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Book Physical Properties of Giant Molecular Clouds in Nearby Starburst Galaxies

Download or read book Physical Properties of Giant Molecular Clouds in Nearby Starburst Galaxies written by David Stuart Meier and published by . This book was released on 2002 with total page 692 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Molecular Clouds in the Milky Way and External Galaxies

Download or read book Molecular Clouds in the Milky Way and External Galaxies written by Robert L. Dickman and published by . This book was released on 1988 with total page 504 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The volume consists of up-to-date reviews and a selection of contributed papers on subjects including the structure and physical properties of molecular clouds, their role in the star formation process, their dust and chemical properties, molecular cloud surveys of the Milky Way, cloud evolution, problems in cloud mass determinations (a panel discussion and review), the CO properties of external galaxies, nuclei of galaxies as revealed by molecular observations, and galactic spiral structure as reflected by molecular cloud distributions. The abstracts of poster papers on these topics presented at the conference are also included. This book is both a valuable reference and a compendium of current knowledge in this field. It should be of special interest to all students and researchers who work on the physics of star formation, the interstellar medium, molecular clouds and galactic structure.

Book Physical Properties of Giant Molecular Clouds in the Spiral Galaxy NGC 6946

Download or read book Physical Properties of Giant Molecular Clouds in the Spiral Galaxy NGC 6946 written by 吳亞霖 and published by . This book was released on 2011 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Giant Molecular Clouds in the Galaxy

Download or read book Giant Molecular Clouds in the Galaxy written by P. M. Solomon and published by Elsevier. This book was released on 2013-10-22 with total page 361 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Giant Molecular Clouds in the Galaxy: Third Gregynog Astrophysics Workshop covers the proceedings of the 1977 Third Gregynog Astrophysics Workshop on Giant Molecular Clouds (GMC), held at the University of Wales. This book is organized into 11 parts encompassing 33 chapters. After a brief introduction to the significant features of GMC, this book goes on examining radio, millimeter, and galactic center observations of GMC, along with their infrared properties and kinematics. Other parts deal with the water sources in GMC; time variation in interstellar water masers; and the relation of HII regions to molecular clouds. The remaining parts discuss the evolution of interstellar molecular clouds and the role of magnetic fields in the collapse of protostellar gas clouds. These parts also cover the chemistry of interstellar molecules containing nitrogen and the search for other planetary systems. This book will prove useful to cloud scientists, physicists, astronomers, and researchers.

Book Molecular Clouds in the Milky Way and External Galaxies

Download or read book Molecular Clouds in the Milky Way and External Galaxies written by Robert L. Dickman and published by Springer. This book was released on 2014-03-12 with total page 475 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The volume consists of up-to-date reviews and a selection of contributed papers on subjects including the structure and physical properties of molecular clouds, their role in the star formation process, their dust and chemical properties, molecular cloud surveys of the Milky Way, cloud evolution, problems in cloud mass determinations (a panel discussion and review), the CO properties of external galaxies, nuclei of galaxies as revealed by molecular observations, and galactic spiral structure as reflected by molecular cloud distributions. The abstracts of poster papers on these topics presented at the conference are also included. This book is both a valuable reference and a compendium of current knowledge in this field. It should be of special interest to all students and researchers who work on the physics of star formation, the interstellar medium, molecular clouds and galactic structure.

Book Starburst Galaxies  Near and Far

Download or read book Starburst Galaxies Near and Far written by L. Tacconi and published by Springer Science & Business Media. This book was released on 2012-12-06 with total page 349 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: A major fraction of star formation in the universe occurs in starbursts. These regions of particularly rapid star formation are often located towards the centers of host galaxies. Studies of this kind of star formation at high redshift have produced astonishing results over recent years that were only possible with the latest generation of large ground-based and space telescopes. The papers collected in this volume present these results in the context of the much firmer foundation of star formation in the local universe, and they emphasize all the important topics, from star formation in different environments to the cosmic star formation history.

Book Triggered Star Formation in a Turbulent Interstellar Medium  IAU S237

Download or read book Triggered Star Formation in a Turbulent Interstellar Medium IAU S237 written by International Astronomical Union. Symposium and published by Cambridge University Press. This book was released on 2007-05-28 with total page 544 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: New stars form in the dense turbulent gas clouds of galaxies, and the formation of these clouds is the subject of the IAU S237. This book is the most up-to-date review of all aspects of cloud and star formation, and one of the few compendiums available on ISM turbulence.

