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Front Cover
View of the Orion nebula, the closest region of massive star forming region, in the 12CO(2-1) emission, that traces the distribution of the cold (10-100 K) molecular gas. The map was obtained using HERA at the 30-meter telescope and has spatial resolution of 12” (or 0.025 pc). The dynamics of the molecular gas are shown in blue (for the emission with velocities between –5 and 8 km/s) and in red (for velocities between 12 and 25 km/s). The map in green shows the emission from warm (100 to 1000 K) dust and gas at the surface of the clouds, traced at 8 microns by the Midcourse Space Experiment satellite.
(O. Berné et al. 2010)
IRAM Annual Report 2010
The Institut de Radioastronomie Millimétrique (IRAM) is a multi-national scientific institute covering all aspects of radio astronomy at millimeter wavelengths: the operation of two high-altitude observatories – a 30-meter diameter telescope on Pico Veleta in the Sierra Nevada (southern Spain), and an interferometer of six 15 meter diameter telescopes on the Plateau de Bure in the French Alps – the development of telescopes and instrumentation, radio astronomical observations and their interpretation.
IRAM was founded in 1979 by two national research organizations: the CNRS and the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft – the Spanish Instituto Geográfico Nacional, initially an associate member, became a full member in 1990.
The technical and scientific staff of IRAM develops instrumentation and software for the specific needs of millimeter radioastronomy and for the benefit of the astronomical community. IRAM’s laboratories also supply devices to several European partners, including for the ALMA project.
IRAM’s scientists conduct forefront research in several domains of astrophysics, from nearby star-forming regions to objects at cosmological distances.
IRAM Partner Organizations:Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) – Paris, FranceMax-Planck-Gesellschaft (MPG) – München, DeutschlandInstituto Geografico Nacional (IGN) – Madrid, España
IRAM Addresses:
Institut de Radioastronomie Millimétrique300 rue de la piscine,Saint-Martin d’HèresF-38406 FranceTel: +33 [0]4 76 82 49 00Fax: +33 [0]4 76 51 59 38info@iram.fr www.iram.fr
Observatoire du Plateau de BureSaint-Etienne-en-DévoluyF-05250 FranceTel: +33 [0]4 92 52 53 60 Fax: +33 [0]4 92 52 53 61
Instituto de Radioastronomía MilimétricaAvenida Divina Pastora 7, Local 20,E-18012 Granada, EspañaTel: +34 958 80 54 54Fax: +34 958 22 23 63info@iram.es
Observatorio Radioastronómico de Pico VeletaSierra Nevada,Granada, EspañaTel: +34 958 48 20 02Fax: +34 958 48 11 49
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30-meter diameter telescope, Pico Veleta
6 x 15-meter interferometer, Plateau de Bure
1Annual report 2010
IRAM Annual Report 2010
Edited by Pierre Cox and Karin Zacher
With contributions from Michael Bremer, Frédéric Gueth, Bastien Lefranc, Roberto Neri, Laurent Palaric, Alain Perrigouard, Jérôme Pety, Karl-Friedrich Schuster, Marc Torres
Pico Veleta texts byCarsten Kramer with contributions from Walter Brunswig, Dave John, Javier Lobato, Santiago Navarro, Gabriel Paubert, Juan Peñalver, Salvador Sánchez, Clemens Thum, Hans Ungerechts, Helmut Wiesemeyer
3Annual report 2010
Contents
Introduction 5
Highlights of research with the IRAM telescopes in 2010 7
The Observatories 16
The 30-meter telescope 16
Plateau de Bure Interferometer 21
Grenoble Headquarters 27
SIS group 27
Frontend group 28
Backend group 32
Mechanical group 33
IRAM ARC node 34
Computer group 35
Science software activities 36
Public relations 37
Personnel and Finances 38
Income and expenditure 2010 – 2010 39
Annexes 40
Annex I - Telescope schedules 40
Annex II – Publications in 2010 48
Annex III – IRAM executive council and committee members 62
5Annual report 2010
In the year 2010, both IRAM facilities underwent major enhancements. At the Plateau de Bure inter fer ometer, the refurbishment of all antennas with new precision-machined aluminum panels was successfully completed. Today the array is composed of six antennas with excellent surface accuracies of order 40 microns that enable obser-va tion with maximum efficiency at the highest available frequencies. This refurbishment is also key in preparing the interferometer for the NOEMA project (the greater stability of the aluminum panels diminishing the maintenance time). With their continuous support for this refurbishment, the IRAM Partners have allowed to maintain the observatory at a word-leading level and ensure the long-term future of the interferometer. Another important change that occurred in 2010 was the upgrade of the LO reference system from DRO to YIG-based oscillators, which has significantly improved the phase noise. Finally, all the antennas were equipped with 345 GHz receivers that include electronically tunable 1st Local Oscillators and modified versions of the 2SB mixers developed for the ALMA Band 7, providing excellent noise performance and a 4 GHz IF bandwidth for each polarization. First results obtained using these new receivers have demonstrated the potential of the Plateau de Bure interferometer at high frequencies, yielding cutting-edge scientific results, including the highest angular resolution observation (0.2”) yet achieved at Bure. Some of these results are described in this report.
At the 30-meter telescope, new Fourier Transform spectrometers were installed at the end of 2010 and upgrades are planned for a 32 GHz instantaneous bandwidth. In the laboratory further progress has been achieved in broadband receiver technology with a recent spectacular development of a sideband-separating mixer for the EMIR Band 3 that will extend the frequency range (200-280 GHz) and double the continuum sensitivity. This will lead the way to increased sensitivities, observing speed and flexibility, and consolidate the leading role of the 30-meter telescope for wideband spectral millimeter surveys and studies. During the summer of 2010, a prototype HEMT receiver operating at 3 mm was successfully tested at the 30-meter telescope, showing very good performance in both noise and stability, and this receiver will serve as a test platform for ongoing HEMT amplifier developments.
A major, high-risk action was undertaken in September 2010 at the 30-meter telescope with the installation of two new gearboxes (Azimuth and Elevation) to replace the old ones that showed excessive vibrations and clear signs of ageing. After careful inspection, it was decided to replace the four remaining gearboxes as well. This action will guarantee that the 30-meter telescope will continue to operate in an optimum way and remain the best possible single-dish telescope for millimeter observations.
Continuing the trends seen in recent years, the number of proposals that are submitted continues to increase both at the 30-meter telescope and the Plateau de Bure interferometer. The number of proposals originating from countries outside of the IRAM Partner’s countries remains at a level of about 30% of the observing time. This continuous increase in proposals is translated in the large number of papers that are published based on or using IRAM data, that amount in 2010 to about 150 in total. It should be noted that the total number of papers that includes IRAM personnel is exceptionally high in 2010 as a large number of papers are based on data obtained with the Herschel satellite, a project in which IRAM has been involved at various levels. As in previous years, the topics cover the entire field of modern astronomy, spanning the range from solar system studies to observations of the first objects that were formed in the universe, from the search of new complex or rare molecules to understanding the processes of star formation, from constraining the properties of the gas and dust in proto-planetary disks to detailed studies of the molecular gas in nearby galaxies. The availability of new instruments, the increase in the characteristics of the back-ends and the front-ends and the refurbishments at both facilities each time have opened up new possibilities to study sources that are fainter, probe more efficiently than before the chemical complexity of celestial objects or increase the speed by which studies can be done therefore enabling large scale and more ambitious programs to be conducted.
Examples of scientific highlights are described in this annual report, and include, for instance, the highest angular resolution map yet obtained at the Plateau de Bure interferometer of a nearby proto-planetary disk, the detection of an emission line of water vapor
Introduction
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in a high-redshift, strongly lensed source that was uncovered in the H-ATLAS deep survey of Herschel. Another outstanding example is the detection of a new type of instability in the interstellar medium that is the result of the interaction of massive stars with the surrounding molecular gas.
Further enhancements are planned at both IRAM tele scopes and all the technical groups have continued their active work to increase the performances of the facilities and develop new instruments. In particular, the developments for a future heterodyne array receiver for the 30-meter telescope are actively pursued and the design of a 5x5 multibeam receiver for the 3 mm band is in good progress. The backend group is studying a new generation (the 5th) correlator, including pioneering work on multi-bit 8 GHz samplers that will eventually lead to a flexible correlator as foreseen for NOEMA. In view of replacing the MAMBO bolometer camera at the 30-meter telescope, further successful observing tests were done with two bolometer cameras. One, NIKA, is based on Kinetic Inductance Detectors (KID) and build by a consortium of institutes led by the Institut Néel (Grenoble) with a strong implication of IRAM. The recent observing tests provided further very encouraging results in both of the 2 and 1 mm windows. Further improve-ments will be made and new observations are planned in the course of 2011. Another bolometer camera, GISMO, based on TES technology and build by the Goddard group at NASA, operates in the 2mm window. This camera was recently tested again at the 30-meter telescope with results that are
so encouraging and stable that it could be made available to the community for general use. These successful observing tests provide a useful basis for the building of a new generation large field of view bolometer camera for the 30-meter telescope.
Concerning the ALMA Band 7 production, its pace is fully sustained. A milestone was reached at the end of 2010 when half of the 65 (and 8 spares) receivers, with state-of-the-art performances, were delivered to and accepted by the ALMA project. The production during the year 2010 amounted to nineteen receivers. The project should normally come to completion at the end of 2012.
Planning the future of IRAM, the activity around the NOEMA project gained further momentum during 2010. In July 2010, an international Visiting Committee, chaired by Robert Wilson (Center for Astrophysics), reviewed the activities of IRAM and gave strong support for the NOEMA project. The report of the Visiting Committee provided the basis for detailed discussions at the Partners’ level to explore how to best implement and build the NOEMA project in a timely fashion. The Partners agreed to make the necessary resources available to start the project in a Phase 1 that will include the construction of a set of 4 antennas with receivers and a new correlator.
The year 2010 was again a remarkable year with many major achievements at both IRAM facilities: projects were successfully completed, while others were started or are under development; many out-standing scientific results that are based on IRAM data have been published, including large and ambitious observing programs that have a high impact and visibility; the ongoing improvements that occur at all levels to keep the instrumentation up to date and plan for the future, gradually trans-form the IRAM observatories into more efficient, versatile and outstanding facilities; last but not least, the positive decisions which were made by the IRAM Partners to expand the Plateau de Bure interferometer and transform it, in the next coming years, into the Northern Extended Millimeter Array, will have a profound and positive impact on the future of IRAM and its role in the ALMA era.
Three members of the IRAM Visiting Committee shown at their visit to the Plateau de Bure interferometer in July 2009. Standing in front of the recently installed WideX correlator are, from left to right: Ewine F. van Dishoeck (Leiden Observatory, NL), Robert W. Wilson (CfA, Cambridge, USA – Chair of the Visiting Committee) and Catherine Cesarky (CEA, France). The other members of the Visiting Committee were: Christopher McKee (University of Berkeley, USA) and Robert C. Kennicutt, Jr (Oxford University, UK).
7Annual report 2010
Highlights of research with the IRAM telescopes in 2010
HerscHel Gravitational lenses: iraM follow-up studies
Gravitational lensed sources have played an important role in infrared and sub-millimetre studies of high-redshift galaxies and active galactic nuclei (AGN) since the discovery of FSC10214+4724 by the IRAS satellite (Rowan-Robinson et al. 1991). Similar sources (including the Cloverleaf ) triggered the sub-millimetre studies of galaxies in the early universe and allowed pioneering detections of the properties of these systems through observations of the emission of the dust continuum and the molecular lines. In this new field, the IRAM facilities played a key role from the early 1990’s onward. The results demonstrated the usefulness of strong gravitational magnification in the investigation of the detailed properties of distant galaxies.
This observational field has recently received a new boost from the results released from the wide-field surveys done with the Herschel Space Observatory – in particular, the H-ATLAS and HerMES projects that will cover 570 and 70 square-degrees, respectively (Eales et al. 2010; Oliver et al. 2010). These surveys have already increased the area of sub-millimetre surveys by factors of hundreds compared to the widest surveys that were previously available. One may expect that the number of strongly lensed sources will be multiplied by a similarly large factor. This expectation is confirmed by the first analysis and study of the strongest sources, which were uncovered so far in H-ATLAS, and were shown to be at high redshifts, i.e. 1.5<z<3 (Negrello et al. 2010). This result triggered a wealth of follow-up observations at all wavelengths to further
characterize the nature of these high-z sources as well as the properties of the lensing galaxies.
Prominent amongst these observations are those done at sub/millimetre wavelengths. The strength of the sources detected by Herschel together with recent technological developments at the sub-millimetre facilities has opened a new area. In particular, the redshift of these sources, which are enshrouded in dust, can now directly be determined from the measurement of a series of CO lines. To date the distances to more than 10 sources uncovered in the Herschel deep-field surveys have been measured using this technique, at the CSO and now APEX (with ZSpec), the GBT (with Zspectrometer), CARMA and the Plateau de Bure interferometer (with the newly installed correlator, WideX). As an example, the redshift of the most prominent, highest redshift source found so far (ID.141) was ‘blindly’ determined at the Plateau de Bure interferometer, yielding a redshift z=4.24 (Cox et al. 2011). The detection of CO lines using the Plateau de Bure interferometer enabled robust redshift determination of five other Herschel lensed sources in the redshift range 2<z<3 (Negrello et al. 2010; Riechers et al. 2011). The determination of the redshift allows further searches to be performed, especially of weaker lines, to probe the physical conditions and the chemistry of the molecular gas in these systems.
A recent example of a follow-up study is that of the lensed sub-millimetre galaxy LHSW-01 at z=2.957, one of the strongest HerMES sources found so far, which was mapped in the 5-4 transition of CO using the Plateau de Bure interferometer. The observations spatially resolve the molecular gas and the dust continuum emissions into four lensed images with
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a maximum separation of 9”, revealing the internal gas dynamics in this system.
Another example is the detection of water in the 2
02−1
11 transition of para-H₂O in the source H-ATLAS
ID.17b (z=2.3052), using the band 4 receiver at the Plateau de Bure interferometer (Omont et al. 2011) - confirming a previous, tentative detection done at the CSO (Lupu et al. 2011). The intrinsic water line luminosity in ID.17b is comparable to that of the local ultra-luminous starburst galaxy Mrk231 and the excitation of the H₂O levels are probably similar in both objects. This detection shows that some of the Herschel lenses can harbour a rich chemistry that remains to be studied in the future with ALMA and NOEMA.
