121 results on '"Stolovy, S. R."'
Search Results
2. A Catalog of X-ray Point Sources from Two Megaseconds of Chandra Observations of the Galactic Center
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Muno, M. P., Bauer, F. E., Baganoff, F. K., Bandyopadhyay, R. M., Bower, G. C., Brandt, W. N., Broos, P. S., Cotera, A., Eikenberry, S. S., Garmire, G. P., Hyman, S. D., Kassim, N. E., Lang, C. C., Lazio, T. J. W., Law, C., Mauerhan, J. C., Morris, M. R., Nagata, T., Nishiyama, S., Park, S., Ramirez, S. V., Stolovy, S. R., Wijnands, R., Wang, Q. D., Wang, Z., and Yusef-Zadeh, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a catalog of 9017 X-ray sources identified in Chandra observations of a 2 by 0.8 degree field around the Galactic center. We increase the number of known X-ray sources in the region by a factor of 2.5. The catalog incorporates all of the ACIS-I observations as of 2007 August, which total 2.25 Msec of exposure. At the distance to the Galactic center (8 kpc), we are sensitive to sources with luminosities >4e32 erg/s (0.5-8.0 keV; 90% confidence) over an area of one square degree, and up to an order of magnitude more sensitive in the deepest exposure (1.0 Msec) around Sgr A*. The positions of 60% of our sources are accurate to <1" (95% confidence), and 20% have positions accurate to <0.5". We search for variable sources, and find that 3% exhibit flux variations within an observation, 10% exhibit variations from observation-to-observation. We also find one source, CXOUGC J174622.7-285218, with a periodic 1745 s signal (1.4% chance probability), which is probably a magnetically-accreting cataclysmic variable. We compare the spatial distribution of X-ray sources to a model for the stellar distribution, and find 2.8 sigma evidence for excesses in the numbers of X-ray sources in the region of recent star formation encompassed by the Arches, Quintuplet, and Galactic center star clusters. These excess sources are also seen in the luminosity distribution of the X-ray sources, which is flatter near the Arches and Quintuplet than elsewhere in the field. These excess point sources, along with a similar longitudinal asymmetry in the distribution of diffuse iron emission that has been reported by other authors, probably have their origin in the young stars that are prominent at l~0.1 degree., Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, 7 tables. Submitted to ApJ Supplements, referees' first comments incorporated. Data is available at http://www.srl.caltech.edu/gc_project/
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- 2008
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3. Comparison of 3.6 - 8.0 Micron Spitzer/IRAC Galactic Center Survey Point Sources with Chandra X-Ray Point Sources in the Central 40x40 Parsecs
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Arendt, R. G., Gezari, D. Y., Stolovy, S. R., Sellgren, K., Smith, R., Ramirez, S. V., Yusef-Zadeh, F., Law, C. J., Smith, H. A., Cotera, A. S., and Moseley, S. H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have studied the correlation between 2357 Chandra X-ray point sources in a 40 x 40 parsec field and ~20,000 infrared sources we observed in the corresponding subset of our 2 x 1.4 degree Spitzer/IRAC Galactic Center Survey at 3.6-8.0 um, using various spatial and X-ray hardness thresholds. The correlation was determined for source separations of less than 0.5", 1" or 2". Only the soft X-ray sources show any correlation with infrared point sources on these scales, and that correlation is very weak. The upper limit on hard X-ray sources that have infrared counterparts is <1.7% (3 sigma). However, because of the confusion limit of the IR catalog, we only detect IR sources with absolute magnitudes < ~1. As a result, a stronger correlation with fainter sources cannot be ruled out. Only one compact infrared source, IRS 13, coincides with any of the dozen prominent X-ray emission features in the 3 x 3 parsec region centered on Sgr A*, and the diffuse X-ray and infrared emission around Sgr A* seems to be anti-correlated on a few-arcsecond scale. We compare our results with previous identifications of near-infrared companions to Chandra X-ray sources., Comment: 28 pages, 8 Postscript figures (low resolution). Accepted for publication in the ApJ
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- 2008
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4. The Mid-Infrared Colors of the ISM and Extended Sources at the Galactic Center
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Arendt, R. G., Stolovy, S. R., Ramírez, S. V., Sellgren, K., Cotera, A. S., Law, C. J., Yusef-Zadeh, F., Smith, H. A., and Gezari, D. Y.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A mid-infrared (3.6-8 um) survey of the Galactic Center has been carried out with the IRAC instrument on the Spitzer Space Telescope. This survey covers the central 2x1.4 degree (~280x200 pc) of the Galaxy. At 3.6 and 4.5 um the emission is dominated by stellar sources, the fainter ones merging into an unresolved background. At 5.8 and 8 um the stellar sources are fainter, and large-scale diffuse emission from the ISM of the Galaxy's central molecular zone becomes prominent. The survey reveals that the 8 to 5.8 um color of the ISM emission is highly uniform across the surveyed region. This uniform color is consistent with a flat extinction law and emission from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Models indicate that this broadband color should not be expected to change if the incident radiation field heating the dust and PAHs is <10^4 times that of the solar neighborhood. The few regions with unusually red emission are areas where the PAHs are underabundant and the radiation field is locally strong enough to heat large dust grains to produce significant 8 um emission. These red regions include compact H II regions, Sgr B1, and wider regions around the Arches and Quintuplet Clusters. In these regions the radiation field is >10^4 times that of the solar neighborhood. Other regions of very red emission indicate cases where thick dust clouds obscure deeply embedded objects or very early stages of star formation., Comment: 37 pages, 15 Postscript figures (low resolution). Accepted for publication in the ApJ
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- 2008
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5. Masers as Probes of Massive Star Formation in the Nuclear Disk
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Yusef-Zadeh, F., Arendt, R. G., Heinke, C. O., Hinz, J. L., Hewitt, J. W., Pratap, P., Ramirez, S. V., Rieke, G. H., Roberts, D. A., Stolovy, S. R., Wardle, M., and Whitney, B. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
OH(1720 MHz) and methanol masers are now recognized to be excellent probes of the interactions of supernova remnants with molecular clouds and tracers of massive star formation, respectively. To better understand the nature of star formation activity in the central region of the Galaxy, we have used these two classes of masers combined with the IRAC and MIPS data to study prominent sites of ongoing star formation in the nuclear disk. The nuclear disk is characterized by massive GMCs with elevated gas temperatures, compared to their dust temperatures. We note an association between methanol masers and a class of mid-infrared ``green sources''. These highly embedded YSOs show enhanced 4.5micron emission due to excited molecular lines. The distribution of methanol masers and supernova remnants suggest a low efficiency of star formation (with the exception of Sgr B2), which we believe is due to an enhanced flux of cosmic ray electrons impacting molecular clouds in the nuclear disk. We also highlight the importance of cosmic rays in their ability to heat molecular clouds, and thus increase the gas temperature., Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, IAU 242 on "Astrophysical Masers and Their Environments", editors: J. Chapman and W. Baan
