Browsing by Subject "radio lines: galaxies"
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- ItemOpen AccessA rare example of low surface-brightness radio lobes in a gas-rich early-type galaxy: the story of NGC 3998(2016) Frank, Bradley S; Morganti, Raffaella; Oosterloo, Tom; Nyland, Kristina; Serra, PaoloWe study the nearby lenticular galaxy NGC 3998. This galaxy is known to host a low-power radio AGN with a kpc-size one-sided jet and a large, nearly polar H i disc. It is therefore a good system to study to understand the relation between the availability of cold-gas and the triggering of AGNs in galaxies. Our new WSRT data reveal two faint, S-shaped radio lobes extending out to ~10 kpc from the galaxy centre. Remarkably, we find that the inner H i disc warps back towards the stellar mid-plane in a way that mirrors the warping of the radio lobes. We suggest that the polar H i disc was accreted through a minor merger, and that the torques causing it to warp in the inner regions are also responsible for feeding the AGN. The “S” shape of the radio lobes would then be due to the radio jets adapting to the changing angular momentum of the accreted gas. The extended radio jets are likely poorly collimated, which would explain their quick fading and, therefore, their rarity in galaxies similar to NGC 3998. The fuelling of the central super-massive black hole is likely occurring via “discrete events”, suggested by the observed variability of the radio core and the extremely high core dominance, which we attribute to the formation and ejection of a new jet resulting from a recent fuelling event.
- ItemOpen AccessA simple model for global H i profiles of galaxies(2014) Stewart, I M; Blyth, S- L; de Blok, W J GContext. Current and future blind surveys for H i generate large catalogs of spectral lines for which automated characterisation would be convenient.
- ItemOpen AccessHI in group interactions: HCG 44(2017) Hess, Kelley M; Cluver, M E; Yahya, Sahba; Leisman, Lukas; Serra, Paolo; Lucero, Danielle M; Passmoor, Sean S; Carignan, ClaudeExtending deep observations of the neutral atomic hydrogen (H I) to the environment around galaxy groups can reveal a complex history of group interactions which is invisible to studies that focus on the stellar component. Hickson Compact Group 44 (HCG 44) is a nearby example, and we have combined H I data from the Karoo Array Telescope, Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope, and Arecibo Legacy Fast ALFA survey, in order to achieve high column density sensitivity (N _{H {I}}
- ItemOpen AccessH I line observations of 2MASS galaxies in the zoneof avoidance(2009) van Driel, W; Schneider, S E; Kraan-Korteweg, R C; Monnier Ragaigne, DA pilot survey has been made to obtain 21 cm H
- ItemOpen AccessIs GBT 1355+5439 a dark galaxy?(2013) Oosterloo, T A; Heald, G H; de Blok, W J GWe present H i imaging of GBT 1355+5439 performed with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope. This is a dark H i object recently discovered close to the nearby galaxy M101. We find GBT 1355+5439 to be an H i cloud 5 × 3 arcmin in size. The total H i image and the kinematics show that the cloud consists of condensations that have small (~10 km s-1) motions with respect to each other. The column densities of the H i are low; the observed peak value is 7.1 × 1019 cm-2. The velocity field shows a mild velocity gradient over the body of GBT 1355+5439, possibly due to rotation, but it may also indicate large-scale radial motions. Although our data are limited in sensitivity, at all positions the H i velocity dispersion is higher than 5 km s-1 and no narrow, cold, H i component is seen. Because its distance is not known, we considered various possibilities for the nature of GBT 1355+5439. Both the scenarios that it is a tidal remnant near M101 and that it is a dark dwarf companion of M101 meet difficulties. Neither do the data fit the properties of known compact high-velocity clouds in the Galactic halo exactly, but we cannot entirely exclude this option and deeper observations are required. We also considered the possibility that GBT 1355+5439 is a gas-rich dark minihalo in the outer regions of the Local Group. Interestingly, it would then have similar properties as the clouds of a proposed Local Group population recently found in the ALFALFA survey. In this case, the H i mass of GBT 1355+5439 would be about a few times 105M⊙, its size about 1 kpc, and the dynamical mass Mdyn > 5 × 107M⊙. However, if GBT 1355+5439 is a dark Local Group object, the internal kinematics of the H i appears to be different from that of gas-dominated, almost dark galaxies of similar size.
- ItemOpen AccessParkes H I observations of galaxies behind the southern Milky Way II. The Crux and Great Attractor regions (l ≈ 289◦ to 338◦)***(2009) Schröder, A C; Kraan-Korteweg, R C; Henning, P AAs part of our programme to map the large-scale distribution of galaxies behind the southern Milky Way, we observed 314 optically-selected, partially-obscured galaxies in the Zone of Avoidance (ZOA) in the Crux and Great Attractor (GA) regions. An additional 29 galaxies were observed in the Vela ZOA survey region (because of the small numbers they are not discussed any further). The observations were conducted with the Parkes 64 m (210 ft) radio telescope, in a single-pixel pointed mode, reaching an rms noise level of typically $2{-}6$ mJy over the velocity search range of 400 < v < 10 500 km s-1. A total of 162 galaxies were detected (plus 14 galaxies in the Vela region). The detection rate is slightly higher than for the Hydra/Antlia region (52% versus 45%) observed in the same way. This can be explained by the prominence of the GA overdensity in the survey regions, which leads to a relatively higher fraction of nearby galaxies. It is also evident from the quite narrow velocity distribution (largely confined to $3000{-}6000$ km s-1) and deviates significantly from the expectation of a uniform galaxy distribution for the given sensitivity and velocity range. No systematic differences were found between detections and non-detections, in terms of latitude, foreground extinction, or environment, except for the very central part of the rich Norma cluster, where hardly any galaxies were detected. A detailed investigation of the H i content of the galaxies reveals strong H i deficiency at the core of the Norma cluster (within about a 0.4 Abell radius), similar to what has been found in the Coma cluster. The redshifts obtained by this observing technique result in a substantial reduction of the so-called redshift ZOA. This is obvious when analysing the large-scale structure of the new H i data in combination with data from other (optical) ZOA redshift surveys. The lower latitude detections provide further evidence of the extension of the Norma Wall, across the ZOA, in particular its bending towards the Cen-Crux clusters above the Galactic plane at slightly higher redshift, rather than a straight continuation towards the Centaurus clusters.