<=== observer ===> "HSMITH",\ "Smith, Howard A.",\ "Laboratory for Astrophysics",\ "National Air and Space Museum",\ "Smithsonian Institution",\ "",\ "",\ "Washington DC 20560",\ "United States",\ "202 357 4932",\ "202 633 8174",\ "howard@wright.nasm.edu" <=== proposal ===> "IRBGALS",1,4,\ {"irregular galaxies", "starburst galaxies", "active galactic nuclei"},\ {"LWS consortium", "Barlow", "Emery", "Fischer", "Greenhouse", "Joubert",\ "Lorenzetti", "Rieu", "Malkan", "Saraceno", "Spinoglio", "Stacey", "White"} <=== title ===> ISO Spectroscopy of Infrared Bright Galaxies <=== abstract ===> SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT One the most exciting discoveries of the IRAS mission was that a significant number of galaxies emit a large fraction (up to 90%) of their energy in the far-IR. With luminosities exceeding 10^12 L(solar) these IR bright (IRB) galaxies may represent the initial dust enshrouded stages of quasar formation. IRBs are an important component of the extragalactic sky at all luminosities, and are the single most numerous class of objects in the local universe with luminosities in excess of 10^11 L(solar). What is the source of this prodigious far-IR energy? For some galaxies, it is clear the energy source is a tremendous burst of star formation. For others, the far-IR luminosity may be the outward ramification of an obscured active galactic nucleus (AGN). Many of these galaxies appear to be in collision or merger, suggesting that the far-IR emission is the cooling radiation of galaxy-galaxy collisions. We propose LWS spectroscopic measurements of a representative set of these IRBs to shed light on the nature of these objects, with special attention to the origins of the far-IR luminosity. Detailed studies of the line intensity ratios will (1) determine the physical conditions of the interstellar medium (ISM) in IRBs including abundances, hence the degree of processing of the ISM (2) reveal the spatial extent and age of any starburst (3) determine the hardness of the UV radiation field in these galaxies and (together with SWS GT Proposal observations) distinguish the origins of the field, be it AGN or starburst, and (4) determine the contribution from galaxy-galaxy collisions to the far-IR luminosity. By striving for the highest signal-to-noise thought possible, we will also be sensitive to the presence of low level emission of molecular species such as H20, CO, and OH. We will also use the SWS to observe [FeII] 26.0 um and [FeIII] 22.9 um line emission in a selected set of interacting galaxies with prominent circumnuclear starbursts. These observations are designed to constrain the ionization equilibrium of gas phase iron in the starbursts, and to explore the effect of supernova activity and star formation on [Fe II] and [Fe III] line emission in interaction induced starbursts. OBSERVATIONAL SUMMARY. Our scientific program requires detection of more than half a dozen bright fine-structure lines. Therefore, for observational efficiency, we will take full LWS01 scans on most of our objects. Our LWS01 program is separated into two primary sections: detailed mapping of a few nearby representative IRB galaxies, and LWS01 scans of the nuclei of a sample of ultraluminous, IR bright galaxies. Our first priority is full LWS grating scans of several representative IRB galaxies including objects known to be powered by starbursts (e.g. M82), objects thought to contain embedded AGNs (e.g. Arp 220) and colliding galaxy pairs (e.g. IC694/NGC 3690). Our Priority 1 also includes the ultraluminous "protogalaxy" IRAS1021+4724. These full scans and the full scan maps outlined below will provide a template by which we may compare the more distant or enigmatic sources. Our primary diagnostic lines include [CII] 158 um, [OI] 63 and 146 um, [NII] 122 um, [OIII] 52 and 88 um, and [NIII] 57 um (Table 1). The first three lines trace the physical conditions of the atomic and photodissociated molecular gas and together