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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
111

Molecular Clouds Across the Local Star-forming Galaxy Population

Sun, Jiayi January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
112

A Near-Infrared View of Structure and Star Formation in Galaxies

Kessler, Sarah Jayne January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
113

Infrared and X-ray Studies of the Galactic Center

Dong, Hui 01 September 2011 (has links)
The purpose of this dissertation is to locate evolved massive stars within the central 50 pc of the Galactic Center. These stars are considered to be the descendants of O stars and should be less than 10 Myr old. They trace young star clusters within the Galactic Center. Through these stars and young star clusters, we hope to understand the star formation mode and history within the Galactic Center, as well as the properties of evolved massive stars in the high metallicity environment. We first study the Chandra X-ray deep survey of the Arches and Quintuplet clusters, two of the three young massive star clusters within the Galactic Center. The diffuse X-ray emission is used to constrain their initial mass function and we find a deficiency of low-mass stars, which could be explained by an ongoing collision between the clusters and the adjacent molecular clouds. We then perform a systematic search of young massive stars on a large scale within the Galactic Center through our new HST/NICMOS Paschen-alpha survey. We produce mosaic maps of the Paschen-alpha line and continuum emission, giving an unprecedentedly high resolution and high sensitivity panoramic view of stars and photo-ionized gas in the nuclear environment of the Galaxy. Many new HII regions and extended emission regions have been found. Combined with the archived HST snapshot observations and spectroscopic observations, we construct a sample of 180 potentially evolved massive stars. A multi-wavelength study of these stars is conducted. We find that young massive stars have continued to form within the Galactic Center during the last 10 Myr and some of the evolved massive stars may represent star formation in small groups or even in isolation, compared to the three massive star clusters within the Galactic Center
114

The Gas Kinematics of High Mass Star Forming Regions

Klaassen, Pamela D. January 2008 (has links)
The mechanism by which massive stars form is not nearly as well understood as it is for lower mass stars. For instance, at the onset of massive star formation, it is still not clear whether the mass for a given massive star comes from the turbulent collapse of a dense core (i.e McKee & Tan, 2003) or whether the star continues to accrete material from the cores environment as it grows (i.e. Bonnell et al., 1998). From this point, it is suggested that the cold, massive core (an Infrared Dar Cloud) begins to heat up and form a Hot Core. Later in its protostellar evolution, an HII region forms from the ionizing radiation being produced by the massive star. How, or even whether, accretion onto the massive protostar can continue in the presence of the large outward thermal and radiation pressures from the star is also quite uncertain. Can the star continue to accrete ionized gas (i.e. Keto & Wood, 2006)? Are the accretion rates high enough early on to account for the final observed masses (i.e. Klaassen et al., 2006)? Or, is there some way of minimizing the radiation pressure affecting the infalling gas (i.e. McKee & Ostriker, 2007, and references therein). Here, we present observations which suggest that there is a statistically significant, although short, period in which rotation and infall of molecular gas (which powers a bipolar outflow) continue after the formation of an HII region. This continued infall of material is seen on both large and small scales, and appears to be continuing to produce outflows in many of the sources observed in this study. That it is not seen in all sources suggests that this stage is short lived. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
115

Satellite Quenching and Morphological Transformation of Galaxies in Groups and Clusters / Galaxy Evolution in Groups and Clusters

Oxland, Megan January 2024 (has links)
Galaxy properties are known to correlate with their environment, suggesting that environment plays a significant role in galaxy evolution. In particular, blue star forming spiral galaxies are preferentially found in low density regions while red, passive elliptical galaxies are found in the densest clusters. This suggests galaxies falling into groups and clusters experience a decrease in their star formation rate (SFR) and a morphological transformation from spiral to elliptical, but the timescales associated with these changes are not well constrained. This thesis explores the impact of environment on galaxy SFRs and morphologies for a large sample of galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. We separate galaxies into two environments (groups and clusters) and use location in projected phase space as an estimate for how long a galaxy has been a part of its current environment. We calculate the timescales associated with the changes in galaxy SFRs and morphologies, and determine SFRs change more quickly than morphology. By comparing to a sample of field galaxies, we find evidence that prior group environments impact current galaxy properties via pre-processing. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
116

