Bibcode
Vladilo, G.; King, D. L.; de Boer, K. S.; Lipman, K.; Walton, N. A.; Moritz, P.; Centurion, M.
Referencia bibliográfica
Astronomy and Astrophysics, v.300, p.881
Fecha de publicación:
8
1995
Revista
Número de citas
14
Número de citas referidas
14
Descripción
We present spectroscopic observations of supernova 1994D in NGC 4526, an
S0_3_ galaxy in the Virgo cluster 15Mpc distant. The datasets consist of
the interstellar Ca II and Na I lines towards the supernova at high
spectral resolution (FWHM 6km/s), H α and [N II] observations at
lower resolution (FWHM 33km/s) of the nucleus of NGC 4526 and the
supernova, obtained with the William Herschel Telescope at La Palma, and
21cm spectra obtained with the 100m Effelsberg Radiotelescope in the
field of NGC 4526. The velocity of the gas in NGC 4526 determined from
our H α spectra is +625km/s at the centre (systemic velocity) and
+880km/s at the supernova position. Our value of the systemic velocity
is higher than the value of +450km/s frequently quoted in the
literature. In our high resolution spectra we detect Ca II and Na I
absorption at +714km/s which is produced in interstellar gas in NGC
4526. To our knowledge this is the first detection of interstellar
absorption originating in a galaxy of early morphological type. The
ratio N(Na^0^)/N(Ca^+^)=~4 suggests an origin in cold gas at rest
velocity relative to its galactic environment. The lack of multiple
components indicates a relatively simple structure of the interstellar
medium in the inner region of NGC 4526, at least in the particular line
of sight to the supernova at the border of the nuclear ring of dust. We
detect multi-component Ca II and Na I absorption lines in the range from
+204 to +254km/s which originate in a complex of High Velocity Clouds
(HVCs) located at a distance <<1Mpc, in the surroundings of the
Milky Way. This rare detection of HVCs in absorption enables the study
of the properties of the gas using the Ca^+^ and Na^0^ column densities,
combined with the H^0^ column density taken from the literature at
+215km/s in the same line of sight. We find N(Na^0^)/N(Ca^+^)=0.1-0.3,
in our Galaxy the signature of high velocity gas. The Ca^+^/H^0^ and
Na^0^/H^0^ column density ratios are extremely high compared to Milky
Way interstellar values; the gas appears to have near solar abundances,
very low dust content, and a diluted ultraviolet radiation field. This
is entirely consistent with Galactic fountain models, in which hot gas
is expelled into the outer halo, and subsequently cools. At -29km/s, we
find weak Ca II absorption and weak H I emission. This component has
properties similar to those of the warm gas around the Sun and may
originate in gas infalling onto the Galactic disk, perhaps associated
with the extended complexes of Galactic halo gas at intermediate
negative velocities which are present in the northern Galactic
hemisphere. Finally, close to rest velocity, we find both warm and cold
gas located beyond 65pc, probably associated with high latitude gas at
the border of Loop I. The total reddening of the supernova, estimated
using the standard Milky Way gas-to-dust ratio, is E(B-V)=~0.05.