Leroy, Adam K., Pety, Jerome, Dobbs, Clare L., Garcia-Burillo, Santiago, Dumas, Gaelle, Thompson, Todd A., Schuster, Karl F., and Kramer, Carsten
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Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Using data from the PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS), we have generated the largest extragalactic Giant Molecular Cloud (GMC) catalog to date, containing 1,507 individual objects. GMCs in the inner M51 disk account for only 54% of the total 12CO(1-0) luminosity of the survey, but on average they exhibit physical properties similar to Galactic GMCs. We do not find a strong correlation between the GMC size and velocity dispersion, and a simple virial analysis suggests that 30% of GMCs in M51 are unbound. We have analyzed the GMC properties within seven dynamically-motivated galactic environments, finding that GMCs in the spiral arms and in the central region are brighter and have higher velocity dispersions than inter-arm clouds. Globally, the GMC mass distribution does not follow a simple power law shape. Instead, we find that the shape of the mass distribution varies with galactic environment: the distribution is steeper in inter-arm region than in the spiral arms, and exhibits a sharp truncation at high masses for the nuclear bar region. We propose that the observed environmental variations in the GMC properties and mass distributions are a consequence of the combined action of large-scale dynamical processes and feedback from high mass star formation. We describe some challenges of using existing GMC identification techniques for decomposing the 12CO(1-0) emission in molecule-rich environments, such as M51's inner disk., Comment: 73 pages, 18 figures, 14 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2014
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20. The NIKA instrument: results and perspectives towards a permanent KID based camera for the Pico Veleta observatory
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D'Addabbo, A., Adam, R., Adane, A., Ade, P., André, P., Beelen, A., Belier, B., Benoit, A., Bideaud, A., Billot, N., Bourrion, O., Calvo, M., Catalano, A., Coiffard, G., Comis, B., Désert, F. -X., Doyle, S., Goupy, J., Kramer, C., Leclercq, S., Macias-Perez, J., Martino, J., Mauskopf, P., Mayet, F., Monfardini, A., Pajot, F., Pascale, E., Ponthieu, N., Revéret, V., Rodriguez, L., Savini, G., Schuster, K. F., Sievers, A., Tucker, C., and Zylka, R.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The New IRAM KIDs Array (NIKA) is a pathfinder instrument devoted to millimetric astronomy. In 2009 it was the first multiplexed KID camera on the sky; currently it is installed at the focal plane of the IRAM 30-meters telescope at Pico Veleta (Spain). We present preliminary data from the last observational run and the ongoing developments devoted to the next NIKA-2 kilopixels camera, to be commissioned in 2015. We also report on the latest laboratory measurements, and recent improvements in detector cosmetics and read-out electronics. Furthermore, we describe a new acquisition strategy allowing us to improve the photometric accuracy, and the related automatic tuning procedure., Comment: 24th International Symposium on Space Terahertz Technology, ISSTT 2013, April 8 to 10, 2013, Groningen, the Netherlands
- Published
- 2013
21. Development and validation for research assessment of Oncotype DX® Breast Recurrence Score, EndoPredict® and Prosigna®
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Buus, Richard, Szijgyarto, Zsolt, Schuster, Eugene F., Xiao, Hui, Haynes, Ben P., Sestak, Ivana, Cuzick, Jack, Paré, Laia, Seguí, Elia, Chic, Nuria, Prat, Aleix, Dowsett, Mitch, and Cheang, Maggie Chon U.
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- 2021
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22. Variation in the dust emissivity index across M33 with Herschel and Spitzer (HerM33es)
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Tabatabaei, F. S., Braine, J., Xilouris, E. M., Kramer, C., Boquien, M., Combes, F., Henkel, C., Relano, M., Verley, S., Gratier, P., Israel, F., Wiedner, M. C., Roellig, M., Schuster, K. F., and van derWerf, P.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We study the wavelength dependence of the dust emission as a function of position and environment across the disk of M33 at a linear resolution of 160 pc using Spitzer and Herschel photometric data. Expressing the emissivity of the dust as a power law, the power-law exponent (beta) is estimated from two independent approaches designed to properly treat the degeneracy between beta and the dust temperature. Both beta and the dust temperature are higher in the inner disk than in the outer disk, contrary to reported beta-T anti-correlations found in other sources. In the cold + warm dust model, the warm component and the ionized gas (Halpha) have a very similar distribution across the galaxy, demonstrating that the model separates the components in an appropriate fashion. The flocculent spiral arms and the dust lanes are evident in the map of the cold component. Both cold and warm dust column densities are high in star forming regions and reach their maxima toward the giant star forming complexes NGC604 and NGC595. beta declines from close to 2 in the center to about 1.3 in the outer disk. beta is positively correlated with star formation and with molecular gas column, as traced by Halpha and CO emission. The lower dust emissivity index in the outer parts of M33 is likely related to the reduced metallicity (different grain composition) and possibly different size distribution. It is not due to the decrease in stellar radiation field or temperature in a simple way because the FIR-bright regions in the outer disk also have a low beta. Like most spirals, M33 has a (decreasing) radial gradient in star formation and molecular-to-atomic gas ratio such that the regions bright in Halpha or CO tend to trace the inner disk, making it difficult to distinguish between their effects on the dust., Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, Accepted for Publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics Journal
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- 2013
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23. A Comparative Study of Giant Molecular Clouds in M51, M33 and the Large Magellanic Cloud
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Hughes, Annie, Meidt, Sharon E., Colombo, Dario, Schinnerer, Eva, Pety, Jerome, Leroy, Adam K., Dobbs, Clare L., Garcia-Burillo, Santiago, Thompson, Todd A., Dumas, Gaelle, Schuster, Karl F., and Kramer, Carsten
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We compare the properties of giant molecular clouds (GMCs) in M51 identified by the Plateau de Bure Interferometer Whirlpool Arcsecond Survey (PAWS) with GMCs identified in wide-field, high resolution surveys of CO emission in M33 and the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). We find that GMCs in M51 are larger, brighter and have higher velocity dispersions relative to their size than equivalent structures in M33 and the LMC. These differences imply that there are genuine variations in the average mass surface density of the different GMC populations. To explain this, we propose that the pressure in the interstellar medium surrounding the GMCs plays a role in regulating their density and velocity dispersion. We find no evidence for a correlation between size and linewidth in any of M51, M33 or the LMC when the CO emission is decomposed into GMCs, although moderately robust correlations are apparent when regions of contiguous CO emission (with no size limitation) are used. Our work demonstrates that observational bias remains an important obstacle to the identification and study of extragalactic GMC populations using CO emission, especially in molecule-rich galactic environments., Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. Uses emulateapj LaTeX macros. For more information on PAWS, further papers and data, see http://www.mpia.de/PAWS/