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- 2007
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6. The Frequency of Mid-Infrared Excess Sources in Galactic Surveys
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Uzpen, B., Kobulnicky, H. A., Monson, A. J., Pierce, M. J., Clemens, D. P., Backman, D. E., Meade, M. R., Babler, B. L., Indebetouw, R., Whitney, B. A., Watson, C., Wolfire, M. G., Benjamin, R. A., Bracker, S., Bania, T. M., Cohen, M., Cyganowski, C. J., Devine, K. E., Heitsch, F., Jackson, J. M., Mathis, J. S., Mercer, E. P., Povich, M. S., Rho, J., Robitaille, T. P., Sewilo, M., Stolovy, S. R., Watson, D. F., Wolff, M. J., and Churchwell, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have identified 230 Tycho-2 Spectral Catalog stars that exhibit 8 micron mid-infrared extraphotospheric excesses in the MidCourse Space Experiment (MSX) and Spitzer Space Telescope Galactic Legacy MidPlane Survey Extraordinaire (GLIMPSE) surveys. Of these, 183 are either OB stars earlier than B8 in which the excess plausibly arises from a thermal bremsstrahlung component or evolved stars in which the excess may be explained by an atmospheric dust component. The remaining 47 stars have spectral classifications B8 or later and appear to be main sequence or late pre-main-sequence objects harboring circumstellar disks. Six of the 47 stars exhibit multiple signatures characteristic of pre-main-sequence circumstellar disks, including emission lines, near-infrared K-band excesses, and X-ray emission. Approximately one-third of the remaining 41 sources have emission lines suggesting relative youth. Of the 25 GLIMPSE stars with SST data at >24 microns, 20 also show an excess at 24 microns. Three additional objects have 24 micron upper limits consistent with possible excesses, and two objects have photospheric measurements at 24 microns. Six MSX sources had a measurement at wavelengths >8 microns. We modeled the excesses in 26 stars having two or more measurements in excess of the expected photospheres as single-component blackbodies. We determine probable disk temperatures and fractional infrared luminosities in the range 191 < T < 787 and 3.9x10^-4 < L_IR/L_* < 2.7x10^-1. We estimate a lower limit on the fraction of Tycho-2 Spectral Catalog main-sequence stars having mid-IR, but not near-IR, excesses to be 1.0+-0.3%., Comment: Accepted to ApJ
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- 2006
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7. First GLIMPSE Results on the Stellar Structure of the Galaxy
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Benjamin, Robert A., Churchwell, E., Babler, B. L., Indebetouw, R., Meade, M. R., Whitney, B. A., Watson, C., Wolfire, M. G., Wolff, M. J., Ignace, R., Bania, T. M., Bracker, S., Clemens, D. P., Chomiuk, L., Cohen, M., Dickey, J. M., Jackson, J. M., Kobulnicky, H. A., Mercer, E. P., Mathis, J. S., Stolovy, S. R., and Uzpen, B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The GLIMPSE (Galactic Legacy Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire) Point Source Catalog of ~ 30 million mid-infrared sources towards the inner Galaxy, 10 < |l| < 65 degrees and |b| < 1 degree, was used to determine the distribution of stars in Galactic longitude, latitude, and apparent magnitude. The counts versus longitude can be approximated by the modified Bessel function N=N_0*(l/l_0)*K_1(l/l_0), where l_0 is insensitive to limiting magnitude, band choice, and side of Galactic center: l_0= 17-30 degrees with a best fit value in the the 4.5 micron band of l_0=24 +/- 4 degrees. Modeling the source distribution as an exponential disk yields a radial scale length of H= 3.9 +/- 0.6 kpc. There is a pronounced north-south asymmetry in source counts for |l| < 30 degrees, with ~ 25% more stars in the north. For l=10-30 degrees, there is a strong enhancement of stars of m= 11.5-13.5 mag. A linear bar passing through the Galactic center with half-length R_bar=4.4 +/- 0.5 kpc, tilted by phi=44 +/- 10 degrees to the Sun-Galactic Center line, provides the simplest interpretation of this data. We examine the possibility that enhanced source counts at l=26-28 degrees, 31.5-34 degrees, and 306-309 degrees are related to Galactic spiral structure. Total source counts are depressed in regions where the counts of red objects (m_K-m_[8.0] >3) peak. In these areas, the counts are reduced by extinction due to molecular gas and/or high diffuse backgrounds associated with star formation., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters. Version with full res figures and info on GLIMPSE Point Source Catalog at http://www.astro.wisc.edu/glimpse
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- 2005
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8. Identification of Main Sequence Stars with Mid-Infrared Excesses Using GLIMPSE: Beta-Pictoris Analogs?
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Uzpen, B., Kobulnicky, H. A., Olsen, K. A. G., Clemens, D. P., Laurance, T. L., Meade, M. R., Babler, B. L., Indebetouw, R., Whitney, B. A., Watson, C., Wolfire, M. G., Wolff, M. J., Benjamin, R. A., Bania, T. M., Cohen, M., Devine, K. E., Dickey, J. M., Heitsch, F., Jackson, J. M., Marston, A. P., Mathis, J. S., Mercer, E. P., Stauffer, J. R., Stolovy, S. R., Backman, D. E., and Churchwell, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Spitzer IRAC 3.6-8 micron photometry obtained as part of the GLIMPSE survey has revealed mid-infrared excesses for 33 field stars with known spectral types in a 1.2 sq. degree field centered on the southern Galactic HII region RCW49. These stars comprise a subset of 184 stars with known spectral classification, most of which were pre-selected to have unusually red IR colors. We propose that the mid-IR excesses are caused by circumstellar dust disks that are either very late remnants of stellar formation or debris disks generated by planet formation. Of these 33 stars, 29 appear to be main-sequence stars based on optical spectral classifications. Five of the 29 main-sequence stars are O or B stars with excesses that can be plausibly explained by thermal bremsstrahlung emission, and four are post main-sequence stars. The lone O star is an O4V((f)) at a spectrophotometric distance of 3233+ 540- 535 pc and may be the earliest member of the Westerlund 2 cluster. Of the remaining 24 main-sequence stars, 18 have SEDs that are consistent with hot dusty debris disks, a possible signature of planet formation. Modeling the excesses as blackbodies demonstrates that the blackbody components have fractional bolometric disk-to-star luminosity ratios, LIR/L*, ranging from 10^-3 to 10^-2 with temperatures ranging from 220 to 820 K. The inferred temperatures are more consistent with asteroid belts rather than the cooler temperatures expected for Kuiper belts. Mid-IR excesses are found in all spectral types from late B to early K.
