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Institution

Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory

FacilityCambridge, Massachusetts, United States
About: Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory is a facility organization based out in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Galaxy & Stars. The organization has 1665 authors who have published 3622 publications receiving 132183 citations. The organization is also known as: SAO.
Topics: Galaxy, Stars, Telescope, Luminosity, Star formation


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a dense, complete redshift survey, Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey (SHELS), covering a 4 square degree region of a deep imaging survey, the Deep Lens Survey (DLS), to study the optical spectral properties of Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) 22 \mu m-selected galaxies.
Abstract: We use a dense, complete redshift survey, the Smithsonian Hectospec Lensing Survey (SHELS), covering a 4 square degree region of a deep imaging survey, the Deep Lens Survey (DLS), to study the optical spectral properties of Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) 22 \mu m-selected galaxies. Among 507 WISE 22 \mu m-selected sources with (S/N)_{22\mu m}>3 (\simS_{22\mu m}>2.5 mJy), we identify the optical counterparts of 481 sources (\sim98%) at R<25.2 in the very deep, DLS R-band source catalog. Among them, 337 galaxies at R<21 have SHELS spectroscopic data. Most of these objects are at z<0.8. The infrared (IR) luminosities are in the range 4.5x10^8 (L_sun) < L_{IR} < 5.4x10^{12} (L_sun). Most 22 \mu m-selected galaxies are dusty star-forming galaxies with a small (<1.5) 4000 \AA break. The stacked spectra of the 22 \mu m-selected galaxies binned in IR luminosity show that the strength of the [O III] line relative to H\beta grows with increasing IR luminosity. The optical spectra of the 22 \mu m-selected galaxies also show that there are some (\sim2.8%) unusual galaxies with very strong [Ne III] \lambda 3869, 3968 emission lines that require hard ionizing radiation such as AGN or extremely young massive stars. The specific star formation rates (sSFRs) derived from the 3.6 and 22 \mu m flux densities are enhanced if the 22 \mu m-selected galaxies have close late-type neighbors. The sSFR distribution of the 22 \mu m-selected galaxies containing active galactic nuclei (AGNs) is similar to the distribution for star-forming galaxies without AGNs. We identify 48 dust-obscured galaxy (DOG) candidates with large (\gtrsim1000) mid-IR to optical flux density ratio. The combination of deep photometric and spectroscopic data with WISE data suggests that WISE can probe the universe to z\sim2.

35 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, Charoenngam et al. used data produced collaboratively between AFRL/ADAPT and NSO/NISP to plot data from the Parker Solar Probe FIELDS MAG team.
Abstract: The authors are grateful to Wiwithawin Charoenngam for plotting assistance. This work utilizes data produced collaboratively between AFRL/ADAPT and NSO/NISP. This research has been supported in part by grant RTA6280002 from Thailand Science Research and Innovation and the Parker Solar Probe mission under the ISOIS project (contract NNN06AA01C) and a subcontract to University of Delaware from Princeton University (SUB0000165). M.L.G. acknowledges support from the Parker Solar Probe FIELDS MAG team. Y.Y. and M.W. acknowledge support from NSFC (Grants 11672123,11902138, and 91752201). Additional support is acknowledged from the NASA LWS program (NNX17AB79G) and the HSR program (80NSSC18K1210 & 80NSSC18K1648).

35 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the photometric and spectroscopic data indicate that the CFHT-Pl-18 system is likely a member of the Pleiades cluster, but a final confirmation will have to wait until lithium can be detected.
Abstract: Hubble Space Telescope Near-Infrared Camera and Multiobject Spectrometer (NICMOS) observations of six brown dwarf candidates in the Pleiades open cluster are presented. One of them, namely CFHT-Pl-18, is clearly resolved as a binary with an angular separation of 033. The very low density of contaminating background stars in our images and the photometry of the components support that this system is a physical binary rather than a chance projection. All of the available photometric and spectroscopic data indicate that the CFHT-Pl-18 system is likely a member of the Pleiades cluster, but a final confirmation will have to wait until lithium can be detected. Assuming cluster membership, we compare our NICMOS photometry with evolutionary models and find that the inclusion of the effects of dust grains is necessary for fitting the data. We estimate that the masses of the components are about 0.045 and 0.035 M☉. The binary system has a projected separation of 42 AU (for a distance of 125 pc) that is common among stellar binaries.

35 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a wide spectroscopic survey aimed at detecting extragalactic globular clusters (GCs) in the core of the Fornax cluster was presented, where 4500 low-resolution spectra (from 4800 to 10000 A) were observed in 25 VLT/VIMOS masks covering the central 1 deg(-2) around the dominant galaxy NGC 1399 corresponding to similar to 175 kpc galactocentric radius.
Abstract: We present the results of a wide spectroscopic survey aimed at detecting extragalactic globular clusters (GCs) in the core of the Fornax cluster. About 4500 low-resolution spectra (from 4800 to 10000 A) were observed in 25 VLT/VIMOS masks covering the central 1 deg(-2) around the dominant galaxy NGC 1399 corresponding to similar to 175 kpc galactocentric radius. We describe the methodology used for data reduction and data analysis. We found a total of 387 unique physical objects (372 GCs and 15 ultracompact dwarfs) in the field covered by our observations. Most of these objects lie in the region of NGC 1399 halo, with only 10 per cent likely belonging to other giant galaxies 48 of these objects have a literature counterpart. The new VIMOS data set is complementary to the many GC catalogues already present in the literature and it brings the total number of tracer particles around NGC 1399 to more than 1130 objects. With this comprehensive radial velocity sample, we have found that the velocity dispersion of the GC population (equally for red and blue GC populations) shows a relatively sharp increase from low velocity dispersion (similar to 250-350 km s(-1) ) to high velocity dispersion (similar to 300-4001cm s(-1) ) at projected radius of approximate to 10 arcmin (similar to 60 kpc) from the galaxy centre. This suggests that at a projected radius of approximate to 60 kpc both blue and red GC populations begin to be governed by the dominating Fornax cluster potential, rather than by the central NGC 1399 galaxy potential. This kinematic evidence corroborates similar results found using surface brightness analysis and planetary nebulae kinematics.

35 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a-and b-dipole transitions in the far-infrared spectrum of the HCO radical have been detected by the technique of laser magnetic resonance (LMR).

35 citations


Authors

Showing all 1666 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Lee Hartmann13457957649
David W. Latham12785267390
Chi Lin1251313102710
William R. Forman12080053717
Edo Berger11857847147
Joseph Silk108131758146
Jon M. Miller10770650126
Fabrizio Fiore10680443260
Randall V. Martin10539657917
Christopher F. McKee10336844919
John P. Hughes10161636396
Wallace L. W. Sargent9939730265
Bryan Gaensler9984439851
Alexey Vikhlinin9936735822
Matthew J. Holman9932046577
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20231
202154
2020100
201986
2018107
201787