- Published
- 2013
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24. Gas Kinematics on GMC scales in M51 with PAWS: cloud stabilization through dynamical pressure
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Meidt, Sharon E., Schinnerer, Eva, Garcia-Burillo, Santiago, Hughes, Annie, Colombo, Dario, Pety, Jerome, Dobbs, Clare L., Schuster, Karl F., Kramer, Carsten, Leroy, Adam K., Dumas, Gaelle, and Thompson, Todd A.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We use the high spatial and spectral resolution of the PAWS CO(1-0) survey of the inner 9 kpc of the iconic spiral galaxy M51 to examine the effect of gas streaming motions on the star-forming properties of individual GMCs. We compare our view of gas flows in M51 -- which arise due to departures from axi-symmetry in the gravitational potential (i.e. the nuclear bar and spiral arms) -- with the global pattern of star formation as traced by Halpha and 24\mu m emission. We find that the dynamical environment of GMCs strongly affects their ability to form stars, in the sense that GMCs situated in regions with large streaming motions can be stabilized, while similarly massive GMCs in regions without streaming go on to efficiently form stars. We argue that this is the result of reduced surface pressure felt by clouds embedded in an ambient medium undergoing large streaming motions, which prevents collapse. Indeed, the variation in gas depletion time expected based on the observed streaming motions throughout the disk of M51 quantitatively agrees with the variation in observed gas depletion time scale. The example of M51 shows that streaming motions, triggered by gravitational instabilities in the form of bars and spiral arms, can alter the star formation law; this can explain the variation in gas depletion time among galaxies with different masses and morphologies. In particular, we can explain the long gas depletion times in spiral galaxies compared to dwarf galaxies and starbursts. We suggest that adding a dynamical pressure term to the canonical free-fall time produces a single star formation law that can be applied to all star-forming regions and galaxies, across cosmic time., Comment: 28 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2013
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25. The PdBI Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS). I. A Cloud-Scale/Multi-Wavelength View of the Interstellar Medium in a Grand-Design Spiral Galaxy
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Schinnerer, Eva, Meidt, Sharon E., Pety, Jerome, Hughes, Annie, Colombo, Dario, Garcia-Burillo, Santiago, Schuster, Karl F., Dumas, Gaelle, Dobbs, Clare L., Leroy, Adam K., Kramer, Carsten, Thompson, Todd A., and Regan, Michael W.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The PdBI (Plateau de Bure Interferometer) Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS) has mapped the molecular gas in the central ~9kpc of M51 in its 12CO(1-0) line emission at cloud-scale resolution of ~40pc using both IRAM telescopes. We utilize this dataset to quantitatively characterize the relation of molecular gas (or CO emission) to other tracers of the interstellar medium (ISM), star formation and stellar populations of varying ages. Using 2-dimensional maps, a polar cross-correlation technique and pixel-by-pixel diagrams, we find: (a) that (as expected) the distribution of the molecular gas can be linked to different components of the gravitational potential, (b) evidence for a physical link between CO line emission and radio continuum that seems not to be caused by massive stars, but rather depend on the gas density, (c) a close spatial relation between the PAH and molecular gas emission, but no predictive power of PAH emission for the molecular gas mass,(d) that the I-H color map is an excellent predictor of the distribution (and to a lesser degree the brightness) of CO emission, and (e) that the impact of massive (UV-intense) young star-forming regions on the bulk of the molecular gas in central ~9kpc can not be significant due to a complex spatial relation between molecular gas and star-forming regions that ranges from co-spatial to spatially offset to absent. The last point, in particular, highlights the importance of galactic environment -- and thus the underlying gravitational potential -- for the distribution of molecular gas and star formation., Comment: 52 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables, (several minor typos corrected) accepted by ApJ, high resolution version available, see http://www.mpia.de/PAWS/pub/paws_schinnerer.pdf ; for more information on PAWS, further papers and the data, see http://www.mpia.de/PAWS
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- 2013
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26. The Plateau de Bure + 30m Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey reveals a thick disk of diffuse molecular gas in the M51 galaxy
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Pety, J., Schinnerer, E., Leroy, A. K., Hughes, A., Meidt, S. E., Colombo, D., Dumas, G., Garcia-Burillo, S., Schuster, K. F., Kramer, C., Dobbs, C. L., and Thompson, T. A.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the data of the Plateau de Bure Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS), a high spatial and spectral resolution 12CO(1-0) line survey of the inner 10 x 6 kpc of the M51 system, and the first wide-field imaging of molecular gas in a star-forming spiral galaxy with resolution matched to the typical size of Giant Molecular Clouds (40 pc). We describe the observation, reduction, and combination of the Plateau de Bure Interferometer (PdBI) and IRAM-30m "short spacing" data. The final data cube attains 1.1"-resolution over the 270" x 170" field of view, with sensitivity to all spatial scales from the combination of PdBI and IRAM-30m data, and brightness sensitivity of 0.4 K (1 sigma) in each 5 km/s-wide channel map. We find a CO-luminosity of 9.10^8 K km/s pc^2, corresponding to a molecular gas mass of 4.10^9 Msol for a standard CO-to-H2 conversion factor. Unexpectedly, we find that a large fraction, (50 +/- 10)%, of this emission arises mostly from spatial scales larger than 36" or about 1.3 kpc. Through a series of tests, we demonstrate that this extended emission does not result from a processing artifact. We discuss its origin in light of the stellar component, the 12CO/13CO ratio, and the difference between the kinematics and structure of the PdBI-only and hybrid synthesis (PdBI + IRAM-30m) images. The extended emission is consistent with a thick, diffuse disk of molecular gas with a typical scale height of about 200 pc, substructured in unresolved filaments which fills about 0.1% of the volume., Comment: 42 pages, 35 PostScript figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ. Uses emulateapj LaTeX macros
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- 2013