The examples of these recent studies provide us with a first glimpse of what can be expected in the future from this unique sample of hundreds of Herschel high-z lensed galaxies: today with Plateau de Bure, soon in the frame of the ALMA Early Science, and later with the fully operational ALMA and NOEMA. The enhanced capabilities of the latter facilities will allow countless extensions for each of the topics mentioned above, including: blind CO redshift determination and search for objects at the highest redshifts; high-resolution imaging and dynamics of strongly lensed galaxies; comprehensive studies of dark matter in high-z deflectors; high sensitivity molecular (and atomic) spectroscopy; molecular gas in high-z Active Galactic Nuclei; search and study of exceptional, high-z lensed systems: highest
magnifications; double object lensing by the same deflector; radio-loud sources; or high-z masers.
MM18423+5938: an extreMely BriGHt Galaxy in tHe early universe
In the course of a program designed to search for debris left by the formation of planets around nearby stars, Lestrade and collaborators serendipitously discovered an extremely bright source, using MAMBO at the 30-meter telescope. Subsequent follow-up spectroscopic observations showed that the source MM18423+5938 was a galaxy at a redshift of z=3.93 undergoing vigorous, dust-enshrouded star formation activity. Bright, star-forming submillimeter galaxies (SMGs) trace the most massive galaxies assembled during an active phase of galaxy formation, which peaked at a redshift around ~2.5. Their star formation rate can be prodigious (up to 1000 M per year) and the underlying starburst activity is believed to result from major merger events.
The apparent infrared luminosity of MM18423+5938 is estimated to be 4.8 1014 L and the inferred apparent star formation rate is 8.3 104 M per year, about 50 times higher than for the most prolific star-forming galaxies known. The molecular hydrogen gas (H2) fueling star formation was estimated to be between 2.1011 and 11.1011 M, which is at least as large as in the most massive galaxies known but which are older and have had more time to build up their masses. All these values clearly point to gravitational amplification.
To measure the redshift of MM18423+5938, Lestrade et al. used EMIR, the multi-band heterodyne receiver installed in 2010 at the 30-meter telescope. Its 7.4 GHz wide, dual linear polarization bandwidth was used to search for emission lines of carbon monoxide. Several lines were detected which enabled a robust determination of the redshift of this source. The 12CO line excitation was found to be moderate, suggesting that there is no strong heating by a central AGN and that the starburst activity must be moderate.
The galaxy MM18423+5938 must be amplified by a intervening massive and closely aligned foreground galaxy. High angular resolution observations using interferometers at millimeter and radio wavelengths, which should reveal the multiple mirror images of MM18423+5938, are currently underway. These observations will help to constrain the lensing and to study at high resolution the morphology and
Spectrum of the water emission in the Herschel source H-ATLAS ID.17b at z=2.3. The line corresponds to the para H₂O 2₀₂ -1₁₁ emission line redshifted at 299 GHz. It was obtained at the Plateau de Bure interferometer using the newly installed band 4 receiver.
From Omont et al. 2011. A&A, 530, L3
Map of the molecular gas in the 5-4 transition of CO (shown as contours) and the dust emission at 890 microns (color image) towards the lensed galaxy HLSW-01 at z=2.95. The line data were obtained using the Plateau de Bure interferometer and the dust continuum was measured with the SubMillimeter Array (SMA) in Hawaii. The four spots of the lensed image are clearly seen with a maximum separation of ~9”, revealing the internal gas dynamics in this system.
From Riechers et al. 2011, ApJ, 733, L12
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the properties of the molecular gas where the star formation activity takes place. These data will also be useful to further understand how galaxies built up their masses and assembled their stellar populations early in cosmic time.
Quasar feedBack disclosed By Giant Molecular outflows
In the standard scenario for galaxy evolution, young star-forming galaxies transform into red bulge-dominated spheroids, where star formation has been quenched. To explain this transformation, a strong negative feedback generated by accretion onto a central super-massive black hole is often invoked. The depletion of gas resulting from quasar-driven outflows should eventually stop star-formation across the host galaxy and lead the black hole to “suicide” by starvation. Direct observational evidence for a major quasar feedback onto the host galaxy is still missing, because outflows previously observed in quasars are generally associated with the ionized component of the gas, which only accounts for a minor fraction of the total gas content, and typically occurs in the central, compact regions (on ~pc scales).
To investigate whether the fast outflows observed in the nearby active galactic nucleus (AGN) Mrk231 in the atomic gas phase are also affecting the molecular gas phase, Feruglio and collaborators used the Plateau de Bure interferometer to perform a deep integration in the ¹²CO(1-0) emission line. Thanks to the correlator WideX, they succeeded in detecting the low surface-brightness wings of the line, with velocities of up to 750 km/s that are spatially resolved on a 1kpc scale. Despite several previous observations of CO in Mrk231, these wings were never detected before, on one hand because of insufficient frequency band coverage, on the other because of the intrinsic low surface brightness of the wings (the flux of the broad component is ~1/5 flux of the narrow core). Feruglio et al. suggest that the broad wings trace a giant molecular outflow of about 700 M /yr, about 3-4 times larger than the ongoing star-formation rate observed in the host galaxy.
The authors expect that the wind will expel the cold gas reservoir in about 10⁷ yr and halt the star-formation activity on the same timescale. The inferred kinetic energy in the molecular outflow is ~10⁴⁴ erg/s, corresponding to a few percent of the AGN bolometric luminosity, which is very close to the fraction expected by models ascribing quasar
feedback to highly supersonic shocks generated by radiatively accelerated nuclear winds. In contrast, the contribution by supernovae associated with the starburst fall short by several orders of magnitude to account for the kinetic energy observed in the outflow. The direct observational evidence for quasar feedback provides solid support to the scenarios ascribing the observed properties of local massive galaxies to quasar-induced large-scale winds.
EMIR spectra of the (4-3), (6-5), and (7-6) transitions of ¹²CO and of the two CI lines revealing the presence of a large gas reservoir at a redshift of 3.9296. The vertical scale is the main beam temperature (K).
From Lestrade et al. 2010, A7A 522, L4
Left: HST/WFPC2 image of Mrk231. Right: The broad line emission profile detected in 12CO(1-0)with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer from the inner 1kpc.
From Feruglio et al. 2010, A7A, 518, L155
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cold Molecular Gas in tHe inner two kiloparsecs of nGc 4151
NGC4151 is one the best studied nearby active galaxies and is sometimes referred to as the proto-typical Seyfert 1. Although it has been extensively observed at all wavelengths and on various spatial scales, information was still missing on the cold gas in between the leading side of the large scale stellar bar (at about 1 kpc from the nucleus) and the putative torus observed in HI absorption on parsec scales.
Using the Plateau de Bure interferometer, Dumas and collaborators obtained the first spatially resolved spectroscopic imaging observations of the ¹²CO(1-0) line emission in the central 2.5kpc of NGC4151. The 3mm continuum emission was found to arise from the location of the active nucleus with a flux of 14mJy and appears to be unresolved at an angular scale of about 2.8” (or 180pc). The total cold molecular gas mass detected is 2,107 Msun. Most of the CO is distributed along two curved features, about 1 kpc north and south of the active nucleus and coincident with the circum-nuclear dust ring. The gas kinematics within these arcs is consistent with motions due to the large-scale stellar bar, derived from neutral hydrogen observations. Two
additional CO clumps showing non-circular motions are detected: one associated with the southern feature and the other lying at about 600pc north of the nucleus. Finally, and very surprisingly, no cold molecular gas is detected in the central 300pc, where abundant near-infrared H₂ line emission is present. This suggests that either the H₂ line emission is not a good indicator of cold gas in NGC4151, or that the relatively low column density in this X-ray dominated region leads to a low CO abundance relative to H₂. The upper limit of the cold molecular gas mass from the CO line in the central 300pc is 10⁵ M, which is sufficient to support the AGN activity at its current levels for 10⁷ yrs, the typical lifetime of nuclear activity.
cold Gass - an iraM leGacy dataBase for tHe Gass survey
One of the most fascinating aspects of galaxies in the local universe is the complex system of cor re la-tions between their global physical properties. These correlations form the basis of the so-called scaling laws, which are important because they provide quantitative means to understand the physics of galaxies, their formation and their evolutionary his-tory. Scaling laws have been proposed for a variety of properties and systems, but only very few exist that describe how the global cold gas properties correlate with other global physical properties of galaxies. To shed new light on how the cold gas, atomic gas and stars relate to each other, Kauffmann and Kramer initiated with their collaborators the COLD GASS observational project.
COLD GASS is an international collaboration and an ongoing 30-meter telescope Legacy Survey using EMIR, that is aimed at measuring the amount of cold gas through the ¹²CO J=1-0 emission line in a statistically representative sample of massive (M*>10¹⁰ M) galaxies in the local Universe (0.025<z<0.05). The sample, which covers a wide range of Hubble types from star-forming spirals to red-and-dead ellipticals and two orders of mag-ni tude in luminosity (0.1-10 L*), was designed to establish an unbiased reference multi-wavelength database from radio to near UV of 350 galaxies within the area of overlap of the SDSS spectroscopic survey, the ALFALFA survey, and the GALEX Medium Imaging Survey.
The figure shown herewith displays first results of the survey. The left-hand panel shows the relation between the molecular gas fraction M(H₂)/M* and the NUV-r color of a sample of 222 galaxies. It appears that the empirical threshold of NUV-r=5
Moment maps of the ¹²CO (1-0) line emission in NGC 4151: integrated intensity (top), velocity field (middle), and velocity dispersion (bottom). The cross marks the location of the active galactic nucleus.
From Dumas et al. 2010, ApJ, 721, 911
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marks an abrupt transition from the active gas-rich star forming galaxy population to a more passive population characterized by molecular gas fractions lower than 0.015.
The date displayed in the right panel indicates that the mean molecular gas depletion time scale increases by a factor of 6 across the mass range sampled by the NUV-r<5 galaxies of the COLD GASS survey, and that this variation correlates strongly with specific star formation rate, NUV-r color and stellar mass. Previous surveys were unable to observe this variation because of the limited statistical range of their samples. While it is known that gas depletion times are significantly shorter in starburst galaxies and mergers of the local Universe, the importance of these results is two-fold. First, they produce compelling evidence that the gas depletion timescales also varies within the population of “normal” star-forming galaxies, and, second, these results quantify this variation as a function of a range of fundamental parameters.
a new instaBility revealed in tHe orion Molecular cloud
Massive stars influence their immediate surrounding and have profound impacts on their parental mole-cular clouds, fragmenting, compressing and dis rup-ting them. Hydrodynamical instabilities are thought to play a fundamental role in these processes although identifying them remains difficult. The Orion nebula is the closest-by example of a region forming massive stars (at a distance of 414 pc) and has therefore been a choice laboratory for exploring the influence of massive stars on the surrounding molecular gas. Recently, Berné and collaborators have obtained a new complete map of the Orion nebula in ¹²CO(2-1) using HERA at the 30-meter telescope with a spatial resolution of 12” (0.025 pc) and a spectral resolution of 0.4 km.s-¹.The spatial
coverage and angular resolution of this map allows a comparison of the distribution and the dynamics of the molecular gas with maps at other wavelengths with comparable spatial coverage and resolution as shown in the accompanying figure.
In the southwest region of the nebula, Berné et al. reported the presence of a series of regular waves (ripples) enshrouding an elongated molecular cloud and displaying strong velocity gradients. This structure follows closely (with clear stratifications) similar features that are traced in H₂ and in the emis sion features of very small grains (PAHs). From a careful analysis of the relative distribution of these various tracers, the authors conclude that this remarkable periodic structure and its velocity field are consistent with hydrodynamical instabilities that result from the interaction of high-velocity plasma/gas, produced by massive stars, with the dense mole cular gas. The characteristics of the structure are consistent with a Kelvin-Helmholtz instability that arises during the expansion of the nebula as gas heated and ionized by massive stars is blown over pre-existing molecular gas.
fraGMentation and Mass seGreGation in cyGnus x
Massive dense cores (MDCs) are the high-mass equivalent of the so-called dense cores in nearby star-forming regions. With typical sizes of 0.1 pc, they could form either a few high-mass stars, or a cluster of low-mass stars. To constrain the result of the fragmentation process in regions that offer the opportunity to reach scales at which individual collapsing objects can be separated, Bontemps and collaborators observed the six most massive and youngest dense cores in the Cygnus X complex using the Plateau de Bure Interferometer at 1.3 and 3.5 mm.
First results of the COLD GASS project
(Left panel) Molecular gas mass fraction as a function of NUV-r color for the actual COLD GLASS sample. Secure detections are represented as filled circles, tentative detections as open circles, and non-detections are indicated by arrows.
(Right panel) The depletion time - specific star formation rate relation at z=0, 1 and 2, for normal and extreme star forming galaxies.
From Saintonge et al. 2011, MNRAS, 415, 32 & 61
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With the exception of the most compact MDC (CygX-N40), which harbors a single protostellar object of ~60 M, the remaining MDCs seem to have collapsed into a number of compact fragments with sizes and separations similar to low-mass pre-stellar condensations and Class 0 young stellar objects in nearby proto-clusters. The level of fragmentation is found to be higher than in the turbulence regulated monolithic collapse scenario but not as high as expected in a pure gravo-turbulent scenario where the distribution of mass is dominated by low-mass (proto)stars. The high fractions of mass
in the protostellar fragments are also indicative of an enhanced efficiency of core formation in the MDC. The increase in the core formation efficiency as a function of average density in the MDCs is suggested to be due to the increasing importance of self-gravity that leads to gravitational collapse on the scale of the MDCs. At the same time, the observed MDCs tend to fragment into a few proto-stellar objects within their central regions. Bontemps et al. conclude that we are probably witnessing the primordial mass segregation of clusters.
tHe protoplanetary disk around tHe younG star lkca15
Hundreds of exoplanets have been discovered around nearby main-sequence stars. A massive effort is underway to find more planets, determine their key properties, and explain demographic trends with models of their formation. But asso-ciating the current exoplanet properties with their formation epoch can be problematic, since the formation process is intimately associated with the initial conditions in the progenitor circumstellar disk. Ideally, the properties of mature exoplanet systems could be compared with those for their younger counterparts that are “caught in the act” of formation, still embedded in their natal disks. The results would refine our understanding of planet formation timescales and help characterize how exoplanet
Multiwavelength overview of the Orion nebula. a) Spitzer mid-infrared image of the Orion nebula. b) Overlay of the IRAM 30-meter ¹²CO J=2-1 maps integrated emission in velocity between -5 and 8 (blue), and 12 and 25 km.s -1 (red), tracing the cold (10-100 K) molecular gas, and 8 μm emission from the Midcourse Space Experiment (MSX) (green) tracing dust and warm (~100-1000 K) gas at the surface of clouds. c) The series of images show the ripples seen in ¹²CO (2-1) emission at different velocities overlaid on the Spitzer 3.6 μm map (green) attributed to small grains (PAH). In panels a and b, the white solid contours show the delimitation of diffuse soft X-ray emission tracing the hot plasma detected in the X-rays.
