757 results on '"Gordon, K. D."'
Search Results
102. Mid-Infrared IRS Spectroscopy of NGC 7331: A First Look at the SINGS Legacy
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Smith, J. D. T., Dale, D. A., Armus, L., Draine, B. T., Hollenbach, D. J., Roussel, H., Helou, G., Kennicutt, Jr., R. C., Li, A., Bendo, G. J., Calzetti, D., Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K. D., Jarrett, T. H., Kewley, L., Leitherer, C., Malhotra, S., Meyer, M. J., Murphy, E. J., Regan, M. W., Rieke, G. H., Rieke, M. J., Thornley, M. D., Walter, F., and Wolfire, M. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The nearby spiral galaxy NGC 7331 was spectrally mapped from 5-38um using all modules of Spitzer's IRS spectrograph. A strong new dust emission feature, presumed due to PAHs, was discovered at 17.1um. The feature's intensity is nearly half that of the ubiquitous 11.3um band. The 7-14um spectral maps revealed significant variation in the 7.7 and 11.3um PAH features between the stellar ring and nucleus. Weak [OIV] 25.9um line emission was found to be centrally concentrated in the nucleus, with an observed strength over 10% of the combined neon line flux, indicating an AGN or unusually active massive star photo-ionization. Two [SIII] lines fix the characteristic electron density in the HII regions at n_e < ~200 cm^-3. Three detected H_2 rotational lines, tracing warm molecular gas, together with the observed IR continuum, are difficult to match with standard PDR models. Either additional PDR heating or shocks are required to simultaneously match lines and continuum., Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJS Spitzer Special Issue
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- 2004
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103. The Formation and Evolution of Planetary Systems: First Results from a Spitzer Legacy Science Program
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Meyer, M. R., Hillenbrand, L. A., Backman, D. E., Beckwith, S. V. W., Bouwman, J., Brooke, T. Y., Carpenter, J. M., Cohen, M., Gorti, U., Henning, T., Hines, D. C., Hollenbach, D., Kim, J. S., Lunine, J., Malhotra, R., Mamajek, E. E., Metchev, S., Moro--Martin, A., Morris, P., Najita, J., Padgett, D. L., Rodmann, J., Silverstone, M. D., Soderblom, D. R., Stauffer, J. R., Stobie, E. B., Strom, S. E., Watson, D. M., Weidenschilling, S. J., Wolf, S., Young, E., Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K. D., Misselt, K., Morrison, J., Muzerolle, J., and Su, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present 3-160 micron photometry obtained with the IRAC and MIPS instruments for the first five targets from the Spitzer Legacy Science Program "Formation and Evolution of Planetary Systems" and 4-35 micron spectro-photometry obtained with the IRS for two sources. We discuss in detail our observations of the debris disks surrounding HD 105 (G0V, 30 +- 10 Myr) and HD 150706 (G3V, ~ 700 +- 300 Myr). For HD 105, possible interpretations include large bodies clearing the dust inside of 45 AU or a reservoir of gas capable of sculpting the dust distribution. The disk surrounding HD 150706 also exhibits evidence of a large inner hole in its dust distribution. Of the four survey targets without previously detected IR excess, spanning ages 30 Myr to 3 Gyr, the new detection of excess in just one system of intermediate age suggests a variety of initial conditions or divergent evolutionary paths for debris disk systems orbiting solar-type stars., Comment: Six postscript pages with one additional PDF file. To appear in the ApJ Supplement, Vol. 154, Spitzer Special Issue, September, 2004
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- 2004
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104. Far Infrared Imaging of NGC 55
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Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K. D., Bendo, G. J., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Misselt, K. A., Rieke, G. H., Young, E. T., Hines, D. C., Kelly, D. M., Stansberry, J. A., Papovich, C., Morrison, J. E., Egami, E., Su, K. Y. L., Muzerolle, J., Dole, H., Alonso-Herrero, A., Hinz, J. L., Smith, P. S., Latter, W. B., Noriega-Crespo, A., Padgett, D. L., Rho, J., Frayer, D. T., and Wachter, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present images of the galaxy NGC 55 at 24, 70, and 160 micron obtained with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS) instrument aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope. The new images display the far infrared emission in unprecedented detail and demonstrate that the infrared morphology differs dramatically from that at shorter wavelengths. The most luminous emission region in the galaxy is marginally resolved at 24 micron and has a projected separation of nearly 520 pc from the peak emission in the optical and near infrared. This region is responsible for ~9% of the total emission at 24 micron and is likely a young star formation region. We show that this and other compact sources account for more than 1/3 of the total 24 micron emission. We compute a total infrared luminosity for NGC 55 of 1.2*10^9 L_sun. The star formation rate implied by our measurements is 0.22 M_sun/yr. We demonstrate that the cold dust is more extended than the warm dust in NGC 55--the minor-axis scale heights are 0.32, 0.43, and 0.49 kpc at 24, 70 and 160 micron, respectively. The dust temperature map shows a range of temperatures that are well-correlated with the 24 micron surface brightness, from 20 K in low-surface-brightness regions to 26 K in high-surface-brightness regions., Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, accepted to ApJS
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- 2004
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105. The nature of luminous X-ray sources with mid-infrared counterparts
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Alonso-Herrero, A., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rigby, J., Rieke, G. H., Floc'h, E. Le, Barmby, P., Page, M. J., Papovich, C., Dole, H., Egami, E., Huang, J. -S., Rigopoulou, D., Cristobal-Hornillos, D., Eliche-Moral, C., Balcells, M., Prieto, M., Erwin, P., Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K. D., Werner, M., Willner, S. P., Fazio, G. G., Frayer, D., Hines, D., Kelly, D., Latter, W., Misselt, K., Miyazaki, S., Morrison, J., Rieke, M. J., and Wilson, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the luminous X-ray sources in the Lockman Hole (LH) and the Extended Groth Strip (EGS) detected at 24microns using MIPS and also with IRAC on board Spitzer. We assemble optical/infrared spectral energy distributions (SEDs) for 45 X-ray/24micron sources in the EGS and LH. Only about 1/4 of the hard X-ray/24micron sources show pure type 1 AGN SEDs. More than half of the X-ray/24micron sources have stellar-emission-dominated or obscured SEDs, similar to those of local type 2 AGN and spiral/starburst galaxies. One-third of the sources detected in hard X-rays do not have a 24micron counterpart. Two such sources in the LH have SEDs resembling those of S0/elliptical galaxies. The broad variety of SEDs in the optical-to-Spitzer bands of X-ray selected AGN means that AGN selected according to the behavior in the optical/infrared will have to be supplemented by other kinds of data (e.g., X-ray) to produce unbiased samples of AGN., Comment: Accepted to the ApJS Spitzer Special Issue
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- 2004
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106. Spitzer observations of MAMBO galaxies: weeding out active nuclei in starbursting proto-ellipticals