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27. Probability Distribution Functions OF 12CO(J = 1-0) Brightness and Integrated Intensity in M51: The PAWS View
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Hughes, Annie, Meidt, Sharon E., Schinnerer, Eva, Colombo, Dario, Pety, Jerome, Leroy, Adam K., Dobbs, Clare L., Garcia-Burillo, Santiago, Thompson, Todd A., Dumas, Gaelle, Schuster, Karl F., and Kramer, Carsten
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We analyse the distribution of CO brightness temperature and integrated intensity in M51 at ~40 pc resolution using new CO data from the Plateau de Bure Arcsecond Whirlpool Survey (PAWS). We present probability distribution functions (PDFs) of the CO emission within the PAWS field, which covers the inner 11 x 7 kpc of M51. We find variations in the shape of CO PDFs within different M51 environments, and between M51 and M33 and the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). Globally, the PDFs for the inner disk of M51 can be represented by narrow lognormal functions that cover 1 to 2 orders of magnitude in CO brightness and integrated intensity. The PDFs for M33 and the LMC are narrower and peak at lower CO intensities. However, the CO PDFs for different dynamical environments within the PAWS field depart from the shape of the global distribution. The PDFs for the interarm region are approximately lognormal, but in the spiral arms and central region of M51, they exhibit diverse shapes with a significant excess of bright CO emission. The observed environmental dependence of the shape of the CO PDFs is qualitatively consistent with changes that would be expected if molecular gas in the spiral arms has a larger range of average densities, gas temperatures and velocity fluctuations, though further work is required to disentangle the importance of large-scale dynamical effects versus star formation feedback in regulating these properties. We show that the shape of the CO PDFs for different M51 environments is only weakly related to global properties of the CO emission, but is strongly correlated with some properties of the local giant molecular cloud (GMC) and young stellar cluster populations. For galaxies with strong spiral structure such as M51, our results indicate that galactic-scale dynamical processes play a significant role in the formation and evolution of GMCs and stellar clusters.(abridged), Comment: 30 pages, 18 figures, accepted to ApJ PAWS special issue
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- 2013
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28. Development of Lumped Element Kinetic Inductance Detectors for NIKA
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Roesch, M., Benoit, A., Bideaud, A., Boudou, N., Calvo, M., Cruciani, A., Doyle, S., Leduc, H. G., Monfardini, A., Swenson, L., Leclercq, S., Mauskopf, P., and Schuster, K. F.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors(LEKIDs) have recently shown considerable promise as direct absorption mm-wavelength detectors for astronomical applications. One major research thrust within the N\'eel Iram Kids Array (NIKA) collaboration has been to investigate the suitability of these detectors for deployment at the 30-meter IRAM telescope located on Pico Veleta in Spain. Compared to microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKID), using quarter wavelength resonators, the resonant circuit of a LEKID consists of a discrete inductance and capacitance coupled to a feedline. A high and constant current density distribution in the inductive part of these resonators makes them very sensitive. Due to only one metal layer on a silicon substrate, the fabrication is relatively easy. In order to optimize the LEKIDs for this application, we have recently probed a wide variety of individual resonator and array parameters through simulation and physical testing. This included determining the optimal feed-line coupling, pixel geometry, resonator distribution within an array (in order to minimize pixel cross-talk), and resonator frequency spacing. Based on these results, a 144-pixel Aluminum array was fabricated and tested in a dilution fridge with optical access, yielding an average optical NEP of ~2E-16 W/Hz^1/2 (best pixels showed NEP = 6E-17 W/Hz^1/2 under 4-8 pW loading per pixel). In October 2010 the second prototype of LEKIDs has been tested at the IRAM 30 m telescope. A new LEKID geometry for 2 polarizations will be presented. Also first optical measurements of a titanium nitride array will be discussed., Comment: 5 pages, 12 figures; ISSTT 2011 Workshop
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- 2012
29. The CO-to-H2 Conversion Factor and Dust-to-Gas Ratio on Kiloparsec Scales in Nearby Galaxies
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Sandstrom, K. M., Leroy, A. K., Walter, F., Bolatto, A. D., Croxall, K. V., Draine, B. T., Wilson, C. D., Wolfire, M., Calzetti, D., Kennicutt, R. C., Aniano, G., Meyer, J. Donovan, Usero, A., Bigiel, F., Brinks, E., de Blok, W. J. G, Crocker, A., Dale, D., Engelbracht, C. W., Galametz, M., Groves, B., Hunt, L. K., Koda, J., Kreckel, K., Linz, H., Meidt, S., Pellegrini, E., Rix, H. -W., Roussel, H., Schinnerer, E., Schruba, A., Schuster, K. -F., Skibba, R., van der Laan, T., Appleton, P., Armus, L., Brandl, B., Gordon, K., Hinz, J., Krause, O., Montiel, E., Sauvage, M., Schmiedeke, A., Smith, J. D. T., and Vigroux, L.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present kiloparsec (kpc) spatial resolution maps of the CO-to-H2 conversion factor (alpha_co) and dust-to-gas ratio (DGR) in 26 nearby, star-forming galaxies. We have simultaneously solved for alpha_co and DGR by assuming that the DGR is approximately constant on kpc scales. With this assumption, we can combine maps of dust mass surface density, CO integrated intensity and HI column density to solve for both alpha_co and DGR with no assumptions about their value or dependence on metallicity or other parameters. Such a study has just become possible with the availability of high resolution far-IR maps from the Herschel key program KINGFISH, 12CO J=(2-1) maps from the IRAM 30m large program HERACLES and HI 21-cm line maps from THINGS. We use a fixed ratio between the (2-1) and (1-0) lines to present our alpha_co results on the more typically used 12CO J=(1-0) scale and show using literature measurements that variations in the line ratio do not effect our results. In total, we derive 782 individual solutions for alpha_co and DGR. On average, alpha_co = 3.1 Msun pc^-2 (K km s^-1)^-1 for our sample with a standard deviation of 0.3 dex. Within galaxies we observe a generally flat profile of alpha_co as a function of galactocentric radius. However, most galaxies exhibit a lower alpha_co in the central kpc---a factor of ~2 below the galaxy mean, on average. In some cases, the central alpha_co value can be factors of 5 to 10 below the standard Milky Way (MW) value of alpha_co,MW =4.4 Msun pc^-2 (K km s^-1)^-1. While for alpha_co we find only weak correlations with metallicity, DGR is well-correlated with metallicity, with an approximately linear slope. Finally, we present several recommendations for choosing an appropriate alpha_co for studies of nearby galaxies., Comment: accepted to ApJ July 9, 2013, 63 pages, 2-column ApJ format, p38-63 are an image atlas
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- 2012
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30. A detailed view of a Molecular Cloud in the far outer disk of M33