Characterizing Dust and Ice Toward Protostars in the Orion Molecular Cloud Complex

Poteet, Charles Allen 18 December 2012 (has links)
No description available.
117

Properties of Bulgeless Disk Galaxies: Atomic Gas and Star Formation

Watson, Linda Ceva 20 October 2011 (has links)
No description available.
118

The co-evolution of molecular clumps and high-mass stars

Hogge, Taylor Graham 17 June 2022 (has links)
Since high-mass stars form deeply embedded within dense molecular clumps, the evolution of young stars and of dense clumps is inextricably linked. Previous datasets, however, lack the information necessary to test the prevailing theories. Definitive tests require a sufficiently large sample of molecular clumps and maps of their gas temperatures, column densities, velocity dispersions, and velocities at a spatial resolution comparable to, or smaller than, the clump scale (~1 pc). The Radio Ammonia Mid-Plane Survey (RAMPS), a new molecular line survey of thermal NH3 and H2O masers, provides the necessary data. In this dissertation, I used RAMPS data and archival datasets to test several theories of high-mass star formation and to investigate the co-evolution of molecular clumps and high-mass stars. All theories of high-mass star formation make testable predictions regarding clump kinematics and gravitational stability. Analyses of RAMPS kinematic data revealed that the majority of molecular clumps, particularly those in early evolutionary stages, are unstable to gravitational collapse. Further, they display infall motions, a key prediction of the theory of competitive accretion. I also investigated the kinematics of molecular filaments by comparing their measured velocity gradients to those predicted by hydrodynamical simulations. The measured spatial distributions of velocity gradients are inconsistent with existing models. Feedback from protostars and stars is predicted to alter the properties of surrounding clumps. I investigated feedback size scales and found that high-mass protostellar and stellar feedback significantly changes the temperatures, chemical abundances, and velocity dispersions of clumps on scales of ~0.3 to 3 pc. Finally, I observed a massive molecular cloud filament undergoing an interaction with a supernova shock, which is accelerating, heating, and injecting turbulence into the filament's gas. Although the molecular cores hosted by the filament may remain gravitationally bound, the filament is gravitationally unbound and likely being dispersed. Given that the shock is removing a reservoir of gas that could have been accreted by the cores, these data suggest that the supernova is inhibiting star formation.
119

Radiation hydrodynamic models and simulated observations of radiative feedback in star forming regions

Haworth, Thomas James January 2013 (has links)
This thesis details the development of the radiation transport code torus for radiation hydrodynamic applications and its subsequent use in investigating problems regarding radiative feedback. The code couples Monte Carlo photoionization with grid-based hydrodynamics and has the advantage that all of the features available to a dedicated radiation transport code are at its disposal in RHD applications. I discuss the development of the code, including the hydrodynamics scheme, the adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) framework and the coupling of radiation transport with hydrodynamics. Extensive testing of the resulting code is also presented. The main application involves the study of radiatively driven implosion (RDI), a mechanism where the expanding ionized region about a massive star impacts nearby clumps, potentially triggering star formation. Firstly I investigate the way in which the radiation field is treated, isolating the relative impacts of polychromatic and diffuse field radiation on the evolution of radiation hydrodynamic RDI models. I also produce synthetic SEDs, radio, Hα and forbidden line images of the bright rimmed clouds (BRCs) resulting from the RDI models, on which I perform standard diagnostics that are used by observers to obtain the cloud conditions. I test the accuracy of the diagnostics and show that considering the pressure difference between the neutral cloud and surrounding ionized layer can be used to infer whether or not RDI is occurring. Finally I use more synthetic observations to investigate the accuracy of molecular line diagnostics and the nature of line profiles of BRCs. I show that the previously unexplained lack of dominant blue-asymmetry (a blue-asymmetry is the expected signature of a collapsing cloud) in the line profiles of BRCs can be explained by the shell of material, swept up by the expanding ionized region, that drives into the cloud. The work in this thesis combines to help resolve the difficulties in understanding radiative feedback, which is a non–linear process that happens on small astrophysical timescales, by improving numerical models and the way in which they are compared with observations.
120