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Ivison, R. J., Greve, T. R., Serjeant, S., Bertoldi, F., Egami, E., Mortier, A. M. J., Alonso-Herrero, A., Barmby, P., Bei, L., Dole, H., Engelbracht, C. W., Fazio, G. G., Frayer, D. T., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Huang, J. -S., Floch, E. Le, Misselt, K. A., Miyazaki, S., Morrison, J. E., Papovich, C., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rieke, M. J., Rieke, G. H., Rigby, J., Rigopoulou, D., Smail, I., Wilson, G., and Willner, S. P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Spitzer observations in five wavebands between 3.6 and 24um of an unbiased sample of 9 luminous, dusty galaxies selected at 1200um by the MAMBO camera on the IRAM 30-m telescope, a population akin to the well-known submm or `SCUBA' galaxies (hereafter SMGs). Owing to the coarse resolution of submm/mm instrumentation, SMGs have traditionally been difficult to identify at other wavelengths. We compare our multi-wavelength catalogs to show that the overlap between 24 and 1200um must be close to complete at these flux levels. We find that all (4/4) of the most secure >=4sigma SMGs have robust >=4sigma counterparts at 1.4GHz, while the fraction drops to 7/9 using all >=3sigma SMGs. We show that combining mid-IR and marginal (>=3sigma) radio detections provides plausible identifications in the remaining cases, enabling us to identify the complete sample. Accretion onto an obscured central engine is betrayed by the shape of the mid-IR continuum emission for several sources, confirming Spitzer's potential to weed out active galaxies. We demonstrate the power of a S(24um)/S(8um) vs S(8um)/S(4.5um) color-color plot as a diagnostic for this purpose. However, we conclude that the majority (~75%) of SMGs have rest-frame mid-/far-IR SEDs commensurate with obscured starbursts. Sensitive 24-um observations are clearly a useful route to identify and characterize reliable counterparts to high-redshift far-IR-bright galaxies, complementing what is possible via deep radio imaging., Comment: Accepted, ApJS Spitzer Special Issue. Full resolution version at http://www.roe.ac.uk/~rji/ivison_letter.ps.gz
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- 2004
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107. Identification of luminous infrared galaxies at 1<z<2.5
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Floc'h, E. Le, Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rieke, G. H., Papovich, C., Huang, J. -S., Barmby, P., Dole, H., Egami, E., Alonso-Herrero, A., Wilson, G., Miyazaki, S., Rigby, J. R., Bei, L., Blaylock, M., Engelbracht, C. W., Fazio, G. G., Frayer, D. T., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Misselt, K. A., Morrison, J. E., Muzerolle, J., Rieke, M. J., Rigopoulou, D., Su, K. Y. L., Willner, S. P., and Young, E. T.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present preliminary results on 24micron detections of luminous infrared galaxies at z>1 with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS). Observations were performed in the Lockman Hole and the Extended Groth Strip (EGS), and were supplemented by data obtained with the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) between 3 and 9microns. The positional accuracy of ~2arcsec for most MIPS/IRAC detections provides unambiguous identifications of their optical counterparts. Using spectroscopic redshifts from the Deep Extragalactic Evolutionary Probe survey, we identify 24micron sources at z>1 in the EGS, while the combination of the MIPS/IRAC observations with $BVRIJHK$ ancillary data in the Lockman Hole also shows very clear cases of galaxies with photometric redshifts at 1
=M*) galaxy counterparts. It is the first time that this population of luminous objects is detected up to z~2.5 in the infrared. Our work demonstrates the ability of the MIPS instrument to probe the dusty Universe at very high redshift, and illustrates how the forthcoming Spitzer deep surveys will offer a unique opportunity to illuminate a dark side of cosmic history not explored by previous infrared experiments., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Spitzer Special Issue of ApJS, 4 pages, 2 figures. 1 table - Published
- 2004
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108. The 24-Micron View of Embedded Star Formation in NGC 7129
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Muzerolle, J., Megeath, S. T., Gutermuth, R. A., Allen, L. E., Pipher, J. L., Hartmann, L., Gordon, K. D., Padgett, D. L., Noriega-Crespo, A., Myers, P. C., Fazio, G. G., Rieke, G. H., Young, E. T., Morrison, J. E., Hines, D. C., Su, K. Y. L., Engelbracht, C. W., and Misselt, K. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present observations of the star formation region NGC 7129 taken with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS). A significant population of sources, likely pre-main sequence members of the young stellar cluster, is revealed outside the central photoionization region. Combining with Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) and ground-based near-infrared images, we have obtained colors and spectral energy distributions for some 60 objects. The [3.6]-[4.5] vs. [8]-[24] color-color plane shows sources clustered at several different loci, which roughly correspond to the archetypal evolutionary sequence Class 0, I, II, and III. We obtain preliminary classifications for 36 objects, and find significant numbers of both Class I and II objects. Most of the pre-main sequence candidates are associated with the densest part of the molecular cloud surrounding the photoionization region, indicating active star formation over a broad area outside the central cluster. We discuss three Class II candidates that exhibit evidence of inner disk clearing, which would be some of the youngest known examples of a transition from accretion to optically thin quiescent disks., Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures. Accepted to the Spitzer special issue of ApJS
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- 2004
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109. Spatially Resolved Ultraviolet, H-alpha, Infrared, and Radio Star Formation in M81
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Gordon, K. D., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Misselt, K. A., Murphy, E. J., Bendo, G. J., Walter, F., Thornley, M. D., Kennicutt, Jr., R. C., Rieke, G. H., Engelbracht, C. W., Smith, J. -D. T., Alonso-Herrero, A., Appleton, P. N., Calzetti, D., Dale, D. A., Draine, B. T., Frayer, D. T., Helou, G., Hinz, J. L., Hines, D. C., Kelly, D. M., Morrison, J. E., Muzerolle, J., Regan, M. W., Stansberry, J. A., Stolovy, S. R., Storrie-Lombardi, L. J., Su, K. Y. L., and Young, E. T.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS) observations of M81 at 24, 70, and 160 micron. The grand design nature of M81 is clearly seen, showing two well resolved spiral arms containing numerous bright star forming regions. The MIPS images reveal a significant amount of cold dust associated with the spiral arms. We investigate the variation of the ultraviolet (UV), H-alpha, and infrared (IR) luminosities and star formation rate (SFR) indicators across the face of M81 using the MIPS images and archival UV and H-alpha images. For regions in M81, we find that UV and H-alpha SFRs (uncorrected for dust attenuation) are always lower than the IR SFR. The cause of this behavior is dust attenuation and/or using SFR calibrations appropriate for entire galaxies, not regions in galaxies. The characteristics of the dust attenuation for the regions indicate the dust grains and/or geometry are different from those in starburst galaxies. The behavior of the infrared-radio correlation in M81 is seen to vary from the global average, with variations correlated with the morphology of M81., Comment: 7 pages, 6 embedded figures, paper with full resolution figures available at http://dirty.as.arizona.edu/~kgordon/papers/PS_files/m81_mips.pdf
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- 2004
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110. The 24 Micron Source Counts in Deep Spitzer Surveys
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Papovich, Casey, Dole, H., Egami, E., Floc'h, E. Le, Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Alonso-Herrero, A., Bai, L., Beichman, C. A., Blaylock, M., Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Misselt, K. A., Morrison, J. E., Mould, J., Muzerolle, J., Neugebauer, G., Richards, P. L., Rieke, G. H., Rieke, M. J., Rigby, J. R., Su, K. Y. L., and Young, E. T.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Galaxy source counts in the infrared provide strong constraints on the evolution of the bolometric energy output from distant galaxy populations. We present the results from deep 24 micron imaging from Spitzer surveys, which include approximately 50,000 sources to an 80% completeness of 60 uJy. The 24 micron counts rapidly rise at near-Euclidean rates down to 5 mJy, increase with a super-Euclidean rate between 0.4 - 4 mJy, and converge below 0.3 mJy. The 24 micron counts exceed expectations from non-evolving models by a factor >10 at 0.1 mJy. The peak in the differential number counts corresponds to a population of faint sources that is not expected from predictions based on 15 micron counts from ISO. We argue that this implies the existence of a previously undetected population of infrared-luminous galaxies at z ~ 1-3. Integrating the counts to 60 uJy, we derive a lower limit on the 24 micron background intensity of 1.9 +/- 0.6 nW m-2 sr-1 of which the majority (~ 60%) stems from sources fainter than 0.4 mJy. Extrapolating to fainter flux densities, sources below 60 uJy contribute 0.8 {+0.9/-0.4} nW m-2 sr-1 to the background, which provides an estimate of the total 24 micron background of 2.7 {+1.1/-0.7} nW m-2 sr-1., Comment: Accepted to the ApJS (Spitzer special issue); 5 pages, 3 color figures, uses emulateapj class