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Braine, J., Gratier, P., Contreras, Y., Schuster, K. F., and Brouillet, N.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The amount of H$_2$ present in spiral galaxies remains uncertain, particularly in the dim outer regions and in low-metallicity environments. We present high-resolution CO(1--0) observations with the Plateau de Bure interferometer of the most distant molecular cloud in the local group galaxy M 33. The cloud is a single entity rather than a set of smaller clouds within the broad beam of the original single-dish observations. The interferometer and single-dish fluxes are very similar and the line widths are indistinguishable, despite the difference in beamsize. At a spatial resolution of 10 pc, beyond the optical radius of the M 33, the CO brightness temperature reaches 2.4 Kelvins. A virial mass estimate for the cloud yields a mass of $4.3 \times 10^4$ \msun and a ratio $\ratio \simeq 3.5 \times 10^{20} \Xunit$. While no velocity gradient is seen where the emission is strong, the velocity is redshifted to the extreme SW and blue-shifted to the far NE. If the orientation of the cloud is along the plane of the disk (i.e. not perpendicular), then these velocities correspond to slow infall or accretion. The rather modest infall rate would be about $2 \times 10^{-4}$\moyr., Comment: 6 pages, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2012
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31. Giant Molecular Clouds in the Local Group Galaxy M33
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Gratier, P., Braine, J., Rodriguez-Fernandez, N. J., Schuster, K. F., Kramer, C., Corbelli, E., Combes, F., Brouillet, N., van der Werf, P. P., and Röllig, M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis of the systematic CO(2-1) survey at 12" resolution covering most of the local group spiral M 33 which, at a distance of 840 kpc, is close enough that individual giant molecular clouds (GMCs) can be identified. The goal of this work is to study the properties of the GMCs in this subsolar metallicity galaxy. The CPROPS (Cloud Properties) algorithm (Rosolowsky & Leroy 2006) was used to identify 337 GMCs in M 33, the largest sample to date in an external galaxy. The sample is used to study the GMC luminosity function, or mass spectrum under the assumption of a constant N(H2)/ICO ratio. We find that n(L)dL = K*L^(-2.0\pm0.1) for the entire sample. However, when the sample is divided into inner and outer disk samples, the exponent changes from 1.6 \pm 0.2 for the centre 2 kpc to 2.3 \pm 0.2 for galactocentric distances larger than 2 kpc. Based on the emission in the FUV, Halpha, 8mu, and 24mu bands, each cloud was classified in terms of its star forming activity - no star formation, embedded, or exposed star formation (visible in FUV and Halpha). At least one sixth of the clouds had no (massive) star formation, suggesting that the average time required for star formation to start is about one sixth of the total time for which the object is identifiable as a GMC. The clouds without star formation have significantly lower CO luminosities than those with star formation, whether embedded or exposed, presumably related to the lack of heating sources. Taking the cloud sample as a whole, the main non-trivial correlation was the decrease in cloud CO brightness (or luminosity) with galactocentric radius. The complete cloud catalog, including CO and HI spectra and the CO contours on the FUV, Halpha, 8mu, and 24mu images is presented in the appendix., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics. Language correction and change to figure 1. Figure 6 was shifted and cropped in the previous version
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- 2011
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32. A Constant Molecular Gas Depletion Time in Nearby Disk Galaxies
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Bigiel, F., Leroy, A. K., Walter, F., Brinks, E., de Blok, W. J. G., Kramer, C., Rix, H. W., Schruba, A., Schuster, K. F., Usero, A., and Wiesemeyer, H. W.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We combine new sensitive, wide-field CO data from the HERACLES survey with ultraviolet and infrared data from GALEX and Spitzer to compare the surface densities of H2, Sigma_H2, and recent star formation rate, Sigma_SFR, over many thousands of positions in 30 nearby disk galaxies. We more than quadruple the size of the galaxy sample compared to previous work and include targets with a wide range of galaxy properties. Even though the disk galaxies in this study span a wide range of properties, we find a strong and approximately linear correlation between Sigma_SFR and Sigma_H2 at our common resolution of 1kpc. This implies a roughly constant median H2 consumption time, tau_H2 = Sigma_H2 / Sigma_SFR, of ~2.35Gyr (including heavy elements) across our sample. At 1kpc resolution, there is only a weak correlation between Sigma_H2 and tau_H2 over the range Sigma_H2~5-100M_sun/pc^2, which is probed by our data. We compile a broad set of literature measurements that have been obtained using a variety of star formation tracers, sampling schemes and physical scales and show that overall, these data yield almost exactly the same results, although with more scatter. We interpret these results as strong, albeit indirect evidence that star formation proceeds in a uniform way in giant molecular clouds in the disks of spiral galaxies., Comment: Accepted for Publication in ApJL
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- 2011
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33. A dual-band millimeter-wave kinetic inductance camera for the IRAM 30-meter telescope
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Monfardini, A., Benoit, A., Bideaud, A., Swenson, L. J., Roesch, M., Desert, F. X., Doyle, S., Endo, A., Cruciani, A., Ade, P., Baryshev, A. M., Baselmans, J. J. A., Bourrion, O., Calvo, M., Camus, P., Ferrari, L., Giordano, C., Hoffmann, C., Leclercq, S., Macias-Perez, J. F., Mauskopf, P., Schuster, K. F., Tucker, C., Vescovi, C., and Yates, S. J. C.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Context. The Neel IRAM KIDs Array (NIKA) is a fully-integrated measurement system based on kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs) currently being developed for millimeter wave astronomy. In a first technical run, NIKA was successfully tested in 2009 at the Institute for Millimetric Radio Astronomy (IRAM) 30-meter telescope at Pico Veleta, Spain. This prototype consisted of a 27-42 pixel camera imaging at 150 GHz. Subsequently, an improved system has been developed and tested in October 2010 at the Pico Veleta telescope. The instrument upgrades included dual-band optics allowing simultaneous imaging at 150 GHz and 220 GHz, faster sampling electronics enabling synchronous measurement of up to 112 pixels per measurement band, improved single-pixel sensitivity, and the fabrication of a sky simulator to replicate conditions present at the telescope. Results. The new dual-band NIKA was successfully tested in October 2010, performing in-line with sky simulator predictions. Initially the sources targeted during the 2009 run were re-imaged, verifying the improved system performance. An optical NEP was then calculated to be around 2 \dot 10-16 W/Hz1/2. This improvement in comparison with the 2009 run verifies that NIKA is approaching the target sensitivity for photon-noise limited ground-based detectors. Taking advantage of the larger arrays and increased sensitivity, a number of scientifically-relevant faint and extended objects were then imaged including the Galactic Center SgrB2(FIR1), the radio galaxy Cygnus A and the NGC1068 Seyfert galaxy. These targets were all observed simultaneously in the 150 GHz and 220 GHz atmospheric windows., Comment: Submitted to ApJ (abstract reduced to fit ApJ standards)