with photodissociation region models constrain the strength of the local UV radiation field. The [NII] line traces the diffuse ionized medium, and is used to discern the fraction of [CII] emission which arises from this low density ionized gas. The [OIII] pair are a somewhat higher density tracer for the ionized gas, and together with the [NIII] and [NII] lines, they trace the O/N abundance ratio, hence, age of the interstellar medium. The [NIII]/[NII] line intensity ratio is a sensitive indicator of the hardness of the UV radiation field when T(eff) ~ 33,000 K. This pair thus indicates the upper mass limit (or, age) of any purported starburst. Our [OIII] data, when combined with SWS GT observations of the [OIV] 26 um line will be a sensitive indicator of the very hard UV radiation fields associated with AGNs. Finally, clear signatures of the shocks associated with galaxy-galaxy collisions include a high [OI]/[CII] ratio, and detectable [SI] 56 um and/or CO (14-13) 186 um radiation. Naturally, our LWS01 spectra may also reveal unexpectedly strong lines from other important species. Of special interest would be strong H20 line emission - an indicator of warm dense molecular gas (shocked or UV exposed). For the Priority 1 objects, we set the integration time so that we would detect the weakest of our seven priority lines (likely [NIII]) with SNR > 7 (except in the case of the "protogalaxy" IRAS 1021+4724, where the signal-to-noise ratio achieved on the continuum is 2-10). Line flux estimates were based on typical observed KAO [CII] line-to-continuum ratios and standard models of the ISM. Our Priority 2 observations consist of LWS01 full scans of several ultraluminous galaxies. Priority 3 includes LWS02 line scans of the more distant ultraluminous IR bright galaxies: 2/1 galaxies in our primary diagnostic lines (Table 1), and 3/3 galaxies in the [OI] 63 um and [CII] 158 um lines (Table 2). It also includes large scale, full LWS01 mapping (~25 points) of the nearby IRBs M82 and NGC 253. For an autumn launch we plan a large scale full LWS01 map of NGC 4945 - a nearby bright "post-starburst" galaxy. For these maps we adjusted the integration time so as to ensure a 50 sigma detection of the weakest line ([NII]) at the nucleus. Therefore we will obtain 5 sigma detections of the 10% contours in our maps. For a spring launch, a Fabry-Perot LWS03 scan of NGC 253 around the H20 432-423 line at 121.721 um, including the [NII] 121.9 um line, will be obtained. Additionally, we will obtain SWS02 [Fe II] and [Fe III] line measurements of a selected set of interacting galaxies. All of our LWS observations listed above contain an "off" point to subtract weak foreground (Galactic) emission. For long integrations on low visibility objects, the observations were divided into two AOTs (IRAS 1021+4727/IRAS1211+0305). Follow up time for Fabry-Perot velocity resolved observations of any very strong diagnostic lines will be taken from priority 3 program sources in this or other parts of the LWS Consortium extragalactic program. Additional details can be found in the LWS Elmau Document: "ISO:LWS Guaranteed Time Proposals", LWS/90/P/SCI/135.00, November 1990. Table 1* => [CII] 157.7 [OI] 63.2, 145.5 [NII] 121.9 [OIII] 51.8, 88.3 [NIII] 57.3 * IRAS 1434-1447 and IRAS 2249-1808 (LWS02 AOT) Table 2** => [CII] 157.7 [OI] 63.2 ** IRAS 0759+6508, IRAS 1207-0444, IRAS 1345+1232, IRAS 1207-0444, VIIZw31 (LWS02 AOT) Table 3 => [FeII]25.99,[FeIII]22.9 (SWS02 AOT) <=== scientific_justification ===> Time distribution for Autumn launch: Team top 40% second 30% last 30% Total LWS: 44928 35556 38121 118605 total: 44928 35556 38121 118605 Time distribution for Spring launch: Team top 40% second 30% last 30% Total LWS: 60836 35756 39825 136417 total: 60836 35756 39825 136417 <=== autumn_launch_targets ===> 01, "LWS01", 1., "N", "M 82 ", 09.86233, +69.91528, 1950,0, 0, 884, 0 02, "LWS01", 1., "N", "ARP 220 ", 15.54633, +23.66861, 1950,0, 0, 1912, 0 03, "LWS01", 