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- 2004
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111. Sub-millimeter detections of Spitzer Space Telescope galaxy populations
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Serjeant, S., Mortier, A. M. J., Ivison, R. J., Egami, E., Rieke, G. H., Willner, S. P., Rigopoulou, D., Alonso-Herrero, A., Barmby, P., Bei, L., Dole, H., Engelbracht, C. W., Fazio, G. G., Floc'h, E. Le, Gordon, K. D., Greve, T. R., Hines, D. C., Huang, J. -S., Misselt, K. A., Miyazaki, S., Morrison, J. E., Papovich, C., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rieke, M. J., Rigby, J., and Wilson, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present sub-millimeter statistical detections of galaxies discovered in the 5'x5' Spitzer Early Release Observations (to 4-15 microJy 5 sigma at 3.6-8 microns, 170 microJy at 24 microns) through a stacking analysis of our reanalysed SCUBA 8mJy survey maps, and a Spitzer identification of a new sub-millimeter point source in the 8mJy survey region. For sources detected at 5.8 or 8 microns (154 and 111 sources respectively), we detect positive skews in the sub-millimeter flux distributions at 99.2-99.8% confidence using Kolmogorov-Smirnov tests, at both 850 microns and 450 microns. We also marginally detect the Spitzer 24 micron galaxies at 850 microns at 97% confidence, and place limits on the mean sub-millimeter fluxes of the 3.6 and 4.5 micron sources. Integrating the sub-millimeter fluxes of the Spitzer populations, we find the 5.8 micron galaxies contribute 0.12 +/- 0.05 nW/m^2/sr to the 850 micron background, and 2.4 +/- 0.7 nW/m^2/sr to the 450 micron background; similar contributions are made by the 8 micron-selected sample. We infer that the populations dominating the 5.8 and 8 micron extragalactic background light also contribute around a quarter of the 850 micron background and the majority of the 450 micron background., Comment: Accepted for ApJS Spitzer Special Issue. 11 pages, 2 figures
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- 2004
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112. Far Infrared Source Counts at 70 and 160 microns in Spitzer Deep Surveys
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Dole, H., Floc'h, E. Le, Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Papovich, C., Egami, E., Lagache, G., Alonso-Herrero, A., Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Krause, O., Misselt, K. A., Morrison, J. E., Rieke, G. H., Rieke, M. J., Rigby, J. R., Young, E. T., Bai, L., Blaylock, M., Neugebauer, G., Beichman, C. A., Frayer, D. T., Mould, J. R., and Richards, P. L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We derive galaxy source counts at 70 and 160 microns using the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS) to map the Chandra Deep Field South (CDFS) and other fields. At 70 microns, our observations extend upwards about 2 orders of magnitude in flux density from a threshold of 15 mJy, and at 160 microns they extend about an order of magnitude upward from 50 mJy. The counts are consistent with previous observations on the bright end. Significant evolution is detected at the faint end of the counts in both bands, by factors of 2-3 over no-evolution models. This evolution agrees well with models that indicate most ofthe faint galaxies lie at redshifts between 0.7 and 0.9. The new Spitzer data already resolve about 23% of the Cosmic Far Infrared Background at 70 microns and about 7% at 160 microns., Comment: Small modifications to match printed version. Models in Differential Counts plots were changed. MIPS Source Counts are available at: http://lully.as.arizona.edu/GTODeep/Counts/ . Accepted for Publication in ApJS Special Issue on Spitzer
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- 2004
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113. Confusion in the infrared: Spitzer and beyond
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Dole, H., Rieke, G. H., Lagache, G., Puget, J-L., Alonso-Herrero, A., Bai, L., Blaylock, M., Egami, E., Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Kelly, D. M., Floc'h, E. Le, Misselt, K. A., Morrison, J. E., Muzerolle, J., Papovich, C., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Rieke, M. J., Rigby, J. R., Neugebauer, G., Stansberry, J. A., Su, K. Y. L., Young, E. T., Beichman, C. A., and Richards, P. L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We use the source counts measured with the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS) at 24, 70, and 160 microns to determine the 5-sigma confusion limits due to extragalactic sources: 56 micro-Jy, 3.2 and 40 mJy at 24, 70 and 160 microns, respectively. We also make predictions for confusion limits for a number of proposed far infrared missions of larger aperture (3.5 to 10m diameter)., Comment: Accepted for Publication in ApJS Special Issue on Spitzer. 4 pages, 2 B&W figures. emulateapj. Also available at http://ssc.spitzer.caltech.edu/pubs/journal2004.html
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- 2004
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114. PAHs contribution to the infrared output energy of the Universe at z~2
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Lagache, G., Dole, H., Puget, J. -L., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Floc'h, E. Le, Rieke, G. H., Papovich, C., Egami, E., Alonso-Herrero, A., Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K. D., Misselt, K. A., and Morrision, J. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an updated phenomenological galaxy evolution model to fit the Spitzer 24, 70 and 160 microns number counts as well as all the previous mid and far infrared observations. Only a minor change of the co-moving luminosity density distribution in the previous model (Lagache, Dole, Puget 2003), combined with a slight modification of the starburst template spectra mainly between 12 and 30 microns, are required to fit all the data available. We show that the peak in the MIPS 24 micron counts is dominated by galaxies with redshift between 1 and 2, with a non negligible contribution from the z>2 galaxies (~30% at S=0.2 mJy). The very close agreement between the model and number counts at 15 and 24 microns strikingly implies that (1) the PAHs (Policyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons) features remain prominent in the redshift band 0.5 to 2.5 and (2) the IR energy output has to be dominated by ~3 10^11 Lo to ~3 10^12 Lo galaxies from redshift 0.5 to 2.5. Combining Spitzer with the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) deep cosmological surveys gives for the first time an unbiased view of the infrared Universe from z=0 to z=2.5., Comment: 4 pages, 7 figure. In press. To appear in the Special Issue of the ApJSS
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- 2004
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115. Extremely Red Objects in The Lockman Hole
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Wilson, G., Huang, J. -S., Perez-Gonzalez, P. G., Egami, E., Ivison, R. J., Rigby, J. R., Alonso-Herrero, A., Barmby, P., Dole, H., Fazio, G. G., Floc'h, E. Le, Papovich, C., Rigopoulou, D., Bai, L., Engelbracht, C. W., Frayer, D., Gordon, K. D., Hines, D. C., Misselt, K. A., Miyazaki, S., Morrison, J. E., Rieke, G. H., Rieke, M. J., and Surace, J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate Extremely Red Objects (EROs) using near- and mid-infrared observations in five passbands (3.6 to 24 micron) obtained from the Spitzer Space Telescope, and deep ground-based R and K imaging. The great sensitivity of the IRAC camera allows us to detect 64 EROs in only 12 minutes of IRAC exposure time, by means of an R-[3.6] color cut (analogous to the traditional red R-K cut). A pure infrared K-[3.6] red cut detects a somewhat different population and may be more effective at selecting z > 1.3 EROs. We find 17% of all galaxies detected by IRAC at 3.6 or 4.5 micron to be EROs. These percentages rise to about 40% at 5.8 micron, and about 60% at 8.0 micron. We utilize the spectral bump at 1.6 micron to divide the EROs into broad redshift slices using only near-infrared colors (2.2/3.6/4.5 micron). We conclude that two-thirds of all EROs lie at redshift z > 1.3. Detections at 24 micron imply that at least 11% of 0.6 < z < 1.3 EROs and at least 22% of z > 1.3 EROs are dusty star-forming galaxies., Comment: to appear in the special Spitzer issue of the ApJS
