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The Astrophysical Journal | 1984

THE INFRARED ASTRONOMICAL SATELLITE (IRAS) MISSION

G. Neugebauer; H. J. Habing; Rj Vanduinen; Hh Aumann; B. Baud; C. A. Beichman; Da Beintema; N Boggess; P.E. Clegg; T Dejong; Jp Emerson; T. N. Gautier; Fc Gillett; S Harris; M. G. Hauser; [No Value] Houck; Re Jennings; F. J. Low; Pl Marsden; G.K. Miley; Fm Olnon; [No Value] Pottasch; E Raimond; Michael Rowan-Robinson; B. T. Soifer; Rg Walker; Pr Wesselius; Erick T. Young

The Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS) consists of a spacecraft and a liquid helium cryostat that contains a cooled IR telescope. The telescopes focal plane assembly is cooled to less than 3 K, and contains 62 IR detectors in the survey array which are arranged so that every source crossing the field of view can be seen by at least two detectors in each of four wavelength bands. The satellite was launched into a 900 km-altitude near-polar orbit, and its cryogenic helium supply was exhausted on November 22, 1983. By missions end, 72 percent of the sky had been observed with three or more hours-confirming scans, and 95 percent with two or more hours-confirming scans. About 2000 stars detected at 12 and 25 microns early in the mission, and identified in the SAO (1966) catalog, have a positional uncertainty ellipse whose axes are 45 x 9 arcsec for an hours-confirmed source.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1984

Infrared cirrus - New components of the extended infrared emission

F. J. Low; Da Beintema; T. N. Gautier; Fc Gillett; C. A. Beichman; G. Neugebauer; Erick T. Young; Hh Aumann; N Boggess; Jp Emerson; H. J. Habing; M. G. Hauser; [No Value] Houck; Michael Rowan-Robinson; B. T. Soifer; Rg Walker; Pr Wesselius

Extended sources of far-infrared emission superposed on the zodiacal and galactic backgrounds are found at high galactic latitudes and near the ecliptic plane. Clouds of interstellar dust at color temperatures as high as 35 K account for much of this complex structure, but the relationship to H I column density is not simple. Other features of the extended emission show the existence of warm structures within the solar system. Three bands of dust clouds at temperatures of 150-200 K appear within 10 deg on both sides of the ecliptic plane. Their ecliptic latitudes and derived distances suggest that they are associated with the main asteroid belt. A third component of the 100-micron cirrus, poorly correlated with H I, may represent cold material in the outer solar system or a new component of the interstellar medium.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1984

IRAS OBSERVATIONS NEAR YOUNG OBJECTS WITH BIPOLAR OUTFLOWS - L1551 AND HH 46-47

Jp Emerson; S Harris; Re Jennings; C. A. Beichman; B. Baud; Da Beintema; Pl Marsden; Pr Wesselius

A 6-solar luminosity dust-embedded precursor of a low-mass (about 1 solar mass) pre-main-sequence star has been discovered with IRAS near the northeast lobe of the bipolar outflow region in the dust cloud L1551 and designated L1551 NE. Star formation is proceeding in at least two locations in L1551, reminiscent of the situation in regions of more massive star formation. If the position of NE in the flow from IRS 5 is indicative of the flow having initiated star formation in NE, then the object can be only about 24,000 years old. Alternatively, NE could appear by chance to lie in the flow from IRS 5. In the globule ES 0210-6A, a 12 solar luminosity dust-embedded precursor of a low-mass (about 1 solar mass) pre-main-sequence star is found which drives the bipolar flow responsible for the string of Herbig-Haro objects HH 46-47 A-D. In this globule, there is only one region of active star formation.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1984

High-sensitivity IRAS observations of the Chamaeleon I dark cloud

B. Baud; Erick T. Young; C. A. Beichman; Da Beintema; Jp Emerson; H. J. Habing; S Harris; Re Jennings; Pl Marsden; Pr Wesselius

Very sensitive IRAS observations of a region of 0.8 sq deg in the Chamaeleon I cloud have revealed 70 compact sources. Hot sources are field stars; warm sources are associated with pre-main-sequence (PMS) stars in the cloud center; others may be in an even earlier phase of gravitational collapse. Cool sources, detected only at the long wavelengths, surround the main cloud and appear to be associated with small globules. Only a small fraction (less than 20 percent) of the total luminosity of the known PMS objects is emitted in the IRAS bands. This has important implications for the classification of the newly discovered embedded objects.


Astronomy & Astrophysics Supplement Series | 1986

IRAS catalogues and atlases - Atlas of low-resolution spectra

Fm Olnon; E. Raimond; G. Neugebauer; R. J. van Duinen; H. J. Habing; Hh Aumann; Da Beintema; N Boggess; J. Borgman; P.E. Clegg; Fc Gillett; M. G. Hauser; J.R. Houck; Re Jennings; T. de Jong; F. J. Low; Pl Marsden; Stuart R. Pottasch; B. T. Soifer; Rg Walker; Jp Emerson; Michael Rowan-Robinson; Pr Wesselius; B. Baud; C. A. Beichman; T. N. Gautier; S Harris; G.K. Miley; Erick T. Young; Faculteit der Wiskunde en Natuurwetenschappen


The Astrophysical Journal | 1984

THE IRAS MINISURVEY

M. Rowan-Robinson; P.E. Clegg; C. A. Beichman; G. Neugebauer; B. T. Soifer; Hh Aumann; Da Beintema; N. Boggess; Jp Emerson; T. N. Gautier; F. C. Gillett; M. G. Hauser; James R. Houck; F. J. Low; Rg Walker


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

Abundances of the planetary nebula Hu 1-2

Stuart R. Pottasch; Siek Hyung; Lawrence H. Aller; Da Beintema; J Bernard-Salas; Wa Feibelman; Hr Klockner


The Astrophysical Journal | 1984

IRAS SPECTRA OF PLANETARY-NEBULAE

[No Value] Pottasch; Da Beintema; E Raimond; B. Baud; Rj Vanduinen; H. J. Habing; [No Value] Houck; T Dejong; Re Jennings; Fm Olnon; Pr Wesselius


The Astrophysical Journal | 1984

IRAS observations of two early-type pre-main-sequence stars in the association Chamaeleon I

Pr Wesselius; Da Beintema; Fm Olnon


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 1985

Highly Ionized Neon In The Planetary-nebula NGC-6302

Stuart R. Pottasch; A Preitemartinez; Fm Olnon; E Raimond; Da Beintema; H. J. Habing

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Pr Wesselius

University of Groningen

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C. A. Beichman

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Hh Aumann

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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M. G. Hauser

Goddard Space Flight Center

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T. N. Gautier

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Stuart R. Pottasch

Kapteyn Astronomical Institute

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P.E. Clegg

Queen Mary University of London

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