36 resultados para GALAXIES: STARBURST
Resumo:
Cyanoacetylene HC3N is a molecule of great astronomical importance and it has been observed in many interstellar environments. Its deuterated form DC3N has been detected in number of sources from external galaxies to Galactic interstellar clouds, star-forming regions and planetary atmospheres. All these detections relied on previous laboratory investigations, which however still lack some essential information concerning its infrared spectrum. In this project, high-resolution ro-vibrational spectra of DC3N have been recorded in two energy regions: 150 – 450 cm-1 and 1800 – 2800 cm-1. In the first window the ν7← GS, 2ν7 ← ν7, ν5 ← ν7, ν5+ν7 ← 2ν7, ν6+ν7 → 2v7, 4ν7 ← 2ν7 bands have been assigned, while in the second region the three stretching fundamental bands ν1, ν2, ν3 have been observed and analysed. The 150 – 450 cm-1 region spectra have been recorded at the AILES beamline at the SOLEIL synchrotron (France), the 1800 – 2800 cm-1 spectra at the Department of Industrial Chemistry “Toso Montanari” in Bologna. In total, 2299 transitions have been assigned. Such experimental transition, together with data previously recorded for DC3N, were included in a least-squares fitting procedure from which several spectroscopic parameters have been determined with high precision and accuracy. They include rotational, vibrational and resonance constants. The spectroscopic data of DC3N have been included in a line catalog for this molecule in order to assist future astronomical observations and data interpretation. A paper which includes this research work has been published (M. Melosso, L. Bizzocchi, A. Adamczyk, E. Cane, P. Caselli, L. Colzid, L. Dorea, B. M. Giulianob, J.-C. Guillemine, M-A. Martin-Drumel, O. Piralif, A. Pietropolli Charmet , D. Prudenzano, V. M. Rivillad, F. Tamassia, Extensive ro-vibrational analysis of deuterated-cyanoacetylene (DC3N) from millimeter wavelengths to the infrared domain, Jour. of Quant. Spectr. and Rad. Tran. 254, 107221, 2020).
Resumo:
Inflation is the primordial stage of accelerated expansion of the Universe which solves the issues of the initial conditions of a decelerating Universe (horizon, flatness and entropy problems). Moreover, it is supposed that quantum fluctuations originated during the first moments after the Big Bang gave rise to the formation of galaxies and other structures of the Universe when inflation ends. Among these structures also primordial black holes (PBHs) may have been generated. The interest in PBHs relies on their possible connection with dark matter: they could constitute a portion or even the whole dark matter content of our Universe.\\ In this work we consider inflation in the Induced Gravity (IR) context and study possible mechanisms of amplification of the curvature perturbations generated during the cosmic acceleration. In particular we consider the possibility of a period of Constant Roll (CR). Starting from the previous work of Starobinsky et al. Our final purpose is to analyse the power spectrum of the scalar perturbations and to find in which conditions there is an enhancement of the power spectrum possibly leading to PBHs formation.
Resumo:
Gravitational lensing is a powerful tool to investigate the properties of the distribution of matter, be it barionic or dark. In this work we take advantage of Strong Gravitational Lensing to infer the properties of one of the galaxy-scale substructures that makes up the cluster MACSJ1206. It is relatively easy to model the morphology of the visible components of a galaxy, while the morphology of the dark matter distribution cannot be so easily constrained. Being sensitive to the whole mass, strong lensing provides a way to probe DM distribution, and this is the reason why it is the best tool to study the substructure. The goal of this work consists of performing an analysis of the substructure previously mentioned, an early type galaxy (ETG), by analyzing the highly magnified Einstein ring around it, in order to put stringent constraints on its matter distribution, that, for an ETG, is commonly well described by an isothermal profilele. This turns out to be interesting for three main different reasons. It is well known that galaxies in clusters are subject to interaction processes, both dynamic and hydrodynamic, that can significantly modify the distribution of matter within them. Therefore, finding a different profile from the one usually expected could be a sign that the galaxy has undergone processes that have changed its structure. Studying the mass distribution also means studying the dark matter component, which not only still presents great questions today, but which is also not obviously distributed in the same way as in an isolated galaxy. What emerges from the analysis is that the total mass distribution of the galaxy under examination turns out to have a slope much steeper than the isothermal usually expected.