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- 2004
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116. SINGS: The SIRTF Nearby Galaxies Survey
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Kennicutt, Jr., R. C., Armus, L., Bendo, G., Calzetti, D., Dale, D. A., Draine, B. T., Engelbracht, C. W., Gordon, K. D., Grauer, A. D., Helou, G., Hollenbach, D. J., Jarrett, T. H., Kewley, L. J., Leitherer, C., Li, A., Malhotra, S., Regan, M. W., Rieke, G. H., Rieke, M. J., Roussel, H., Smith, J. -D. T., Thornley, Michele D., and Walter, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The SIRTF Nearby Galaxy Survey is a comprehensive infrared imaging and spectroscopic survey of 75 nearby galaxies. Its primary goal is to characterize the infrared emission of galaxies and their principal infrared-emitting components, across a broad range of galaxy properties and star formation environments. SINGS will provide new insights into the physical processes connecting star formation to the interstellar medium properties of galaxies, and provide a vital foundation for understanding infrared observations of the distant universe and ultraluminous and active galaxies. The galaxy sample and observing strategy have been designed to maximize the scientific and archival value of the data set for the SIRTF user community at large. The SIRTF images and spectra will be supplemented by a comprehensive multi-wavelength library of ancillary and complementary observations, including radio continuum, HI, CO, submillimeter, BVRIJHK, H-alpha, Paschen-alpha, ultraviolet, and X-ray data. This paper describes the main astrophysical issues to be addressed by SINGS, the galaxy sample and the observing strategy, and the SIRTF and other ancillary data products., Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures, PASP, in press
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- 2003
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117. Dust Grain-Size Distributions From MRN to MEM
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Clayton, Geoffrey C., Wolff, Michael J., Sofia, Ulysses J., Gordon, K. D., and Misselt, K. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Employing the Maximum Entropy Method algorithm, we fit interstellar extinction measurements which span the wavelength range 0.125-3 micron. We present a uniform set of MEM model fits, all using the same grain materials, optical constants and abundance constraints. In addition, we are taking advantage of improved UV and IR data and better estimates of the gas-to-dust ratio. The model fits cover the entire range of extinction properties that have been seen in the Galaxy and the Magellanic Clouds. The grain models employed for this presentation are the simplistic homogeneous spheres models (i.e., Mathis, Rumpl, & Nordsieck 1977) with two (graphite, silicate) or three (graphite, silicate, amorphous carbon) components. Though such usage is only a first step, the results do provide interesting insight into the use of grain size as a diagnostic of dust environment. We find that the SMC Bar extinction curve cannot be fit using carbon grains alone. This is a challenge to the recent observational result indicating little silicon depletion in the SMC., Comment: 24 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2003
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118. H2O- and OH-bearing minerals in the Martian regolith: Analysis of 1997 observations from HST/NICMOS
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Dobrea, E. Z. Noe, Bell III, J. F., Wolff, M. J., and Gordon, K. D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have analyzed observations of the Acidalia hemisphere of Mars taken by the Hubble Space Telescope's Near-Infrared Camera Multi-Object Spectrograph (HST/NICMOS) during July of 1997 (Ls = 152 degrees, northern Martian summer). The data consist of images at ~60 km/pixel resolution, using both narrow- and medium-band filters specifically selected to allow us to study the hydration state of the Martian surface. Calibration was performed by comparison to Phobos-2 ISM observations of overlapping regions, and atmospheric gas correction was performed by modeling the atmosphere for each pixel using a line-by-line radiative transfer code coupled with the MOLA altimetry data. Our results indicate the presence of at least three spectrally different large-scale (>1000 km diameter) terrains corresponding to the dark regions of northern Acidalia, the southern hemisphere classical dark terrain, and the classical intermediate terrain adjacent to southern Acidalia. We also identified two other spectrally unique terrains, corresponding to the northern polar ice cap, and to the southern winter polar hood. Comparisons with mineral spectra indicate the possibility of different H2O- or OH-bearing (i.e., hydroxides and/or hydrates) minerals existing both in northern Acidalia and in the nearby intermediate albedo terrain. Hydrated minerals do not appear to be spectrally important components of the southern hemisphere dark terrains imaged by HST in 1997., Comment: 44 pages, 5 tables, 17 figures
- Published
- 2002
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119. The Spectral Energy Distribution and Mass-loss Rate of the A-Type Supergiant Deneb
- Author
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Aufdenberg, J. P., Hauschildt, P. H., Baron, E., Nordgren, T. E., Howarth, I. D., Burnley, A. W., Gordon, K. D., and Stansberry, J. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
A stellar wind module has been developed for the PHOENIX stellar atmosphere code for the purpose of computing non-LTE, line-blanketed, expanding atmospheric structures and detailed synthetic spectra of hot luminous stars with winds. We apply the code to observations of Deneb, for which we report the first positive detections of mm and cm emission (obtained using the SCUBA and the VLA), as well a strong upper limit on the 850 micron flux (using the HHT). The slope of the radio spectrum shows that the stellar wind is partially ionized. We report a uniform-disk angular diameter measurement, 2.40 +/- 0.06 mas, from the Navy Prototype Optical Interferometer (NPOI). The measured bolometric flux and corrected NPOI angular diameter yield an effective temperature of 8600 +/- 500 K. Least-squares comparisons of synthetic spectral energy distributions from 1220 A to 3.6 cm with the observations provide estimates for the effective temperature and the mass-loss rate of 8400 +/- 100 K and 8 +/- 3 E-7 M_sun/yr, respectively. This range of mass-loss rates is consistent with that derived from high dispersion UV spectra when non-LTE metal-line blanketing is considered. We are unable achieve a reasonable fit to a typical Halpha P-Cygni profile with any model parameters over a reasonable range. This is troubling because the \ha profile is the observational basis for Wind Momentum-Luminosity Relationship., Comment: Accepted by the Astrophysical Journal, 43 pages, 23 figures
- Published
- 2002
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120. HST Ultraviolet and Ground-based Optical Spectropolarimetry of IRAS QSOs: Dusty Scattering in Luminous AGN
- Author