Star formation in LITTLE THINGS dwarf galaxies

Ficut-Vicas, Dana January 2015 (has links)
In this thesis we test and expand our current knowledge of Star Formation Laws (SF laws) in the extreme environment of dwarf irregular galaxies. We focus on the SF characteristics of our 18 galaxies sample, extending current investigations of the Schmidt-Kennicutt law to the low luminosity, low metallicity regime. The Hi data used in this project have been observed, calibrated and imaged according to the LITTLE THINGS Survey prescription to which I brought my own contribution as a member of the team. Apart from high resolution, VLA data in B, C and D array configurations, this project makes use of an extensive set of multi- wavelength data (H , FUV, 24 m, 3.6 m, V-band and K-band). Molecular gas in dwarfs is very difficult to observe, mainly because due to the low metallicity environment, we lose our only molecular tracer, the CO which becomes under luminous. Therefore the gas distribution is represented by Hi gas only. We create our Star Formation Rate (SFR) maps mainly based on FUV maps because our analysis shows that FUV is the SF tracer that allows us the most extensive sampling of the SFR surface density (SFRD) and Hi surface density relation. The main results of our study are: Whereas in spiral galaxies Bigiel et al. (2008) have found a one to one relation between star formation rate and molecular gas and no relation between the SFR and the neutral gas, in a small sample of dwarfs as well as in the outskirts of spiral galaxies Bigiel et al. (2010b) has found that SFRD does correlate with Hi surface density. We confirm the existence of the SFRD vs. Hi surface density relation in dwarf irregular galaxies and a linear fitting through all our data (all 18 galaxies combined) yields a power law relation ΣSFR ∝ Σ1.87±0.3/HI . We find that the interiors of Hi shells, at 400 pc scales, become resolved and show up in SFRD versus Hi surface density plots although within the shell interior we have SFRD values but no Hi surface density related to them. Thus, the points originating from those regions contribute significantly to the increase of the scatter in the plot. We show that by excluding those points the correlation between SFRD and Hi surface density improves between 10% and 20%. Eight of the 18 galaxies in our sample have Hi maxima higher than the 10M pc-2 value found by Bigiel et al. (2008) for spiral galaxies. Krumholz et al. (2011) predicted that the 10M pc-2 threshold is metallicity dependent in galaxies with sub-solar metallicity, however the theoretically predicted values for our galaxies only match the observed Hi maxima in one case (DDO168). We find that metallicity cannot be the only factor setting the Hi to H2 transition. In fact, we find evidence that the higher the interstellar radiation field (ISRF), the higher the Hi maximum is, hence we suggest that the ISRF should also be taken into consideration in predicting the Hi to H2 transition threshold. We find that even tighter than the SFRD vs. Hi surface density relation is the SFRD vs. V-band surface density relation. Unlike the SFRD vs. Hi surface density relation the SFRD vs. V-band surface density relation follows a power law and can be written as follows: ΣSFR ∝ (10^μv)^-0.43±0.03. The SFRD vs. V-band surface density relation suggests that the existing stars also play a role in the formation of the next generation of stars. Within our sample of dwarf galaxies the average pressure per resolution element and the SFRD are in a 1:1 linear relation: ΣSFR ∝ P_h^1.02±0.05. A similar relation has been found by Blitz & Rosolowsky (2006) for the low-pressure regimes of spiral galaxies. In conclusion we find that in the extreme environments of dwarf galaxies the metal deficiency and the lack of the classic SF stimulators (spiral arms, shear motions) do not impede the star forming process. In these galaxies, dust-shielding becomes predominantly self-shielding and there is plenty of Hi available to achieve this additional task. Existing stars assume the role of pressure enhancers, which in turn will stimulate SF without the need of spiral arms or shear motion.

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