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Featured researches published by Paul M. Hintzen.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1992

The Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope - Design and performance

Theodore P. Stecher; Gerald R. Baker; Donna D. Bartoe; Frank H. Bauer; Albert Blum; Ralph C. Bohlin; Harvey Butcher; Peter C. Chen; Nicholas R. Collins; Robert H. Cornett; John J. Deily; Michael R. Greason; Gregory S. Hennessy; Jesse K. Hill; R. S. Hill; Paul M. Hintzen; Joan E. Isensee; Peter J. Kenny; Wayne B. Landsman; D. L. Linard; Stephen P. Maran; Susan G. Neff; Granville R. Nichols; Joseph Novello; Robert W. O'Connell; Joel D. Offenberg; Ronald A. Parise; B. B. Pfarr; Thomas B. Plummer; Foy F. Richardson

The instrumental configuration, calibration, and operations during the first flight of the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope on the Astro-1 mission, December 2-10, 1990, are described. The UV images of a wide variety of astronomical objects were recorded with a 40-arcmin diameter field of view. Images of targets as faint as magnitude 21 (UV) were secured with a resolution of about 3 arcsec. The optics, light baffling, and image motion compensation system are summarized, and detectors and electronic subsystems are described.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 1988

Identifications and limited spectroscopy for Luyten common proper motion stars with probable white dwarf components. I - Pair brighter than 17th magnitude

Terry D. Oswalt; Paul M. Hintzen; Willem J. Luyten

Identifications are provided for 103 bright Luyten common proper motion (CPM) stellar systems with m(pg) less than 17.0 mag containing likely white dwarf (WD) components. New spectral types are presented for 55 components, and spectral types for 51 more are available in the literature. With the CPM systems previously published by Giclas et al. (1978), the Luyten stars provide a uniform sample of nearly 200 pairs or multiples brighter than 17h magnitude. Selection effects biasing the combined samples are discussed; in particular, evidence is presented that fewer than 1 percent of wide WD binaries have been detected.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

Ultraviolet Colors and Extinctions of H II Regions in the Whirlpool Galaxy (M51)

Jesse K. Hill; William H. Waller; Robert H. Cornett; Ralph C. Bohlin; Kwang-Ping Cheng; Susan G. Neff; Z Morton S. Roberts; Andrew M. Smith; Paul M. Hintzen; Eric P. Smith; Theodore P. Stecher

Far-UV (wavelength 1520 A), U, Hα, and R images of the interacting Sbc spiral galaxy M51 were obtained by the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT) during the Astro-2 Spacelab mission of 1995 March and at Mount Laguna Observatory. The μ152 - μU radial gradient of over 1 mag, becoming bluer with increasing radius, is attributed primarily to a corresponding radial extinction gradient. Magnitudes in both UV bands and Hα fluxes are reported for 28 H II regions. Optical extinctions for the 28 corresponding UV sources are computed from the measured m152 - U colors by fitting to the optical extinctions of Nakai & Kuno. The estimated normalized far-UV extinction A152/E(B-V) increases with increasing Galactocentric distance (decreasing metallicity), from 5.99 to 6.54, compared with the Galactic value 8.33. The best-fit m152 - U color for no extinction, -3.07, is the color of a model solar metallicity starburst of age ~2.5 Myr with IMF slope -1.0. H II regions show decreasing observed Hα fluxes with decreasing radius, relative to the Hα fluxes predicted from the observed f152 for age 2.5 Myr, after the Hα and f152 are corrected for extinction. We attribute the increasing fraction of missing Hα flux with decreasing radius to increasing extinction in the Lyman continuum. The increasing extinction-corrected far-UV flux of the H II regions with decreasing distance to the nucleus is probably a result of the corresponding increasing column density of the interstellar gas resulting in larger mass OB associations. The estimated dust-absorbed Lyman continuum energy flux is ~0.6 times the far-infrared energy flux of M51 observed by IRAS.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1991

Galaxies clustering around QSOs with z = 0. 9-1. 5 and the origin of blue field galaxies