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- 2011
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34. The High-Density Ionized Gas in the Central Parsec of the Galaxy
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Zhao, Jun-Hui, Blundell, Ray, Moran, James M., Downes, Dennis, Schuster, Karl F., and Marrone, Daniel P.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report a study of the H30$\alpha$ line emission at 1.3 mm from the region around Sgr A* made with the Submillimeter Array at a resolution of 2\arcsec\ over a field of 60\arcsec\ (2 parsec) and a velocity range of -360 to +345 \kms. This field encompasses most of the Galactic center's "minispiral". With an isothermal homogeneous HII model, we determined the physical conditions of the ionized gas at specific locations in the Northern and Eastern Arms from the H30$\alpha$ line data along with Very Large Array data from the H92$\alpha$ line at 3.6 cm and from the radio continuum emission at 1.3 cm. The typical electron density and kinetic temperature in the minispiral arms are 3-21$\times10^4$ cm$^{-3}$ and 5,000-13,000 K, respectively. The H30$\alpha$ and H92$\alpha$ line profiles are broadened due to the large velocity shear within and along the beam produced by dynamical motions in the strong gravitational field near Sgr A*. We constructed a 3D model of the minispiral using the orbital parameters derived under the assumptions that the gas flows are in Keplerian motion. The gas in the Eastern Arm appears to collide with the Northern Arm flow in the "Bar" region, which is located 0.1-0.2 parsec south of and behind Sgr A*. Finally, a total Lyman continuum flux of $3\times10^{50}$ photons s$^{-1}$ is inferred from the assumption that the gas is photoionized and the ionizing photons for the high-density gas in the minispiral arms are from external sources, which is equivalent to $\sim250$ O9-type zero-age-main-sequence stars., Comment: 23 pages, including 8 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2010
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35. Coordinated NIR/mm observations of flare emission from Sagittarius A*
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Kunneriath, D., Witzel, G., Eckart, A., Zamaninasab, M., übel, R. Gieß, Schödel, R., Baganoff, F. K., Morris, M. R., Dovčiak, M., Duschl, W. J., García-Marín, M., Karas, V., König, S., Krichbaum, T. P., Krips, M., Lu, R. -S., Mauerhan, J., Moultaka, J., Mužić, K., Sabha, N., Najarro, F., Pott, J. -U., Schuster, K. F., Sjouwerman, L. O., Straubmeier, C., Thum, C., Vogel, S. N., Teuben, P., Weiss, A., Wiesemeyer, H., and Zensus, J. A.
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Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on a successful, simultaneous observation and modelling of the millimeter (mm) to near-infrared (NIR) flare emission of the Sgr A* counterpart associated with the supermassive black hole at the Galactic centre (GC). We present a mm/sub-mm light curve of Sgr A* with one of the highest quality continuous time coverages and study and model the physical processes giving rise to the variable emission of Sgr A*., Comment: 14 pages, 16 figures
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- 2010
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36. Molecular Cloud Formation and the Star Formation Efficiency in M~33
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Braine, Jonathan, Gratier, Pierre, Kramer, Carsten, Schuster, Karl F., Tabatabaei, Fatemeh, and Gardan, Erwan
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Does star formation proceed in the same way in large spirals such as the Milky Way and in smaller chemically younger galaxies? Earlier work suggests a more rapid transformation of H$_2$ into stars in these objects but (1) a doubt remains about the validity of the H$_2$ mass estimates and (2) there is currently no explanation for why star formation should be more efficient. M~33, a local group spiral with a mass $\sim 10$\% and a metallicity half that of the Galaxy, represents a first step towards the metal poor Dwarf Galaxies. We have searched for molecular clouds in the outer disk of M~33 and present here a set of detections of both $^{12}$CO and $^{13}$CO, including the only detections (for both lines) beyond the R$_{25}$ radius in a subsolar metallicity galaxy. The spatial resolution enables mass estimates for the clouds and thus a measure of the $N({\rm H}_2) / I_{\rm CO}$ ratio, which in turn enables a more reliable calculation of the H$_2$ mass. Our estimate for the outer disk of M~33 is $N({\rm H}_2) / I_{\rm CO(1-0)} \sim 5 \times 10^{20} \,{\rm cm^{-2}/(K{\rm \ km \ s^{-1}})}$ with an estimated uncertainty of a factor $\le 2$. While the $^{12/13}$CO line ratios do not provide a reliable measure of $N({\rm H}_2) / I_{\rm CO}$, the values we find are slightly greater than Galactic and corroborate a somewhat higher $N({\rm H}_2) / I_{\rm CO}$ value. Comparing the CO observations with other tracers of the interstellar medium, no reliable means of predicting where CO would be detected was identified. In particular, CO detections were often not directly on local HI or FIR or H$\alpha$ peaks, although generally in regions with FIR emission and high HI column density. The results presented here provide support for the quicker transformation of H$_2$ into stars in M~33 than in large local universe spirals., Comment: 9 pages 6 figures, Accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysics full resolution version available at www.obs.u-bordeaux1.fr/radio/JBraine/14166.pdf
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- 2010
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37. Cool gas and dust in M33: Results from the Herschel M33 extended survey (HERM33ES)
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Braine, J., Gratier, P., Kramer, C., Xilouris, E. M., Rosolowsky, E., Buchbender, C., Boquien, M., Calzetti, D., Quintana-Lacaci, G., Tabatabaei, F., Verley, S., Israel, F., van der Tak, F., Aalto, S., Combes, F., Garcia-Burillo, S., Gonzalez, M., Henkel, C., Koribalski, B., Mookerjea, B., Roellig, M., Schuster, K. F., Relano, M., Bertoldi, F., van der Werf, P., and Wiedner, M.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an analysis of the first space-based far-IR-submm observations of M 33, which measure the emission from the cool dust and resolve the giant molecular cloud complexes. With roughly half-solar abundances, M33 is a first step towards young low-metallicity galaxies where the submm may be able to provide an alternative to CO mapping to measure their H$_2$ content. In this Letter, we measure the dust emission cross-section $\sigma$ using SPIRE and recent CO and \HI\ observations; a variation in $\sigma$ is present from a near-solar neighborhood cross-section to about half-solar with the maximum being south of the nucleus. Calculating the total H column density from the measured dust temperature and cross-section, and then subtracting the \HI\ column, yields a morphology similar to that observed in CO. The H$_2$/\HI\ mass ratio decreases from about unity to well below 10% and is about 15% averaged over the optical disk. The single most important observation to reduce the potentially large systematic errors is to complete the CO mapping of M 33., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2010
