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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2007

The Infrared Astronomical Mission AKARI

Hiroshi Murakami; Hajime Baba; Peter D. Barthel; D. L. Clements; Martin Cohen; Yasuo Doi; Keigo Enya; Elysandra Figueredo; Naofumi Fujishiro; Hideaki Fujiwara; Mikio Fujiwara; Pedro Garcia-Lario; Tomotsugu Goto; Sunao Hasegawa; Yasunori Hibi; Takanori Hirao; Norihisa Hiromoto; Seung Soo Hong; Koji Imai; Miho Ishigaki; Masateru Ishiguro; Daisuke Ishihara; Yoshifusa Ita; Woong-Seob Jeong; Kyung Sook Jeong; Hidehiro Kaneda; Hirokazu Kataza; Mitsunobu Kawada; Toshihide Kawai; Akiko Kawamura

AKARI, the first Japanese satellite dedicated to infrared astronomy, was launched on 2006 February 21, and started observations in May of the same year. AKARI has a 68.5 cm cooled telescope, together with two focal-plane instruments, which survey the sky in six wavelength bands from mid- to far-infrared. The instruments also have a capability for imaging and spectroscopy in the wavelength range 2-180 mu m in the pointed observation mode, occasionally inserted into a continuous survey operation. The in-orbit cryogen lifetime is expected to be one and a half years. The All-Sky Survey will cover more than 90% of the whole sky with a higher spatial resolution and a wider wavelength coverage than that of the previous IRAS all-sky survey. Point-source catalogues of the All-Sky Survey will be released to the astronomical community. Pointed observations will be used for deep surveys of selected sky areas and systematic observations of important astronomical targets. These will become an additional future heritage of this mission.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2007

The Far-Infrared Surveyor (FIS) for AKARI

Mitsunobu Kawada; Hajime Baba; Peter D. Barthel; D. L. Clements; Martin Cohen; Yasuo Doi; Elysandra Figueredo; Mikio Fujiwara; Tomotsugu Goto; Sunao Hasegawa; Yasunori Hibi; Takanori Hirao; Norihisa Hiromoto; Woong-Seob Jeong; Hidehiro Kaneda; Toshihide Kawai; Akiko Kawamura; Do Kester; Tsuneo Kii; Hisato Kobayashi; Suk Minn Kwon; Hyung Mok Lee; Sin’itirou Makiuti; Hiroshi Matsuo; Shuji Matsuura; Thomas Müller; Noriko Murakami; Hirohisa Nagata; Takao Nakagawa; Masanao Narita

The Far-Infrared Surveyor (FIS) is one of two focal-plane instruments on the AKARI satellite. FIS has four photometric bands at 65, 90, 140, and 160 mu m, and uses two kinds of array detectors. The FIS arrays and optics are designed to sweep the sky with high spatial resolution and redundancy. The actual scan width is more than eight arcminutes, and the pixel pitch matches the diffraction limit of the telescope. Derived point-spread functions (PSFs) from observations of asteroids are similar to those given by the optical model. Significant excesses, however, are clearly seen around tails of the PSFs, whose contributions are about 30% of the total power. All FIS functions are operating well in orbit, and the performance meets the laboratory characterizations, except for the two longer wavelength bands, which are not performing as well as characterized. Furthermore, the FIS has a spectroscopic capability using a Fourier transform spectrometer (FTS). Because the FTS takes advantage of the optics and detectors of the photometer, it can simultaneously make a spectral map. This paper summarizes the in-flight technical and operational performance of the FIS.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2008