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- 2005
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9. HCN and HCO+ Observations of the Galactic Circumnuclear Disk
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Christopher, M. H., Scoville, N. Z., Stolovy, S. R., and Yun, Min S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high spatial resolution (5.1" x 2.7") OVRO millimeter array observations of HCN (J=1-0) and HCO+ (J=1-0) emission in the inner 3 pc of the galaxy. The HCN and HCO+ emission of the circumnuclear disk (CND) is distributed in a well-defined ring with a peak at a radius of 1.6pc. The HCO+/HCN emission ratio is typically ~0.4 but with significant variations. The HCN emission is well correlated with the H_2 emission at 2.12 microns both in the main emission lobes of the CND and also in four filaments. Multiple areas of interaction between the ionized gas and the CND are also seen - the western arm of the minispiral is spatially and kinematically consistent with being the ionized inner edge of the CND, and the northern arm may be connected to the CND northeastern extension. With the enhanced spatial resolution of the HCN map, we resolve numerous dense molecular gas cores within the CND with characteristic diameter of 7" (0.25pc). For 26 of the more isolated cores, we measure sizes, velocity widths, and integrated fluxes. We estimate three masses for each core: a virial mass, an optically thick mass, and a lower limit mass assuming optically thin HCN emission. The virial and optically thick masses are in good agreement with a typical mass of (2-3)x10^4 M_sun and a total CND gas mass of 10^6 M_sun. The internal densities implied by these core masses are on average (3-4)x10^7 cm^-3, high enough to be stable against tidal disruption from Sgr A* and the central stellar concentration. This tidal stability suggests a longer lifetime for the CND. The higher densities and masses within the cores might support star formation either in the CND itself or within a core infalling toward the inner parsec, thus providing a mechanism for the formation of the young stellar population in the inner arcseconds of the galaxy., Comment: 43 pages with 16 figures, Accepted for publication in March 20, 2005 ApJ; High-resolution figures available at: http://www.astro.caltech.edu/~mc/cnd.html
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- 2005
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10. Discovery of a New Low-Latitude Milky Way Globular Cluster using GLIMPSE
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Kobulnicky, Chip, Monson, A. J., Buckalew, B. A, Darnel, J. M., Uzpen, B., Whitney, B. A., Indebetouw, R., Babler, B. L., Meade, M. R., Watson, C., Churchwell, E., Wolff, M. J., Wolfire, M. G., Clemens, D. P., Shah, R., Bania, T. M., Benjamin, R. A., Cohen, M., Devine, K. E., Dickey, J. M., Heitsch, F., Jackson, J. M., Marston, A. P., Mathis, J. S., Mercer, E. P., Stauffer, J. R., Stolovy, S. R., Norris, J. P., Kutyrev, A., Canterna, R., and Pierce, M. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Spitzer Space Telescope imaging as part of the Galactic Legacy Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire (GLIMPSE) reveals a previously unidentified low-latitude rich star cluster near l=31.3 degrees, b=-0.1 degrees. Near-infrared JHK' photometry from the Wyoming Infrared Observatory indicates an extinction of A_V ~ 15+/-3 mag for cluster members. Analysis of 13CO features along the same sightline suggests a probable kinematic distance of 3.1 -- 5.2 kpc. The new cluster has an angular diameter of ~1-2 pc, a total magnitude m_{K_0}=2.1 corrected for extinction, and a luminosity of M_K ~ -10.3 at 3.1 kpc. In contrast to young massive Galactic clusters with ages <100 Myr, the new cluster has no significant radio emission. Comparison to theoretical K-band luminosity functions indicates an age of at least several Gyr and a mass of at least 10^5 solar masses. Unlike known old open clusters, this new cluster lies in the inner Galaxy at R_{GC} ~ 6.1 kpc. We designate this object ``GLIMPSE-C01'' and classify it as a Milky Way globular cluster passing through the Galactic disk. We also identify a region of star formation and fan-shaped outflows from young stellar objects in the same field as the cluster. The cluster's passage through the Galactic molecular layer may have triggered this star formation activity., Comment: Accepted for Publication in AJ Report with full resolution images available at http://physics.uwyo.edu/~chip/Glob
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- 2004
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11. The Wavelength Dependence of Interstellar Extinction from 1.25 to 8.0 microns Using GLIMPSE Data
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Indebetouw, R., Mathis, J. S., Babler, B. L., Meade, M. R., Watson, C., Whitney, B. A., Wolff, M. J., Wolfire, M. G., Bania, T. M., Benjamin, R. A., Clemens, D. P., Cohen, Martin, Dickey, J. M., Jackson, J. M., Kobulnicky, H. A., Marston, A. P., Mercer, E. P., Stauffer, J. R., Stolovy, S. R., and Churchwell, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We determine and tabulate A(lambda)/A(K), the wavelength dependence of interstellar extinction, in the Galactic plane for 1.25um
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- 2004
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12. Structure and Colors of Diffuse Emission in the Spitzer Galactic First Look Survey
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Ingalls, James G., Miville-Deschênes, M. -A., Reach, William T., Noriega-Crespo, A., Carey, Sean J., Boulanger, F., Stolovy, S. R., Padgett, Deborah L., Burgdorf, M. J., Fajardo-Acosta, S. B., Glaccum, W. J., Helou, G., Hoard, D. W., Karr, J., O'Linger, J., Rebull, L. M., Rho, J., Stauffer, J. R., and Wachter, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the density structure of the interstellar medium using new high-resolution maps of the 8 micron, 24 micron, and 70 micron surface brightness towards a molecular cloud in the Gum Nebula, made as part of the Spitzer Space Telescope Galactic First Look Survey. The maps are correlated with 100 micron images measured with IRAS. At 24 and 70 micron, the spatial power spectrum of surface brightness follows a power law with spectral index -3.5. At 24 micron, the power law behavior is remarkably consistent from the 0.2 degree size of our maps down to the 5 arcsecond spatial resolution. Thus, the structure of the 24 micron emission is self-similar even at milliparsec scales. The combined power spectrum produced from Spitzer 24 micron and IRAS 25 micron images is consistent with a change in the power law exponent from -2.6 to -3.5. The decrease may be due to the transition from a two-dimensional to three-dimensional structure. Under this hypothesis, we estimate the thickness of the emitting medium to be 0.3 pc., Comment: 13 Pages, 3 Figures, to be published in Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series (Spitzer Special Issue), volume 154. Uses aastex v5.2
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- 2004
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13. A GLIMPSE of Star Formation in the Giant H II Region RCW 49