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Hines, D. C., Schmidt, G. D., Gordon, K. D., Smith, P. S., Wills, B. J., Allen, R. G., and Sitko, M. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present UV and optical spectropolarimetry of two highly polarized IRAS-selected QSOs, IRAS 13349+2438 and the BALQSO IRAS 14026+4341. The polarization in both objects rises rapidly toward the blue, peaks near 3000 A in the rest frame and remains nearly constant for shorter wavelengths. The rest frame optical polarized flux density spectra also increase rapidly towards the blue, but then decrease dramatically below 3000 A. This distinctive wavelength dependence of polarized flux shows that the polarization is produced by dust scattering. As for many Seyfert, radio and Hyperluminous Infrared Galaxies (HIGs), the lower polarization of the weak [O III] 4959,5007 lines in IRAS 13349+2438 suggests that the scattering grains lie interior to, or mixed with the narrow line gas. We construct full radiative transfer models of these systems consisting of a dusty sphere of modest optical depth illuminated axisymmetrically from within by a powerlaw QSO spectrum. We show that this simple model successfully reproduces the qualitative polarization properties of the objects. Despite similarities to other IRAS-selected BALQSOs, our FOS spectropolarimetry of IRAS 13349+2438 does not reveal broad absorption lines. IRAS 14026+4341 has an Al III BAL in both scattered and total flux density. We discuss these two objects in terms of both orientation and evolutionary unified schemes for QSOs, BALQSOs and HIGs., Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures (4 png, 3 eps), ApJ, in press: full postscript version is available from http://dirty.as.arizona.edu/~kgordon/papers/qso_scat.html
- Published
- 2001
121. The MACHO Project LMC Variable Star Inventory: X. The R Coronae Borealis Stars
- Author
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Alcock, C., Allsman, R. A., Alves, D. R., Axelrod, T. S., Becker, A., Bennett, D. P., Clayton, Geoffrey C., Cook, K. H., Dalal, N., Drake, A. J., Freeman, K. C., Geha, M., Gordon, K. D., Griest, K., Kilkenny, D., Lehner, M. J., Marshall, S. L., Minniti, D., Misselt, K. A., Nelson, C. A., Peterson, B. A., Popowski, P., Pratt, M. R., Quinn, P. J., Stubbs, C. W., Sutherland, W., Tomaney, A., Vandehei, T., and Welch, D. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of eight new R Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) using the MACHO project photometry database. The discovery of these new stars increases the number of known RCB stars in the LMC to thirteen. We have also discovered four stars similar to the Galactic variable DY Per. These stars decline much more slowly and are cooler than the RCB stars. The absolute luminosities of the Galactic RCB stars are unknown since there is no direct measurement of the distance to any Galactic RCB star. Hence, the importance of the LMC RCB stars. We find a much larger range of absolute magnitudes (M(V) = -2.5 to -5 mag) than inferred from the small pre-MACHO sample of LMC RCB stars. It is likely that there is a temperature - M(V)relationship with the cooler stars being intrinsically fainter. Cool (~5000 K) RCB stars are much more common than previously thought based on the Galactic RCB star sample. Using the fairly complete sample of RCB stars discovered in the MACHO fields, we have estimated the likely number of RCB stars in the Galaxy to be ~3,200. The SMC MACHO fields were also searched for RCB stars but none were found., Comment: 36 pages, Latex plus 16 additional tables. ApJ, in press
- Published
- 2001
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122. The DIRTY Model II: Self-Consistent Treatment of Dust Heating and Emission in a 3-D Radiative Transfer Code
- Author
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Misselt, K. A., Gordon, K. D., Clayton, G. C., and Wolff, M. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper and a companion paper we present the DIRTY model, a Monte Carlo radiative transfer code, self-consistently including dust heating and emission, and accounting for the effects of the transient heating of small grains. The code is completely general; the density structure of the dust, the number and type of heating sources, and their geometric configurations can be specified arbitrarily within the model space. Source photons are tracked through the scattering and absorbing medium using Monte Carlo techniques and the effects of multiple scattering are included. The dust scattering, absorbing, and emitting properties are calculated from realistic dust models derived by fitting observed extinction curves in Local Group galaxies including the Magellanic Clouds and the Milky Way. The dust temperature and the emitted dust spectrum are calculated self consistently from the absorbed energy including the effects of temperature fluctuations in small grains. Dust self-absorption is also accounted for, allowing the treatment of high optical depths, by treating photons emitted by the dust as an additional heating source and adopting an iterative radiative transfer scheme. As an illustrative case, we apply the DIRTY radiative transfer code to starburst galaxies wherein the heating sources are derived from stellar evolutionary synthesis models. Within the context of the starburst model, we examine the dependence of the UV to FIR SED, dust temperatures, and dust masses predicted by DIRTY on variations of the input parameters., Comment: 23 pages (emulateapj, single column), 17 figures. To appear in the ApJ, in press
- Published
- 2000
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123. Dust Emission Features in NGC 7023 between 0.35 and 2.5 micron: Extended Red Emission (0.7 micron) and Two New Emission Features (1.15 and 1.5 micron)
- Author
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Gordon, K. D., Witt, A. N., Rudy, R. J., Puetter, R. C., Lynch, D. K., Mazuk, S., Misselt, K. A., Clayton, G. C., and Smith, T. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present 0.35 to 2.5 micron spectra of the south and northwest filaments in the reflection nebula NGC 7023. These spectra were used to test the theory of Seahra & Duley that carbon nanoparticles are responsible for Extended Red Emission (ERE). Our spectra fail to show their predicted second emission band at 1.0 micron even though both filaments exhibit strong emission in the familiar 0.7 micron ERE band. The northwest filament spectrum does show one, and possibly two, new dust emission features in the near-infrared. We clearly detect a strong emission band at 1.5 micron which we tentatively attribute to beta-FeSi_2 grains. We tentatively detect a weaker emission band at 1.15 micron which coincides with the location expected for transitions from the conduction band to mid-gap defect states of silicon nanoparticles. This is added evidence that silicon nanoparticles are responsible for ERE as they already can explain the observed behavior of the main visible ERE band., Comment: 9 pages, color figures, accepted to the ApJ, color and b/w versions available at http://dirty.as.arizona.edu/~kgordon/papers/ere_1um.html
- Published
- 2000
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124. The Dusty Starburst Nucleus of M33
- Author
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Gordon, K. D., Hanson, M. M., Clayton, G. C., Rieke, G. H., and Misselt, K. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have thoroughly characterized the ultraviolet to near-infrared (0.15 - 2.2 micron) spectral energy distribution (SED) of the central parsec of the M33 nucleus through new infrared photometry and optical/near-infrared spectroscopy, combined with ultraviolet/optical observations from the literature and the HST archive. The SED shows evidence for a significant level of attenuation, which we model through a Monte Carlo radiative transfer code as a shell of clumpy Milky Way-type dust (tau_V ~ 2 +/- 1). The discovery of Milky Way-type dust (with a strong 2175 A bump) internal to the M33 nucleus is different from previous work which has found SMC-like dust (no bump) near starburst regions. The amount by which dust can be processed may be related to the mass and age of the starburst as well as the extent to which the dust can shield itself. Our starburst models include the effects of this dust and can fit the SED if the nucleus was the site of a moderate (~10^8 L_sun at 10 Myrs) episode of coeval star formation about 70 Myrs ago. This result is quite different from previous studies which resorted to multiple stellar populations (between 2 and 7) attenuated by either no or very little internal dust. The M33 nuclear starburst is remarkably similar to an older version (70 Myr versus 10 Myr) of the ultra-compact starburst in the center of the Milky Way., Comment: 29 pages, 9 embedded figures, ApJ, in press
- Published
- 1999
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125. Silicon Nanoparticles: Source of Extended Red Emission?