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38. PACS and SPIRE photometer maps of M33: First results of the Herschel M33 extended survey (HERM33ES)
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Kramer, C., Buchbender, C., Xilouris, E. M., Boquien, M., Braine, J., Calzetti, D., Lord, S., Mookerjea, B., Quintana-Lacaci, G., Relano, M., Stacey, G., Tabatabaei, F. S., Verley, S., Aalto, S., Akras, S., Albrecht, M., Anderl, S., Beck, R., Bertoldi, F., Combes, F., Dumke, M., Garcia-Burillo, S., Gonzalez, M., Gratier, P., Gueusten, R., Henkel, C., Israel, F. P., Koribalski, B., Lundgren, A., Martin-Pintado, J., Roellig, M., Rosolowsky, E., Schuster, K. F., Sheth, K., Sievers, A., Stutzki, J., Tilanus, R. P. J., van der Tak, F., van der Werf, P., and Wiedner, M. C.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Within the framework of the HERM33ES key project, we are studying the star forming interstellar medium in the nearby, metal-poor spiral galaxy M33, exploiting the high resolution and sensitivity of Herschel. We use PACS and SPIRE maps at 100, 160, 250, 350, and 500 micron wavelength, to study the variation of the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) with galacto-centric distance. Detailed SED modeling is performed using azimuthally averaged fluxes in elliptical rings of 2 kpc width, out to 8 kpc galacto-centric distance. Simple isothermal and two-component grey body models, with fixed dust emissivity index, are fitted to the SEDs between 24 and 500 micron using also MIPS/Spitzer data, to derive first estimates of the dust physical conditions. The far-infrared and submillimeter maps reveal the branched, knotted spiral structure of M33. An underlying diffuse disk is seen in all SPIRE maps (250-500 micron). Two component fits to the SEDs agree better than isothermal models with the observed, total and radially averaged flux densities. The two component model, with beta fixed at 1.5, best fits the global and the radial SEDs. The cold dust component clearly dominates; the relative mass of the warm component is less than 0.3% for all the fits. The temperature of the warm component is not well constrained and is found to be about 60K plus/minus 10K. The temperature of the cold component drops significantly from about 24K in the inner 2 kpc radius to 13K beyond 6 kpc radial distance, for the best fitting model. The gas-to-dust ratio for beta=1.5, averaged over the galaxy, is higher than the solar value by a factor of 1.5 and is roughly in agreement with the subsolar metallicity of M33., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in the A&A Herschel Special Issue
- Published
- 2010
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39. NIKA: A millimeter-wave kinetic inductance camera
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Monfardini, A., Swenson, L. J., Bideaud, A., Désert, F. X., Yates, S. J. C., Benoit, A., Baryshev, A. M., Baselmans, J. J. A., Doyle, S., Klein, B., Roesch, M., Tucker, C., Ade, P., Calvo, M., Camus, P., Giordano, C., Guesten, R., Hoffmann, C., Leclercq, S., Mauskopf, P., and Schuster, K. F.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Current generation millimeter wavelength detectors suffer from scaling limits imposed by complex cryogenic readout electronics. To circumvent this it is imperative to investigate technologies that intrinsically incorporate strong multiplexing. One possible solution is the kinetic inductance detector (KID). In order to assess the potential of this nascent technology, a prototype instrument optimized for the 2 mm atmospheric window was constructed. Known as the N\'eel IRAM KIDs Array (NIKA), it was recently tested at the Institute for Millimetric Radio Astronomy (IRAM) 30-meter telescope at Pico Veleta, Spain. The measurement resulted in the imaging of a number of sources, including planets, quasars, and galaxies. The images for Mars, radio star MWC349, quasar 3C345, and galaxy M87 are presented. From these results, the optical NEP was calculated to be around $1 \times 10^{-15}$ W$ / $Hz$^{1/2}$. A factor of 10 improvement is expected to be readily feasible by improvements in the detector materials and reduction of performance-degrading spurious radiation., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2010
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40. Molecular and Atomic Gas in the Local Group Galaxy M33
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Gratier, P., Braine, J., Rodriguez-Fernandez, N. J., Schuster, K. F., Kramer, C., Xilouris, E. M., Tabatabaei, F. S., Henkel, C., Corbelli, E., Israel, F., van der Werf, P. P., Calzetti, D., Garcia-Burillo, S., Sievers, A., Combes, F., Wiklind, T., Brouillet, N., Herpin, F., Bontemps, S., Aalto, S., Koribalski, B., van der Tak, F., Wiedner, M. C., Roellig, M., and Mookerjea, B.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high resolution large scale observations of the molecular and atomic gas in the Local Group Galaxy M33. The observations were carried out using the HERA at the 30m IRAM telescope in the CO(2-1) line achieving a resolution of 12"x2.6 km/s, enabling individual GMCs to be resolved. The observed region mainly along the major axis out to a radius of 8.5 kpc, and covers the strip observed with HIFI/PACS Spectrometers as part of the HERM33ES Herschel key program. The achieved sensitivity in main beam temperature is 20-50 mK at 2.6 km/s velocity resolution. The CO(2-1) luminosity of the observed region is 1.7\pm0.1x10^7 Kkm/s pc^2, corresponding to H2 masses of 1.9x10^8 Msun (including He), calculated with a NH2/ICO twice the Galactic value due to the half-solar metallicity of M33. HI 21 cm VLA archive observations were reduced and the mosaic was imaged and cleaned using the multi-scale task in CASA, yielding a series of datacubes with resolutions ranging from 5" to 25". The HI mass within a radius of 8.5 kpc is estimated to be 1.4x10^9 Msun. The azimuthally averaged CO surface brightness decreases exponentially with a scale length of 1.9\pm0.1 kpc whereas the atomic gas surface density is constant at Sigma_HI=6\pm2 Msun/pc^2 deprojected to face-on. The central kiloparsec H_2 surface density is Sigma_H2=8.5\pm0.2 Msun/pc^2. The star formation rate per unit molecular gas (SF Efficiency, the rate of transformation of molecular gas into stars), as traced by the ratio of CO to Halpha and FIR brightness, is constant with radius. The SFE appears 2-4 times greater than of large spiral galaxies. A morphological comparison of molecular and atomic gas with tracers of star formation shows good agreement between these maps both in terms of peaks and holes. A few exceptions are noted. Several spectra, including those of a molecular cloud situated more than 8 kpc from the galaxy center, are presented., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. Higher resolution version available at : http://www.obs.u-bordeaux1.fr/radio/gratier/M33_CO_HI_accepted.pdf
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- 2010
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41. The Molecular Interstellar Medium of the Local Group Dwarf NGC6822