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Whitney, B. A., Indebetouw, R., Babler, B. L., Meade, M. R., Watson, C., Wolff, M. J., Wolfire, M. G., Clemens, D. P., Bania, T. M., Benjamin, R. A., Cohen, M., Devine, K. E., Dickey, J. M., Heitsch, F., Jackson, J. M., Kobulnicky, H. A., Marston, A. P., Mathis, J. S., Mercer, E. P., Stauffer, J. R., Stolovy, S. R., and Churchwell, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
GLIMPSE imaging using the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) on the Spitzer Space Telescope indicates that star formation is ongoing in the RCW 49 giant H II region. A photometric comparison of the sources in RCW 49 to a similar area to its north finds that at least 300 stars brighter than 13th magnitude in band [3.6] have infrared excesses inconsistent with reddening due to foreground extinction. These are likely young stellar objects (YSOs) more massive than 2.5 M_sun suggesting that thousands more low-mass stars are forming in this cloud. Some of the YSOs are massive (B stars) and therefore very young, suggesting that a new generation of star formation is occurring, possibly triggered by stellar winds and shocks generated by the older (2-3 Myr) central massive cluster. The Spitzer IRAC camera has proven to be ideally suited for distinguishing young stars from field stars, and the GLIMPSE survey of the Galactic Plane will likely find thousands of new star formation regions., Comment: Accepted by ApJS, Spitzer edition. 9 pages, 6 figures. Due to space limitations on astro-ph, figures 1-4 are submitted as separate .jpg files at http://arxiv.org/ps/astro-ph/0406100. Full-resolution figures and text can be downloaded from http://www.astro.wisc.edu/glimpse/glimpsepubs.html
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- 2004
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14. 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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15. The nature of the Galactic Center source IRS 13 revealed by high spatial resolution in the infrared
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Maillard, J. P., Paumard, T., Stolovy, S. R., and Rigaut, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
High spatial resolution observations in the 1 to 3.5 micron region of the Galactic Center source known historically as IRS 13 are presented. They include ground-based adaptive optics images in the H, Kp (2.12/0.4 micron) and L bands, NICMOS data in filters between 1.1 and 2.2 micron, and integral field spectroscopic data from BEAR, an Imaging FTS, in the HeI 2.06 micron and the Br$\gamma$ line regions. Analysis of all these data provides a completely new picture of the main component, IRS 13E, which appears as a cluster of seven individual stars within a projected diameter of ~0.5'' (0.02 pc). The brightest sources, 13E1, 13E2, 13E3 (a binary), and 13E4, are all massive stars, 13E1 a blue object, with no detected emission line while 13E2 and 13E4 are high-mass emission line stars. 13E2 is at the WR stage and 13E4 a massive O-type star. 13E3A and B are extremely red objects, proposed as other examples of dusty WR stars. All these sources have a common westward proper motion. 13E5, is a red source similar to 13E3A/B. This concentration of comoving massive hot stars, IRS 13E, is proposed as the remaining core of a massive star cluster, which could harbor an intermediate-mass black hole (IMBH) of ~1300 M_sol. This detection plays in favor of a scenario in which the helium stars and the other hot stars in the central pc originate from the stripping of a massive cluster formed several tens of pc from the center. The detection of a discrete X-ray emission (Baganoff et al. 2003) at the IRS~13 position is examined in this context., Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures (3 in color), LaTeX2e, accepted in A&A
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- 2004
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16. GLIMPSE: I. A SIRTF Legacy Project to Map the Inner Galaxy
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Benjamin, Robert A., Churchwell, E., Babler, Brian L., Bania, T. M., Clemens, Dan P., Cohen, Martin, Dickey, John M., Indebetouw, Remy, Jackson, James M., Kobulnicky, Henry A., Lazarian, Alex, Marston, A. P., Mathis, John S., Meade, Marilyn R., Seager, Sara, Stolovy, S. R., Watson, C., Whitney, Barbara A., Wolff, Michael J., and Wolfire, Mark G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
GLIMPSE (Galactic Legacy Infrared Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire), a SIRTF Legacy Science Program, will be a fully sampled, confusion-limited infrared survey of the inner two-thirds of the Galactic disk with a pixel resolution of \~1.2" using the Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) at 3.6, 4.5, 5.8, and 8.0 microns. The survey will cover Galactic latitudes |b| <1 degree and longitudes |l|=10 to 65 degrees (both sides of the Galactic center). The survey area contains the outer ends of the Galactic bar, the Galactic molecular ring, and the inner spiral arms. The GLIMPSE team will process these data to produce a point source catalog, a point source data archive, and a set of mosaicked images. We summarize our observing strategy, give details of our data products, and summarize some of the principal science questions that will be addressed using GLIMPSE data. Up-to-date documentation, survey progress, and information on complementary datasets are available on the GLIMPSE web site: www.astro.wisc.edu/glimpse., Comment: Description of GLIMPSE, a SIRTF Legacy project (Aug 2003 PASP, in press). Paper with full res.color figures at http://www.astro.wisc.edu/glimpse/glimpsepubs.html
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- 2003
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17. HST Paschen alpha and 1.9 micron imaging of Sgr A West
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Scoville, N. Z., Stolovy, S. R., Rieke, M., Christopher, M. H., and Yusef-Zadeh, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present HST/NICMOS images at 0.2" resolution of the HI Paschen Alpha (PaA) emission line in a 70" x 90" region of the Galactic center centered on the non-thermal radio source Sgr A*. The majority of the emission arises from ionized gas in the mini-spiral in the central parsec. PaA emission is also seen from 26 stellar sources, presumably early-type stars with mass-loss winds. The new data reveal significant small-scale structure (<1"~0.04pc) in the ionized gas of the mini-spiral; low surface brightness emission features are also seen for the first time. Extinction, estimated from the ratio of observed PaA emission to 6-cm continuum emission, varies from 20 to 50 mag with a median Av=31.1 mag, in excellent agreement with earlier estimates for the stellar sources and indepedent measurements derived using H92alpha recombination line data. Large increases in extinction are seen along the periphery of the ionized gas, suggesting that the ionized gas is partially extincted by dust in the molecular clouds at the outside of the ionized regions. The small-scale, filamentary structures in the ionized gas have a free thermal expansion time of only ~ 3000 yrs; either magnetic fields or mass-loss winds from the hot emission line stars may contain the ionized filaments. For both the ionized gas and the stellar continuum, the centroids of the emission remain within ~+/- 1" from a radius of 2" out to 40", providing further evidence that Sgr A* is indeed at or extremely close to the dynamical center of the Galactic nucleus stellar distribution. The 1.9 micron surface brightness increases inwards to 0.9" and then decreases or levels off closer to Sgr A*, possibly indicating the core radius of the central stellar distribution or depletion of the late-type stars by stellar collisions near the central black hole., Comment: 43 pages, 15 figures, 2 tables; Accepted to ApJ (9/1/03 issue)