Resumo:
Extra mixing at the borders of convective zones in stellar interiors takes on an important role in the chemical evolution of stars and galaxies through the transport of chemical elements towards the stellar surface: knowing the overshooting mechanism can therefore lead to a better understanding of the observed chemical abundances in stellar photospheres. The comprehension of this phenomenon is quite uncertain and currently object of many studies. In particular, concerning low mass stars, in the past decades several works highlighted a discrepancy between the observed luminosity of the Red-Giant Branch bump and its prediction from simulations, which can be fixed including overshooting at the base of the convective envelope. This work, studying the Red-Giant Branch bump and using it as a diagnostic for extra mixing processes, tries to classify two different types of overshooting, instantaneous and diffusive, using both simulations from stellar models and Globular Clusters’ data. The aim is to understand which one of the two mixing processes is the most suitable in reproducing the observed stellar behaviour and, in case both of them provide reliable results, what are the conditions under which they produce the same effects on the Red-Giant Branch bump luminosity function and are consequently indistinguishable. Finally, possible dependences of overshooting efficiency on stellar parameters, such as chemical composition, are analysed.
Resumo:
Galaxy clusters and groups are the most massive bounded structures and the knots of the large-scale structure of the Universe. These structures reside in dark matter haloes, hosting tens to hundreds of galaxies and they are filled with hot and rarefied gas. Radio Galaxies are a peculiar class of galaxies with a luminosity in the radio band up to 10^46 erg/s between 10 MHz and 100 GHz. These galaxies are a subclass of AGN in which there is accretion on the Super Massive Black Hole. The accretion generates jets of relativistic particles and magnetic fields which lose energy through synchrotron radiation, best observable at radio frequencies. The study of the spectral ageing of the AGN plasma is fundamental to understand its evolution, interaction with the environment and to constrain the AGN duty cycle. n this thesis, we have investigated the duty cycle of the nearby remnant radio galaxy NGC 6086, located in the centre of the galaxy group Abell 2162. We have made major steps forward thanks to the new high-sensitivity interferometers in the low-frequency radio band. We have detected for the first time three filaments of emission and a second couple of lobes. We have performed an integrated and resolved analysis on the previously known inner lobes, the new filaments and the older outer lobes. We have performed an age estimate of the two pairs of lobes to give constraints on the duty cycle of the source and an estimate of its active time.
Resumo:
Dwarf galaxies often experience gravitational interactions from more massive companions. These interactions can deform galaxies, turn star formation on or off, or give rise to mass loss phenomena. In this thesis work we propose to study, through N-body simulations, the stellar mass loss suffered by the dwarf spheroid galaxy (dSph) Fornax orbiting in the Milky Way gravitational potential. Which is a key phenomenon to explain the mass budget problem: the Fornax globular clusters together have a stellar mass comparable to that of Fornax itself. If we look at the stellar populations which they are made of and we apply the scenarios of stellar population formation we find that, originally, they must have been >= 5 times more massive. For this reason, they must have lost or ejected stars through dynamic interactions. However, as presented in Larsen et al (2012), field stars alone are not sufficient to explain this scenario. We may assume that some of those stars fell into Fornax, and later were stripped by Milky Way. In order to study this solution we built several illustrative single component simulations, with a tabulated density model using the P07ecc orbit studied from Battaglia et al (2015). To divide the single component into stellar and dark matter components we have defined a posterior the probability function P(E), where E is the initial energy distribution of the particles. By associating each particle with a fraction of stellar mass and dark matter. In this way we built stellar density profiles without repeating simulations. We applied the method to Fornax using the profile density tables obtained in Pascale et al (2018) as observational constraints and to build the model. The results confirm the results previously obtained with less flexible models by Battaglia et al (2015). They show a stellar mass loss < 4% within 1.6 kpc and negligible within 3 kpc, too small to solve the mass budget problem.