From Berné et al. 2010, Nature 466, 947
CygX-N48 (top) and CygX-N53 (bottom) are two MDCs located in the filament of DR21. Both reveal a complex and extended structure at 3.5mm (left) with one or two main cores in the central regions that divide into smaller fragments at 1.3mm (right).
From Bontemps et al. 2010, A&A, 524, 18
13Annual report 2010
properties are shaped by early interactions with disk material.
While the direct detection of a planet orbiting a young star is currently a challenge, the presence of a giant planet can be inferred indirectly through its dynamical influence on the structure of the remnant disk material. A sufficiently massive planetary companion can open a gap that impedes the inward flow of mass through the disk, quickly producing a low-density cavity at the disk center. The size of the cavity is set by the planet orbit, and the amount of material inside it depends in some way on the planet mass. Therefore, observational constraints on the sizes and mass contents of these disk cavities can offer some initial insights into the orbital architectures and masses, respectively, of planetary systems at ages of only ~1 Myr. The best way to measure such disk structures is with high-quality, sensitive, and high angular resolution observations of the millimeter dust continuum emission.
Using the new band 4 receivers and the WideX correlator in the A configuration, the Plateau de Bure interferometer has recently resolved the large cavity (R = 50 AU) in the proto-planetary disk around the young star LkCa15 at a continuum frequency of 346 GHz. While a detailed modeling effort will be required to interpret the properties and underlying origins of this cavity, these exceptional data represent a first step in the development of a new, indirect method for identifying potential young exoplanet systems through the sub/millimeter imaging of their associated disk structures.
tHe cosas survey of aGB and post-aGB stars
The evolution of transition objects between the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) and the planetary nebula (PN) phase is spectacular, probably the all-decisive moment where very efficient mass loss processes determine the basic morphological, dynamical and chemical layout of the future PN. While these processes are not well understood, radiation pressure on dust grains in the cool and dense circumstellar shells and atmospheric shock waves driven by inner envelope pulsations are both suspected to be at work. According to present knowledge, the rapid evolution of stars towards the end of the AGB seems to be related to the appearance of high-velocity winds in the innermost regions and a clear breakdown of the spherical symmetry of the circumstellar envelopes. These winds, which are often highly collimated, run into
the dense, dusty layers of the envelope inducing shocks and structural deformation.
In the frame of the COSAS (CO Survey of late AGB Stars) collaboration, Castro-Carrizo and collaborators have mapped and analyzed the ¹²CO J = 1-0 and 2-1 emission lines in a representative sample of circumstellar envelopes around AGB and post-AGB stars. The survey was undertaken with the aim of investigating small and large-scale morphological and kinematical properties of the molecular environ-ment surrounding stars in the late AGB and early post-AGB phases. For this, COSAS combines the high sensitivity and spatial resolving power of the Plateau de Bure interferometer with the better capability of the 30-meter telescope to map extended emission. The global sample encompasses 45 stars selected to span a range in chemical type, variability type, evolutionary state, and initial mass. COSAS provides sensitive means to quantify variations in the mass-loss rates, assess morphological and kinematical features, and investigate the appearance of fast aspherical winds in the early post-AGB phase.
Based on this survey data, the authors conclude that the envelopes around late AGB stars are mostly spherical, often mingled with features such as concentric arcs (R Cas and TX Cam), broken spiral density pattern (TX Cam), molecular patches testifying to aspherical mass-loss (WX Psc, IK Tau, V Cyg, and S Cep), as well as with well-defined axis-symmetric morphologies and kinematical patterns (X Her and RX Boo). The COSAS sources span a wide range of angular sizes, from relatively compact (CRL 2362, OH 104.9+2.4 and CRL 2477) to very large (χ Cyg and TX Cam) envelopes, sometimes partially obscured by self-absorption features, which testify to the emergence of aspherical winds in the inner-most circumstellar regions.
Image of the 346 GHz dust continuum emission from the LkCa 15 disk measured with the Plateau de Bure interferometer in A-configuration. The 0.39” x 0.18” synthesized beam is shown in the lower left, with a 40 AU scale bar labeled to the lower right for reference. This is the highest spatial resolution image obtained with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer.
From Andrews et al. (2011) in preparation
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first oBservations of interstellar anion cn-
The discovery of interstellar anions is probably the most remarkable result recently obtained in the field of astrochemistry. After the synthesis and characterization of C₄H-, C
6H-, C
8H- and C
3N- in
the Harvard spectroscopic laboratory and their subsequent identification in the spectrum of IRC+10216, a fifth anion was identified in 2008 in the same source without the help of any laboratory data: C
5N-. Up to now, only the n=1 members of the C
2nH-
and C2n-1
N- series remained unidentified in space, although their transition frequencies are precisely known.
C-chain anions are believed to be formed by electron radiative attachment on neutrals. As predicted by models, the abundances of C
6H- and
C8H- are fairly large and represent a good fraction
(~1/10) of the abundances of their parent neutral species C
6H and C
8H. On the other hand, the
abundances of C4H- and C
3N- relative to C
4H and
C3N are much smaller (≤1/4000). This is explained
by the fact that C4H- and C
3N- are shorter than C
6H-
and C8H- and have less low-lying vibrational states,
making electron attachment less probable. For the very short radicals CN and C
2H, which have only a
few vibrational states, the theory predicts vanishingly small electron attachment rates. The non-detection of CN- and C
2H-, down to very low levels, was
therefore expected. Yet, remarkably, Agundez and collaborators succeeded in detecting 3 lines in the millimeter wave spectrum of IRC+10216 that they could assign to CN-, the shortest of the two anions.
The three lines are shown in the accompanying figure. The first two lines (one appears as a low intensity shoulder of a much stronger C
6H line, the
other as a broad feature blended with a SiC2 line)
were tentatively assigned to the J=1-0 and 2-1 transitions of CN- but only the detection of the J=3-2 transition using EMIR (shown in the upper panel) ultimately led to the clear-cut and unambiguous identification of the anion: its rest frequency, which was found identical to the predicted one, left little doubt on the detection of CN-.
The abundance of CN- derived from the line inten si ties is many orders of magnitude larger than predicted by statistical theory calculations of electron attachment. Although electron attachment rate coefficients are difficult to calculate precisely and are only evaluated through statistical theory, the disagreement seems much too large and suggests another formation route than the attachment of an electron to CN.
¹²CO J=1-0 and 2-1 line maps at the systemic velocity of a selected sample of AGB and post-AGB stars from the COSAS survey.
From Castro-Carrizo et al. 2010, A&A, 523, 59
15Annual report 2010
ZooMinG in on tHe nucleus of coMet 8p/tuttle
Comets have challenged generations of astronomers, yet much remains to be understood about the properties of their nuclei. Understanding their physical and chemical properties is one of the most challenging issues in the study of planetary formation. They potentially provide crucial details on the initial thermo-physical conditions of the Solar proto-planetary disk and on the subsequent formation of the icy planetesimals from which the cores of the outer planets were formed.
During a recent observing campaign using the Plateau de Bure interferometer, Boissier and collaborators succeeded in observing the thermal continuum emission at millimeter wavelengths from the nucleus of Comet 8P/Tuttle. It was ejected to the outer Solar System and preserved in the Oort cloud until it came back in the inner Solar System as a Halley type comet. Observed at 240 GHz on January 8, 2008, it was detected with a flux density of ~3 mJy. By combining these millimeter measurements with visible and mid-IR data, the authors were able to constrain the surface properties of the ~2.5 km-sized nucleus and derived a thermal inertia ≤10 J/K.m-2.s-1/2 and a millimetric emissivity of ~0.7-0.8. This low emissivity suggests the sub-surface layers of the nucleus do contribute to the detected continuum emission.
Spectra of IRC+20216 covering the J=1-0, 2-1 and 3-2 transitions of CN-. Grey boxes mark their expected positions based on laboratory measurements.
From Agundez et al. 2010, A&A, 517, L2
Synthetic thermal light curve of Comet 8P/Tuttle, phased relatively to the radar observations of Harmon et al. (2010). The shape model is from HST observations by Lamy et al. (2008, 2010b). The thick solid line corresponds to the time interval of the Plateau de Bure observations.
From Boissier et al. 2011, A&A, 528, 54
16 Institut de Radioastronomie Milimétrique
Several important events took place at the 30-meter telescope on Pico Valeta, including the installation of the new Fourier transform spectrometers, the replacement of the gearboxes and the successful testing of new bolometer cameras.
As in previous years, the 30-meter telescope is highly demanded by the community with almost 200 projects that were observed during 2010. About an equal number of observers visited the observatory to conduct their own observations or help with other projects during several weeks of pooled observations. The new eight-mixer receiver EMIR, including its new 345 GHz band, is strongly demanded due to its unique sensitivy and bandwidth. A large part of the technical work
described below was focused on preparing for yet larger bandwidths to be covered by fast Fourier transform spectrometers.
During the winter semester 2010/2011, the fast Fourier transform spectrometers (FTS) were offered for the first time for routine observations. The available eight FTS units cover 8 GHz of bandwidth at 195kHz resolution. These units only form the first part of the extension to 24 units, which is planned for autumn 2011. This revised IF system will cover an instantaneous bandwidth of 32GHz. In order to prepare for this major upgrade, we started to revise the entire data handling system of hard- and software (see below).
Since December 1, 2010, the 8 GHz FTS have been successfully used with EMIR in all observing modes. An example of data obtained with this new facility is displayed hereby and demonstrates the power of the new system. It shows frequency surveys near 346 GHz using the WILMA and FTS backends of two Oxygen-rich circumstellar envelopes around evolved stars that both show a wealth of emission lines witnessing the chemical complexity.
Two prototype bolometer cameras were tested at the telescope in 2010. The GISMO 2mm camera has 128 pixels and uses transition edge sensors (TES) and squid amplifiers and multiplexers for readout. In April 2010, the GISMO team, led by Johannes Staguhn (Goddard/USA), tested a much-improved instrument in a 3rd test run at the 30-meter telescope. Remaining problems were identified. With the help
Data subset of EMIR spectra at 0.85mm of the O-rich stars IK Tau and OH231.8+4.2, which are part of an on-going mm-wavelength spectral line survey of O-rich evolved stars. Bottom: Selected spectra obtained with WILMA around 300 and 343GHz. The molecular species responsible for some of the most intense transitions detected are labeled. Top: Zoom of a smaller frequency range (indicated by vertical dashed lines in the bottom panels) showing higher spectral resolution spectra obtained with FTS. (Work by Sanchez Contreras and collaborators)
Pico Veleta observatory
17Annual report 2010
Time distribution at the IRAM 30-meter telescope in 2010
Monthly time distribution at the IRAM 30-meter telescope (U.Observ.: Observations, U.T.T.: technical tests, U.Mainten.: Maintenance, S.Wind: Stopped because of high wind velocities, S:Meteo: Stopped because of other meteorological conditions, S:Techn.: Stopped because of technical problems).
Monthly time distribution at the IRAM 30-meter telescope (U.Observ.: Observations, U.T.T.: technical tests, U.Mainten.: Maintenance, S.Wind: Stopped because of high wind velocities, S:Meteo: Stopped because of other meteorological conditions, S:Techn.: Stopped because of technical problems).
of the CRUSH-2 data reduction package written by A. Kovacs some very promising results were obtained. For example, the starburst galaxy AzTEC-3 at a redshift of z=5.3 was detected with a flux density of 3.7mJy at 2 mm (Capak et al. 2011).
The Neel IRAM KIDs Array (NIKA) camera uses kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs). For the 2nd test run at the 30-meter telescope in October 2010, the instrument had been upgraded to include dual-band optics for simultaneous observations at 150 and 220 GHz using two spatially separated KID arrays. In this version of the instrument, a grid polarizer achieves the band splitting. The arrays comprised 144 pixels at 2mm and 256 pixels at 1mm. A number of faint and extended objects were imaged including SgrB2, Cygnus A, and NGC1068 (Monfardini, Benoit et al. 2011).
astronoMical proJects
During the year 2010, a total of 188 projects were scheduled at the 30-meter telescope. This number includes 3 Large Programs, 14 Director’s time proposals (DDT), and 8 VLBI projects. A large fraction of these projects (74 or 39%) was scheduled in pools. The fraction of projects observed remotely has increased further, to 11% (20 projects).
192 observers visited the observatory during the reporting period. Many of these visitors came two or more times to the telescope. Forty observers came to help with the pool observations, and seven of them actually came for more than one week.
From the proposals eligible for RadioNet support, 27 were scheduled at the telescope and 8 European observers were granted travel support.
Two global 3mm VLBI sessions were carried out during 10 days in 2010. A dedicated test at 1mm between the Pico and the Plateau de Bure showed good quality fringes.
telescope operation
About 60% of the total time in 2010 was used for observations and about 30% of the time was lost due to adverse meteorological conditions. The amount of time lost is much less during summer than during winter, similar as in previous years. About 10% of the time was used for regular maintenance and dedicated technical projects. Less than 0.8% of the time (about 68 hours) was lost due to technical problems. Here, we only count failures of more than 2 hours, which are directly noticed by the staff. However, each important failure is monitored, analyzed and discussed to further improve the system.
Out of the 68 hours, 28 hours in total were lost in the telescope area, 16 hours were lost due to front-end problems, and about 24 hours because of computer related problems.