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- 2003
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18. High Mass, OB Star Formation in M51 : HST Halpha and Palpha Imaging
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Scoville, N. Z., Polletta, M., Ewald, S., Stolovy, S. R., Thompson, R., and Rieke, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
(first paragraph) We have obtained Halpha and Palpha emission line images covering the central 3 - 4 arcmin of M51 using the WFPC2 and NICMOS cameras on HST to study the high-mass stellar population. The 0.1 - 0.2 arcsec pixels provide 4.6 - 9 pc resolution in M51 and the Halpha/Palpha line ratios are used to obtain extinction estimates. A sample of 1373 Halpha emission regions is catalogued using an automated and uniform measurement algorithm. Their sizes are typically 10 - 100 pc. The luminosity function for the Halpha emission regions is obtained over the range L_{Halpha} = 10^{36} to 2 times 10^{39} erg s{-1}. The luminosity function is fit well by a power law with dN/dlnL proportional to L^{-1.01}). The power law is significantly truncated and no regions were found with observed L_{Halpha} above 2 times 10^{39} erg s^{-1} (uncorrected for extinction; the maximum seen in ground-based studies is approximately a factor of 5 higher, very likely due to blending of multiple regions). The extinctions derived here increase the maximum intrinsic luminosity to above 10^{40} erg s^{-1}). The logarithmically binned luminosity function is also somewhat steeper (alpha = -1.01) than that found ground-based imaging (alpha = -0.5 to -0.8) - probably also a result of our resolving regions which were blended in the ground-based images. The 2-point correlation function for the HII regions exhibits strong clustering on scales <= 2 arcsec or 96 pc., Comment: to appear in Astronomical Journal (Nov. 2001) tarfile includes: main text (61 pages), 24 figures (jpeg format), 4 tables
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- 2001
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19. High Spectral and Spatial Resolution Observations of Shocked Molecular Hydrogen at the Galactic Center
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Yusef-Zadeh, F., Stolovy, S. R., Burton, M., Wardle, M., and Ashley, M. C. B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The presence of OH (1720 MHz) masers, and the absence of counterparts at 1665/1667 MHz has proved to be a clear diagnostic of shocked molecular gas associated with Galactic supernova remnants. This suggests that shocked molecular gas should be associated with the OH (1720 MHz) masers that have been detected in the circumnuclear disk (CND) and Sgr A East at the Galactic center. In order to test this hypothesis, we observed the H$_2$ 1--0 S(1) and Br $\gamma$ lines using NICMOS on the HST and UNSWIRF on the AAT, near the regions where OH (1720 MHz) masers are detected in the CND and Sgr A East. We present the distribution of H$_2$ in the North and South lobes of the CND and in Sgr A East. H$_2$ emission accompanies almost all of the maser spots detected at the Galactic center. In particular, we find a striking filamentary structure near the Northwest of the CND and evidence that shocked molecular gas is associated with the 70 \kms molecular cloud at the Galactic center. We argue that the emission from the CND could arise in gas heated by the dissipation of the random motion of clumps by collisions or the dissipation of turbulence in a more homogeneous medium. In addition, highly red-shifted gas of up to 140 \kms\ close to the eastern edge of the Sgr A East shell is detected. These observations combined with OH (1720 MHz) results suggest that the H$_2$ gas is shocked and accelerated by the expansion of Sgr A East into the 50 and the 70 \kms cloud and into the lobes of the CND., Comment: 31 pages plus 14 figures, ApJ (in press)
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- 2001
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20. High Resolution Mid-Infrared Imaging of Infrared Luminous Starburst Galaxies
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Soifer, B. T., Neugebauer, G., Matthews, K., Egami, E., Weinberger, A. J., Ressler, M., Scoville, N. Z., Stolovy, S. R., Condon, J. J., and Becklin, E. E.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations for seven infrared luminous starburst galaxies are reported in the mid-infrared from 8 - 18 microns using the Keck Telescopes with spatial resolution approaching the diffraction limit. All of the galaxies observed show evidence of strong interactions based on optical morphologies. For these galaxies, a substantial fraction, usually more than 50%, of the infrared luminosity is generated in regions ranging in sizes from 100pc -- 1 Kpc. Nuclear starbursts often dominate the infrared luminosity, but this is not always true. In some galaxies, most notably NGC 6090, substantial infrared luminosity greatly in excess of the nuclear luminosity is generated in regions associated with the physical interaction between two galaxies. The radio emission is a good tracer of the location of high luminosity young stars. The visual/ultraviolet radiation output of the nearby star forming galaxies is dominated by emission from regions that are generally not producing the copious infrared luminosity of the systems. The regions of high infrared luminosity in local starburst galaxies are significantly smaller than the galaxies as a whole. The integrated spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of these galaxies are very different from the SEDs of the regions of star formation. If the SEDs of star-forming regions in these galaxies reflect the SEDs found in forming galaxies at high redshift, the distant galaxies should be dominated by the mid and far-infrared luminosity output far more than the integrated luminous output of nearby starburst galaxies would suggest., Comment: 33pages, 4 tables, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in Astronomical Journal
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- 2001
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21. Isolated Wolf-Rayet Stars and O Supergiants in the Galactic Center Region Identified Via Paschen-α Excess
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Mauerhan, J. C., Cotera, A., Dong, H., Morris, M. R., Wang, Q. D., Stolovy, S. R., and Lang, C.