- Author
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Witt, A. N., Gordon, K. D., and Furton, D. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have reviewed the characteristics of the extended red emission (ERE) as observed in many dusty astronomical environments, in particular, the diffuse interstellar medium of the Galaxy. The spectral nature and the photon conversion efficiency of the ERE identify the underlying process as highly efficient photoluminescence by an abundant component of interstellar dust. We have compared the photoluminescence properties of a variety of carbon- and silicon-based materials proposed as sources for the ERE with the observationally established constraints. We found that silicon nanoparticles provide the best match to the spectrum and the efficiency requirement of the ERE. If present in interstellar space with an abundance sufficient to explain the intensity of the ERE, silicon nanoparticles will also contribute to the interstellar 9.7 micron Si-O stretch feature in absorption, to the near- and mid-IR nonequilibrium thermal background radiation, and to the continuum extinction in the near- and far-UV. About 36% of the interstellar silicon depleted into the dust phase would be needed in the form of silicon nanoparticles, amounting to less than 5% of the interstellar dust mass. We propose that silicon nanoparticles form through the nucleation of SiO in oxygen-rich stellar mass outflows and that they represent an important small-grain component of the interstellar dust spectrum., Comment: 5 pages; 1 included figure; accepted 1998 May 1, ApJL
- Published
- 1998
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126. The Spectroscopic Orbit of the Evolved Binary HD 197770
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Gordon, K. D., Clayton, G. C., Smith, T. L., Aufdenberg, J. P., Drilling, John S., Hanson, M. M., Anderson, C. M., and Mulliss, C. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have used spectra taken between 1992 and 1997 to derive the spectroscopic orbit of the eclipsing double-lined spectroscopic binary HD 197770. This binary has a period of 99.69 +/- 0.02 days and K amplitudes of 31.2 +/- 0.8 and 47.1 +/- 0.4 km s^{-1} for components A & B, respectively. The msin^{3}i values for A & B are 2.9 and 1.9, respectively, and are close to the actual masses due to the eclipsing nature of this binary. Both components of HD 197770 have spectral types near B2 III. This means both components are undermassive by about a factor of five and, thus, evolved stars. Additional evidence of the evolved nature of HD 197770 is found in 25, 60, and 100 micron IRAS images of HD 197770. These images show 2 apparent shells centered on HD 197770; a bright 60 micron shell with a 14' diameter and a larger (1.2 degeree diameter) bubble-like feature. At least one of the components of HD 197770 is likely to be a post-AGB star., Comment: will be published in the AJ (1998 June), also availible at http://snake.phys.lsu.edu/~gordon/papers/hd197770.html
- Published
- 1998
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127. Starburst-like Dust Extinction in the Small Magellanic Cloud
- Author
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Gordon, K. D. and Clayton, G. C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The recent discovery that the UV dust extinction in starburst galaxies is similar to that found in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) motivated us to re-investigate the ultraviolet (UV) extinction found in the SMC. We have been able to improve significantly on previous studies by carefully choosing pairs of well matched reddened and unreddened stars. In addition, we benefited from the improved S/N of the NEWSIPS IUE data and the larger sample of SMC stars now available. Searching the IUE Final Archive, we found only four suitable early-type stars that were significantly reddened and had well matched comparison stars. The extinction for three of these stars is remarkably similar. The curves are roughly linear with 1/lambda and have no measurable 2175 A bump. The fourth star has an extinction curve with a significant 2175 A bump and weaker far-UV extinction. The dust along all four sightlines is thought to be local to the SMC. There is no significant Galactic foreground component. The first three stars lie in the SMC Bar and the line-of-sight for each of them passes through regions of recent star formation. The fourth star belongs to the SMC Wing and its line-of-sight passes though a much more quiescent region. Thus, the behavior of the dust extinction in the SMC supports a dependence of dust properties on star formation activity. However, other environmental factors (such as galactic metallicity) must also be important. Dust in the 30 Dor region of the LMC, where much more active star formation is present, does not share the extreme extinction properties seen in SMC dust., Comment: 23 pages, figures included, to be published in the ApJ (20 June 1998)
- Published
- 1998
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128. Detection of Extended Red Emisson in the Diffuse Interstellar Medium
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Gordon, K. D., Witt, A. N., and Friedmann, B. C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Extended Red Emission (ERE) has been detected in many dusty astrophysical objects and this raises the question: Is ERE present only in discrete objects or is it an observational feature of all dust, i.e. present in the diffuse interstellar medium? In order to answer this question, we determined the blue and red intensities of the radiation from the diffuse interstellar medium (ISM) and examined the red intensity for the presence of an excess above that expected for scattered light. The diffuse ISM blue and red intensities were obtained by subtracting the integrated star and galaxy intensities from the blue and red measurements made by the Imaging Photopolarimeter (IPP) aboard the Pioneer 10 and 11 spacecraft. The color of the diffuse ISM was found to be redder than the Pioneer intensities, contrary to that expected for scattered light (Diffuse Galactic Light [DGL]). The red DGL was calculated using the blue diffuse ISM intensities and the approximately invariant color of the DGL calculated with the DGL model. Subtracting the calculated red DGL from the red diffuse ISM intensities resulted in the detection of an excess red intensity. This represents the likely detection of ERE in the diffuse ISM since H-alpha emission cannot account for the strength of this excess and the only other known emission process applicable to the diffuse ISM is ERE. Thus, ERE appears to be a general characteristic of dust. From the correlation between N_HI and ERE intensity the ERE photon conversion efficiency was estimated at 10 +/- 3%., Comment: 44 pages (41 figures included), to be published in the ApJ, new version corrected for small error in fig. 23
- Published
- 1997
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129. Dust in Starburst Galaxies
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Gordon, K. D., Calzetti, D., and Witt, A. N.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
To investigate the nature of starbursts' dust, we constructed a model of the stars and dust in starburst galaxies and applied it to 30 observed starburst spectral energy distributions (SEDs). The starburst model was constructed by combining two stellar evolutionary synthesis models with a model describing the radiative transfer of stellar photons through dust. The stellar evolutionary synthesis models were used to compute the dust-free SEDs for stellar populations with ages between 1x10^6 and 15x10^9 years. Using a Monte Carlo radiative transfer model, the effects of dust were computed for average Milky Way (MW) and Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) dust, two different star/dust geometries, and locally homogeneous or clumpy dust. Using color-color plots, the starburst model was used to interpret the behavior of 30 starbursts with aperture-matched UV and optical SEDs (and IR for 19 of the 30) from previous studies. From the color-color plots, it was evident that the dust in starbursts has an extinction curve lacking a 2175 A bump, like the SMC curve, and a steep far-UV rise, intermediate between the MW and SMC curves. The star/dust geometry which is able to explain the distribution of the 30 starbursts in various color-color plots has an inner dust-free sphere of stars surrounded by an outer star-free shell of clumpy dust. When combined with other work from the literature on the Orion region and the 30 Dor region of the Large Magellanic Cloud, this work implies a trend in dust properties with star formation intensity., Comment: 17 pages (9 figures included), to be published in the ApJ
- Published
- 1997
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130. Zeta^2 Coronae Borealis, a Spectroscopic Triple System Including an Asynchronous Close Binary
- Author
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Gordon, K. D. and Mulliss, C. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the 1-m telescope at Ritter Observatory, we took 36 observations of zeta^2 Coronae Borealis with a fiber-fed echelle spectrograph. From these observations, zeta^2 CrB was found to be a triple system and a new spectroscopic orbit was calculated. This orbit has two periods, a 1.72357 day period for the inner binary composed of zeta^2 CrB A & B and a 251 day period for the outer binary composed of zeta^2 CrB AB & C. The inner binary is a double-lined spectroscopic binary composed of two B7 V stars. The inner binary's center of mass (zeta^2 CrB AB) describes a long-period single-lined variation identified with the outer binary. The inner binary period is significantly shorter than the 12.5842 day period previously calculated by Abhyankar & Sarma (1966). The inner binary possesses an essentially circular orbit (e = 0.01) while the outer binary has an eccentric orbit (e = 0.48). From the widths of their Si II 6371 A lines, the vsini's were calculated to be 46 +/- 7 km s^-1 for zeta^2 CrB A and 7.5 +/- 2 km s^-1 for zeta^2 CrB B. As zeta^2 CrB A & B have similar masses, their different rotational velocities make this system a sensitive test of synchronization theories., Comment: 12 pages (3 figures & 1 table, included), to be published in the PASP
- Published
- 1996
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131. Comparative analyses on medium access control protocol in wireless ATM.
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Geng-Sheng Kuo and Gordon K. D. Chung
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- 2002
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132. Rapid resolution of hidradenitis suppurativa after bariatric surgical intervention
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Thomas, C. L., Gordon, K. D., and Mortimer, P. S.
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- 2014
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133. Effects of Volcanic Ash on Computers and Electronic Equipment
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Gordon, K. D., Cole, J. W., Rosenberg, M. D., and Johnston, D. M.
