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Featured researches published by Michael G. Burton.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1990

Velocity-resolved far-infrared spectra of forbidden Fe II - Evidence for mixing and clumping in SN 1987A

Michael R. Haas; Edwin F. Erickson; Steven D. Lord; David J. Hollenbach; Sean W. J. Colgan; Michael G. Burton

We present approx. 400 km/s resolution profiles of the 17.94 and 25.99 micron [Fe II] transitions from SN 1987A at t approx. 400 days after core collapse. These observations used the facility cooled grating spectrometer aboard NASAs Kuiper Airborne Observatory. The two profiles are similar and have FWHM line widths of approx. 2700 km/s. The higher signal-to-noise 18 micron profile is somewhat asymmetric, falling off more steeply on the redshifted side than on the blue. Gaussian fits to the profiles yield an average centroid velocity of 280 +/- 140 km/s relative to the Large Magellanic Cloud. The wings of the profiles extend to velocities is approx. greater than 3000 km/s. This shows that a significant fraction of the iron has been mixed outward into the hydrogen-rich envelope, which has a minimum expansion velocity of 2100-2400 km/s. Both profiles also contain an unresolved 3-5 sigma emission feature on the redshifted wing at nu(LSR) approx. + 3900 km/s. We interpret this feature as emission from a high-velocity clump of material containing approx. 3% of the total iron mass. The total line flux of the 26 micron ground-state transition yields an optically thin, singly ionized iron mass of 0.026 solar mass, relatively independent of the assumed temperature. This is significantly less than the 0.06 Me of Fe+ determined from the decline of the optical light curve and the ionization of measured nickel lines, implying that the iron transitions still have appreciable optical depth. However, because of the small change in the 26 micron line flux from our measurement at 250 days, and the similarity of our profiles to the 1.26 micron [Fe II] profile, most of the emission is believed to originate from optically thin material with a temperature of 4406 +/- 400 K. A comparison of the data with spherically symmetric models indicates a power-law density exponent of -3.2 +/- 1.1 and a minimum expansion velocity of 650 +/- 650 km/s for this optically thin component. The [Fe II] line fluxes and profiles also imply that the remainder of the material has high optical depth and is distributed in clumps throughout the ejecta, rather than being concentrated at low velocities in the center of a smooth density distribution.


Archive | 1995

Stellar ionization of the thermal radio emission regions of the Galactic Center

Angela Stephanie Cotera; Edwin F. Erickson; David A. Allen; Sean W. J. Colgan; Janet P. Simpson; Michael G. Burton


Archive | 1992

A New Cluster of Hot Stars near the Galactic Center

Angela Stephanie Cotera; Edwin F. Erickson; Janet P. Simpson; Sean W. J. Colgan; David A. Allen; Michael G. Burton


Proceedings of Cosmic Rays and the InterStellar Medium — PoS(CRISM2014) | 2015

Gas towards the gamma-ray sources HESS J1731-347 and HESS J1729-345

N. Maxted; G. Rowell; Phoebe de Wilt; Michael G. Burton; M. Renaud; Yasuo Fukui; J. Hawkes; R. Blackwell; F. Voisin; Vicki Lowe; F. Aharonian


Archive | 2011

12mm line survey towards W28 SNR (Nicholas+, 2011)

B. Nicholas; G. Rowell; Michael G. Burton; A. M. Walsh; Yasuo Fukui; Akiko Kawamura; S. N. Longmore; Eric Keto


Archive | 2010

The dense and disrupted gas towards the interacting SNR G359.1-0.5 and the TeV gamma-ray source HESSJ1745-303

Phoebe de Wilt; Yasuo Fukui; Michael G. Burton; Akiko Kawamura; G. Rowell; Andrew J. Walsh; F. Aharonian; Bruce R. Dawson


Archive | 2010

The Physical Conditions of the Lupus clouds

N. F. H. Tothill; Michael G. Burton; S. Horiuchi


Archive | 2010

The Formation of Molecular Clouds in our Galaxy

Michael G. Burton; Herbert A. Simon; N. F. H. Tothill; John W. V. Storey; Christopher Louis Martin; Christopher K. Walker; Craig Kulesa; J. Stutzki; David J. Hollenbach


Archive | 2010

G333.466-0.163 (IRAS 16175-5002) - A Cluster of Massive Young Stellar Objects

Janet P. Simpson; Angela Stephanie Cotera; Michael G. Burton; Maria Cunningham; Indra Bains; Nadia Lo


Archive | 2010

Temperatures of dense cores in the G333 giant molecular cloud

Vicki Lowe; Nadia Lo; Paul Jones; Maria Cunningham; Michael G. Burton; J. S. Urquhart; T. Hill; M. P. Redman; S. Horiuchi; N. F. H. Tothill

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Maria Cunningham

University of New South Wales

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Indra Bains

University of Manchester

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G. Rowell

University of Adelaide

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N. F. H. Tothill

University of Western Sydney

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