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We report the discovery of 19 hot, evolved, massive stars near the Galactic center region (GCR). These objects were selected for spectroscopy owing to their detection as strong sources of Paschen-α (Pα) emission-line excess, following a narrowband imaging survey of the central 0°.65 × 0°.25 (l, b) around Sgr A* with the Hubble Space Telescope. Discoveries include six carbon-type (WC) and five nitrogen-type (WN) Wolf-Rayet stars, six O supergiants, and two B supergiants. Two of the O supergiants have X-ray counterparts having properties consistent with solitary O stars and colliding-wind binaries. The infrared photometry of 17 stars is consistent with the Galactic center distance, but 2 of them are located in the foreground. Several WC stars exhibit a relatively large infrared excess, which is possibly thermal emission from hot dust. Most of the stars appear scattered throughout the GCR, with no relation to the three known massive young clusters; several others lie near the Arches and Quintuplet clusters and may have originated within one of these systems. The results of this work bring the total sample of Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars in the GCR to 88. All sources of strong Pα excess have been identified in the area surveyed with HST, which implies that the sample of WN stars in this region is near completion, and is dominated by late (WNL) types. The current WC sample, although probably not complete, is almost exclusively dominated by late (WCL) types. The observed WR subtype distribution in the GCR is a reflection of the intrinsic rarity of early subtypes (WNE and WCE) in the inner Galaxy, an effect that is driven by metallicity.
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- 2010
22. ERRATUM: “ISOLATED WOLF-RAYET STARS AND O SUPERGIANTS IN THE GALACTIC CENTER REGION IDENTIFIED VIA PASCHEN-αEXCESS” (2010, ApJ, 725, 188)
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Mauerhan, J. C., primary, Cotera, A., additional, Dong, H., additional, Morris, M. R., additional, Wang, Q. D., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Lang, C., additional
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- 2015
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23. Near-infrared Counterparts to Chandra X-ray Sources Toward the Galactic Center. II. Discovery of Wolf-Rayet Stars and O Supergiants
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Mauerhan, J. C., Muno, M. P., Morris, M. R., Stolovy, S. R., and Cotera, A.
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Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We present new identifications of infrared counterparts to the population of hard X-ray sources near the Galactic center detected by the Chandra X-ray Observatory. We have spectroscopically confirmed 16 new massive stellar counterparts to the X-ray population, including nitrogen-type (WN) and carbon-type (WC) Wolf-Rayet stars, and O supergiants. These discoveries increase the total sample of massive stellar X-ray sources in the Galactic center region to 30 (possibly 31). For the majority of these sources, the X-ray photometry is consistent with thermal emission from plasma having temperatures in the range of kT = 1-8 keV or non-thermal emission having power-law indices in the range of –1 ≲ Γ ≲ 3, and X-ray luminosities in the range of L_X ~ 10^(32)-10^(34) erg s^(–1) (0.5-8.0 keV). Several sources have exhibited X-ray variability of several factors between observations. These X-ray properties are not a ubiquitous feature of single massive stars but are typical of massive binaries, in which the high-energy emission is generated by the collision of supersonic winds, or by accretion onto a compact companion. However, without direct evidence for companions, the possibility of intrinsic hard X-ray generation from single stars cannot be completely ruled out. The spectral energy distributions of these sources exhibit significant infrared excess, attributable to free-free emission from ionized stellar winds, supplemented by hot dust emission in the case of the WC stars. With the exception of one object located near the outer regions of the Quintuplet cluster, most of the new stars appear isolated or in loose associations. Seven hydrogen-rich WN and O stars are concentrated near the Sagittarius B H II region, while other similar stars and more highly evolved hydrogen-poor WN and WC stars lie scattered within ≈50 pc, in projection, of Sagitarrius A West. We discuss various mechanisms capable of generating the observed X-rays and the implications these stars have for massive star formation in the Galaxy's Central Molecular Zone.
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- 2010
24. Spectroscopic Study of Massive Young Stellar Object Candidates in the Galactic Center
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An, Deokkeun, Ramírez, S. V., Sellgren, K., Arendt, R. G., Boogert, A. C. A., Schultheis, M., Stolovy, S. R., Cotera, A. S., Thomas Robitaille, Smith, H. A., Infrared Processing and Analysis Center (IPAC), California Institute of Technology (CALTECH), NASA ExoPlanet Science Institute (NExScI), Ohio State University [Columbus] (OSU), NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC), Univers, Transport, Interfaces, Nanostructures, Atmosphère et environnement, Molécules (UMR 6213) (UTINAM), Université de Franche-Comté (UFC), Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS), Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Institute (SETI), Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA), Harvard University [Cambridge]-Smithsonian Institution, and Debray, Bernard
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Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,[PHYS.ASTR] Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph] ,[PHYS.ASTR]Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph] ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
International audience; We present results of a spectroscopic study of massive young stellar object (YSO) candidates in the central 200 pc region of the Milky Way Galaxy, using the Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) onboard the Spitzer Space Telescope. Our 107 massive YSO candidates were selected based on colors of point sources in high sensitivity Spitzer/IRAC images. Following our recent announcement of the first spectroscopic identification of massive YSOs in the Galactic Center, we show that about one third of our targets reveal spectral features characteristic of massive YSOs, such as molecular gas-phase absorptions from C2H2 (13.7 μm), HCN (14.0 μm), and CO2 (15.0 μm), and solid-phase absorptions from 15 μm CO2 ice with a broad absorption profile, suggestive of CO2 ice mixed with CH3OH ice. These IRS spectra of the YSO candidates will allow us to study the early stages of star formation in the Galactic Center.