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Gratier, P., Braine, J., Rodriguez-Fernandez, N. J., Israel, F. P., Schuster, K. F., Brouillet, N., and Gardan, E.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Do molecular clouds collapse to form stars at the same rate in all environments? In large spiral galaxies, the rate of transformation of H2 into stars (hereafter SFE) varies little. However, the SFE in distant objects (z~1) is much higher than in the large spiral disks that dominate the local universe. Some small local group galaxies share at least some of the characteristics of intermediate-redshift objects, such as size or color. Recent work has suggested that the Star Formation Efficiency (SFE, defined as the SFRate per unit H2) in local Dwarf galaxies may be as high as in the distant objects. A fundamental difficulty in these studies is the independent measure of the H2 mass in metal-deficient environments. At 490 kpc, NGC6822 is an excellent choice for this study; it has been mapped in the CO(2-1) line using the multibeam receiver HERA on the 30 meter IRAM telescope, yielding the largest sample of giant molecular clouds (GMCs) in this galaxy. Despite the much lower metallicity, we find no clear difference in the properties of the GMCs in NGC 6822 and those in the Milky Way except lower CO luminosities for a given mass. Several independent methods indicate that the total H2 mass in NGC 6822 is about 5 x 10^6 Msun in the area we mapped and less than 10^7 Msun in the whole galaxy. This corresponds to a NH2/ICO ~ 4 x 10^{21} cm^-2 /(Kkm/s) over large scales, such as would be observed in distant objects, and half that in individual GMCs. No evidence was found for H2 without CO emission. Our simulations of the radiative transfer in clouds are entirely compatible with these NH2/ICO values. The SFE implied is a factor 5 - 10 higher than what is observed in large local universe spirals., Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
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42. HERACLES: The HERA CO-Line Extragalactic Survey
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Leroy, A. K., Walter, F., Bigiel, F., Usero, A., Weiss, A., Brinks, E., de Blok, W. J. G., Kennicutt, R. C., Schuster, K. -F., Kramer, C., Wiesemeyer, H. W., and Roussel, H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the HERA CO-Line Extragalactic Survey (HERACLES), an atlas of CO emission from 18 nearby galaxies that are also part of The HI Nearby Galaxy Survey (THINGS) and the Spitzer Infrared Nearby Galaxies Survey (SINGS). We used the HERA multi-pixel receiver on the IRAM 30-m telescope to map the CO J=2-1 line over the full optical disk (defined by the isophotal radius r_25) of each target, at 13" angular resolution and 2.6 km/s velocity resolution. Here we describe the observations and reduction of the data and show channel maps, azimuthally averaged profiles, integrated intensity maps, and peak intensity maps. The implied H2 masses range from 7 \times 10^6 to 6 \times 10^9 M_sun, with four low metallicity dwarf irregular galaxies yielding only upper limits. In the cases where CO is detected, the integrated H2-to-HI ratios range from 0.02 - 1.13 and H2-to-stellar mass ratios from 0.01 to 0.25. Exponential scale lengths of the CO emission for our targets are in the range 0.8 - 3.2 kpc, or 0.2 \pm 0.05 r_25. The intensity-weighted mean velocity of CO matches that of HI very well, with a 1\sigma scatter of only 6 km/s. The CO J=2-1 / J=1-0 line ratio varies over a range similar to that found in the Milky Way and other nearby galaxies, \sim 0.6 - 1.0, with higher values found in the centers of galaxies. The typical line ratio, \sim 0.8, could be produced by optically thick gas with an excitation temperature of \sim 10 K., Comment: 28 pages, 34 figures, published in AJ (http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2009AJ....137.4670L)
- Published
- 2009
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43. A complete 12CO 2--1 map of M51 with HERA: II. Total gas surface densities and gravitational stability
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Hitschfeld, M., Kramer, C., Schuster, K. F., Garcia-Burillo, S., and Stutzki, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
To date the onset of large-scale star formation in galaxies and its link to gravitational stability of the galactic disk have not been fully understood. The nearby face-on spiral galaxy M51 is an ideal target for studying this subject. This paper combines CO, dust, HI, and stellar maps of M51 and its companion galaxy to study the H2/HI transition, the gas-to-dust ratios, and the stability of the disk against gravitational collapse. We combine maps of the molecular gas using 12CO 2--1 map HERA/IRAM-30m data and HI VLA data to study the total gas surface density and the phase transition of atomic to molecular gas. The total gas surface density is compared to the dust surface density from 850 micron SCUBA data. Taking into account the velocity dispersions of the molecular and atomic gas, and the stellar surface densities derived from the 2MASS K-band survey, we derive the total Toomre Q parameter of the disk. The gas surface density in the spiral arms is approximately 2-3 higher compared to that of the interarm regions. The ratio of molecular to atomic surface density shows a nearly power-law dependence on the hydrostatic pressure P_hydro. The gas surface density distribution in M51 shows an underlying exponential distribution with a scale length of h_gas=7.6 kpc representing 55% of the total gas mass, comparable to the properties of the exponential dust disk. In contrast to the velocity widths observed in HI, the CO velocity dispersion shows enhanced line widths in the spiral arms compared to the interarm regions. The contribution of the stellar component in the Toomre Q-parameter analysis is significant and lowers the combined Q-parameter Q_tot by up to 70% towards the threshold for gravitational instability. The value of Q_tot varies from 1.5-3 in radial averages. A map of Q_tot shows values around 1 on the spiral arms., Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, accepted by A&A for publication
- Published
- 2009
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44. Simultaneous NIR/sub-mm observation of flare emission from SgrA*
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Eckart, A., Schoedel, R., Garcia-Marin, M., Witzel, G., Weiss, A., Baganoff, F. K., Morris, M. R., Bertram, T., Dovciak, M., Duschl, W. J., Karas, V., Koenig, S., Krichbaum, T. P., Krips, M., Kunneriath, D., Lu, R. S., Markoff, S., Mauerhan, J., Meyer, L., Moultaka, J., Muzic, K., Najarro, F., Pott, J. -U., Schuster, K. F., Sjouwerman, L. O., Straubmeier, C., Thum, C., Vogel, S. N., Wiesemeyer, H., Zamaninasab, M., and Zensus, J. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on a successful, simultaneous observation and modeling of the sub-millimeter to near-infrared flare emission of the Sgr A* counterpart associated with the super-massive black hole at the Galactic center. Our modeling is based on simultaneous observations that have been carried out on 03 June, 2008 using the NACO adaptive optics (AO) instrument at the ESO VLT and the LABOCA bolometer at the APEX telescope. Inspection and modeling of the light curves show that the sub-mm follows the NIR emission with a delay of 1.5+/-0.5 hours. We explain the flare emission delay by an adiabatic expansion of the source components., Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables, in press with A&A
- Published
- 2008
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45. Gravitational stability in the disk of M51