18 Institut de Radioastronomie Milimétrique
antenna and electronics
The main effort and activities in the telescope area were related with the daily operation of the observatory: periodically maintaining the systems and equipments for observation, including the pointing model, helping with the daily problems concerning the observation and operation, and repairing broken equipment.
Other activities in the telescope area during 2010 that deserve to be mentioned are:
■■ During two weeks in September 2010, two of the six antenna gearboxes were replaced, one for azimuth and one for elevation, by new gearboxes built by the German company Desch. This exchange became necessary as some of the
old gearboxes exhibited enhanced vibrations indicating wear. In preparation of this exchange, we characterized these vibrations and installed two new electrical cranes to permit moving of up to 3 tons inside the antenna tower. We also installed manual cranes in the roof of the motors room, which had to be reinforced. The gearboxes were characterized by measuring stiffness, transfer function, hysteresis, rolling friction, operation of brakes, etc.. The exchange went very well and smoothly due to a careful preparation. It is planned to replace the remaining 4 gearboxes in 2011 and 2012.
■■ In early 2010, a protective plate of one of the legs was blown off the 30-meter telescope. It was replaced during the summer period. To prevent such problems in the future, the rivets of the back-structure were revised. Several tens of rivets, that showed signs of wear, were replaced.
■■ The telescope sun avoidance system was improved by implementing a mechanism to automatically close the antenna vertex when the distance between the antenna beam and the sun is less than 0.75°, i.e. in case the antenna has accidentally moved into the sun avoidance zone of 1°. This mechanism is independent to what is implemented in the antenna control program ‘AntennaMountDrive’ and works all the time, even when the antenna is stopped. The main goal is to protect the receivers from being saturated.
■■ The antenna Error Beam was measured with Moon observations in collaboration with A. Greve and C. Kramer. New values of the Error Beam improve on the findings of 1998. A report is in preparation.
■■ Measurements were done to characterize the antenna gain elevation curve, telescope efficiencies, and insertion losses of the vertex radome at 340 GHz.
front-ends
The EMIR receiver continues to produce data of exceptional quality and, by now, can be considered to be the core of the 30-meter telescope front-end area. Acquired experience over the past two years show new effects that were not detected during the initial commissioning phase. Some new interferences at fixed frequencies in the IF band were found. Whereas some of these spurious signals are from a known origin (oscillators from other receivers), others are not yet understood and are still under investigation. A mechanical problem on one of the EMIR calibration motors stopped receiver operation during some days. One of the position sensors was found defective, probably due to the very frequent use of the part. The damaged piece was replaced but a longer-term solution needs to be found.
New Azimuth gearbox being craned into the motors room of the 30-meter telescope
Motors room of the 30-meter telescope with original gearboxes
New Azimuth gearbox being craned into the motors room of the 30-meter telescop
19Annual report 2010
HEMT test receiver at the 30-meter telescope.
HEMT test receiver at the 30-meter telescope.
The IF system will be upgraded to a total bandwidth of 32 GHz in 2011, doubling the bandwidth available for the backends. To prepare for the strong increase in the total instantaneous bandwidth, a revision of the IF transport and switching scheme has been started. A new equalizer unit, good for 4 new coaxial cables, each transporting 4 GHz of bandwidth, was built. The EMIR receiver will be upgraded further in 2011 by installing 2SB mixers for the E230 and E330 bands.
Some performance degradation was found on one of the HERA Local Oscillator (LO) boxes. The two oscillators were completely refurbished in Grenoble and later installed and commissioned at the telescope.
Tests on experimental bolometer cameras (GISMO and NIKA) were continued over the year. The bolometer prototypes include new upgraded sensors arrays providing a much-improved sensitivity (see above).
Finally, a new dual polarization HEMT test receiver was installed in August 2010. Initial results, after commissioning at the telescope, show very close agreement to measurements made in laboratory conditions in Grenoble. The results are also com-pa rable in performance to the best SIS receivers. Allan variance results demonstrate good receiver stability, even comparable to the specifications for ALMA receivers. This fact, coupled to the extremely large bandwidth (>30 GHz), makes this receiver a good candidate for pointing and other continuum measurements. The prototype receiver will help in solving the question of which technology to use for a future 3 mm multi-beam heterodyne array.
Backends
In autumn 2010, 8 new fast Fourier transform spec tro meters (FTS) from Radiometer Physics (Meckenheim, Germany) were integrated into the system. This FTS will enable observations with EMIR, using the 2x4GHz bandwidth with a resolution of 195 kHz. The FTS units were connected to the 4 MHz processor and installed in parallel to the 4 MHz backend. In preparation, the synchronization signals had to be debugged with help by Bernd Klein at the MPIfR (Bonn, Germany). Data transfer and control were developed and a new 19” rack for the IF processor and three FTS crates were installed in the backend room. Since the start of the winter semester 2010/2011, the FTS units have been successfully offered to the astronomers and first results are displayed above.
In preparation of the new IF system, which will offer 32GHz of instantaneous bandwidth with 24 FTS units, we installed a second distribution box for 4 more IF cables transporting 4GHz each. Work on new broadband continuum detectors continued in 2010. The temperature control, detec-tor boards, data readout, and the FPGA program-ming were developed for commissioning in spring 2011. For the VESPA auto-correlator spectrometer, offset voltage corrections were installed for all samplers to adapt to the increased dynamic range between the cold load and the sky of EMIR.
coMputers
In the computer group, the following activities took place in 2010.
■■ New Server System at the Observatory: The server computers that control the telescope that are used for data-processing (mrt-lx1,..,3) were replaced. The new computers are equipped with faster processors, more cores and more memory. Each computer now has 16 disk slots, which allows installing up to 96 TB of disk space (based on 2TB disks). A fallback hardware (mrt-lx0) is available to replace a broken server. In order to prevent disk failures, all system have a RAID controller installed with hot-swap spare disks.
■■ A tape autoloader that can automatically load one LTO tape from 16 tapes was installed and the LTO-5 tapes that have a capacity of 1.6TB (uncompressed) were switched. The backup sys-tem was changed to use the open-source tool ‘Bacula’.
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■■ Moving from 32 to 64 bit systems: During the preparation for the new FTS back-ends, it was realized that the current operating system (32-bit architecture) imposed a severe limit on data reduction. When the hardware of the main telescope control and data reduction computers was updated, it was decided to also change the system architecture to 64-bit. This implied a new operating system. The basic architecture is now 64-bit, but support for programs compiled for 32-bit architecture was also installed.
■■ Telescope Control: Today the telescope control system supports the new FTS backends. The increase in backend channels (approx. 10 times more) requested the replacement of the server systems at the observatory as described above.
■■ The receiver control software was modified to support the HEMT receiver installed in 2010. A new fallback hardware for the MAMBO backend (ABBA) has been installed.
■■ Organization of observing projects: The project organization has been improved. Projects and TAPAS accounts are now created based on the information from the IRAM Scheduler database. The Principal Investigator is informed by e-mail that the project has been created and can be accessed via Internet.
■■ TAPAS database of observations header information: The data-format of the observation header information for the CDS (Centre de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg) has been defined and a first set of data included into the CDS database (2009-10/12).
control systeM (ncs)
The main effort in the development of the NCS in 2010 was the support of the new FTS backend. This includes the beginning of a major revision of the logistics of the data handling and processing because of the much larger data rates.
More technical time than usual was lost to bad weather, creating a bottleneck in NCS testing, particularly toward the end of 2010 – without harming the observations except that we needed to schedule some additional Technical Time in December. Moreover, several developments started in 2010, remained unfinished.
Further improvements were made of the safeguards for the experimental observing modes for GISMO, i.e. Lissajous curves, which use the tracking capabilities
of the 30-meter telescope to its limits. These improvements are now also active for standard observations, including the execution of scans and alarms for tracking problems, with simple default values, though some fine-tuning remains to be done.
Unification in the NCS software development was achieved allowing the observer to use the same revision of paKo and the same version of the antenna mount drive software for routine observations using the heterodyne receivers, MAMBO, and GISMO.
Before and after the gearbox exchange, all the tracking and observing modes were extensively tested to assure the tracking quality.
At the less “visible” levels, improvements were made in the limits for the EMIR frequencies, in several alarm and warning messages, antenna tracking, secondary (“spindles”) control, sun avoidance, support for experimental instruments, e.g., the HEMT receiver and the NIKA bolometer, and other aspects of the NCS.
Miscellaneous
In April 2010, Breezy Ocana, finished her PhD thesis on “The interstellar medium in nearby elliptical radio galaxies” and successfully defended it at the Universidad de Granada. Jorge Abreu Vicente, who graduated at the Universidad de La Laguna on Tenerife, joined the team of astronomers in Granada in August, and became a new Astronomer of Duty and PhD student. End of July, Helmut Wiesemeyer left IRAM for a sabbatical year in the group of Karl Menten at the MPIfR (Bonn, Germany). Albrecht Sievers has taken over Helmut Wiesemeyer’s work of maintaining and developing the calibration package MIRA and the online data processing (odp), and preparing for the new high resolution Fast Fourier Transform Spectrometers.
As in previous years, IRAM offered guided tours through the observatory and public talks to a broader public during the summer months. These outreach activities were organized in collaboration with the Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia (IAA).
21Annual report 2010
The operation of the Plateau de Bure Interferometer in 2010 has been as exciting as in previous years, characterised by outstanding scientific results and a number of major technical achievements.
A first technical breakthrough was achieved in the spring: WideX, a broadband correlator with 3.6 GHz frequency coverage in each polarization, a channel spacing of 2 MHz, and a modular design to support an array extension to 8 antennas, went into operation after several weeks of intensive testing. The new correlator, which is operated in parallel to the narrow-band correlator, is working well since then and shows excellent performance.
The next highlight was reached at the end of the year when Band 4 (275 to 373 GHz) was opened to the astronomical community. The full integration of the ~100 GHz wide band called for a number of system upgrades among which the most sig ni fi-cant were: the installation of the remaining eight Band 4 mixers (two antennas were already equipped in 2009), a complete refurbishment of the local oscillator transport system, a major modifi cation of the system control software and a thorough refitting of the data acquisition software. After months of preparatory work, three weeks during which the array was not available for astronomical observations, and a few days of testing at the beginning of December, the instrument com-missioning team reported the successful measure-ment of interferometric fringes using Band 4. The commissioning was carried out in two phases: after a short technical validation of the instrumental performance over the Christmas period, a series of
science demonstration programs was observed that gave a first glimpse of the exciting new observing possibilities the new band was opening up. First images from the commissioning and science demon stra tion phase revealed the power of the interferometer (see Science Section) and helped to identify areas where work had to be done to improve operational reliability. The performance of the Band 4 system has met our highest expectations. By opening the new band to astronomical research, it has now become possible to observe with a spatial resolution of ~0.2” in the most extended con figuration of the interferometer, and with unprecedented details when observations are made with the instantaneous sensitivity of the broad-band correlator. Regular user-requested Band 4 observa tions have been scheduled and successfully obtained since the beginning of 2011.
While much of the focus at the Plateau de Bure Interferometer has been on Band 4 and the new correlator, the project to develop and implement additional logic to provide full-Stokes polarization imaging capabilities to the system has also been making progress in 2010. A digital switching circuit was implemented that interconnects the polarization IF bandsplitters of different antennas to compute all possible parallel- and crossed-handed correlation products. The project, which is being carried out in collaboration with the Observatoire de Bordeaux, generated a first scientific result, which provided a first proof of concept for a possible implementation of a polarimetric observing mode for users of the Plateau de Bure Interferometer.
Plateau de Bure observatory
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oBservations
The interferometer performed according to expectations with almost no downtime due to hardware upgrades. The receivers and the antennas all worked well throughout the year. Observations were done in periods of excellent phase stability and atmospheric transparency at the beginning and at the end of 2010, and faced rather unseasonable conditions in spring. The excellent weather con-
di tions at the end of the year were used for the com missioning and science verification of Band 4. The move to the A configuration was deferred to January 5, 2011, and was so accomplished about two weeks later than in the winter 2009/2010. As in previous years, the scheduling of the A configuration was readjusted shortly after the beginning of the winter scheduling period to optimize the observing of A-rated projects with respect to Sun avoidance limitations and weather constraints. As of February 8, 2011, 41 A-configuration tracks, corresponding to 22 astronomical programs and 6 Band 4 programs, were observed with remarkable sensitivity and successfully completed.
As in previous years, the percentage of telescope contiguous correlation time scheduled for observing programs was on average 50% percent of the total time. Additional 20 percent have to be accounted for receiver tuning, testing equipment, surface adjust-ments and antenna maintenance, and on com plet-ing the commissioning and science verification of WideX, the new LO transport system and band 4; the remaining 30% were lost because of precipitation, wind and inadequate atmospheric phase stability.
The Program Committee met twice during the year, around four weeks after the deadlines for submission of proposals and reviewed 220 applications. The April meeting was seriously disrupted due to travel difficulties resulting from the Icelandic volcano eruption. As a result the Program Committee met for the very first time via telephone conference to Grenoble from their home institutes. More than
170 different projects, including 4 Large Programs and 21 proposals for Director’s Discretionary time, corresponding to 112 different observing programs, were scheduled at the Observatory in 2010. As in previous years, the weight on extragalactic research remains considerable with about twice as many proposals submitted than in the field of young stellar objects. Also, a large amount of observing time was invested in D-configuration between spring and fall in the detection of line-emission (mostly of carbon monoxide) in galaxies at high redshift. The second week in May and October was devoted to coordinated 3mm VLBI continuum observations with several participating radio observatories in Europe and the United States. Annex I details all the proposals to which time was granted in the course of the year, and the great number of papers, that were published in 2010 and are based on data obtained at the interferometer, testifies to the high scientific return of the Plateau de Bure Interferometer.
antenna surface iMproveMents
In the context of the antenna surface refurbishment project (which started in 2007), a special effort was made in the antenna maintenance period to resurface the remaining two antennas and thereby resolve the issues related to panel degradation and antenna efficiency losses. Surface refurbishment work started on antenna 1 in the first June week and was completed on July 3, 2010. On antenna 6, work started around the middle of September and was completed at the end on October 16, 2010. As in previous years, the carbon fibre panels were replaced with new precision-machined aluminium panels (by MECACHROME) using a chessboard like technique to reduce the number of iterations required in the process of achieving highest surface precision. In a subsequent series of holographic surface measurements final surface precisions of 45μm (not weighted by illumination) and 46μm were achieved for antenna 1 and 6, respectively.