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- 2010
25. PROPERTIES OF THE COMPACT H II REGION COMPLEX G-0.02-0.07
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Mills, E., primary, Morris, M. R., additional, Lang, C. C., additional, Dong, H., additional, Wang, Q. D., additional, Cotera, A., additional, and Stolovy, S. R., additional
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- 2011
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26. ERRATUM: “ISOLATED WOLF-RAYET STARS AND O SUPERGIANTS IN THE GALACTIC CENTER REGION IDENTIFIED VIA PASCHEN-α EXCESS” (2010, ApJ, 725, 188)
- Author
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Mauerhan, J. C., primary, Cotera, A., additional, Dong, H., additional, Morris, M. R., additional, Wang, Q. D., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Lang, C., additional
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- 2011
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27. ISOLATED WOLF–RAYET STARS AND O SUPERGIANTS IN THE GALACTIC CENTER REGION IDENTIFIED VIA PASCHEN-α EXCESS
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Mauerhan, J. C., primary, Cotera, A., additional, Dong, H., additional, Morris, M. R., additional, Wang, Q. D., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Lang, C., additional
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- 2010
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28. DISCOVERY OF A LUMINOUS BLUE VARIABLE WITH AN EJECTION NEBULA NEAR THE QUINTUPLET CLUSTER
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Mauerhan, J. C., primary, Morris, M. R., additional, Cotera, A., additional, Dong, H., additional, Wang, Q. D., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Lang, C., additional, and Glass, I. S., additional
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- 2010
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29. NEAR-INFRARED COUNTERPARTS TOCHANDRAX-RAY SOURCES TOWARD THE GALACTIC CENTER. II. DISCOVERY OF WOLF-RAYET STARS AND O SUPERGIANTS
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Mauerhan, J. C., primary, Muno, M. P., additional, Morris, M. R., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Cotera, A., additional
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- 2010
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30. A CATALOG OF X-RAY POINT SOURCES FROM TWO MEGASECONDS OF CHANDRA OBSERVATIONS OF THE GALACTIC CENTER
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Muno, M. P., primary, Bauer, F. E., additional, Baganoff, F. K., additional, Bandyopadhyay, R. M., additional, Bower, G. C., additional, Brandt, W. N., additional, Broos, P. S., additional, Cotera, A., additional, Eikenberry, S. S., additional, Garmire, G. P., additional, Hyman, S. D., additional, Kassim, N. E., additional, Lang, C. C., additional, Lazio, T. J. W., additional, Law, C., additional, Mauerhan, J. C., additional, Morris, M. R., additional, Nagata, T., additional, Nishiyama, S., additional, Park, S., additional, Ramìrez, S. V., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Wijnands, R., additional, Wang, Q. D., additional, Wang, Z., additional, and Yusef-Zadeh, F., additional
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- 2009
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31. Comparison of 3.6–8.0 μmSpitzer/IRAC Galactic Center Survey Point Sources withChandraX‐Ray Point Sources in the Central 40 × 40 Parsecs
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Arendt, R. G., primary, Gezari, D. Y., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Sellgren, K., additional, Smith, R., additional, Ramírez, S. V., additional, Yusef‐Zadeh, F., additional, Law, C. J., additional, Smith, H. A., additional, Cotera, A. S., additional, and Moseley, S. H., additional
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- 2008
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32. The Mid‐Infrared Colors of the Interstellar Medium and Extended Sources at the Galactic Center
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Arendt, R. G., primary, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Ramírez, S. V., additional, Sellgren, K., additional, Cotera, A. S., additional, Law, C. J., additional, Yusef‐Zadeh, F., additional, Smith, H. A., additional, and Gezari, D. Y., additional
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- 2008
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33. The Frequency of Mid‐Infrared Excess Sources in Galactic Surveys
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Uzpen, B., primary, Kobulnicky, H. A., additional, Monson, A. J., additional, Pierce, M. J., additional, Clemens, D. P., additional, Backman, D. E., additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Babler, B. L., additional, Indebetouw, R., additional, Whitney, B. A., additional, Watson, C., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Benjamin, R. A., additional, Bracker, S., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Cohen, M., additional, Cyganowski, C. J., additional, Devine, K. E., additional, Heitsch, F., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Mathis, J. S., additional, Mercer, E. P., additional, Povich, M. S., additional, Rho, J., additional, Robitaille, T. P., additional, Sewilo, M., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Watson, D. F., additional, Wolff, M. J., additional, and Churchwell, E., additional
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- 2007
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34. Masers as probes of massive star formation in the nuclear disk
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Yusef-Zadeh, F., primary, Arendt, R. G., additional, Heinke, C. O., additional, Hinz, J. L., additional, Hewitt, J. W., additional, Pratap, P., additional, Ramirez, S. V., additional, Rieke, G. H., additional, Roberts, D. A., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Wardle, M., additional, and Whitney, B. A., additional
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- 2007
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35. A GLIMPSE of the Southern Jellyfish Nebula and Its Massive YSO
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Mercer, E. P., primary, Clemens, D. P., additional, Rathborne, J. M., additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Babler, B. L., additional, Indebetouw, R., additional, Whitney, B. A., additional, Watson, C., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Wolff, M. J., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Benjamin, R. A., additional, Cohen, M., additional, Dickey, J. M., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Kobulnicky, H. A., additional, Mathis, J. S., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Uzpen, B., additional, and Churchwell, E. B., additional
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- 2007
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36. The Bubbling Galactic Disk
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Churchwell, E., primary, Povich, M. S., additional, Allen, D., additional, Taylor, M. G., additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Babler, B. L., additional, Indebetouw, R., additional, Watson, C., additional, Whitney, B. A., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Benjamin, R. A., additional, Clemens, D. P., additional, Cohen, M., additional, Cyganowski, C. J., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Kobulnicky, H. A., additional, Mathis, J. S., additional, Mercer, E. P., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Uzpen, B., additional, Watson, D. F., additional, and Wolff, M. J., additional
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- 2006
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37. Erratum: “Structure and Colors of Diffuse Emission in the Spitzer Galactic First Look Survey” (ApJS, 154, 281 [2004])
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Ingalls, James G., primary, Miville‐Deschenes, M.‐A., additional, Reach, William T., additional, Noriega‐Crespo, A., additional, Carey, Sean J., additional, Boulanger, F., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Padgett, Deborah L., additional, Burgdorf, M. J., additional, Fajardo‐Acosta, S. B., additional, Glaccum, W. J., additional, Helou, G., additional, Hoard, D. W., additional, Karr, J., additional, O’Linger, J., additional, Rebull, L. M., additional, Rho, J., additional, Stauffer, J. R., additional, and Wachter, S., additional
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- 2006
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38. New Star Clusters Discovered in the GLIMPSE Survey
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Mercer, E. P., primary, Clemens, D. P., additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Babler, B. L., additional, Indebetouw, R., additional, Whitney, B. A., additional, Watson, C., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Wolff, M. J., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Benjamin, R. A., additional, Cohen, M., additional, Dickey, J. M., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Kobulnicky, H. A., additional, Mathis, J. S., additional, Stauffer, J. R., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Uzpen, B., additional, and Churchwell, E. B., additional
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- 2005
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39. First GLIMPSE Results on the Stellar Structure of the Galaxy
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Benjamin, R. A., primary, Churchwell, E., additional, Babler, B. L., additional, Indebetouw, R., additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Whitney, B. A., additional, Watson, C., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Wolff, M. J., additional, Ignace, R., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Bracker, S., additional, Clemens, D. P., additional, Chomiuk, L., additional, Cohen, M., additional, Dickey, J. M., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Kobulnicky, H. A., additional, Mercer, E. P., additional, Mathis, J. S., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Uzpen, B., additional
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- 2005
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40. Identification of Main‐Sequence Stars with Mid‐Infrared Excesses Using GLIMPSE: β Pictoris Analogs?