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- 2005
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134. Exploring the dust content of galactic haloes with Herschel III. NGC 891
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Yoon, J H, primary, Martin, Crystal L, additional, Veilleux, S, additional, Meléndez, M, additional, Mueller, T, additional, Gordon, K D, additional, Cecil, G, additional, Bland-Hawthorn, J, additional, and Engelbracht, C, additional
- Published
- 2020
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135. Erratum: “Modeling Dust and Starlight in Galaxies Observed by Spitzer and Herschel: The KINGFISH Sample” (2020, ApJ, 889, 150)
- Author
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Aniano, G., primary, Draine, B. T., additional, Hunt, L. K., additional, Sandstrom, K., additional, Calzetti, D., additional, Kennicutt, R. C., additional, Dale, D. A., additional, Galametz, M., additional, Gordon, K. D., additional, Leroy, A. K., additional, Smith, J.-D. T., additional, Roussel, H., additional, Sauvage, M., additional, Walter, F., additional, Armus, L., additional, Bolatto, A. D., additional, Boquien, M., additional, Crocker, A., additional, Looze, I. De, additional, Meyer, J. Donovan, additional, Helou, G., additional, Hinz, J., additional, Johnson, B. D., additional, Koda, J., additional, Miller, A., additional, Montiel, E., additional, Murphy, E. J., additional, Relaño, M., additional, Rix, H.-W., additional, Schinnerer, E., additional, Skibba, R., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, and Engelbracht, C. W., additional
- Published
- 2020
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136. Modeling Dust and Starlight in Galaxies Observed by Spitzer and Herschel: The KINGFISH Sample
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Aniano, G., primary, Draine, B. T., additional, Hunt, L. K., additional, Sandstrom, K., additional, Calzetti, D., additional, Kennicutt, R. C., additional, Dale, D. A., additional, Galametz, M., additional, Gordon, K. D., additional, Leroy, A. K., additional, Smith, J.-D. T., additional, Roussel, H., additional, Sauvage, M., additional, Walter, F., additional, Armus, L., additional, Bolatto, A. D., additional, Boquien, M., additional, Crocker, A., additional, De Looze, I., additional, Donovan Meyer, J., additional, Helou, G., additional, Hinz, J., additional, Johnson, B. D., additional, Koda, J., additional, Miller, A., additional, Montiel, E., additional, Murphy, E. J., additional, Relaño, M., additional, Rix, H.-W., additional, Schinnerer, E., additional, Skibba, R., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, and Engelbracht, C. W., additional
- Published
- 2020
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137. Herschel Detects a Massive Dust Reservoir in Supernova 1987A
- Author
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Matsuura, M, Dwek, E, Meixner, M, Otsuka, M, Babler, B, Barlow, M. J, Roman-Duval, J, Engelbracht, C, Sandstrom K, Lakicevic, M, vanLoon, J. Th, Sonneborn, G, Clayton, G. C, Long, K. S, Lundqvist, P, Nozawa, T, Gordon, K. D, Hony, S, Okumura, K, Misselt, K. A, Montiel, E, and Sauvage, M
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report far-infrared and submillimeter observations of Supernova 1987A, the star that exploded on February 23, 1987 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a galaxy located 160,000 light years away. The observations reveal the presence of a population of cold dust grains radiating with a temperature of approx.17-23 K at a rate of about 220 stellar luminosity. The intensity and spectral energy distribution of the emission suggests a dust mass of approx.0.4-0.7 stellar mass. The radiation must originate from the SN ejecta and requires the efficient precipitation of all refractory material into dust. Our observations imply that supernovae can produce the large dust masses detected in young galaxies at very high red shifts.
- Published
- 2011
138. THE EFFECT OF IMPLANT STEM LENGTH ON BONE STRAINS IN THE DISTAL ULNA
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Austman, R. L., Beaton, B. J.B., Dunning, C. E., Gordon, K. D., King, G. J.W., and Quenneville, C. E.
- Published
- 2009
139. First look at the Fomalhaut debris disk with the Spitzer Space Telescope
- Author
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Young, E. T, Van Cleve, J, Noriega-Crespo, A, Muzerolle, J, Morrison, J. E, Misselt, K, Megeath, T, Latter, W. B, Keene, J, Gordon, K. D, Frayer, D. T, Engelbracht, C. W, Egami, E, Blaylock, M, Backus, C, Velusamy, T, Thomspson, T, Marengo, M, Cadien, J, Bendo, G, Stansberry, J. A, Padgett, D. L, Jura, M, Beichman, C. A, Werner, M. W, Hines, D. C, Su, K. Y. L, Rieke, G. H, Chen, C, Holmes, E. K, and Stapelfeldt, K. R
- Abstract
We present Spitzer Space Telescope early release observations of Fomalhaut, a nearby A-type star with dusty circumstellar debris. The disk is spatially resolved at 24, 70, and 160 mu m using the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS). While the disk orientation and outer radius are comparable to values measured in the submillimeter, the disk inner radius cannot be precisely defined: the central hole in the submillimeter ring is at least partially filled with emission from warm dust, seen in Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph (IRS)17.5-34 mu m spectra and MIPS 24 mu m images. The disk surface brightness becomes increasingly asymmetric toward shorter wavelengths, with the south-southeast ansa always brighter than the north-northwest one. This asymmetry may reflect perturbations on the disk by an unseen interior planet.
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- 2004
140. New Infrared Emission Features and Spectral Variations in Ngc 7023
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Werner, M. W, Uchida, K. I, Sellgren, K, Marengo, M, Gordon, K. D, Morris, P. W, Houck, J. R, and Stansberry, J. A
- Subjects
Astronomy - Abstract
We observed the reflection nebula NGC 7023, with the Short-High module and the long-slit Short-Low and Long-Low modules of the Infrared Spectrograph on the Spitzer Space Telescope. We also present Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) and Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (MIPS) images of NGC 7023 at 3.6, 4.5, 8.0, and 24 m. We observe the aromatic emission features (AEFs) at 6.2, 7.7, 8.6, 11.3, and 12.7 m, plus a wealth of weaker features. We find new unidentified interstellar emission features at 6.7, 10.1, 15.8, 17.4, and 19.0 m. Possible identifications include aromatic hydrocarbons or nanoparticles of unknown mineralogy. We see variations in relative feature strengths, central wavelengths, and feature widths, in the AEFs and weaker emission features, depending on both distance from the star and nebular position (southeast vs. northwest).
- Published
- 2004
141. Comprehensive comparison of models for spectral energy distributions from 0.1μm to 1 mm of nearby star-forming galaxies
- Author
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Hunt, L. K., primary, De Looze, I., additional, Boquien, M., additional, Nikutta, R., additional, Rossi, A., additional, Bianchi, S., additional, Dale, D. A., additional, Granato, G. L., additional, Kennicutt, R. C., additional, Silva, L., additional, Ciesla, L., additional, Relaño, M., additional, Viaene, S., additional, Brandl, B., additional, Calzetti, D., additional, Croxall, K. V., additional, Draine, B. T., additional, Galametz, M., additional, Gordon, K. D., additional, Groves, B. A., additional, Helou, G., additional, Herrera-Camus, R., additional, Hinz, J. L., additional, Koda, J., additional, Salim, S., additional, Sandstrom, K. M., additional, Smith, J. D., additional, Wilson, C. D., additional, and Zibetti, S., additional
- Published
- 2019
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142. Exploring the dust content of galactic haloes with Herschel III. NGC 891.
