Dale F. Dickinson
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
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Featured researches published by Dale F. Dickinson.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1987
Dale F. Dickinson
IRAS far-IR flux data for 163 OH maser stars were analyzed to quantify the contributions 35 and 53 microns inversions make to pumping of the hydroxyl maser. The 35 microns transition is from the 3,3 ground state to the 1,5 rotationally excited level and subsequent decay; the 53 microns transition is a change from the ground state to the 1,3 excited level and relaxation. The stars examined included Mira, short period semi-regular and long-period semi-regular variables. Both transition lines had rough parity in contributing to the approximately 8 percent pumping efficiency at 1612 MHz. However, the individual contributions of the lines could not be determined for the stellar population studied.
The Astronomical Journal | 1978
Dale F. Dickinson; Lewis E. Snyder; L. W. Brown; D. Buhl
Seven Mira variable stars with silicon monoxide maser emission have been found. All are later than M4 and heavily reddened. Two were observed near maximum light. One, Y Cas, seems to bear out the correlation of 43-GHz SiO maser luminosity and mean spectral type at maximum light. RT Aql, however, falls about 1 mag below the expected brightness. A catalog of SiO maser stars is given.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1978
Lewis E. Snyder; Dale F. Dickinson; L. W. Brown; D. Buhl
Results are reported for high-spectral-resolution observations of the v = 1, J = 1-0 SiO maser sources at 43,122.027 MHz (6.95 mm wavelength) associated with the variable stars Omega Cet, NML Tau, VY CMa, R Leo, W Hya, VX Sgr, NML Cyg, and R Cas. A weak underlying maser emission pedestal is clearly observed in the spectra of all but NML Cyg and R Cas. The data indicate that the underlying pedestal of SiO emission appears to originate in a shell-like region around the star, has a thermal appearance even though it must be due to weak maser emission, and appears to be part of the spectral signature of SiO maser emission from late-type stars. It is found that the center velocities of the pedestals may be used to determine stellar radial velocities. Observations of large-scale time variations in the intensity of the Ori A SiO maser and the detection of weak maser pedestals associated with each of the two strong emission-feature groups in Orion are also discussed. It is suggested that the Orion molecular cloud might contain two late-type long-period variable stars that may be semiregular variables.
The Astronomical Journal | 1986
Lewis E. Snyder; P. R. Jewell; A. S. Dinger; Dale F. Dickinson; D. Buhl
High-spectral-resolution SiO maser observations at 7 mm wavelength were made for 13 circumstellar objects and Ori A over a 34 month interval from January 1977 to November 1979. These data precede and adjoin the SiO monitoring data taken at 3 and 7 mm wavelengths by Lane (1982) and at 3 mm wavelengths by Nyman and Olofsson (1985) and thus provide an important link in the record of the temporal behavior of SiO masers over a period of several years. The time-averaged center of the weak SiO maser emission pedestal gives the stellar radial velocity. This reinforces the idea that the SiO maser emission pedestal is representative of the true structure of a stellar SiO maser, while the more visible and stronger, narrow SiO emission spikes represent chance coherences along the velocity range of the pedestal. Similarities between the SiO maser velocity patterns of VY CMa and Ori A may suggest similarities in their evolutionary stages. 50 references.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1991
Dale F. Dickinson
A total of 474 stars with known IRAS fluxes has been used to investigate the far-infrared excitation of the hydroxyl maser. The efficiency of the far-IR pump is clearly shown to increase with increasing redness of the stellar envelope, as measured by the (25−12) μm color. There appears to be a modest correlation with Galactic longitude; stars closer to the Galactic center have somewhat more efficient masers
Astrophysics | 1979
Gabriel Kojoian; Dale F. Dickinson; H. M. Tovmassian; Ann St. Clair Dinger
Radio measurements were made at 1.35, 1.93, 2.8, and 3.8 cm during April 1978 and at 6 and 11 cm during August and November 1977, respectively, supplementing and extending previous work on OQ 208-Markarian 668. The radio source has a curved spectrum with a maximum at centimeter wavelengths. The spectral index is approximately -1.35 between 3.8 and 1.35 cm and approximately +0.65 between 11 and 6 cm. The synchrotron source may be located within a dense ionized medium. It is suggested that OQ 208-Markarian 668 is a class 1 Seyfert galaxy.
The Astrophysical Journal | 1979
C. A. Gottlieb; John A. Ball; E.W. Gottieb; Dale F. Dickinson
The Astrophysical Journal | 1979
B.G. Elmegreen; Charles J. Lada; Dale F. Dickinson
The Astrophysical Journal | 1988
Irene R. Little-Marenin; Priscilla J. Benson; Dale F. Dickinson
The Astrophysical Journal | 1987
Philip R. Jewell; Dale F. Dickinson; Lewis E. Snyder; Dan P Clemens