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Uzpen, B., primary, Kobulnicky, H. A., additional, Olsen, K. A. G., additional, Clemens, D. P., additional, Laurance, T. L., additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Babler, B. L., additional, Indebetouw, R., additional, Whitney, B. A., additional, Watson, C., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Wolff, M. J., additional, Benjamin, R. A., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Cohen, M., additional, Devine, K. E., additional, Dickey, J. M., additional, Heitsch, F., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Marston, A. P., additional, Mathis, J. S., additional, Mercer, E. P., additional, Stauffer, J. R., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Backman, D. E., additional, and Churchwell, E., additional
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- 2005
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41. HCN and HCO+Observations of the Galactic Circumnuclear Disk
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Christopher, M. H., primary, Scoville, N. Z., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Yun, Min S., additional
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- 2005
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42. The Wavelength Dependence of Interstellar Extinction from 1.25 to 8.0 μm Using GLIMPSE Data
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Indebetouw, R., primary, Mathis, J. S., additional, Babler, B. L, additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Watson, C., additional, Whitney, B. A., additional, Wolff, M. J., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Cohen, M., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Benjamin, R. A., additional, Clemens, D. P., additional, Dickey, J. M., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Kobulnicky, H. A., additional, Marston, A. P., additional, Mercer, E. P., additional, Stauffer, J. R., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Churchwell, E., additional
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- 2005
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43. Discovery of a New Low-Latitude Milky Way Globular Cluster Using GLIMPSE
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Kobulnicky, Henry A., primary, Monson, A. J., additional, Buckalew, B. A., additional, Darnel, J. M., additional, Uzpen, B., additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Babler, B. L., additional, Indebetouw, R., additional, Whitney, B. A., additional, Watson, C., additional, Churchwell, E., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Wolff, M. J., additional, Clemens, D. P., additional, Shah, R., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Benjamin, R. A., additional, Cohen, M., additional, Dickey, J. M., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Marston, A. P., additional, Mathis, J. S., additional, Mercer, E. P., additional, Stauffer, J. R., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Norris, J. P., additional, Kutyrev, A., additional, Canterna, R., additional, and Pierce, M. J., additional
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- 2005
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44. An Aggregate of Young Stellar Disks in Lynds 1228 South
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Padgett, Deborah L., primary, Rebull, L. M., additional, Noriega‐Crespo, A., additional, Carey, Sean J., additional, Stapelfeldt, Karl R., additional, Stauffer, John R., additional, Burgdorf, Martin J., additional, Cole, D. M., additional, Fajardo‐Acosta, S. B., additional, Frayer, D. T., additional, Helou, G., additional, Hoard, D. W., additional, Karr, J., additional, Latter, W. B., additional, Lowrance, P. J., additional, O’Linger, J., additional, Masci, F., additional, Ramirez, S., additional, Reach, W. T., additional, Rho, Jeonghee, additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Wachter, S., additional
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- 2004
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45. Structure and Colors of Diffuse Emission in the Spitzer Galactic First Look Survey
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Ingalls, James G., primary, Miville‐Deschenes, M.‐A., additional, Reach, William T., additional, Noriega‐Crespo, A., additional, Carey, Sean J., additional, Boulanger, F., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Padgett, Deborah L., additional, Burgdorf, M. J., additional, Fajardo‐Acosta, S. B., additional, Glaccum, W. J., additional, Helou, G., additional, Hoard, D. W., additional, Karr, J., additional, O’Linger, J., additional, Rebull, L. M., additional, Rho, J., additional, Stauffer, J. R., additional, and Wachter, S., additional
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- 2004
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46. RCW 49 at Mid‐Infrared Wavelengths: A GLIMPSE from the Spitzer Space Telescope
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Churchwell, E., primary, Whitney, B. A., additional, Babler, B. L., additional, Indebetouw, R., additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Watson, Christer, additional, Wolff, M. J., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Benjamin, R. A., additional, Clemens, D. P., additional, Cohen, Martin, additional, Devine, K. E., additional, Dickey, J. M., additional, Heitsch, F., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Kobulnicky, H. A., additional, Marston, A. P., additional, Mathis, J. S., additional, Mercer, E. P., additional, Stauffer, J. R., additional, and Stolovy, S. R., additional
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- 2004
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47. A GLIMPSE of Star Formation in the Giant H ii Region RCW 49
- Author
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Whitney, B. A., primary, Indebetouw, R., additional, Babler, B. L., additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Watson, C., additional, Wolff, M. J., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Clemens, D. P., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Benjamin, R. A., additional, Cohen, M., additional, Devine, K. E., additional, Dickey, J. M., additional, Heitsch, F., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Kobulnicky, H. A., additional, Marston, A. P., additional, Mathis, J. S., additional, Mercer, E. P., additional, Stauffer, J. R., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Churchwell, E., additional
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Spatially Resolved Ultraviolet, Hα, Infrared, and Radio Star Formation in M81
- Author
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Gordon, K. D., primary, Perez‐Gonzalez, P. G., additional, Misselt, K. A., additional, Murphy, E. J., additional, Bendo, G. J., additional, Walter, F., additional, Thornley, M. D., additional, Kennicutt, Jr., R. C., additional, Rieke, G. H., additional, Engelbracht, C. W., additional, Smith, J.‐D. T., additional, Alonso‐Herrero, A., additional, Appleton, P. N., additional, Calzetti, D., additional, Dale, D. A., additional, Draine, B. T., additional, Frayer, D. T., additional, Helou, G., additional, Hinz, J. L., additional, Hines, D. C., additional, Kelly, D. M., additional, Morrison, J. E., additional, Muzerolle, J., additional, Regan, M. W., additional, Stansberry, J. A., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, Storrie‐Lombardi, L. J., additional, Su, K. Y. L., additional, and Young, E. T., additional
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Discovery of a Distant Star Formation Region using GLIMPSE
- Author
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Mercer, E. P., primary, Clemens, D. P., additional, Bania, T. M., additional, Jackson, J. M., additional, Rathborne, J. M., additional, Shah, R. Y., additional, Babler, B. L., additional, Indebetouw, R., additional, Meade, M. R., additional, Watson, C., additional, Whitney, B. A., additional, Wolff, M. J., additional, Wolfire, M. G., additional, Benjamin, R. A., additional, Cohen, M., additional, Dickey, J. M., additional, Kobulnicky, H. A., additional, Marston, A. P., additional, Mathis, J. S., additional, Stauffer, J. R., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Churchwell, E. B., additional
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. The nature of the Galactic Center source IRS 13 revealed by high spatial resolution in the infrared
- Author
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Maillard, J. P., primary, Paumard, T., additional, Stolovy, S. R., additional, and Rigaut, F., additional
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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