As in previous years, the surface quality of all the antennas was verified by means of holographic measurements at the end of the maintenance period. Surface panels were readjusted when deemed necessary.
In connection with the plans to compensate for the central gravity sag of ring 1 panels, a fourth mechanical point was added on antenna 4 to support the center of the panels and the achievable surface quality improvement assessed
Plateau de Bure observing time and atmospheric water vapor statistics over the last ten years. The overall correlation time accounts for 50% of the total time in the year 2010. Band 3 (200 – 274 GHz) and Band 4 (275 – 373 GHz) programs and observations in the most extended (AB) configurations are for the most part carried out in the winter months.
23Annual report 2010
by holographic measurements. The support points were installed during the maintenance period 2009 but the final positional adjustments were only made in early 2010. A semi-quantitative assessment of the panels’ stability, obtained over the last months, suggests that the additional support point is instrumental in ensuring the panels mechanical stability and containing the antenna efficiency losses. Based on this assessment, it is planned to equip the remaining five antennas with a fourth mechanical point in the maintenance period 2011.
Aperture phase patterns of antenna 1 (left) and 6 (right), respectively after the surface refurbishment. A series of holographic surface measurements was needed to readjust the primary surface of the refurbished antennas to a precision of 45μm rms (left) and 46μm rms (right). Contours are given in steps of 100μm.
The strong astigmatism-like deformation detected on antenna 3 in the summer 2009, and repeatedly observed over the winter period 2009/2010, was found to be unrelated to deformations of the secondary mirror. The deformation having disappeared without any apparent reason in the spring 2010, a physical origin for the deformation could neither be identified, nor be demonstrated.
antenna stations
Accurate knowledge of the antenna positions is of paramount importance to adequately compensate for the geometrical delay. In 2009, the inclination angles of the azimuth axis of some of the antennas were found to change significantly over a period of several weeks. Detailed investigations revealed that the changes in the antenna inclination appear to be linked to positional instabilities of the station on which the antennas are clamped, and that these changes occur more often in the spring, when warming conditions bring melting snow and heavy precipitation. To remedy this problem, the antenna inclination is now monitored over time to ensure the best possible relative antenna positions at any time.
antenna sun avoidance
In the context of the antenna primary surface refurbishment plan, Sun illumination measurements were started in 2008 to investigate the possibility of relaxing the initial Sun avoidance constraints (45 deg). The results of these investigations led to the design of a new Sun sensor that will permit observations down to a Sun distance of 25 deg. A first step was made in 2009 with the old sensors by reducing the Sun avoidance circle to 35 deg, and a second was planned for 2010 with the new sensors by reducing it further down to 25 deg. By relaxing the Sun avoidance constraints from 45 deg to 25 deg, the region of the sky inaccessible to observations on any given date will become less than 5%, and will make many more objects of the sky accessible to observations in the extended configurations of the array. Due to the exceptionally heavy schedule of activities at the Observatory during the summer maintenance period 2010, the decision was made to limit the installation of the Sun sensors to only one antenna and to defer the installation of the remaining sensors to the antenna maintenance period 2011.
receiver Band 4 and lo transport systeM
Significant efforts were made in the context of the project to equip the antennas with the Band 4 (275 – 373 GHz) receiving system: 1) the ageing HP synthesizers were replaced each with Rohde & Schwarz frequency generators to meet the tight constraints on phase stability, 2) the Local Oscillator transport system was refurbished to a) accommodate a pair of diplexers (one for each reference) to transport the phasing references (0.5
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MHz and 100 MHz) and the generator frequency (1600-2000MHz) over a single coaxial cable, and b) replace the out-dated, mechanically driven LO1 reference signals with YIG voltage controlled oscillators that feature broadband operation (13.2-16.4 GHz) and a much better phase noise performance, 3) the LO1 boxes of Bands 1-3 were modified to match the new reference signals, and the antennas all equipped with band 4 LO1 boxes, 4) the receivers of the remaining 4 antennas were finally fit up with 2SB ALMA-type Band 4 mixers operated SSB.
To manage the structural changes and adapt to the changing system, it was decided to suspend all astronomical activity at the Observatory on August 31, 2010. Operation restarted with 3 antennas (1, 2 and 5) after two weeks of testing and bug fixing, and was resumed entirely with all six elements of the interferometer at the end of the antenna maintenance period (October 17, 2010). The only drawback is the loss of a failing vertical polarization mixer on antenna 1 because of an open-circuit. It is planned to replace the inoperative mixer during the antenna maintenance period 2011.
data arcHive
As in previous years, in a continuing and successful effort with the Centre de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg (CDS), data headers of observations carried out with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer are conjointly archived at the CDS, and are available for viewing via the CDS search tools. In 2010, the archive contained coordinates, on-source integration time, frequencies, observing modes, array configurations, project identification codes, etc. for observations carried out in the period from January 1990 to May 2010. The archive is updated at the CDS every 6 months (May and October) and with a delay of 12 months from the end of a scheduling semester
in which a project is observed in order to keep some pieces of information confidential until that time.
seventH scHool on MilliMeter interferoMetry
The Seventh IRAM Millimeter Interferometry School took place from October 4 to 8, 2010, at the IRAM headquarters in Grenoble. The school focused on both theoretical and observational aspects of millimeter interferometry. In-house and invited experts gave lectures. The program of the school was structured to provide the participants with a broad base knowledge of the Plateau de Bure Interferometer and its future upgrades and a particular accent was given on ALMA. Participants had the opportunity to present posters on their own work and discuss results obtained with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer to share their knowledge and learn from each other’s experience. The school was limited to a total of 63 researchers from Europe and overseas: Germany/ESO (19), France (13), Netherlands (2), Spain (8), USA/Canada (4), Chile (4), United Kingdom (3), Denmark (2), Argentina (1), Finland (1), Italy (2), Bulgaria (1), Ireland (1), Portugal (1) and Switzerland (1). The lectures of the 7th Interferometry School and the proceedings from previous Interferometry Schools are available on the IRAM Web. The school received financial support from the RadioNet (FP7) initiative of the European Commission. The funding was used to pay the meal costs for participants, accommodation and missions for the outside lecturers and accommodation costs for selected participants. No school fees were charged to participants.
user support
The Plateau de Bure Science Operations Group (SOG) is staffed with astronomers that regularly act as astronomers on duty to optimise the scientific return
Participants at the 7th Millimeter Interferometry School
25Annual report 2010
of the instrument, directly on the site or remotely from Grenoble, provide technical support and expertise on the Plateau de Bure interferometer to investigators and visiting astronomers for questions related to the calibration, pipeline-processing and archiving of Plateau de Bure data, interact with the scientific software development group for developments related to the long-term future of the interferometer, perform the technical reviewing of the proposals, and collaborate with technical groups to ensure that operational requirements are being met. Five astronomers were appointed to the group at the end of 2010. The group also received the support of Ivana Stoklasova-Orlitová, a visiting astronomer from Prague on a three months stay.
In 2010 assistance was given to 30 investigators from Europe and overseas visiting IRAM Grenoble for a total of 130 days to reduce data from the Plateau de Bure Interferometer. Advice and support was also provided to a number of experienced astronomers from Bonn, Bordeaux, Cambridge, Garching, Heidelberg and Caltech to reduce and analyze Plateau de Bure Interferometer data remotely from their home institutes. Having suffered from a severe computer network attack early this year, the protection of the IRAM’s computer network was reviewed and it was decided to limit remote access to specific machines for data reduction purposes.
radionet users
Since January 2004, travel funds have been made available to RadioNet eligible astronomers from non IRAM partner countries for expenses incurred during their stay at IRAM for reducing data from the Plateau de Bure Interferometer. These funds which were initially made available by the European Commission in the frame of the FP6 program, are today managed by the FP7 program. For the year 2010, the Program Committee received 27 eligible proposals and recommended 15 proposals for observations with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer. Taking into account proposals accepted in 2008 and 2009 but continued in 2010, time was allocated to 14 eligible proposals corresponding to a total of 266 hours of observing time. Since the beginning of RadioNet, access time was allocated to 78 eligible proposals (12 in 2004, 11 in 2005, 11 in 2006, 13 in 2007, 14 in 2008 and 6 in 2009) for observations with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer, corresponding to a total of ~1900 hours (272 in 2004, 239 in 2005, 272 in 2006, 326 hours in 2007, 334 in 2008 and 140 in 2009) of observing time. User responses to questionnaires of the EU show that IRAM continues
to maintain an excellent reputation concerning the assistance and service given by scientists and support staff to visiting astronomers.
vlBi news
In early 2010, it was necessary to re-test the Plateau de Bure VLBI capabilities: the arrival of WideX had led to numerous hardware and software modifications that could have impacted the VLBI part. Instead of fully disabling WideX in VLBI mode, it was decided to keep it as a parallel backend for pointing, focus and flux estimates. It turned out to be impossible to fully align both WideX polarizations in phase while in VLBI mode: the phase offsets would impact the narrowband correlator during a phasing observation, and lead to a wrong alignment of the individual antenna phases during VLBI. Real-time pointing and focus had therefore to be limited to one WideX polarization only, but even so, the tremendous gain in bandwidth (3.6 GHz compared to the 128 MHz of the narrowband correlator in VLBI mode) provided a significant improvement. For the offline flux calibration, it was possible to calibrate the phases separately and thus use both polarizations.
During the Global Millimeter VLBI Array (GMVA) campaign on May 6-11, both IRAM observatories suffered from difficult weather conditions. Pico Veleta observed 53% of the scheduled scans, and Bure 50%. When not counting the scans impossible for Bure due to the sun avoidance of 35 degrees, the Bure fraction improves to 54%. This relatively small difference shows that the reduction of the sun avoidance circle from 45 to 35 degrees for the winter 2009/2010 season had a positive impact on the rather rigid VLBI observing schedule.
In the October 8-11, 2010 GMVA session, the respective observing fractions of Pico Veleta and Bure were of 33% and 94%. Previous tests in 2010 had shown that both IRAM observatories were capable of doing VLBI at 230 GHz. After the end of the Global campaign, the PI of a pending 230 GHz VLBI project asked explicitly to start the project
R a d io N e t P I U s e r D is tr ib u t io n2 0 0 4 - 2 0 1 0
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RadioNet observing time was allocated to eligible principal investigators from United Kingdom (percentage of total time is 54%), Italy (38%), the Netherlands (4%), Denmark (1%), Hungary (1%), Portugal (1%), Sweden (1%) and Switzerland (<1%) with a slightly unbalanced distribution between PhD students and post-doctoral researchers (31%) and senior scientists (69%).
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although the conditions were sub-optimum (the principal source was about to enter a long sun avoidance period). Even so, fringes of high quality were found, which proves that (i) the Bure array phasing works at a sufficient stability and (ii) that the Bure LO chain with its R&S SMA100 B22 frequency synthesizer at the place of the Racal Dana can successfully operate at high frequencies.
In late 2010 it became necessary to refill the hydrogen storage of the Plateau de Bure EFOS-38 maser: the hydrogen storage monitoring showed a telltale non-linear drop that indicated a remaining operation time of a few months. The refill operation was done on the mountain by a T4Science technician. The maser was back into operation after a few hours and is working fine since then.
tHe 22GHZ radioMetric pHase-correction systeM
The 22 GHz radiometer system on the Plateau de Bure antennas underwent several improvements in 2010. In June, the radiometer on antenna 3, which showed a dysfunction in its load arm and an elevation-dependent gain drift, was replaced by the spare. The problems were resolved in the Grenoble frontend laboratory, so that a fully functional spare is again available. New control cards based on the NTP antenna time solved the PPS timing problems that had been noted in particular on Antenna 2. In the real time acquisition, a command was introduced to enable or disable a sliding three-second averaging window on the raw radiometer data. This allows trading time resolution against a better signal-to-noise of the phase correction when the atmosphere is very stable, and was successfully applied from December 2010 on.
Around the time of the installation of the astronomical Band 4 receivers, an occasional interference problem was noticed on the low-frequency channel of the radiometers. Triangulation experiments showed that the source was likely to be inside the receiver cabins, and was traced to a component of the new Band 4 LO boxes that enters the first radiometer band above a certain Band 4 observing frequency. Three simultaneous approaches were put in place to reduce the impact: (i) setting the frequency of the LO box on a safe «parking position» when Band 4 is not used, (ii) developing a passive shielding in the LO box; a first antenna is already equipped and shows that the approach is efficient, and (iii) the development of an offline “dual frequency” radiometer scheme that allows to recover most of the continuum phase correction on contaminated data. Considering that Band 4 observations are typically scheduled when the atmosphere is already close to perfection, the impact of the interference has been very limited.
On the subject of the phase correction tools, substantial progress has been made in the extension of the time range of the phase correction. These tools are so far experimental, but will soon enter the main CLIC distribution.
27Annual report 2010
sis Group
During 2010, the fabrication of the total number of required SIS junctions for the ALMA Band 7 project has been successfully achieved and the focus of the group has shifted to new developments and projects. New designs of junctions for broadband 2SB mixers in the 230 GHz window, as foreseen for NOEMA, were fabricated and work to stabilize the process yield for multi-junction devices continued. In early 2010, the SIS group accepted and commissioned a new deposition system (PLASSYS 500S) that will allow considerable improvement of thin film development by exploring new material and process combinations unavailable so far. The deposition system has been custom designed and enables easy change of sputter targets while combining RF/DC sputtering with a multi crucible Ebeam evaporation station. The machine provides fully programmable automatic process control and was one of IRAM major investments in 2010.
The development of thin films and structures for kinetic inductance detectors (KIDs) has grown into a major activity during 2010. Various designs of lumped element KIDs were produced and different qualities of aluminum film parameters explored. The produced detectors allowed a second run with the NIKA instrument in October 2010 with greatly improved sensitivities at 2mm. Other very promising materials such as NbN and TiN have been explored and essential process steps such as film deposition and etching as well as film characterization utilities has been established. Work on passive millimeter wave structures using silicon technology and surface mounted MEMS technique was pursued. Deposition of Si and SiN membranes and their patterning started with the goal to support advanced millimeter wave-guide coupling structures as designed by the IRAM receiver group. Ongoing work to improve the process for metallic surface mounted variable capacitors addressed the ‘sacrificial layer’ preparation and release process.
