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Maps of Dust IR Emission for Use in Estimation of Reddening and CMBR Foregrounds

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors presented a reprocessed composite of the COBE/DIRBE and IRAS/ISSA maps, with the zodiacal foreground and confirmed point sources removed.
Abstract
We present a full sky 100 micron map that is a reprocessed composite of the COBE/DIRBE and IRAS/ISSA maps, with the zodiacal foreground and confirmed point sources removed. Before using the ISSA maps, we remove the remaining artifacts from the IRAS scan pattern. Using the DIRBE 100 micron and 240 micron data, we have constructed a map of the dust temperature, so that the 100 micron map can be converted to a map proportional to dust column density. The result of these manipulations is a map with DIRBE-quality calibration and IRAS resolution. To generate the full sky dust maps, we must first remove zodiacal light contamination as well as a possible cosmic infrared background (CIB). This is done via a regression analysis of the 100 micron DIRBE map against the Leiden- Dwingeloo map of H_I emission, with corrections for the zodiacal light via a suitable expansion of the DIRBE 25 micron flux. For the 100 micron map, no significant CIB is detected. In the 140 micron and 240 micron maps, where the zodiacal contamination is weaker, we detect the CIB at surprisingly high flux levels of 32 \pm 13 nW/m^2/sr at 140 micron, and 17 \pm 4 nW/m^2/sr at 240 micron (95% confidence). This integrated flux is ~2 times that extrapolated from optical galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field. The primary use of these maps is likely to be as a new estimator of Galactic extinction. We demonstrate that the new maps are twice as accurate as the older Burstein-Heiles estimates in regions of low and moderate reddening. These dust maps will also be useful for estimating millimeter emission that contaminates CMBR experiments and for estimating soft X-ray absorption.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Globular Cluster Systems in Brightest Cluster Galaxies: Bimodal Metallicity Distributions and the Nature of the High-Luminosity Clusters

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present new (B, I) photometry for the globular cluster systems in eight brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs), obtained with the ACS/WFC camera on the Hubble Space Telescope, and find that all have strongly bimodal color distributions that are clearly resolved by the metallicity-sensitive (B - I) index.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dust and Extinction Curves in Galaxies with z > 0: The Interstellar Medium of Gravitational Lens Galaxies*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors determined 37 differential extinctions in 23 gravitational lens galaxies over the range 0 zl 1.08 mag, although the total extinction distribution is dominated by the uncertainties in the intrinsic colors of quasars.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synthetic stellar photometry – I. General considerations and new transformations for broad-band systems

TL;DR: In this article, the MARCS transformations of the color-magnitude diagram (CMD) were analyzed for different values of [Fe/H] and [alpha/Fe] and showed how suitable colour combinations can easily discriminate between red giant branch and lower main sequence populations.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Black Hole Mass-Galaxy Bulge Relationship for QSOs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 3

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relationship between black hole mass, MBH, and host galaxy velocity dispersion, σ*, for QSOs in Data Release 3 of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
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