- Author
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Yoon, J H, Martin, Crystal L, Veilleux, S, Meléndez, M, Mueller, T, Gordon, K D, Cecil, G, Bland-Hawthorn, J, and Engelbracht, C
- Subjects
GALACTIC halos ,SYNCHROTRON radiation ,DUST ,STARBURSTS ,GRAVITATIONAL potential ,STAR formation ,COSMIC rays - Abstract
We present deep far-infrared observations of the nearby edge-on galaxy NGC 891 obtained with the Herschel Space Observatory and the Spitzer Space Telescope. The maps confirm the detection of thermal emission from the inner circumgalactic medium (halo) and spatially resolve a dusty superbubble and a dust spur (filament). The dust temperature of the halo component is lower than that of the disc but increases across a region of diameter ≈8.0 kpc extending at least 7.7 kpc vertically from one side of the disc, a region we call a superbubble because of its association with thermal X-ray emission and a minimum in the synchrotron scale height. This outflow is breaking through the thick disc and developing into a galactic wind, which is of particular interest because NGC 891 is not considered a starburst galaxy; the star formation rate surface density, 0.03 M
⊙ yr−1 kpc−2 , and gas fraction, just |$10{{\ \rm per\ cent}}$| in the inner disc, indicate the threshold for wind formation is lower than previous work has suggested. We conclude that the star formation surface density is sufficient for superbubble blowout into the halo, but the cosmic ray electrons may play a critical role in determining whether this outflow develops into a fountain or escapes from the gravitational potential. The high dust-to-gas ratio in the dust spur suggests the material was pulled out of NGC 891 through the collision of a minihalo with the disc of NGC 891. We conclude that NGC 891 offers an example of both feedback and satellite interactions transporting dust into the halo of a typical galaxy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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143. Dust Emission at 8 and 24μm as Diagnostics of H ii Region Radiative Transfer
- Author
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Oey, M. S., primary, López-Hernández, J., additional, Kellar, J. A., additional, Pellegrini, E. W., additional, Gordon, K. D., additional, Jameson, K. E., additional, Li, A., additional, Madden, S. C., additional, Meixner, M., additional, Roman-Duval, J., additional, Bot, C., additional, Rubio, M., additional, and Tielens, A. G. G. M., additional
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
144. TRUST
- Author
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Gordon, K. D., primary, Baes, M., additional, Bianchi, S., additional, Camps, P., additional, Juvela, M., additional, Kuiper, R., additional, Lunttila, T., additional, Misselt, K. A., additional, Natale, G., additional, Robitaille, T., additional, and Steinacker, J., additional
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
145. Updated 34-band Photometry for the SINGS/KINGFISH Samples of Nearby Galaxies
- Author
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Dale, D. A., primary, Cook, D. O., additional, Roussel, H., additional, Turner, J. A., additional, Armus, L., additional, Bolatto, A. D., additional, Boquien, M., additional, Brown, M. J. I., additional, Calzetti, D., additional, Looze, I. De, additional, Galametz, M., additional, Gordon, K. D., additional, Groves, B. A., additional, Jarrett, T. H., additional, Helou, G., additional, Herrera-Camus, R., additional, Hinz, J. L., additional, Hunt, L. K., additional, Kennicutt, R. C., additional, Murphy, E. J., additional, Rest, A., additional, Sandstrom, K. M., additional, Smith, J.-D. T., additional, Tabatabaei, F. S., additional, and Wilson, C. D., additional
- Published
- 2017
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- View/download PDF
146. Comprehensive comparison of models for spectral energy distributions from 0.1 μm to 1 mm of nearby star-forming galaxies.
- Author
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Hunt, L. K., De Looze, I., Boquien, M., Nikutta, R., Rossi, A., Bianchi, S., Dale, D. A., Granato, G. L., Kennicutt, R. C., Silva, L., Ciesla, L., Relaño, M., Viaene, S., Brandl, B., Calzetti, D., Croxall, K. V., Draine, B. T., Galametz, M., Gordon, K. D., and Groves, B. A.
- Subjects
SPECTRAL energy distribution ,ULTRAVIOLET detectors ,LUMINOSITY ,ALGORITHMS ,STELLAR mass - Abstract
We have fit the far-ultraviolet (FUV) to sub-millimeter (850 μm) spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of the 61 galaxies from the Key Insights on Nearby Galaxies: A Far-Infrared Survey with Herschel (KINGFISH). The fitting has been performed using three models: the Code for Investigating GALaxy Evolution (CIGALE), the GRAphite-SILicate approach (GRASIL), and the Multiwavelength Analysis of Galaxy PHYSical properties (MAGPHYS). We have analyzed the results of the three codes in terms of the SED shapes, and by comparing the derived quantities with simple "recipes" for stellar mass (M
star ), star-formation rate (SFR), dust mass (Mdust ), and monochromatic luminosities. Although the algorithms rely on different assumptions for star-formation history, dust attenuation and dust reprocessing, they all well approximate the observed SEDs and are in generally good agreement for the associated quantities. However, the three codes show very different behavior in the mid-infrared regime: in the 5–10 μm region dominated by PAH emission, and also between 25 and 70 μm where there are no observational constraints for the KINGFISH sample. We find that different algorithms give discordant SFR estimates for galaxies with low specific SFR, and that the standard recipes for calculating FUV absorption overestimate the extinction compared to the SED-fitting results. Results also suggest that assuming a "standard" constant stellar mass-to-light ratio overestimates Mstar relative to the SED fitting, and we provide new SED-based formulations for estimating Mstar from WISE W1 (3.4 μm) luminosities and colors. From a principal component analysis of Mstar , SFR, Mdust , and O/H, we reproduce previous scaling relations among Mstar , SFR, and O/H, and find that Mdust can be predicted to within ∼0.3 dex using only Mstar and SFR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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147. The Mid-Infrared Instrument for the James Webb Space Telescope, III: MIRIM, The MIRI Imager
- Author
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Bouchet, Patrice, Garcia-Marin, Macarena, Lagage, P. -O., Amiaux, Jerome, Augueres, J. -L., Bauwens, Eva, Blommaert, J. A. D. L., Chen, C. H., Detre, O. H., Dicken, Dan, Dubreuil, D., Galdemard, Ph., Gastaud, R., Glasse, A., Gordon, K. D., Gougnaud, F., Guillard, Phillippe, Justtanont, K., Krause, Oliver, Leboeuf, Didier, Longval, Yuying, Martin, Laurant, Mazy, Emmanuel, Moreau, Vincent, Olofsson, Goran, Ray, T. P., Rees, J. -M., Renotte, Etienne, Ressler, M. E., Ronayette, Samuel, Salasca, Sophie, Scheithauer, Silvia, Sykes, Jon, Thelen, M. P., Wells, Martyn, Wright, David, Wright, G. S., Bouchet, Patrice, Garcia-Marin, Macarena, Lagage, P. -O., Amiaux, Jerome, Augueres, J. -L., Bauwens, Eva, Blommaert, J. A. D. L., Chen, C. H., Detre, O. H., Dicken, Dan, Dubreuil, D., Galdemard, Ph., Gastaud, R., Glasse, A., Gordon, K. D., Gougnaud, F., Guillard, Phillippe, Justtanont, K., Krause, Oliver, Leboeuf, Didier, Longval, Yuying, Martin, Laurant, Mazy, Emmanuel, Moreau, Vincent, Olofsson, Goran, Ray, T. P., Rees, J. -M., Renotte, Etienne, Ressler, M. E., Ronayette, Samuel, Salasca, Sophie, Scheithauer, Silvia, Sykes, Jon, Thelen, M. P., Wells, Martyn, Wright, David, and Wright, G. S.
- Abstract
In this article, we describe the Mid-Infrared Imager Module (MIRIM), which provides broadband imaging in the 5-27 mu m wavelength range for the James Webb Space Telescope. The imager has a 0 ''.11 pixel scale and a total unobstructed view of 74 '' x 113 '' The remainder of its nominal 113 '' x 113 '' field is occupied by the coronagraphs and the low-resolution spectrometer. We present the instrument optical and mechanical design. We show that the test data, as measured during the test campaigns undertaken at CEA-Saclay, at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, and at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, indicate that the instrument complies with its design requirements and goals. We also discuss the operational requirements (multiple dithers and exposures) needed for optimal scientific utilization of the MIRIM.
- Published
- 2015
148. JWST/MIRI Data Reduction and Products.
- Author
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Bright, Stacey N., Gordon, K. D., Chen, C. H., Lajoie, R., Azzollini, R., Bergeron, L., Bouchet, P., Bouwman, J., Cracraft, M., Fischer, S., Friedman, S. D., Garcia-Marin, M., Glasse, A., Glauser, A. M., Goodson, G. B., Greene, T. P., Hines, D. C., Khorrami, M. A., Lahuis, F., and Lajoie, C.-P.
- Published
- 2016
149. Mid-infrared spectroscopy of the Andromeda galaxy
- Author
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Hemachandra, D., primary, Barmby, P., additional, Peeters, E., additional, Willner, S. P., additional, Ashby, M. L. N., additional, Smith, H. A., additional, Gordon, K. D., additional, Smith, D. A., additional, and Fazio, G. G., additional
- Published
- 2015
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150. A NEW METHOD FOR DERIVING THE STELLAR BIRTH FUNCTION OF RESOLVED STELLAR POPULATIONS
- Author
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Gennaro, M., primary, Tchernyshyov, K., additional, Brown, T. M., additional, and Gordon, K. D., additional
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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