Grenoble headquarters
Change of superconducting transition temperatur Tc depending on N2 flow during plasma sputter deposition for the two binary nitrides TiN and NbN. These materials are of particular interest for kinetic inductance detectors.
Right: Combined Sputter/Ebeam-Evaporation system commissioned during early 2010. New materials and film combinations will be one of the main goals with this equipment.
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frontend Group
The year 2010 was a busy year for the Front End group with maintenance, upgrade, and development activities for both IRAM observatories. Local Oscillators (LO) and cryogenic RF modules for Band 4 were installed on the Plateau de Bure antennas and the LO modules of Bands 1, 2 and 3 were modified to be compatible with the new reference (LO1ref ). A 3 mm HEMT receiver was built and installed on the Pico Veleta telescope and a new mixer for EMIR Band 3 was developed. Construction of a spectrum slicer for a FFT backend has started and good progress was made on the design of the 3 mm band 5x5 multibeam receiver, both for the Pico Veleta telescope.
PLATEAU DE BURE INTERFEROMETER UPGRADE AND MAINTENANCETwo cryogenic cold heads were replaced on antennas 5 and 6 after four years of continuous operation. Following degradation in performance, one of the 22 GHz water vapour radiometers was replaced with a spare unit. A 4-8 GHz cryogenic amplifier was replaced in antenna 1 after installation of the new Band 4 RF module.
The characterization of the Band 4 RF modules (275-373 GHz band) was completed in the lab and receiver noise measurements were performed using one of the new electronically tuned Local Oscillators (see below). The Band 4 RF modules were installed in antennas 1, 2, 3 and 6 (not yet equipped in 2009). The Band 4 RF module of antenna 4 (with a SIS junction in open circuit after a cool down) was replaced with a new one. In antenna 1, one of the two SIS junctions of the 2SB mixer Band 4 module of V polarization is open-circuited.
A new first LO reference signal (13.2-16.4GHz - LO1ref ) for the mm-waves local oscillator modules was developed by the IRAM backend group and all mm-wave LO modules of Bands 1, 2 and 3 were modified to be compatible with the new reference. New harmonic mixers with integrated diplexer were developed and installed inside existing LO modules to replace old units. The modified LO modules (3 Bands x 6 antennas plus spares) were installed on the Plateau de Bure antennas in September 2010.
ELECTRONICALLY TUNED LOCAL OSCILLATORS FOR PLATEAU DE BURE BAND 4A series of eight 283-365GHz electronically tuned Local Oscillators (LO) for Band 4 of the Plateau de Bure interferometer was built and characterized. The design of the Local Oscillator, described in previous annual reports, is based on a commercial 15.7-20.3GHz YIG oscillator cascaded with an active multiplier chain (AMC) and a 3 mm band power amplifier (PA) module built at IRAM. AMC and PA both integrate 94.3-121.6 GHz MMIC amplifiers EBPA107C from NRAO. A commercial frequency tripler, with efficiency of the order of 3%, delivers the final frequency signal. The tripler is cascaded with a cut-off attenuator which reduces the LO noise contribution to a level comparable to that delivered by a Gunn oscillator. The measured output power of the 3 mm band LO module (before tripler) is in the range of 8-50 mW. The output power across 283-365GHz, after a ~4 dB room temperature attenuation, lies between 50 and 270 μW for all eight LO modules of the series; this output power is large enough to pump the Band 4 Sideband Separating SIS heterodyne receivers.
The new Band 4 LO system, compatible with the new 13.2-16.4GHz first LO reference, allows to phase-lock on a time scale of order of few seconds (to be compared with the few minutes required with the mechanically tuned Gunn oscillators).
The new Local Oscillators were successfully installed on the Plateau de Bure interferometer antennas and
Band 1 Local Oscillator module modified with new harmonic mixer (highlighted by red rectangle).
Below: Details of a 67-118GHz harmonic mixer showing the chip and its integration in the mechanical block with diplexer frequency circuit.
29Annual report 2010
the first astronomical observations were performed across Band 4 in late 2010. The new system opened up the sub-millimeter wave window at Plateau de Bure. This was the first time that a YIG-based Local Oscillator was used at the IRAM observatories.
A 3 MM BAND HEMT RECEIVER PROTOTYPE FOR THE 30-METER TELESCOPEA 3 mm band (84-116 GHz) HEMT receiver prototype, designed and constructed at IRAM, was installed at the 30-meter telescope in August 2010. This receiver allows us to test the 3 mm band cryogenic InP MMIC amplifiers technology and to compare its performance with that delivered by the Sideband Separating SIS mixers (2SB) already available at the site (E0 band of the EMIR receiver).
Inside the telescope cabin, a movable flat mirror switches the telescope beam from the HERA receiver to the 3mm HEMT receiver where it is redirected inside the cryostat and coupled into a single corrugated feedhorn whose output is cascaded with an orthogonal mode transducer from NRAO. Two MMIC HEMT amplifiers from University of Massachusetts, cryogenically cooled to 15K, amplify the 3mm signal in each polarization channel.
At room temperature, the signal is then filtered, down-converted and further amplified to provide a final 8GHz IF bandwidth across 4-12GHz, which is compatible with the currently available IF processor.
The noise temperature (SSB) of the HEMT receiver measured in front of the cryostat window is about 55 K across the whole 84-116 GHz frequency range (see figure). The measured total power stability (Allan deviation) is below 3.10-4 for integration times in the range 1-100 sec, better than the specification of the ALMA receivers.
Above: Series of seven 3 mm band LO modules and their power supplies.
Left: Spectrum of the Local Oscillator signal at 298.2 GHz.
Right: Output power of the eight 3 mm band LO modules.
The 3 mm band Local Oscillator module.
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The receiver was successfully used to perform preliminary astronomical observations.
EMIR BAND 3 MIXER UPGRADEA new sideband-separating (2SB) 200-280 GHz SIS mixer with a 4–12 GHz IF band was developed within the European FP7 RadioNet AMSTAR+ work package. The goal of this work package is the development of receiver pixels and LOs for large focal plane arrays. Therefore, the mixer was designed in a very compact way and the usually adopted superconducting coils for the suppression of the Josephson effect were replaced by permanent magnets. The RF part of the 2SB mixer consists of an RF coupler/mixer block combining all waveguide couplers and the two double sideband SIS mixers in one E-plane splitblock. A 4-12GHz IF hybrid coupler developed by CAY also within AMSTAR+ can be connected directly to the 2SB mixer module.
The mixer has been designed to work for RF frequencies between 200 and 280 GHz and over an IF band of 4–12 GHz. Tests of a prototype have shown that the mixer performs very well (see figures) over the design frequency range and even beyond with a flat response across the IF band. The average image rejection lies around -14 dB. This new mixer will replace the currently installed SSB mixer with 4 GHz IF band of EMIR Band 3, thus quadrupling the instantaneous bandwidth of the receiver.
SPECTRUM SLICER FOR THE 30-METER TELESCOPE FFT BACKENDAn IF processor allowing to interface the IF bands from either the EMIR or the HERA multibeam receivers to a Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) spectrometer from Radiometer Physics GmBH is being developed. Two modes are possible: “wideband mode” (4 GHz bandwidth, 200 KHz resolution), and “high resolution mode” (50 KHz resolution, 1.8 GHz bandwidth). The instrument will be able to process eight inputs simultaneously, i.e. 8 x 4GHz=32GHz maximum in wideband mode.
During 2010, the design of the spectrum slicer was completed and a set (24 plus spares) of locked local oscillators was built and tested; then, the first prototype of a complete subunit was put together.
Photograph of one half of the sideband separating mixer unit showing the RF coupler/mixer block (left) and a close-up of the mixer chip and permanent magnets (right).
The 3 mm band HEMT receiver installed in the receiver cabin of the 30-meter telescope.
Receiver noise temperature (left scale) and gain (right scale) integrated over the 4-12 GHz IF band. The blue curve refers to horizontal polarization, the red one to the vertical polarization.
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First prototype of a complete spectrum slicer sub-unit, consisting of a local oscillator (left), two isolators (small black cases), a cavity bandpass filter (big black case), a mixer (smallest case, in the center), baseband electronics (big cases, top), around two anti-aliasing lowpass filters (the two rectangular items with golden body) and, on the right, the output amplifier. A total of 24 sub-units are to be built to complete the project.
FOCAL PLANE ARRAY RECEIVER FOR THE 3 MM BAND ON THE 30-METER TELESCOPEA 5x5 multibeam receiver for the 3 mm band is being designed for the 30-meter telescope. The receiver will be based on a modular design with broadband input optics, dual linear polarization ortho-mode transducers and sideband separating (2SB) SIS mixers. The design includes a field derotator, which will allow to track the parallactic angle. The study of the overall cryostat design and receiver implementation into the telescope cabin is in progress, as well as the design of the local oscillator distribution scheme into the RF module. Several optical prototype components were fabricated by the IRAM mechanical workshop (corrugated feed horns and double-face mirrors of individual optics).
ALMA BAND 7 CARTRIDGE PRODUCTIONIRAM is responsible for the production (component fabrication and procurement, assembly and test) of 65+8 spares ALMA Band 7 cartridges covering the RF signal frequency range 275-373 GHz. The dual polarization receivers employ Sideband Separating (2SB) SIS mixers and deliver 4GHz IF band per sideband.
The middle of the cartridge production was reached towards the end of 2010. During 2010, nineteen receivers with state-of-the-art performance were delivered and accepted by the project.
Left: Preliminary design of the 5x5 pixels cryogenic RF module.
Above: Design of broadband turnstile junction waveguide ortho-mode transducer.
Below: Prototype five-pixel optics (feed-horns and double-face mirrors).
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Backend Group
In 2010, the backend group successfully delivered the new correlator (Widex) to the Plateau de Bure interferometer and continued its work to prepare for the next generation of correlator.
WIDEX CORRELATOR DELIVERED ON PLATEAU DE BUREOn February 10 2010, all four quarters of the new correlator WideX were installed on the Plateau de Bure correlator room and successfully connected to the rest of the system. An improvement of the
electrical power distribution was required. Soon after its connection, the new correlator was made available for commissioning and then offered to the community for the observations.
During eleven months of permanent operation, only one minor failure was reported. None of the correlator chips showed any sign of dysfunction. Widex is built to accommodate 8 antennas and is currently operated at 15/28 of its capacity. A complete description of Widex can be found at
http://www. iram.fr/IRAMFR/TA/backend/WideX/index.html
NEW LO TRANSPORT SYSTEMThe phase-stabilized reference frequency for tuning the receivers 1st LO’s was moved from the 2 GHz range to 16 GHz. This new frequency plan allows a fast and easy tuning and, in addition, suppresses some spurious lines that were internally generated. It uses a YIG oscillator that provides a more consistent performance than the previous mechanically tuned DRO’s. All six antennas of the Plateau de Bure interferometer have been equipped with this new LO transport system and the production run has made provision for 6 others.
POLARIMETRYSix PIN transfer switches and their driving circuitry were installed on the Plateau de Bure interferometer. Every second, they allow one to swap the H and V IF’s, according to a Walsh function sequence, so that the source polarization information can be extracted.
DIFER PROJECTTechnology for the next (5th) generation for an IRAM correlator is currently under study. A board has been designed that includes a 5-bit, 8 Gsample/sec ADC and a powerful FPGA. It will be used to acquire expertise on synchronization of multiple, multi gigabit data streams. Concomitantly, a polyphase filterbank was designed and simulated. This polyphase filterbank is able to digitally split a 4 GHz band into 64 frequency windows. These elements are the building blocks for a future correlator, featuring high versatility in trading bandwidth versus resolution, and integrating phased array for wideband VLBI. Further information on this new project can be found at
http://www. iram.fr/IRAMFR/TA/backend/WideX/index.html
View of Widex in the correlator room of the Plateau de Bure interferometer
Above: One of the ALMA Band 7production cartridges.
Right: Performances of the 19 ALMA Band 7 cartridges delivered in 2010. (Above) Noise temperature integrated over 4-8 GHz IF versus LO frequency. The ALMA specification of 147 K SSB noise, indicated by the horizontal red line, is well above the measured values. (Below) Image sideband rejection versus signal frequency measured at five different LO frequencies.
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MecHanical Group
In 2010, the staff of the mechanical group dealt with 148 requests for mechanical components. Many of these requests were handled internally, and only a fraction was subcontracted to outside companies.
WORKSHOPThe workshop produced a large number of microwave components, mixers, couplers, and horns for the new generation receivers of the Plateau de Bure interferometer, AMSTAR couplers, and HEMT components. The workshop carried on with the production of the components in the frame of the ALMA Band 7 construction. Despite the tight schedule, the fabrication of the elements was done on time as foreseen.
The workshop was equipped with a new quality control device that optimises the quality control procedure.
DESIGN OFFICE
New Cad files data organisationThe design office succeeded to install a Product Lifecycle Management process dedicated to the 3D Cad files – Solidworks PDM workgroup. Included with the current CAD software, it will play a key role in managing projects, control design revisions and control data access. This software resulted in improving significantly the quality process.
NOEMA projectProgress was achieved on various mechanical projects to upgrade the Plateau de Bure antennas in view of the NOEMA project. In 2010, the main projects dealt with the following issues:■■ Weight reduction on reflector■■ Production cost reduction■■ Back Up Structure of Subreflector■■ Roller cable
Microwave and antenna studiesIn close collaboration with other groups at the institute, the design office worked on numerous mechanical designs that concerned:
■■ Design of new microwave components for Plateau de Bure and the 30-meter telescope
■■ Design and installation of HEMT receiver■■ Leading the manufacturing of 2 set of panels for 2 new reflectors for the Plateau de Bure antennas
■■ Leading, with the team in Granada (Spain), the refurbishment of 1 Azimuth and 1 Elevation gearboxes at the 30-meter telescope.
Technical support for antennasAs in previous years, the technical group closely collaborated with the technical staff on the Plateau de Bure for all aspects dealing with the antennas.
