1 / 15

Towards a 3% Geometric Distance to NGC 4258

Towards a 3% Geometric Distance to NGC 4258 A. Argon, L. Greenhill, M. Reid, J. Moran & E. Humphreys (Harvard-Smithsonian CfA) 20 April 2007 Adam Trotter (UNC-Chapel Hill). J. Kagaya (Hoshi No Techou). Palomar Observatory. The Host Galaxy. NGC 4258 (M106) Barred spiral SABbc

sukey
Download Presentation

Towards a 3% Geometric Distance to NGC 4258

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Towards a 3% Geometric Distance to NGC 4258 A. Argon, L. Greenhill, M. Reid, J. Moran & E. Humphreys (Harvard-Smithsonian CfA) 20 April 2007 Adam Trotter (UNC-Chapel Hill) J. Kagaya (Hoshi No Techou) Palomar Observatory

  2. The Host Galaxy • NGC 4258 (M106) • Barred spiral SABbc • Seyfert 1.9, D=7.2 Mpc • “Anomalous spiral arms” detected in Hα and radio continuum • Recent Chandra, XMM, Spitzer and other images highlight the dual nature of spiral arms – normal + jet impinging on ISM Palomar Observatory Wilson, Yang & Cecil 2001 http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2007/ngc4258/

  3. VLBA Angular resolution = 200 as (0.006 pc at 7.2 Mpc) Spectral resolution < 1 km s-1

  4. Masers trace “hotspots” in underlying structures • Compact (θ < 1 mas) • High surface brightness (TB ~ 107 -1015 K) • Yield θx, θy, vlos, dθx/dt, dθy/dt, dvlos/dt H2O Masers • Conditions required • Dense (108 - 1010 cm-3) • Warm (300 - 800 K) • Quiescent (Δv ~ ΔvD)

  5. Nobeyana 40-m Telescope Greenhill et al. 1995, A&A 304, 21 The Nuclear Megamaser • Discovered by Claussen, Heiligman & Lo (1984) • Centered on galactic systemic vsys = 470 km s-1 • Isotropic Luminosity ~120 LA • Nakai et al. (1993) discovered emission at 1000km s-1 • Greenhill et al. 1995: VLBI Observations of systemic emission show linear structure. Secular velocity drift implies centripetal acceleration in a flat disk. Owens Valley Radio Observatory, 40-m antenna

  6. The Big Picture • Miyoshi et al. (1995) present VLBI images of full velocity range of maser emission • Systemic emission in narrow band S of radio continuum (jet) • High-velocity emission distributed 0.3 pc to either side • High-velocity emission exhibits nearly perfect Keplerian rotation curve

  7. Herrnstein, Moran, Greenhill & Trotter, ApJ 2005 Global Model Fits • Assume warped disk (position angle and inclination change as functions of radius) • Systemic velocity v0 = 4793 km s-1 • Central Mass M0=3.780.01x107MA • Position of disk center determined to 30μas • Plummer model of central cluster would require central density ρc > 5.7x1011 MA pc-3 : unstable to collapse/disruption in lifetime of galaxy • Massive disk model would imply densities 10-1000x too great to support water maser emission • Must be a supermassive black hole!

  8. Observer’s view 0.1pc • Inclination warp (flattening of high velocity rotation curve): 8° across reds • Position angle warp (declinations): 9° across reds • Disk obscures much of central region • Systemic masers in bowl on front side of disk NGC4258 Top View 0.1pc Redshifted masers High Blueshifted masers Bowl TO OBSERVER Systemic Masers Courtesy CfA Maser Group, Humphreys, et al. (in prep)

  9. Natural explanation for: • Faint blue high velocity feature (free-free absorption along the line-of-sight) • Strongest red high velocity feature ~1306 km s-1 (where i=90º) • Strongest systemic maser flares at ~490 km s-1 (optimum coherence path) • X-ray absorbing layer (nH ~ 1023 cm-2) radius = 0.29 pc where disk crosses line-of-sight (Fruscione et al. 2005) Top View 0.1pc High Bowl Warp is Well-Characterized

  10. How to Get a Distance? Measure accelerations & proper motions Acceleration Distance vlos2  M/Dhi M/D dvlos/d [M/Dsys3]1/2 sys D alos  v2/Dsys M . Proper Motion Distance  ~ vt/D  (M/D)1/2/Dsys1/2 D M or

  11. Herrnstein et al. 1999

  12. The Result • Acceleration Distance: • Proper Motion Distance: Including all systematic model uncertainties, a 5% geometric distance measurement:

  13. Comparison to Other MeasurementsD = 7.2  0.3 Mpc • H-band Tully Fisher (Aaronson et al. 1982) D = 7.1  1.1 Mpc • Blue Tully Fisher (Richter & Huchtmeier 1984) D = 7.9  1.8 Mpc • Luminosity Class Estimate (Rowan-Robinson 1985) D = 8.4  2.2 Mpc • Cepheid Variables D = 8.1  0.4 Mpc (Maoz et al. 1999 - 15 Cepheids) D = 7.8  0.3  0.5 Mpc (Newman et al. 2001 - same 15 Cepheids) D = 7.4 Mpc (Macri et al 2006 - 300 Cepheids) All these depend on Cepheid calibrations

  14. Towards a 3% Distance MeasurementArgon et al. 2007 (in preparation) • 18 epochs of VLBI observations, 1997 March – 2000 August, using VLBA, VLA Phased Array and Effelsberg 100-m antenna • Wider bandwidth → Detection of new high-velocity features 30% closer to disk center • Quantification of maser disk thickness, h~5 μas, will lead to more accurate models and estimates of mass accretion rate – ADAF? • More robust genetic modeling algorithm to refine warped disk shape and reduce systematic uncertainties • Inclusion of possible spiral structure in high-velocity masers, and ellipticity in systemic maser orbits • HST observations (in progress) of Cepheids in NGC4258 to provide independent calibration of Cepheid distance scale • Ultimately, a new measurement of H0, though at a distance of 7.2 Mpc, unmodeled local velocity field perturbations may limit accuracy of the result.

  15. Mai: Les Tres Riches Heures du Duc de Berry, c. 1410 The May jaunt, a pageant celebrating the "joli mois de Mai" in which one had to wear green garments known as livree de mai. The riders are young noblemen and women, with princes and princesses.

More Related