Color Maps of the Ohio State University Bright Spiral Galaxy Survey Melissa Butner, Austin Peay State University Susana Deustua, advisor.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Probing the Conditions for Planet Formation in Inner Protoplanetary Disks James Muzerolle.
Advertisements

Efficient Monte Carlo continuum radiative transfer with SKIRT Maarten Baes 2 nd East-Asia Numerical Astrophysics Meeting, Daejeon, Korea 3 November 2006.
CLUES TO THE FORMATION AND EVOLUTION OF THE MILKY WAY
Is the Sodium Na D line useful? Marcel Bergmann Bo Milvang-Jensen.
The life and time of stars Stellar formation, Stellar evolution, Stellar structure and Theoretical stars T.May, A. QI, S. Bashforth, J.Bello1.
Herschel study of the dust content of Cassiopeia A Ref: arxiv: v1 Oliver Krause PPT.
Properties of high redshift galaxies from 24 μm images Paola Santini Università di Roma “La Sapienza” Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma Scuola nazionale.
July 26, 2004 Exploring the Interstellar Medium Debrief What is the interstellar medium? What is the ISM made of? How dense is the ISM? What causes the.
Optimal Photometry of Faint Galaxies Kenneth M. Lanzetta Stony Brook University.
Dust and Stellar Emission of Nearby Galaxies in the KINGFISH Herschel Survey Ramin A. Skibba Charles W. Engelbracht, et al. I.
Color Anomaly in Multiple Quasars - Dust Inhomogeneity or Quasar Microlensing - Atsunori Yonehara (Univ. Tsukuba) with Hiroyuki Hirashita (Nagoya Univ.)
The Interstellar Medium Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 19.
Star formation at high redshift (2 < z < 7) Methods for deriving star formation rates UV continuum = ionizing photons (dust obscuration?) Ly  = ionizing.
Recent Imaging Results from SINGS G. J. Bendo, R. C. Kennicutt, L. Armus, D. Calzetti, D. A. Dale, B. T. Draine, C. W. Engelbracht, K. D. Gordon, A. D.
Wavelength flux Spectral energy distributions of bright stars can be used to derive effective temperatures Ay 123 Lecture I - Physical Properties.
Astronomy 1 – Winter 2011 Lecture 21; February
“ Testing the predictive power of semi-analytic models using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey” Juan Esteban González Birmingham, 24/06/08 Collaborators: Cedric.
The Interstellar Medium Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 18.
Dusty star formation at high redshift Chris Willott, HIA/NRC 1. Introductory cosmology 2. Obscured galaxy formation: the view with current facilities,
Interstellar Medium (ISM) Read Your Textbook: Foundations of Astronomy –Chapter 11, 12 Homework Problems Chapter 11 –Review Questions: 1, 2, 5, 6 –Review.
Stratospheric Terahertz Observatory (STO)‏ 0.8-meter telescope, 1' um Heterodyne receiver arrays for wide-field [N II] and [C II] spectroscopy,
P olarized R adiation I maging and S pectroscopy M ission Probing cosmic structures and radiation with the ultimate polarimetric spectro-imaging of the.
End of Ch. 13 III. Cycle of Birth and Death of Stars: Interstellar Medium Ch. 14.
Astrophysics from Space Lecture 8: Dusty starburst galaxies Prof. Dr. M. Baes (UGent) Prof. Dr. C. Waelkens (KUL) Academic year
1 Common Far-Infrared Properties of the Galactic Disk and Nearby Galaxies MNRAS 379, 974 (2007) Hiroyuki Hirashita Hiroyuki Hirashita (Univ. Tsukuba, Japan)
Ch. 14. The Milky Way Ch. 14. Ch. 14 OUTLINE Shorter than book 14.1 The Milky Way Revealed 14.2 Galactic Recycling (closely related to Ch. 13) 14.3 The.
Lecture 14 Star formation. Insterstellar dust and gas Dust and gas is mostly found in galaxy disks, and blocks optical light.
Dust Envelopes around Oxygen-rich AGB stars Kyung-Won Suh Dept. of Astronomy & Space Science Chungbuk National University, Korea
Evolutionary Population Synthesis models Divakara Mayya INAOEhttp:// Advanced Lectures on Galaxies (2008 INAOE): Chapter 4.
Tracing Dust in Spiral Galaxies: a Summary Jonathan Davies.
Peter Capak Associate Research Scientist IPAC/Caltech.
15 October Observational Astronomy Direct imaging Photometry Kitchin pp ,
RADIO OBSERVATIONS IN VVDS FIELD : PAST - PRESENT - FUTURE P.Ciliegi(OABo), Marco Bondi (IRA) G. Zamorani(OABo), S. Bardelli (OABo) + VVDS-VLA collaboration.
The Interstellar Medium
VLASS – Galactic Science Life cycle of star formation in our Galaxy as a proxy for understanding the Local Universe legacy science Infrared GLIMPSE survey.
The Extremely Red Objects in the CLASH Fields The Extremely Red Galaxies in CLASH Fields Xinwen Shu (CEA, Saclay and USTC) CLASH 2013 Team meeting – September.
Quiz 3 Briefly explain how a low-mass star becomes hot enough to settle on the main-sequence. Describe what is solar weather and list two ways in which.
“Nature and Descendants of Sub-mm and Lyman-break Galaxies in Lambda-CDM” Juan Esteban González Collaborators: Cedric Lacey, Carlton Baugh, Carlos Frenk,
HERschel Observations of Edge-on Spirals (HEROES) Joris Verstappen (UGent) for the HEROES team (UGent, Cardiff University, INAF-Arcetri, KU Leuven, VUB,
The Local Universe A CCAT perspective Christine Wilson McMaster University, Canada 7 January 20131AAS 221 – Long Beach, CA.
Ching-Wa Yip Johns Hopkins University.  Alex Szalay (JHU)  Rosemary Wyse (JHU)  László Dobos (ELTE)  Tamás Budavári (JHU)  Istvan Csabai (ELTE)
Characterizing cosmic ray propagation in massive star forming regions: the case of 30 Dor and LMC E. J. Murphy et al. Arxiv:
Ay 123 Lecture I - Physical Properties 10  as = 10% 10  as/yr = ESA Gaia mission: a revolution in 3-D mapping of our Galaxy.
Investigations of dust heating in M81, M83 and NGC 2403 with Herschel and Spitzer George J. Bendo Very Nearby Galaxies Survey.
Galaxies with Active Nuclei Chapter 14:. Active Galaxies Galaxies with extremely violent energy release in their nuclei (pl. of nucleus).  “active galactic.
ALMA Science Examples Min S. Yun (UMass/ANASAC). ALMA Science Requirements  High Fidelity Imaging  Precise Imaging at 0.1” Resolution  Routine Sub-mJy.
The epoch of star formation for th e most massive galaxies Sarah Brough (AAO)
Star Clusters The Secret of the Stars Star clusters Nebula and.
Stellar Birth By: Scott M & Jeremy B By: Scott M & Jeremy B.
Stars are formed from _______ ___ and ____ coming together due to _______. All stars begin with the _______ ______. What happens then depends on the ____.
Recontres de Moriond XXV La Thuile, March 2005 Recontres de Moriond XXV La Thuile, March 2005 Theoretical SEDs in Starbursts: SFRs in both the UV and IR.
In previous episodes …... Stars are formed in the spiral arms of the Galaxy, in the densest and coldest regions of the interstellar medium, which are.
Gamma-ray Measurements of the distribution of Gas and Cosmic Ray in the Interstellar Space Yasushi Fukazawa Hiroshima University.
SOFIA and the ISM of Galaxies Xander Tielens & Jessie Dotson Presented by Eric Becklin.
Properties of the NLR from Spatially Resolved Spectroscopy Nicola Bennert University of California Riverside Collaborators: Bruno Jungwiert, Stefanie Komossa,
Warm Dust in the Most Distant Quasars Ran Wang Department of Astronomy, Peking University, China.
Competitive Science with the WHT for Nearby Unresolved Galaxies Reynier Peletier Kapteyn Astronomical Institute Groningen.
Cosmic Dust Enrichment and Dust Properties Investigated by ALMA Hiroyuki Hirashita ( 平下 博之 ) (ASIAA, Taiwan)
Star Formation The stuff between the stars Nebulae Giant molecular clouds Collapse of clouds Protostars Reading
[OII] Lisa Kewley Australian National University.
1 Lei Bai George Rieke Marcia Rieke Steward Observatory Infrared Luminosity Function of the Coma Cluster.
 A nebula is a cloud of gas and dust in space.  Some nebulas are regions where new stars are being formed, while others are the remains of dead or dying.
Studying Nearby Starbursts with HST
Are WE CORRECTLY Measuring the Star formation in galaxies?
III. Cycle of Birth and Death of Stars: Interstellar Medium
GALEX: Galaxy Evolution Explorer
The “Milky Way”.
Galactic Astronomy 銀河物理学特論 I Lecture 1-6: Multi-wavelength properties of galaxies Seminar: Draine et al. 2007, ApJ, 663, 866 Lecture: 2011/11/14.
The dust attenuation in the galaxy merger Mrk848
What do we want to learn, and why?
Presentation transcript:

Color Maps of the Ohio State University Bright Spiral Galaxy Survey Melissa Butner, Austin Peay State University Susana Deustua, advisor

Goal Investigate the distribution and properties of the interstellar medium: dust and gas, and of the stellar population in each galaxy by undertaking a pixel by pixel analysis. Questions we are interested in: what is the star formation rate? how is the dust distributed and how does this affect extinction? how do these properties compare to other spiral galaxies?

The OSUBSGS The Ohio State University Bright Spiral Galaxy Survey ~200 spiral galaxies B <= 12 Selected from RC3 BVRJHK band images D < 6.5’ −80 ◦ < δ < +50 ◦ (due to observational limits)

Advantages of using Multi-wavelength Data Extinction measurement is independent of the dust temperature. Probe the temperatures and masses of the dust components to better constrain the heating mechanism for the dust. Helps in separating star and dust contributions to galaxy emission

Steps for pixel based analysis Align (register) images Match PSFs Determine flux and color for each pixel in each galaxy Use Pixel z or similar code to determine the spectral energy distribution of stars (from models of star formation) Use color maps to see the distribution of ISM components Compare SED and color maps

ic5235 Before Registration B imageJ image Image Size - 6.8’ x 6.8 ‘ Pixel Scale – 0.40 “/pixel Image Size – 4.4’ x 4.6’ Pixel Scale – 1.16 “/pixel

ic5325 After Registration B imageJ image

PSF Match ImageFWHM Before FWHM After B6.84 V R J ? H K

Color Maps BV B - V

Color Maps B – K B K

Future Work Finish registering Apply technique of Matching PSFs and generating color maps. Determine the spectral energy distribution Compare color maps with SED