1., "N", "NGC 253 ", 00.75158, -25.56028, 1950,0, 0, 884, 0 04, "LWS01", 1., "N", "NGC 3690 ", 12.90161, +57.14167, 1950,0, 0, 1912, 0 05, "LWS01", 1., "N", "NGC 4945 ", 13.04233, -49.20139, 1950,0, 0, 884, 0 06, "LWS01", 1., "N", "MRK 231 ", 12.90161, +57.23796, 1950,0, 0, 6048, 0 07, "LWS01", 1., "N", "NGC 4038/4039", 11.98883, -18.60292, 1950,0, 0, 3940, 0 08, "LWS01", 1., "N", "NGC 6240 ", 16.84097, +02.48250, 1950,0, 0, 6048, 0 09, "LWS01", 1., "N", "CENTAURUS A ", 13.37544, -42.76000, 1950,0, 0, 1608, 0 10, "LWS01", 1., "N", "IRAS1021+4724", 10.35831, +47.42267, 1950,0, 0, 10404, 0 11, "LWS01", 1., "N", "IRAS1021+4724", 10.35831, +47.42267, 1950,0, 0, 10404, 0 12, "LWS01", 2., "N", "IRAS1211+0305", 12.18714, +03.08750, 1950,0, 0, 17088, 0 13, "LWS01", 2., "N", "IRAS1525+3609", 15.41783, +36.14944, 1950,0, 0, 18468, 0 14, "LWS01", 3., "N", "MAFFEI 2 ", 02.63578, +59.38917, 1950,0, 0, 1608, 0 15, "LWS01", 3., "N", "M 82 map ", 09.86233, +69.91528, 1950,0, 0, 4204, 0 16, "LWS01", 3., "N", "NGC 253 map ", 00.75158, -25.56028, 1950,0, 0, 3851, 0 17, "LWS01", 3., "N", "NGC 4945 map ", 13.04233, -49.20139, 1950,0, 0, 4227, 0 18, "LWS02", 3., "N", "IRAS1434-1447", 14.58119, -14.78944, 1950,0, 0, 6120, 0 19, "LWS02", 3., "N", "IRAS2249-1808", 22.82007, -18.14000, 1950,0, 0, 10928, 0 20, "LWS02", 3., "N", "IRAS1345+1232", 13.75175, +12.53861, 1950,0, 0, 1288, 0 21, "LWS02", 3., "N", "IRAS1207-0444", 12.11983, -04.74222, 1950,0, 0, 984, 0 22, "LWS02", 3., "N", "IRAS1520+3342", 15.34403, +33.70417, 1950,0, 0, 1530, 0 23, "SWS02", 3., "N", "UGC 00966 ", 01.36642, +03.53111, 1950,0, 0, 333, 0 24, "SWS02", 3., "N", "UGC 11391 ", 19.00089, +40.67306, 1950,0, 0, 648, 0 25, "SWS02", 3., "N", "NGC 7592 ", 23.26317, -04.68917, 1950,0, 0, 648, 0 26, "SWS02", 3., "N", "UGC 12699 ", 23.56131, +01.87806, 1950,0, 0, 552, 0 27, "SWS02", 3., "N", "ARP 256 ", 00.27183, -10.65333, 1950,0, 0, 552, 0 28, "SWS02", 3., "N", "UGC 01720 ", 02.11271, +04.93917, 1950,0, 0, 648, 0 <=== spring_launch_targets ===> 01, "LWS01", 1., "N", "M 82 ", 09.86233, +69.91528, 1950,0, 0, 884, 0 02, "LWS01", 1., "N", "NGC 253 ", 00.75158, -25.56028, 1950,0, 0, 884, 0 03, "LWS01", 1., "N", "NGC 3690 ", 12.90161, +57.14167, 1950,0, 0, 1912, 0 04, "LWS01", 1., "N", "MRK 273 ", 13.71428, +56.13750, 1950,0, 0, 5336, 0 05, "LWS01", 1., "N", "NGC 4038/4039", 11.98883, -18.60292, 1950,0, 0, 3940, 0 06, "LWS01", 1., "N", "MRK 231 ", 12.90161, +57.23796, 1950,0, 0, 6048, 0 07, "LWS01", 1., "N", "MAFFEI 2 ", 02.63578, +59.38917, 1950,0, 0, 1608, 0 08, "LWS01", 1., "N", "IRAS0518-2524", 05.31636, -25.41333, 1950,0, 0, 7428, 0 09, "LWS01", 1., "N", "UGC 05101 ", 09.53386, +61.57972, 1950,0, 0, 10188, 0 10, "LWS01", 1., "N", "IRAS1021+4724", 10.35831, +47.42267, 1950,0, 0, 22608, 0 11, "LWS01", 2., "N", "IRAS1211+0305", 12.18714, +03.08750, 1950,0, 0, 8644, 0 12, "LWS01", 2., "N", "IRAS1211+0305", 12.18714, +03.08750, 1950,0, 0, 8644, 0 13, "LWS01", 2., "N", "IRAS0857+3915", 08.95350, +39.26139, 1950,0, 0, 18468, 0 14, "LWS01", 3., "N", "M 82 map ", 09.86233, +69.91528, 1950,0, 0, 4204, 0 15, "LWS01", 3., "N", "NGC 253 map ", 00.75158, -25.56028, 1950,0, 0, 3851, 0 16, "LWS02", 3., "N", "IRAS2249-1808", 22.82007, -18.14000, 1950,0, 0, 10928, 0 17, "LWS02", 3., "N", "IRAS0759+6508", 07.99878, +65.13833, 1950,0, 0, 1458, 0 18, "LWS02", 3., "N", "IRAS1207-0444", 12.11983, -04.74222, 1950,0, 0, 984, 0 19, "LWS02", 3., "N", "VIIZw31 ", 05.13819, +79.61110, 1950,0, 0, 8487, 0 20, "SWS02", 3., "N", "UGC 00966 ", 01.36642, +03.53111, 1950,0, 0, 333, 0 21, "SWS02", 3., "N", "UGC 11391 ", 19.00089, +40.67306, 1950,0, 0, 648, 0 22, "SWS02", 3., "N", "NGC 7592 ", 23.26317, -04.68917, 1950,0, 0, 648, 0 23, "SWS02", 3., "N", "UGC 12699 ", 23.56131, +01.87806, 1950,0, 0, 552, 0 24, "SWS02", 3., "N", "ARP 256 ", 00.27183, -10.65333, 1950,0, 0, 552, 0 25, "SWS02", 3., "N", "UGC 01720 ", 02.11271, +04.93917, 1950,0, 0, 648, 0 26, "LWS03", 3., "N", "NGC 253 ", 00.75158, -25.56028, 1950,0, 0, 6532, 0