Physical Properties of Tidal Features in Interacting Disk Galaxies

Sang Hoon Oh; Woong-Tae Kim; Hyung Mok Lee; Jongsoo Kim

We investigate the physical properties of tidal structures in a disk galaxy created by gravitational interactions with a companion using numerical N-body simulations. We consider a simple galaxy model consisting of a rigid halo/bulge and an infinitesimally thin stellar disk with Toomre parameter Q ≈ 2. A perturbing companion is treated as a point mass moving on a prograde parabolic orbit, with varying mass and pericenter distance. Tidal interactions produce well-defined spiral arms and extended tidal features, such as bridge and tail, that are all transient, but distinct in nature. In the extended disks, a strong tidal force is able to lock the perturbed epicycle phases of the near-side particles to the perturber, shaping them into a tidal bridge that corotates with the perturber. A tidal tail develops on the opposite side as strongly perturbed, near-side particles overtake mildly perturbed, far-side particles. The tail is essentially a narrow material arm with a roughly logarithmic shape, dissolving with time because of large velocity dispersions. Inside the disks where the tidal force is relatively weak, on the other hand, a two-armed logarithmic spiral pattern emerges due to the kinematic alignment of perturbed particle orbits. While self-gravity makes the spiral arms a bit stronger, the arms never become fully self-gravitating, wind up progressively with time, and decay almost exponentially after the peak in a timescale of ~1 Gyr. The arm pattern speed varying with both radius and time converges to Ω − κ/2 at late time, suggesting that the pattern speed of tidally driven arms may depend on radius in real galaxies. Here Ω and κ denote the angular and epicycle frequencies, respectively. We present the parametric dependences of various properties of tidal features on the tidal strength and discuss our findings as applied to tidal spiral arms in grand-design spiral galaxies.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2015

PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF TIDAL FEATURES OF INTERACTING DISK GALAXIES: THREE-DIMENSIONAL SELF-CONSISTENT MODELS

Sang Hoon Oh; Woong-Tae Kim; Hyung Mok Lee

Using self-consistent three-dimensional (3D) N-body simulations, we investigate the physical properties of non-axisymmetric features in a disk galaxy created by a tidal interaction with its companion. The primary galaxy consists of a stellar disk, a bugle, and a live halo, corresponding to Milky-Way type galaxies, while the companion is represented by a halo alone. We vary the companion mass and the pericenter distance to explore situations with differing tidal strength parameterized by either the relative tidal force P or the relative imparted momentum S. We find that the formation of a tidal tail in the outer parts requires P > 0.05 or S > 0.07. A stronger interaction results in a stronger, less wound tail that forms earlier. Similarly, a stronger tidal forcing produces stronger, more loosely wound spiral arms in the inner parts. The arms are approximately logarithmic in shape, with both amplitude and pitch angle decaying with time. The derived pattern speed decreases with radius and is close to the Omega-kappa/2 curve at late time, with Omega and kappa denoting the angular and epicycle frequencies, respectively. This suggests that the tidally-induced spiral arms are most likely kinematic density waves weakly modified by self-gravity. Compared to the razor-thin counterparts, arms in the 3D models are weaker, have a smaller pitch angle, and wind and decay more rapidly. The 3D density structure of the arms is well described by the concentrated and sinusoidal models when the arms are in the nonlinear and linear regimes, respectively. We demonstrate that dynamical friction between interacting galaxies transfers the orbital angular momentum of one galaxy to the spin angular momentum of the companion halo.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

AKARI infrared bright source catalogues

Shinki Oyabu; Issei Yamamura; Carlos Alfageme; Pieter Barthel; A. Cassatella; Martin Cohen; Nicky Cox; E. Figueredo; H. Fujiwara; Norio Ikeda; Daisuke Ishihara; Woong-Seob Jeong; Hirokazu Kataza; D. Kester; H. M. Lee; Sin'itirou Makiuti; T.G. Mueller; Takao Nakagawa; Satoshi Takita; Sang Hoon Oh; S. J. Oliver; Chris Pearson; N. Rahman; M. Rowan-Robinson; A. Salama; R. Savage; S. Serjeant; G. J. White; Chisato Yamauchi

Bright source catalogues based on the new mid- and far-infrared all-sky survey by the infrared astronomical satellite AKARI were released into the public domain in March 2010. The mid-infrared catalogue contains more than 870 thousand sources observed at 9 and 18 μm, and the far-infrared catalogue provides information of about 427 thousand sources at 65, 90, 140, and 160 μm. The AKARI catalogues will take over the IRAS catalogues and will become one of the most important catalogues in astronomy. We present the characteristics of the AKARI infrared source catalogues as well as current activity for the future versions.


EXOPLANETS AND DISKS: THEIR FORMATION AND DIVERSITY: Proceedings of the International Conference | 2009

The First release of the AKARI-FIS Bright Source Catalogue.