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Hitschfeld, M., Kramer, C., Schuster, K. F., Garcia-Burillo, S., and Stutzki, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Star formation laws, like i.e. the Schmidt law relating star formation rate and total gas density, have been studied in several spiral galaxies but the underlying physics are not yet well understood. M51, as a nearby face-on, grand design spiral galaxy studied in many line transitions, is an ideal target to study the connection between physical conditions of the gas and star formation activity. In this contribution we combine molecular, atomic, total gas and stellar surface densities and study the gravitational stability of the gas (Schuster et al.2007, Hitschfeld et al. in prep.). From our IRAM-30m 12 CO2-1 map and complementary HI-, Radio Continuum- and ACS-HST B-band-data we derive maps of the total gas density and the stellar surface density to study the gravitational stability of the gas via the Toomre Q parameter., Comment: 4 pages, 3 Figures: Galaxies in the Local Volume, Sydney, Conference Proceedings Contribution
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- 2007
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46. Particularly Efficient Star Formation in M33
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Gardan, E., Braine, J., Schuster, K. F., Brouillet, N., and Sievers, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Star Formation (SF) rate in galaxies is an important parameter at all redshifts and evolutionary stages of galaxies. In order to understand the increased SF rates in intermediate redshift galaxies one possibility is to study star formation in local galaxies with properties frequently found at this earlier epoch like low metallicity and small size. We present sensitive observations of the molecular gas in M 33, a small Local Group spiral at a distance of 840 kpc which shares many of the characteristics of the intermediate redshift galaxies. The observations were carried out in the CO(2--1) line with the HERA heterodyne array on the IRAM 30 m telescope. A 11\arcmin$\times$22\arcmin region in the northern part of M 33 was observed, reaching a detection threshold of a few 10$^{3}$ \msol. The correlation in this field between the CO emission and tracers of SF (8\mum, 24\mum, \Ha, FUV) is excellent and CO is detected very far North, showing that molecular gas forms far out in the disk even in a small spiral with a subsolar metallicity. One major molecular cloud was discovered in an interarm region with no HI peak and little if any signs of SF -- without a complete survey this cloud would never have been found. The radial dependence of the CO emission has a scale length similar to the dust emission, less extended than the \Ha or FUV. If, however, the $\ratioo$ ratio varies inversely with metallicity, then the scale length of the H$_2$ becomes similar to that of the \Ha or FUV. Comparing the SF rate to the H$_2$ mass shows that M 33, like the intermediate redshift galaxies it resembles, has a significantly higher SF efficiency than large local universe spirals., Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures
- Published
- 2007
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47. Imaging of Thermal Domains in ultrathin NbN films for Hot Electron Bolometers
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Doenitz, D., Kleiner, R., Koelle, D., Scherer, T., and Schuster, K. F.
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Condensed Matter - Superconductivity - Abstract
We present low-temperature scanning electron microscopy (LTSEM) investigations of superconducting microbridges made from ultrathin NbN films as used for hot electron bolometers. LTSEM probes the thermal structure within the microbridges under various dc current bias conditions, either via electron-beam-induced generation of an unstable hotspot, or via the beam-induced growth of a stable hotspot. Such measurements reveal inhomogeneities on a micron scale, which may be due to spatial variations in the NbN film or film-interface properties. Comparison with model calculations for the stable hotspot regime confirm the basic features of common hot spot models., Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2007
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48. A complete 12CO 2-1 map of M51 with HERA
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Kramer, C., Hitschfeld, M., Schuster, K. F., Garcia-Burillo, S., and Mookerjea, B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The nearby, almost face-on, and interacting galaxy M51 offers an excellent opportunity to study the distribution of molecular gas and the mechanisms governing the star formation rate. We have created a complete map of M51 in 12CO 2-1 at a resolution of 11 arcsec corresponding to 450 kpc using HERA at the IRAM-30m telescope. In Schuster et al. (2006) we have combined these data with maps of HI and the radio-continuum to study the star formation efficiency, the local Schmidt law, and Toomre stability of the disk in radial averages out to radii of 12 kpc. Here, we also discuss the distribution of giant molecular associations and its mass spectrum, in comparison with similar studies in the literature., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, contributed talk in "Mapping the Galaxy and Nearby Galaxies", 26-30 June, Ishigaki, Japan, eds. Keiichi Wada & Francoise Combes
- Published
- 2006
49. A complete 12CO 2-1 map of M51 with HERA: I. Radial averages of CO, HI, and radio continuum
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Schuster, K. F., Kramer, C., Hitschfeld, M., Garcia-Burillo, S., and Mookerjea, B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The mechanisms governing the star formation rate in spiral galaxies are not yet clear. The nearby, almost face-on, and interacting galaxy M51 offers an excellent opportunity to study at high spatial resolutions the local star formation laws. In this first paper, we investigate the correlation of H2, HI, and total gas surface densities with the star forming activity, derived from the radio continuum (RC), along radial averages out to radii of 12kpc. We have created a complete map of M51 in 12CO 2-1 at a resolution of 450kpc using HERA at the IRAM-30m telescope. These data are combined with maps of HI and the radio-continuum at 20cm wavelength. The latter is used to estimate the star formation rate (SFR), thus allowing to study the star formation efficiency and the local Schmidt law. The velocity dispersion from CO is used to study the critical surface density and the gravitational stability of the disk. The critical gas velocity dispersions needed to stabilize the gas against gravitational collapse in the differentially rotating disk of M51 using the Toomre criterion, vary with radius between 1.7 and 6.8 km/s. Observed radially averaged dispersions derived from the CO data vary between 28 km/s in the center and 8 km/s at radii of 7 to 9 kpc. They exceed the critical dispersions by factors Q_gas of 1 to 5. We speculate that the gravitational potential of stars leads to a critically stable disk., Comment: accepted by A&A
- Published
- 2006
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50. Microfabrication Developments for Future Instruments Using KID Detectors
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Goupy, J., Benoit, A., Bideaud, A., Bourrion, O., Calvo, M., Catalano, A., Driessen, E. F. C., Gomez, A., Leclercq, S., Levy-Bertrand, F., Macias-Perez, J. F., Monfardini, A., and Schuster, K. F.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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