Paul M. Hintzen; W. Romanishin; Francisco Valdes

Deep CCD images were obtained in Mould-Cousins R and I passbands of 16 radio quasars with z values between 0.9 and 1.5 and absolute values of b above 35 deg, chosen from the Veron-Cetty and Veron (1984) catalog. Results indicate that, in this population of radio quasars, there is a statistically significant excess of galaxies within 15 arcsec of the quasars and brighter than R = 23 and I = 22. However, contrary to the report of Tyson (1986), no excess was found of galaxies with R less than 21 lying within 30 arcsec of quasars in this redshift range. Data were also obtained for very blue galaxies seen among objects in the general field, all of which are bluer in R-I than Magellanic irregulars at any redshift less than 3. It is suggested that this population might be comprised of low-redshift low-luminosity (H II region) galaxies of the type studied by French (1980) and/or higher redshift galaxies with strong cooling flows and forbidden O II lines. 29 refs.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1992

Fabry-Perot images of NGC 1275 and its puzzling high-velocity system

Adeline Caulet; Bruce E. Woodgate; L. W. Brown; Theodore R. Gull; Paul M. Hintzen; James D. Lowenthal; Ronald J. Oliversen; Michael M. Ziegler

We report the first images obtained with the Goddard Fabry-Perot imager, a very sensitive and tunable imaging system designed to achieve the high levels of performance required in the optical studies of faint emission-line extragalactic objects. A velocity sequence of calibrated narrow-band CCD images (FWHM ∼7 A) has been obtained to cover the 3000 km s −1 velocity space between the redshifted Hα emission lines of NGC 1275 (the central dominant galaxy of the Perseus cluster), its extended associated system of low-velocity (LV) filaments and the high velocity (HV) system of knots, projected on the same line of sight in the sky


The Astrophysical Journal | 1988

A 2 kiloparsec accretion disk (?) inside a 17 kiloparsec H-alpha bar in the cooling flow cluster 2A 0335+096

W. Romanishin; Paul M. Hintzen

Observations of the central region of the galaxy cluster associated with 2A 0335+096, obtained in H-alpha, R, I, and b45 (4506 A with FWHM 355 A) using an 800 x 800-pixel CCD detector on the 4-m telescope at KPNO on December 27 and 30, 1986, are reported. The data are presented graphically and analyzed. Features discussed include a 17-kpc-long bar of H-alpha emission surrounded by filaments, a smaller elongated H-alpha structure (possibly an accretion disk) centered on the nucleus of the central galaxy, a secondary galaxy with a red H-alpha-bright nucleus located within the 17-kpc bar about 6 arcsec from the central-galaxy nucleus, and evidence for excess blue emission (indicating star formation at about 8 solar mass/yr in the cooling flow). From the presence of dust in the emission-line gas it is inferred that theoretical models based on preferential formation of low-mass stars may not be applicable to this object. 17 references.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1995

Ultraviolet imaging telescope and optical emission-line observations of H II regions in M81

Jesse K. Hill; K.-P. Cheng; Ralph C. Bohlin; Robert H. Cornett; Paul M. Hintzen; Robert W. O'Connell; Morton S. Roberts; Andrew M. Smith; Eric P. Smith; Theodore P. Stecher

Images of the type Sab spiral galaxy M81 were obtained in far-UV and near-UV bands by the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT) during the Astro-1 Spacelab mission of 1990 December. Magnitudes in the two UV bands are determined for 52 H II regions from the catalog of Petit, Sivan, & Karachentsev (1988). Fluxes of the H-alpha and H-beta emission lines are determined from CCD images. Extinctions for the brightest H II regions are determined from observed Balmer decrements. Fainter H II regions are assigned the average of published radio-H-alpha extinctions for several bright H II regions. The radiative transfer models of Witt, Thronson, & Capuano (1992) are shown to predict a relationship between Balmer Decrement and H-alpha extinction consistent with observed line and radio fluxes for the brightest 7 H II regions and are used to estimate the UV extinction. Ratios of Lyman continuum with ratios predicted by model spectra computed for initial mass function (IMF) slope equal to -1.0 and stellar masses ranging from 5 to 120 solar mass. Ages and masses are estimated by comparing the H-alpha and far-UV fluxes and their ratio with the models. The total of the estimated stellar masses for the 52 H II regions is 1.4 x 10(exp 5) solar mass. The star-formation rate inferred for M81 from the observed UV and H-alpha fluxes is low for a spiral galaxy at approximately 0.13 solar mass/yr, but consistent with the low star-formation rates obtained by Kennicutt (1983) and Caldwell et al. (1991) for early-type spirals.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1985