A view of the HEMT Receiver in the Frontend laboratory before shipping to the 30-meter telescope
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iraM arc node
.The IRAM astronomy support group is involved in several ALMA-related activities and software developments, which are part of a more general effort to develop a node of the European ALMA Regional Center (ARC).
IRAM is deeply involved in the development of one of the key software for the real-time operations of ALMA, the Telescope Calibration (TelCal) software. This software is performing all real-time calibrations necessary to run the array: antenna pointing, focus, baseline measurements, atmospheric parameters, etc. Two IRAM engineers are working on this development. 2010 was a critical year for TelCal, as the array commissioning made large progresses, implying a continuous and important effort to correct, adapt, and maintain TelCal. New functionalities were also added, as atmospheric calibration using loads at several temperatures. Finally, a stand-alone version of TelCal, interfaced to the CASA off-line package, is also being developed, to allow an off-line reprocessing of the real-time calibration.
During 2010, IRAM was also involved in the development of the Observatory Operations Support (ObOps) package. This is a suite of software tools developed to support the handling of the observing programs, from the Call for Proposals to the project completion, as well as the day-to-day real-time operations.
The institute is also responsible for one work package of the EU-funded “ALMA Enhancement”
program. In that context, a new wide-field imaging technique was developed during the last years to be able to properly process large maps obtained with On-The-Fly interferometry. This technique is being implemented and tested in GILDAS. In 2010, the work for the implementation in the ALMA data reduction software, CASA, was started.
IRAM and ESO agreed on a scheme allowing IRAM astronomers to participate to the ALMA commissioning and science verification phase. Following that agreement, an IRAM astronomer spent three months in Chile in summer 2010. This was a very fruitful experience, and as a consequence, the visit of two other IRAM staff members to the Joint ALMA Observatory in Chile is planned in 2011.
The planning and preparation of the IRAM ARC node has continued. While the European ARC core activities are based at ESO Garching, IRAM is one of the European scientific support nodes. The tasks of an ARC node is mostly to form the users to the millimeter interferometry techniques and to the ALMA instrument, and to provide face-to-face support for the data reduction after the data have been acquired. In that context, IRAM intends to build on the existing in-house expertise on millimeter interferometry techniques and on the experience acquired with the institute participation to the ALMA construction. The face-to-face support service provided to Plateau de Bure interferometer users for more than 15 years will be extended to ALMA.
A major achievement during 2010 was the organization of the “Observing with ALMA: Early Science” workshop, that took place in Grenoble, November 29 to December 1. During three days, many practical aspects of the ALMA instruments were discussed and explained to the participants, as, e.g., the time allocation committee, the pipeline, or the key software astronomers will have to use. More than 180 persons registered to that meeting, a large number that required organizing this event not at IRAM but in a larger, more convenient location in Grenoble.
On the long term, having access to the Plateau de Bure/NOEMA and to the ARC node services should place the IRAM users community in the best possible position to get time on ALMA in an extremely competitive environment.
Participants of the “Observing with ALMA: Early Science” workshop held in Grenoble on November 29 – December 01, 2010.
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coMputer Group
In the frame of the installation of the new prototype receiver called HEMT at the 30-meter telescope, the computer group was involved in the support of the control and monitoring software. The main features include two specific graphical interfaces for the laboratory and the observations, an automatic LO tuning, a build-in simulator, an embedded SQL database for configuration storing, a XML RPC server for easy integration with the existing observing software. The package was written in C++/Qt.
At the Plateau de Bure interferometer, the 22GHz water vapor receiver software was modified to rely on the IRAM Network Time Protocol (NTP) timeserver for triggering the integration periods and flagging the measures. The old wired time bus was found unreliable for far distant antenna stations.
The Polar switch module with is software was also installed on the Plateau de Bure interferometer. A GUI and XML/RPC commands let the users and applications select the polarizations connected to the correlator.
The installation of the Band 4 receiver at the Plateau de Bure interferometer with its specific LO, based on a YIG tuned oscillator, required a substantial
upgrade of the receiver software. A new simulator window was included and new control and status commands were added. This installation provided an opportunity to improve the software performance by getting rid of Python and by writing everything in C++/Qt. Still, in order, to standardize our distribution at the 30-meter telescope and the Plateau de Bure interferometer, the same protocols, SQL database and XML/RPC, are in use.
In general, all front-end software was updated in 2010 and improved to comply with this software framework.
In Grenoble, a study showed the difficulty to continue to work with a Fedora distribution for Linux, as the versions were changing too rapidly and the security support was too short. A free distribution, Scientific Linux, was therefore tested. The releases are synchronized with RedHat Entreprise and their lifecycle is up to 10 years. The selected release 5.5 of May 2010 is now the version installed on the new machines and was available on the 15 personal computers that were set up for the interferometry summer school.
A new NAS with a raw volume of 5TBytes was added for the astronomer user space and the projects.
36 Institut de Radioastronomie Milimétrique
As a consequence more space is available to the technical and administration staff.
Our IT disaster recovery plan has shown the need of backing up most of our NAS data space. While the data from the Plateau de Bure interferometer is well protected with redundant disks and multi servers located at different places, the NAS user data spaces had no backup. Although the NAS is reliable in its concept nothing could be saved on magnetic media. The volume to backup is in the order of 4Tbytes! A solution with RAID 0 servers was set up. They are linked with optic fiber to the NAS and located in the building basement as far as possible from the computer room. The backup performed over the weekend sustains a transfer rate better than 300Gbytes/s.
An effort is still done to distribute automatically Windows applications or patches. In connection with this distribution, the new accounting software release has been worked out to ease its installation.
Finally, in order to unify the authentications and the information needed to the different OS’es and applications, a development was started that is based on LDAP (Lightweight Directory access Protocol) servers with common records among the Windows and Unix implementations. For authentications, a master Kerberos server is the solution that has been retained.
science software activities
The first goal of the science software activities at IRAM is to support the preparation, the acquisition and the reduction of data both at the 30-meter and the Plateau de Bure Interferometer. This includes the delivery of 1) software to the community for proposing and setting-up observations, 2) software to the IRAM staff for use in the online acquisition system and 3) offline software to end users for final reduction of their data. However, the GILDAS suite of software is freely available to and used by other radio telescopes.
At the 30-meter telescope, the main event of 2010 was the introduction of the first two units of a new backend technology called Fourier Transform Spectrometer (FTS). In combination with the EMIR receivers, these units allow the observer to obtain spectra at a spectral resolution of about 200 kHz on a bandwidth of about 4 GHz. This amounts to about 20000 channels per unit. In the next two years, the 30-meter will be equipped with up to 16 such units. This will represent an increase of the data rate by almost one order of magnitude, which implies
important changes in the acquisition and data reduction steps. For instance, MIRA was upgraded to 1) work in 64 bits mode to benefit from modern computer technology and 2) process smaller chunks of data (subscans instead of scans) to obtain a better synchronization between data acquisition and data processing. This latter improvement is useful to check long scans (e.g., pointing, OTF) at intermediate steps. The advent of broadband spectra at high spectral resolution considerably eases multi-line studies. This triggered a series of changes in the data processing and analysis of such spectra in CLASS. For instance, the possibility to select all the spectra of a file whose frequency axis intersects a given frequency range was introduced. Interfacing line databases (JPL, CDMS, ...) to identify the lines and to model their properties converged. It was developed in collaboration with the Observatoire de Grenoble and it was released as a CLASS extension, named WEEDS. The EMIR broadband receivers have a rejection level of only 13dB. In addition, broadband receivers in the sub-millimeter (e.g., some Herschel/HIFI receivers) are double-side band. This implied the resurrection of double-side band possibilities of CLASS. The software package MOPSIC, which is used to 1) monitor the 30-meter telescope behavior and 2) support the bolometer observations, was maintained. Finally, the new generation of 30-meter telescope time/sensitivity estimators introduced last year for EMIR was extended to the HERA and MAMBO cameras.
At the Plateau de Bure interferometer, three main hardware changes happened in 2010. First, the new broadband WIDEX correlator was installed. Second, the 0.8 mm receivers (Band 4) were commissioned. This implied a change of the local oscillator system. As a consequence annoying parasites were suppressed and the phase stability increased. Last, polarimetry measurements were made possible through the installation of a device, which switches the antenna inputs of the correlators. This enables the system to measure the different polarimetry products in a given time sequence. All these hardware changes implied software changes in the setup, acquisition and reduction of the observations. Specifically, ASTRO was upgraded to reflect changes of the frequency plan induced by the change of the local oscillator system. The softwares to pilot the WIDEX correlator, the frequency synthesizer and the polarimetry switch box were finalized. The other online acquisition softwares (in particular OBS, RDI and CLIC) were also adapted. A large effort was needed to upgrade the pipeline, so that it continues to optimally calibrate most of the projects.
Collaboration with the Observatoire de Bordeaux was started to implement inside CLIC the calibration
37Annual report 2010
of interferometric polarimetry. In the area of imaging and deconvolution, IRAM leads the research and development activities around the interferometric On-The-Fly observing mode in the framework of the European FP6 program ‘’ALMA Enhancement’’. In 2010, the first steps of a new algorithm to image interferometric On-The-Fly data were implemented. In parallel, the acquisition of On-The-Fly data at the Plateau de Bure interferometer was improved and new tests were made. Finally, the configurations of the ALMA GILDAS simulator were upgraded to reflect the advancement of the project construction.
All these developments are based on the common GILDAS services, e.g., a set of common low-level libraries, collectively named GILDAS kernel, which takes care of the scripting and plotting capabilities of GILDAS. Although any effort in this area is not necessarily visible for the outside world, it is extremely important for the life of the IRAM data reduction software. In 2010, the large effort to overhaul the graphical possibilities of GILDAS was continued so that it could be released in 2011. This is a step required to cope with the large increase of data size, which will result from both the improved imaging capabilities of the IRAM instruments and the increase in the number of channels of the upcoming generation of spectrometers. Finally, the support of the more and more popular GFORTRAN compilers and Mac/OSX system was improved.
This impressive number of concomitant software developments is a testimony to the vitality of the team of software developers, which was largely renewed during the last 5 years.
puBlic relations
The year 2010 began with two very spectacular press releases, which both triggered a major echo in the international press. For the first time, it had been possible to pinpoint the location of water in a very young proto-planetary system, analogue to our Sun – thanks to the IRAM Plateau de Bure Interferometer. In addition to this result, another paper was published in Nature reporting the detection and imaging of cold molecular gas in star forming galaxies representative of galaxy populations shortly after the Big Bang. International media picked up both results and IRAM had several articles in international newspapers like the German FAZ, the FOKUS and Scientific American.
In order to continue public outreach work on a regional level, IRAM astronomers continued during all winter season their well-attended series of public
conferences at St. Etienne-en-Dévoluy (in the Hautes-Alpes near the Plateau de Bure).
After the brochure and the web page, the IRAM Newsletter got an overall “re-looking”. It is published twice a year (in February and July). The new edition, called “IRAMInfo”, has a completely new layout and is only available electronically. Special emphasis is given to scientific results, technical developments and reports on the large observing programs.
At the end of spring, preparations for the 7th IRAM Interferometry Summer School started. The school took place on October 2010 with more than 70 participants and lecturers working together during open sessions and tutorials.
Right after the Summer School, the IRAM ARC Node organized a workshop about Early Science with ALMA. During three days, more than 140 participants and lecturers exchanged information and latest news about ALMA, the first call for proposals and early observations.
At the end of the year, IRAM took part, for the second time, in the French national science festival Fête de la Science. With an interactive and movable model of the Plateau de Bure Interferometer, a 3-D film, live observations with a telescope in Sweden (thanks to the Hands-On-Association) and presentations about our Solar System, the institute’s exhibition stand attracted a lot of visitors. About five school classes per day and more than 11000 people in total visited the IRAM stand.
38 Institut de Radioastronomie Milimétrique
Personnel and finances
The IRAM administration comprises 3 groups in charge of the areas as of human resources, finances and general services.
HuMan resources
In 2010, 105.5 positions were foreseen in the personnel plan authorised by the IRAM Executive Council, i.e. 77.7 for France and 27.8 for Spain. 11 additional positions are authorised for Post-docs and thesis students.
In addition to these authorised positions, IRAM also has a number of staff recruited for specific activities such as ALMA contracts and European contracts.
In total, IRAM employed a total of 146 persons (132 FTE) in 2010.
finances
The activity of the IRAM administration in the area of finances covers the budget preparation and management, the annual accounts and the liaison with the auditors and the audit commission. The overall is reported on a yearly basis to the Executive Council.
IRAM’s financial situation in 2010, as well as budget provisions for 2011, are summarised in the following tables.
The associates approved a 2% increase in their base contribution to the operational budget of 2010. They also agreed upon a further increase by 2% for 2011. The contributions to the investment budget were maintained at their previous level for 2010 and 2011. In addition, the associates finance the reconstruction of the cable car to access the plateau de Bure observatory.
The IRAM administration completed a global review of the IRAM insurance package that was started in 2009. The revision is now finished and a new company has been hired to deal with IRAM insurance.
Japanese women playing with a telescope. Early 19th century Japan.
39Annual report 2010
expenditure 2010 - 2011 (in keuros)
Budget heading 2010 2011
Operation / Personnel 7 869 8 086
Operation / other 3 873 3 791
Investment (base + special) 3 491 9 305
total 15 233 21 181
Budgetary Excess 5 182
total expenditure 20 414 21 181
incoMe and expenditure
income 2010 - 2011 (in keuros)
Budget heading 2010 2011
CNRS contributions 9 148 7 178
MPG contributions 6 148 5 678
IGN contributions 785 725
total 16082 13582
Carry forward from previous years 3 080 5 161
IRAM’s own income 1 252 1 438
Other incomes (Equipex) 1 000
total incoMe 20 414 21 181
40 Institut de Milimétrique
annex i
TELESCOPE SCHEDULESThe next two tables show the allocations for the telescope time for the 30-meter telescope and the Plateau de Bure interferometer for the year 2010. In each table, the first column gives the project’s identification, the second column the title of the investigation and the third column the names of the Principal Investigators and the co-Investigators.
