2010AJ....140...63I


Query : 2010AJ....140...63I

2010AJ....140...63I - Astron. J., 140, 63-74 (2010/July-0)

The buried starburst in the interacting galaxy II Zw 096 as revealed by the Spitzer space telescope.

INAMI H., ARMUS L., SURACE J.A., MAZZARELLA J.M., EVANS A.S., SANDERS D.B., HOWELL J.H., PETRIC A., VAVILKIN T., IWASAWA K., HAAN S., MURPHY E.J., STIERWALT S., APPLETON P.N., BARNES J.E., BOTHUN G., BRIDGE C.R., CHAN B., CHARMANDARIS V., FRAYER D.T., KEWLEY L.J., KIM D.C., LORD S., MADORE B.F., MARSHALL J.A., MATSUHARA H., MELBOURNE J.E., RICH J., SCHULZ B., SPOON H.W.W., STURM E., U V., VEILLEUX S. and XU K.

Abstract (from CDS):

An analysis of data from the Spitzer Space Telescope, Hubble Space Telescope, Chandra X-ray Observatory, and AKARI Infrared Astronomy Satellite is presented for the z = 0.036 merging galaxy system II Zw 096 (CGCG 448-020). Because II Zw 096 has an infrared luminosity of log(LIR/L) = 11.94, it is classified as a Luminous Infrared Galaxy (LIRG), and was observed as part of the Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey (GOALS). The Spitzer data suggest that 80% of the total infrared luminosity comes from an extremely compact, red source not associated with the nuclei of the merging galaxies. The Spitzer mid-infrared spectra indicate no high-ionization lines from a buried active galactic nucleus in this source. The strong detection of the 3.3 µm and 6.2 µm polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon emission features in the AKARI and Spitzer spectra also implies that the energy source of II Zw 096 is a starburst. Based on Spitzer infrared imaging and AKARI near-infrared spectroscopy, the star formation rate is estimated to be 120 M/yr and >45 M/yr, respectively. Finally, the high-resolution B-, I-, and H-band images show many star clusters in the interacting system. The colors of these clusters suggest at least two populations–one with an age of 1-5 Myr and one with an age of 20-500 Myr, reddened by 0-2 mag of visual extinction. The masses of these clusters span a range between 106 and 108 M. This starburst source is reminiscent of the extranuclear starburst seen in NGC 4038/9 (the Antennae Galaxies) and Arp 299 but approximately an order of magnitude more luminous than the Antennae. The source is remarkable in that the off-nuclear infrared luminosity dominates the entire system.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: individual: II Zw 096 - galaxies: interactions - galaxies: starburst - galaxies: star clusters: general - infrared: galaxies

Simbad objects: 15

goto Full paper

goto View the references in ADS

Number of rows : 15
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 IC 1623 IG 01 07 47.380 -17 30 24.51   15       ~ 310 2
2 IC 694 AG? 11 28 27.312 +58 34 42.29   18.2       ~ 252 2
3 [ZWM2003] 2 PoG 11 28 30.7 +58 33 49           ~ 39 0
4 NGC 3690 IG 11 28 31.0 +58 33 41   13.19 12.86     ~ 978 4
5 GSW C' PoG 11 28 31.02 +58 33 49.4           ~ 25 0
6 NAME Antennae IG 12 01 53.170 -18 52 37.92           ~ 1695 0
7 Mrk 231 Sy1 12 56 14.2341182928 +56 52 25.238373852   14.68 13.84     ~ 1993 3
8 Mrk 463 Sy2 13 56 02.9 +18 22 18   14.8 14.22     ~ 393 2
9 IC 4553 SyG 15 34 57.22396 +23 30 11.6084   14.76 13.88     ~ 2966 4
10 LEDA 60189 LIN 17 23 21.943 -00 17 00.96   15.1       ~ 425 0
11 [ZL93] IRAS 20550+1656 B IR 20 57.3 +17 08           ~ 3 0
12 [ZL93] IRAS 20550+1656 A IR 20 57.3 +17 08           ~ 4 0
13 [ZL93] IRAS 20550+1656 D IR 20 57.3 +17 08           ~ 4 0
14 [ZL93] IRAS 20550+1656 C IR 20 57.3 +17 08           ~ 4 0
15 Z 448-20 G 20 57 23.62800 +17 07 44.5980   15.2       ~ 166 0

To bookmark this query, right click on this link: simbad:objects in 2010AJ....140...63I and select 'bookmark this link' or equivalent in the popup menu