Book Molecular Gas and Star Formation in Nearby Galaxies

Download or read book Molecular Gas and Star Formation in Nearby Galaxies written by Dyas Utomo and published by . This book was released on 2017 with total page 136 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In the local Universe, stars form within molecular clouds. Therefore, the properties of molecular clouds may determine the star formation rate. Conversely, star formation also gives feedback to the clouds where the stars reside. In this dissertation, I present the interplay between the molecular gas and star formation, through three parts below. First, I identify and characterize the properties of molecular clouds in NGC4526, resulting in the first catalog of molecular clouds in an early-type galaxy. As a population, the molecular clouds in NGC4526 are gravitationally bound and have a steeper mass distribution than that in the Milky Way. These molecular clouds are also more luminous, denser, and have a higher velocity dispersion than their counterparts in the Milky Way. These different properties may be due to a more intense interstellar radiation field than in the Galactic disk and a weaker external pressure than in the Galactic center. Second, I combine the mm-wave interferometric data from CARMA and the optical Integral Field Unit data from CALIFA to study the molecular depletion time on kilo-parsec scales of nearby galaxies. In particular, the molecular depletion time between the galactic centers and disks is compared. I find that some galactic centers have shorter depletion time than that in the disks, which means that those centers form stars more efficiently per unit molecular gas mass. This places the galactic centers as an intermediate regime between galactic disks and starburst galaxies. The central drop of depletion time is also correlated with a central increase in the stellar mass surface density, suggesting that a shorter depletion time is associated with the molecular gas compression by the stellar gravitational potential. Third, the feedback from star formation to maintain turbulence in the interstellar matter of M33 is investigated. I show that supernovae have enough energy to maintain atomic gas turbulence inside 4 kpc radius and within molecular clouds, assuming a constant value of turbulent dissipation time of 9.8 Myrs. In the outer parts, the energy from the differential rotation of galaxy is large enough to maintain atomic gas turbulence through the magneto-rotational instability (MRI). I conclude that the sum of supernovae and MRI energy maintains turbulence at all radii where atomic hydrogen is detected in M33.

Book Star Formation  Galaxies and the Interstellar Medium

Download or read book Star Formation Galaxies and the Interstellar Medium written by Jose Franco and published by Cambridge University Press. This book was released on 1993-06-10 with total page 418 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: The enormously powerful phenomena of starbursts are examined in this book. These spectacular star-forming events are seen on large scales in some galaxies, often triggered by galactic interactions. An intriguing implication of starburst research is that active galactic nuclei (AGN) may not be powered by accreting black holes. Instead theories are presented where compact powerhouses of dust-enshrouded star formation lie at the core of AGN, with supernovae exploding roughly once per year within massive nuclear concentrations of gas. This book collects articles from a timely international conference in Elba, Italy, in 1992; these comprise a thorough review of the most important developments in galactic-scale star formation since the starburst revolution of the late 1980s. This text will introduce graduate students to this exciting area and keep experts apace with rapid developments in it.

Book Protostars and Planets V

    Book Details:
  • Author : Bo Reipurth
  • Publisher : University of Arizona Press
  • Release : 2007
  • ISBN : 9780816526543
  • Pages : 994 pages

Download or read book Protostars and Planets V written by Bo Reipurth and published by University of Arizona Press. This book was released on 2007 with total page 994 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: 'Protostars and Planets V' builds on the latest results from recent advances in ground and space-based astronomy and in numerical computing techniques to offer the most detailed and up-to-date picture of star and planet formation - including the formation and early evolution of our own solar system.