Issei Yamamura; Sin'itirou Makiuti; Norio Ikeda; Y. Fukuda; Chisato Yamauchi; Sunao Hasegawa; Takao Nakagawa; H. Narumi; Hajime Baba; T. Takagi; Woong-Seob Jeong; Sang Hoon Oh; H. M. Lee; Richard S. Savage; N. Rahman; Matthew Thomson; Seb Oliver; Elysandra Figueredo; S. Serjeant; G. J. White; C. P. Pearson; Lingyu Wang; M. Rowan-Robinson; Dominicus Kester; G. van der Wolk; Pieter Barthel; A. Salama; C. Alfageme; Pedro Garcia-Lario; C. Stephenson

The infrared astronomy satellite AKARI has made all‐sky surveys at six wavelength bands (9, 18 μm with the Infrared Camera (IRC), 65, 90, 140, and 160 μm with the Far‐Infrared Surveyor (FIS)). The first version of the FIS Bright Source Catalogue (β−1) has been provided to the AKARI science team for initial astronomical analyses. The catalogue will be made public in Autumn 2009 after further revisions. The IRC point source catalogue is in parallel preparation.


Advances in Space Research | 2007

Detection of CFIRB with AKARI/FIS deep observations

Woong-Seob Jeong; Chris P. Pearson; Hyung Mok Lee; Shuji Matsuura; Mitsunobu Kawada; Takao Nakagawa; Sang Hoon Oh; Mai Shirahata; Sungho Lee; Ho Seong Hwang; Hideo Matsuhara

The Cosmic Far-Infrared Background (CFIRB) contains information about the number and distribution of contributing sources and thus gives us an important key to understand the evolution of galaxies. Using a confusion study to set a fundamental limit to the observations, we investigate the potential to explore the CFIRB with AKARI/FIS deep observations. The Far-Infrared Surveyor (FIS) is one of the focal-plane instruments on the AKARI (formerly known as ASTRO-F) satellite, which was launched in early 2006. Based upon source distribution models assuming three different cosmological evolutionary scenarios (no evolution, weak evolution, and strong evolution), an extensive model for diffuse emission from infrared cirrus, and instrumental noise estimates, we present a comprehensive analysis for the determination of the confusion levels for deep far-infrared observations. We use our derived sensitivities to suggest the best observational strategy for the AKARI/FIS mission to detect the CFIRB fluctuations. If the source distribution follows the evolutionary models, observations will be mostly limited by source confusion. We find that we will be able to detect the CFIRB fluctuations and that these will in turn provide information to discriminate between the evolutionary scenarios of galaxies in most low-to-medium cirrus regions.


Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2009

AKARI, a Light to Illuminate the Misty Universe

Issei Yamamura; Sin'itirou Makiuti; Norio Ikeda; Y. Fukuda; Chisato Yamauchi; Sunao Hasegawa; Takao Nakagawa; H. Narumi; Hajime Baba; T. Takagi; Woong-Seob Jeong; Sang Hoon Oh; H. M. Lee; Richard S. Savage; N. Rahman; Matthew Thomson; Seb Oliver; Elysandra Figueredo; S. Serjeant; G. J. White; Chris Pearson; L. Wang; M. Rowan-Robinson; Dominicus Kester; G. van der Wolk; Pieter Barthel; A. Salama; Carlos Alfageme; Pedro Garcia-Lario; Craig Stephenson


Advances in Space Research | 2004

ASTRO-F/FIS observing simulation including detector characteristics

Woong-Seob Jeong; Soojong Pak; Hyung Mok Lee; Takao Nakagawa; Minjin Kim; Sang Hoon Oh; Hidehiro Kaneda; Sin’itirou Makiuti; Mai Shirahata; Shuji Matsuura; Mikhail Patrashin; Chris P. Pearson; Hiroshi Shibai


Archive | 2009

Release of the AKARI-FIS Bright Source Catalogue β-1

Issei Yamamura; Sin'itirou Makiuti; Norio Ikeda; Y. Fukuda; Chisato Yamauchi; Sunao Hasegawa; Takao Nakagawa; H. Narumi; Hajime Baba; T. Takagi; Woong-Seob Jeong; Sang Hoon Oh; H. M. Lee; Richard S. Savage; N. Rahman; Matthew Thomson; S. J. Oliver; Elysandra Figueredo; S. Serjeant; G. J. White; C. P. Pearson; L. Wang; M. Rowan-Robinson; Do Kester; G. van der Wolk; Pieter Barthel; A. Salama; Carlos Alfageme; Pedro Garcia-Lario; Craig Stephenson

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Hyung Mok Lee

Seoul National University

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Woong-Seob Jeong

Korea University of Science and Technology

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Takao Nakagawa

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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Chisato Yamauchi

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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Sunao Hasegawa

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency

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Woong-Tae Kim

Seoul National University

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