Optical and radio observations for the BL Lacertae objects 1219 + 28, 0851 + 202, and 1400 + 162

Donna E. Weistrop; Paul M. Hintzen; D. B. Shaffer; W. Romanishin

Radio- and visible-wavelength observations for the BL Lac object 1219 + 28 (ON 231, W Com) are reported along with optical observations of 0851 + 202 (OJ 287), and radio data for 1400 + 162 (4C 16.39, OQ 100). The obtained data consist of imaging and surface photometry for both 1219 + 28 and 0851 + 202, as well as spectra for 1219 + 28, and Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations for 1219 + 28 and 1400 + 162. Two emission features have been observed in the spectrum of 1219 + 28. Radio observations of 1219 + 28 in three frequencies reveal the presence of a radio jet with at least three components. The obtained results for 1219 + 28 support previous conclusions that at least some BL Lac objects are located at the center of elliptical galaxies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1992

Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope ultraviolet images - Large-scale structure, H II regions, and extinction in M81

Jesse K. Hill; Ralph C. Bohlin; Kwang-Ping Cheng; Paul M. Hintzen; Wayne B. Landsman; Susan G. Neff; Robert W. O'Connell; Morton S. Roberts; Andrew M. Smith; Eric P. Smith; Theodore P. Stecher

The study employs UV images of M81 obtained by the Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT) during the December 1990 Astro-1 spacelab mission to determine 2490- and 1520-A fluxes from 46 H II regions and global surface brightness profiles. Comparison photometry in the V band is obtained from a ground-based CCD image. UV radial profiles show bulge and exponential disk components, with a local decrease in disk surface brightness inside the inner Lindblad Resonance about 4 arcmin from the nucleus. The V profile shows typical bulge plus exponential disk structure, with no local maximum in the disk. There is little change of UV color across the disk, although there is a strong gradient in the bulge. Observed m152-V colors of the H II regions are consistent with model spectra for young clusters, after dereddening using Av determined from m249-V and the Galactic extinction curve. The value of Av, so determined, is 0.4 mag greater on the average than Av derived from radio continuum and H-alpha fluxes.


The Astronomical Journal | 1995

H-alpha imaging of galaxies in the Bootes void

Donna E. Weistrop; Paul M. Hintzen; Charles T. Liu; James D. Lowenthal; K. P. Cheng; Ronald J. Oliversen; L. W. Brown; Bruce E. Woodgate

We report H-alpha and continuum imaging of 12 galaxies in the Bootes void. The H-alpha emission in ten galaxies is due to star formation; one galaxy is probably a narrow emission line Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN), and one a Seyfert 1. Star formation rates range from 3-55 solar mass/yr, with the most active galaxies producing stars at almost three times the rate found in normal field disk systems. Eleven galaxies have strong H-alpha emission in the nucleus. The morphology of several of the galaxies is disturbed. There are at least five spirals, three of which are probably one-armed spirals, and three edge-on disk systems. Three galaxies not identifiable as spirals have H-alpha emission from regions outside the nuclear point source. 1510+4727, which has the highest rate of star formation in our sample, does not have the strong far-infrared emission expected from a galaxy experiencing significant star formation. The galaxies are quite luminous M(sub B) = -21 to -23 mag), and are not the type predicted to be found in voids.

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Eric P. Smith

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Morton S. Roberts

National Radio Astronomy Observatory

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K.-P. Cheng

California State University

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Jesse K. Hill

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Wayne B. Landsman

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Andrew M. Smith

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Ralph C. Bohlin

Space Telescope Science Institute

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Kwang-Ping Cheng

California State University

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