Book Scientific and Technical Aerospace Reports

Download or read book Scientific and Technical Aerospace Reports written by and published by . This book was released on 1994 with total page 892 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Starbursts and Galaxy Evolution

Download or read book Starbursts and Galaxy Evolution written by Xuan Thuan Trinh and published by Atlantica Séguier Frontières. This book was released on 1987 with total page 626 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Spatial Distributions of Giant Molecular Clouds and Associations in PHANGS ALMA Galaxies

Download or read book Spatial Distributions of Giant Molecular Clouds and Associations in PHANGS ALMA Galaxies written by Josh Machado and published by . This book was released on 2022 with total page 0 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: We measure the spacing and clustering of \numGMCs~CO peaks identified from 150~pc resolution CO~(2-1) maps of \numGalaxies~ nearby galaxies. Our peaks, derived from carefully homogenized data using the CPROPS algorithm following Rosolowsky et al. 2021, correspond to massive giant molecular clouds or giant molecular associations (GMCs or GMAs), so that our measurements provide a general quantitative description of the spatial distribution of massive star-forming complexes in nearby galaxies. Across our whole data set, peaks have median nearest neighbor distances of $305$~pc with a 16{-}84\% range of 158{-}505~pc, i.e., most peaks have an adjacent peak within 1{-}3 beams. This separation is also of the same order as the Jeans and Toomre lengths for these galaxies, consistent with the peak spacing reflecting the scale of instabilities in the overall gas disk. Using the Landy \& Szalay (1993) estimator, we calculate the two point autocorrelation function for CO peaks and find that CO peaks cluster relative to the null hypothesis of a smooth exponential disk. This agrees with the visual impression of highly structured CO emission in the PHANGS--ALMA maps. The peak of the clustering amplitude lies near the median cloud-cloud distance. Cloud spacing anti-correlates with the local low resolution CO surface brightness, and cloud space density correlates with the same. Clouds in early type galaxies show shorter inter-peak spacings, and clouds in low mass, late type galaxies show longer inter-peak spacings and more signs of stochasiticty compared to massive star-forming galaxies, though we highlight completeness as an issue in these cases.

Book Molecular Clouds as Probes of Milky Way Structure and Interstellar Turbulence

Download or read book Molecular Clouds as Probes of Milky Way Structure and Interstellar Turbulence written by Julia Duval and published by . This book was released on 2010 with total page 536 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Abstract: The Galactic Ring Survey, a 13 CO survey of the first quadrant of the Milky Way, is used to probe the spiral structure of the Galaxy and to constrain the formation and turbulent structure of molecular clouds. A sample of 829 molecular clouds has been identified in the Galactic Ring Survey (GRS). Kinematic distances to 750 of these GRS clouds are derived. The Galactic surface mass density of molecular gas is subsequently computed from 13 CO and 12 CO emission detected in the GRS and the University of Massachusetts-Stony Brook surveys. The Galactic distribution of molecular clouds is strongly enhanced along the Scutum-Crux, Sagittarius, and Perseus arms. These molecular data are consistent with a four-arm model of the Galaxy, while the locations of the Scutum-Crux and Perseus arms are consistent with the distribution of the old stellar population inferred from infrared maps. Physical properties of molecular clouds such as size, mass, and density, are also derived in order to compare clouds located inside and outside spiral arms, and to constrain formation models. Molecular clouds located inside inferred spiral arms are found to be more massive, to have higher surface mass densities, and to be more strongly gravitationally bound than inter-arm clouds. This supports cloud formation models involving spiral structure and suggests that molecular clouds must have lifetimes of a few million years. The turbulent structure of molecular clouds is a fundamental component of star formation. The GRS is the first large scale, fully sampled 13 CO survey of the Galaxy allowing the observation of the sub-parsec-scale structure of molecular clouds. Principal Component Analysis applied to both GRS clouds and numerical simulations allows the derivation of turbulent energy spectra over scales ranging from 0.1 pc to 50 pc. The slope of the energy spectrum, E(k), versus the wavenumber, k, obtained for the GRS clouds is consistent with compressible, intermittent turbulence. The slopes and amplitudes of the energy spectra of the clouds are fairly constant over three decades of masses, which indicates that turbulence is driven on large scales by an external, Galactic pool of kinetic energy.

