G
George H. Rieke
Researcher at Steward Health Care System
Publications - 904
Citations - 79885
George H. Rieke is an academic researcher from Steward Health Care System. The author has contributed to research in topics: Galaxy & Luminous infrared galaxy. The author has an hindex of 128, co-authored 870 publications receiving 75262 citations. Previous affiliations of George H. Rieke include University of Arizona & Planetary Science Institute.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Spitzer/mips infrared imaging of m31: further evidence for a spiral/ring composite structure
Karl D. Gordon,Jeremy Bailin,Charles W. Engelbracht,George H. Rieke,Karl Misselt,William B. Latter,Eric T. Young,Matthew L. N. Ashby,Pauline Barmby,Brad K. Gibson,Brad K. Gibson,Dean C. Hines,Joannah L. Hinz,Oliver Krause,D. Levine,Francine R. Marleau,Alberto Noriega-Crespo,Susan R. Stolovy,David A. Thilker,Michael W. Werner +19 more
TL;DR: In this article, the two spiral arms appear to start at the ends of a bar in the nuclear region and extend beyond the star-forming ring, and the star forming ring is very circular except for a region near M32 where it splits.
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The Mid-Infrared Instrument for the James Webb Space Telescope I: Introduction
George H. Rieke,G. S. Wright,Torsten Boeker,Jordy Bouwman,Luis Colina,Alistair Glasse,Karl D. Gordon,Thomas P. Greene,Manual Guedel,Th. Henning,Kay Justtanont,P. O. Lagage,Margaret Meixner,Hans Ulrik Nørgaard-Nielsen,Tom Ray,Michael E. Ressler,E. G. van Dishoeck,C. Waelkens +17 more
TL;DR: MIRI (the mid-infrared instrument for the James Webb Space Telescope) operates from 5 to 28.5 microns and combines over this range: 1) unprecedented sensitivity levels; 2) sub-arcsec angular resolution; 3) freedom from atmospheric interference; 4) inherent stability of observing in space; and 5) a suite of versatile capabilities including imaging, low and medium resolution spectroscopy (with an integral field unit), and coronagraphy.
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The dependence of Star Formation on Galaxy Stellar Mass
X. Z. Zheng,Eric F. Bell,Casey Papovich,Christian Wolf,Klaus Meisenheimer,Hans-Walter Rix,George H. Rieke,Rachel S. Somerville +7 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the average star formation rates (SFRs) have evolved for galaxy subpopulations of different stellar masses, i.e., not a strong function of stellar mass, for all redshifts, and the rate of decline in cosmic SFR with redshift is nearly the same for massive and low mass galaxies.
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Debris disks in main-sequence binary systems.
David Trilling,John Stansberry,Karl R. Stapelfeldt,George H. Rieke,Kate Y. L. Su,Richard O. Gray,Christopher J. Corbally,Geoffrey Bryden,Christine Chen,Andrew F. Boden,Chas Beichman +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors observed 69 A3-F8 main-sequence binary star systems using the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer on board the Spitzer Space Telescope.