Book Handbook of Nuclear Physics

Download or read book Handbook of Nuclear Physics written by Isao Tanihata and published by Springer Nature. This book was released on 2023-09-04 with total page 4180 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This handbook is a comprehensive, systematic source of modern nuclear physics. It aims to summarize experimental and theoretical discoveries and an understanding of unstable nuclei and their exotic structures, which were opened up by the development of radioactive ion (RI) beam in the late 1980s. The handbook comprises three major parts. In the first part, the experiments and measured facts are well organized and reviewed. The second part summarizes recognized theories to explain the experimental facts introduced in the first part. Reflecting recent synergistic progress involving both experiment and theory, the chapters both parts are mutually related. The last part focuses on cosmo-nuclear physics—one of the mainstream subjects in modern nuclear physics. Those comprehensive topics are presented concisely. Supported by introductory reviews, all chapters are designed to present their topics in a manner accessible to readers at the graduate level. The book therefore serves as a valuable source for beginners as well, helping them to learn modern nuclear physics.

Book Exploring the Limits of Star Formation from the Extreme Environment of Galaxy Interactions to the Milky Way

Download or read book Exploring the Limits of Star Formation from the Extreme Environment of Galaxy Interactions to the Milky Way written by Amanda Lea Heiderman and published by . This book was released on 2012 with total page 584 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: In this thesis, I explore the rate at which molecular gas is converted to stars through detailed studies of a sample of molecular clouds in the Milky Way, IFU spatially resolved observations of gas-rich nearby interacting galaxies, as well as the environmental dependence of star formation and galaxy morphology in a galaxy supercluster. This thesis is composed of three individual projects that investigate nearby star formation within the local 500 pc of our Sun, to neighboring extreme star forming environments of interacting starburst galaxies, and finally studying how star formation varies with galaxy morphology in a galaxy supercluster a z~0.165. I discuss the relation between the star formation rate (SFR) and molecular gas surface densities (e.g., Schmidt-Kennicutt relation) in Galactic star forming regions and find there is a discrepancy between my study and extragalactic relations. The discrepancy is attributed to extragalactic measurements that are averaged over large>kpc scales and include star forming molecular gas (above some threshold) and molecular gas the is not dense enough to form stars. I find a steep increase in the Galactic SFR-gas surface density relation indicative of a threshold for efficient star formation that is best fit to a broken power law with a linear slope above 129 Msun pc−2. I introduce the VIRUS-P Investigation of the eXtreme ENviroments of Starbursts (VIXENS) project which is a survey of interacting is a large integral field unit survey of nearby infrared bright (L_IR>3x1010 Lsun) interacting/starburst galaxies. The main goal of VIXENS is to investigate the relation between star formation and gas content on spatially resolved scales of ~0.1-1 kpc in the extreme star forming environments of interacting/starburst galaxies. The VIXENS sample is composed of systems in a range interaction stages with morphological signatures from early phase (close pairs) to late stage mergers (single system with multiple nuclei), SFRs, and gas surface densities. I highlight the first results from the VIXENS survey in the late interaction phase galaxy merger Arp 299. I find 1.3 kpc regions in Arp 299 to lie along the SFR-gas surface density relation found for mergers at high redshift, but this relation is highly dependent on the CO to molecular hydrogen (H2) conversion factor. I find evidence for a Galactic CO-to-H2 conversion factor using metallicity and dust temperature measurements, which would place 1.3 kpc regions in the Arp 299 merger in between the high redshift and Kennicutt-Schmidt relations. Comparing the SFR to dense gas surface densities as traced by HCN and HCO, I find an agreement between the spatially resolved measurements and that found on global scales in spirals and (ultra)luminous infrared galaxies. Finally, I present an investigation of the influence of environment on frequency, distribution, color, and star formation properties of galaxy mergers and non-interacting galaxies in the Abell 901/902 supercluster at z~0.165. I find galaxy mergers be preferentially blue in color and have an enhanced SFR by a factor of ~2 compared to non-interacting galaxies. This result may be due to a decrease in galaxy velocity dispersion in the cluster outskirt, favoring galaxy-galaxy interactions, or to interacting galaxies that are part of groups or field galaxies being accreted along cosmological filaments by the clusters. I compare to N-body simulations of groups and field galaxies accreting onto the clusters and find the fraction of mergers are similar to that predicated at group overdensities. I find the SFR of galaxies in the supercluster to be depressed compared to field galaxies in both the core and cluster outskirts, suggesting that an environmental process such as ram pressure stripping is effective throughout the cluster. The results of a modest SFR enhancement and a low merger fraction culminate in my finding that mergers contribute only a small fraction (between 10% and 15%) of the total SFR density of the Abell 901/902 clusters.