30 metre telescope
ident. title of investigation authors
212-08 HERA Maps of KINGFISH Herschel Key Program Galaxies
Walter, Leroy, Schinnerer, Rix, Weiss, Kennicutt, Calzetti, Schuster, Wiesemeyer, Schruba
057-09 Origins of molecular clouds and star formation in W43 - a large HERA project
Motte, Schilke, Nguyen, Schneider, Bontemps, Schuller, Menten, Wyrowski, Heitsch, Hennebelle, Banerjee, Kramer, Simon, Beuther, Henning, Bronfman, Walmsley, Zavagno
149-09 Vertical distribution of CO in the deep atmosphere of Neptune
Moreno, Lellouch, Marten, Paubert
150-09 CO in Enceladus and in the E-ring of Saturn Cavalié, Greaves
151-09 Cometary observations in support to the Herschel mission
Biver, Crovisier, Bockelée-Morvan, Colom, Moreno, Hartogh, Lis, Boissier, Paubert
154-09 HDO in the intermediate-mass protostar OMC2-FIR4
Kama, Maret, Crimier, Ceccarelli, Dominik
155-09 Completing a detailed dust and che-mical study of the Pipe Nebula Cores
Frau, Girart, Beltrán, Morata, Masqué, Alves, Busquet, Sánchez-Monge, Estalella, Franco
158-09 Confirming the core mass distribution constructed from IRDC extinction maps
Peretto, Fuller, André
159-09 Tracing Dense Gas in IRDCs: A Prelude to Herschel, Act II
Linz, Vasyunina, Schmiedeke, Pavlyuchenkov, Krause, Beuther, Henning
160-09 The role of environment on the formation of Orion protostars
Maret, Megeath, Stanke, Osorio, Tobin, di Francesco, Fischer, Poteet
161-09 Understanding the Origin of a Remarkable Condensation
Hacar, Tafalla, Quintana-Lacaci, Kauffmann, Kovacs
162-09 Dense Core Formation in the Brightest Taurus Filament
Hacar, Tafalla, Quintana-Lacaci, Kauffmann, Kovacs
165-09 Assembling molecular clouds: mm continuum and NIR extinction
Beuther, Kainulainen
167-09 CN Zeeman Measurements Towards High Mass Dense Cores: A Pilot Study
Pillai, Menten
168-09 Magnetic field diagnostics in MSX IR dark clouds: 1. A search for Zeeman tracers in CL04
Poidevin, Wiesemeyer, Bastien, Vastel
169-09 Measuring the magnetic support in the NGC 2264-C protocluster
Maury, André, Thum, Wiesemeyer, Peretto, Hennebelle
170-09 Magnetic fields in massive star-forming regions: Testing the C2
H Zeeman effect Beuther, Linz, Henning, Crutcher
171-09 C2H: a new opportunity to measure magnetic field
in dense cores Padovani, Walmsley, Tafalla, Galli, Thum
172-09 Polarization study of CN emission towards massive protostars: what is the role of the magnetic field?
Herpin, Bontemps, Wiesemeyer, Motte, Jacq, Schneider, Csengeri
174-09 Disk-Halo interaction: The foot point of the ‘’Giant Molecular Loops’’ at the Galactic center
Riquelme, Amo Baladrón, Martín-Pintado, Mauersberger, Bronfman, Martín, Burton, Jones, Cunningham
178-09 A Comparison of Gas and Solid Phase CO Distribution in Molecular Cores
Fraser, Craigon, Noble, Miller, Thi
180-09 The chemical structure of Orion : Completion of the 2-D line survey at 1mm
Marcelino, Cernicharo, Bañó, Palau, Tercero, Guélin
181-09 Chemical complexity in strongly UV-illuminated regions
Goicoechea, Fuente, Cernicharo, Bañó, García-Burillo, Usero, Berné, Marcelino
182-09 An Unbiased Spectral Survey of the Cep E Protostellar Outflow
Lefloch, Pacheco, Ceccarelli, Cernicharo, Hilyblant, Codella, Cabrit, Schuster, Loinard, Gueth, Fuente
184-09 The quest for CN- and C2H - in space Agúndez, Cernicharo, Guélin, Mccarthy, Thaddeus
188-09 Search of CH₂D+ : deuteration in warm conditions. Roueff, Gerin, Lis, Wootten, Guélin, Cernicharo, Marcelino
189-09 Investigating the incredibly large deuteration ratio in formaldehyde in L1527
Parise, Sakai, Yamamoto, Müller
190-09 Multiple deuteration of CH3CN in IRAS16293-2422 Du, Parise, Müller
Ident. Title of Investigation Authors
191-09 Deuteration in the massive dense cores of Cygnus X Bontemps, Herpin, Jacq, Csengeri, Schneider, Motte, Gallardo
41Annual report 2010
ident. title of investigation authors
192-09 Tracing gas accretion in galactic nuclei using the isotopic ratios
Riquelme, Amo Baladrón, Martín-Pintado, Mauersberger, Martín
193-09 The relation between evolution and deuteration in massive star formation
Fontani, Caselli, Jimenez-Serra, Tan, Butler, Leurini, Audard, Busquet, Estalella, Palau, Sanchez-Monge
198-09 The CMF as an age tracer: Relative deuteration in MSF regions
Rodón, Beuther, Schilke, Zhang
199-09 Hunting for molecules in proto-planetary disks (PPDs)
Fuente, Cernicharo, Goicoechea, Alonso-Albi, Berné, Agúndez
200-09 Sulfur during Planetary System For-mation: Characterizing the Reservoir of Sulfur in Proto-planetary Disks
Dutrey, Henning, Guilloteau, Semenov, Wakelam, Hersant, Launhardt, Pietu, Schreyer, Difolco
201-09 The Impact of Grain Evolution on Protoplanetary disc Chemistry - The CN/HCN ratio
Guilloteau, Henning, Dutrey, Semenov, Wakelam, Launhardt, Pietu, Schreyer, Boehler
202-09 DCN in protoplanetary disks: the missing link between molecular clouds and comets
Chapillon, Parise, Guilloteau
206-09 Characterization of debris disks around solar-type stars
Lestrade, Phou, Bertoldi
207-09 Disks in the TW Hydrae Association Ducourant, Boehler, Dutrey, Guilloteau, Krone-Martins, Texeira, Galli, Chauvin, Difolco
208-09 Multiple Molecular Shells in IRC10216 Cernicharo, Agúndez, Marcelino, Guélin
209-09 A lambda 0.9 mm spectral line survey of IRC +10216
Kahane, Cernicharo, Guélin, Agúndez, Pardo
211-09 Probing HBB by observations of N-bearing molecules in CSEs: III
Alcolea, Bujarrabal, Menten, Desmurs, Jimenez-Esteban, Quintana-Lacaci
212-09 Metal oxides as tracers of dust condensation in oxygen-rich evolved stars
De Beck, Decin, Cherchneff, Bujarrabal
215-09 CO line emission toward magnetically active AGB stars
Ramstedt, Vlemmings, Castro-Carrizo, Maercker, Schöier, Olofsson
216-09 Molecular complexity in O-rich evol-ved stars: OH₂31.8+4.2 and IK Tau
Sanchez Contreras, Alcolea, Cernicharo, Bujarrabal, Agundez, Herpin, Pardo, Menten, Wyrowsky
219-09 Molecular Gas in the M82 wind and cap Boulanger, Armus, Guillard, Herrera, Lehnert, Nesvadba
222-09 Tracing the Dense Gas at Large Radii in NGC 4736 Bigiel, Usero, Leroy, Walter, Blitz
223-09 Molecular Gas in the Extreme Outer Disk of M83 Bigiel, Leroy, Usero, Walter, Blitz, Madore
224-09 Probing the molecular disk-halo interface in NGC 891
García-Burillo, Guélin, Usero, Fuente, Howk, Graciá-Carpio, Zylka
226-09 18O/17O as a diagnostics of star forma-tion in the central minispiral of IC 342
Mauersberger, Henkel, Wilson, Vila-vilaró
228-09 A Legacy Survey to Study Cold Gas Scaling Laws in the Local Universe
Kramer, Kauffmann, Buchbender, Catinella, Cortese, Fabello, Fu, Giovanelli, Gracia-Carpio, Guo, Haynes, Heckman, Krumholz, Li, Moran, Rodriguez-Fernandez, Saintonge, Schiminovich, Schuster, Sievers, Tacconi, Wang
229-09 Do Episodic Inflow Events Resupply Molecular Gas? Kannappan, Wei, Stark, Baker, Vogel
232-09 HERA 13CO(2-1) observations of the Antennae galaxies
Tabatabaei, Güsten, Kramer, Requena-Torres
233-09 CO and CI Study of the ISM in Intermediate Redshift ULIRGs
Boone, Lim, Gerin, Bayet, Papadopoulos, Trung, Matsushita
235-09 CO in Abell 1367: a probe for interaction mechanisms
Scott, Brinks, Usero, Bravo-Alfaro
236-09 Revealing the cold gas phase in the cores of cluster of galaxies
Edge, Salome, Combes, Hamer, Egami
237-09 The chemical classification of galaxies. Aladro, Martín, Riquelme, Martín-Pintado, Kramer, Güsten, Mauersberger, Weiβ, Requena-Torres, Armijos
238-09 Hot molecular gas near the AGN of NGC 1068 Mühle, Henkel, Aalto
Ident. Title of Investigation Authors
242-09 The molecular gas properties of early-type galaxies Crocker, Krips, Young, Bureau, Combes, Davis, Alatalo, Blitz, Emsellem, Cappellari, Mcdermid, Krajnovic
250-09 Multiband Polarization Variability of 0716+714 and 0954+658
Gupta, Krichbaum, Marchili, Wiesemeyer, Thum, Fuhrmann, Nestoras, Zensus, Liu, Wiita, Gaur
252-09 On the Road to Understanding AGN Feedback Lehnert, Boulanger, Pineau des Forêts, Guillard, Nesvadba, Appleton, Ogle
253-09 The Molecular Gas Content of the Weakest AGN Böker, Schinnerer, Lisenfeld
256-09 Coordinated cm to mm-monitoring of variability and spectral evolution in Fermi blazars
Fuhrmann, Zensus, Krichbaum, Readhead, Nestoras, Angelakis, Marchili, Ungerechts, Sievers, Riquelme
257-09 Mapping a z=5 Cluster in Far-IR Emission Bremer, Stanway, Davies, Carilli, Omont, Lehnert
258-09 Search for Dust Continuum in Optically Faint Quasars at z~6
Wang, Carilli, Wagg, Bertoldi, Omont, Cox, Walter, Menten, Strauss, Fan, Jiang
260-09 Further exploring starbursts down the z=6 QSO luminosity function
Omont, Willott, Bergeron, Delorme, Forveille, Delfosse, Cox, Beelen, Fiolet
263-09 A MAMBO survey of the 1046+59 VLA/Herschel ultradeep field
Omont, Baker, Beelen, Ivison, Lindner, Lonsdale, Owen, Bertoldi, Dole, Fiolet, Harris, Lutz, Polletta
42 Institut de Milimétrique
ident. title of investigation authors
264-09 A 1.2 mm MAMBO survey of the Q1623 field Chapman, Greve, Kovacs
269-09 [CII]158um in the Early Universe: a search in a z=6.17 LBG
Verma, Lehnert, Tecza, Contursi, Lutz, Sturm, Schreiber
270-09 Measuring the [CII]/CO Ratio at High Redshift Hailey-Dunsheath, Stacey, Nikola, Tacconi
271-09 Cooling at Early Times - [CII] in a Unique High Redshift Source
Stanway, Bremer, Davies, Carilli, Omont, Lehnert
272-09 Search for [CII] Emission in High-z Quasars and Galaxies
Cox, Riechers, Walter, Carilli, Wang, Neri, Omont, Beelen, Maiolino, Menten, Wagg, Kramer, Weiss, Bertoldi
273-09 A Comprehensive Spectral Survey of the Brightest Submillimetre Galaxy
Swinbank, Cox, Neri, Smail, Edge, Harris, Baker, Longmore, Ivison, Weiss
275-09 CO redshifts of SMGs near HzRGs Weiss, Ivison, Downes, Walter, Menten
276-09 The CO line SED of J14009+0252 - evidence for a second gas component?
Weiss, Downes, Walter, Henkel
277-09 Correlation between PAH and CO emission in z~1.5-2 Spitzer starburst ULIRGs
Fiolet, Omont, Bertincourt, Yan, Farrah, Lagache, Lutz, Tacconi, Cox, Nesvadba, Polletta
278-09 High-J CO Excitation in Submm-Faint Radio Galaxies at z~2
Casey, Chapman, Greve, Genzel, Weiss, Tacconi, Bertoldi, Neri, Omont, Cox, Smail, Swinbank, Ivison, Blain
279-09 Search for molecular absorption at high z Combes, Bergeron, Omont, Gupta, Srianand
D11-09 Improve Spectrum of NH+ in L1689B Bacmann
D14-09 Search for OFF position in S140 for HERSCHEL Dedes
D15-09 Finish 052-09 Goicoechea, Pety
D16-09 Water Vapor in our Galaxy Cernicharo
D17-09 Master Students Training LeBourlot
D19-09 Short-spacings CO map to correct a complex Plateau de Bure CO map
Van Loon, Davies, Messineo, Kastner, Figer
D20-09 MAMBO snapshots: Obtaining the flux at 1.2mm of strong gravitational lens candidates selected in the Herschel-ATLAS SDP field
Dannerbauer, Omont, Bertoldi, Beelen, Negrello, Verma,
D21-09 DDT: The SiO masers of the recent nova V407 Cyg Vlemmings, Fuhrmann, Humphreys, Ramstedt, Maercker
D22-09 DDT observations of comet 29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann in support of Herschel
Bockelée-Morvan, Biver, Crovisier, Lellouch, Colom, Moreno, Hartogh, Lis, Boissier, Paubert
001-10 Jupiter’s atmosphere 16 years after SL9 impact Moreno, Marten, Paubert
Ident. Title of Investigation Authors
002-10 The composition of Jupiter-family comet 10P/Tempel 2
Crovisier, Biver, Bockelée-Morvan, Colom, Moreno, Hartogh, Lis, Boissier, Paubert, Weaver, Russo, Vervack
003-10 A Close-up Look at Comet 103P/Hartley 2 Drahus, Jewitt, Thum, Sievers, Guilbert, Waniak, Bonev, Borisov
004-10 Understanding the composition of Earth-grazing comet 103P/Hartley 2
Biver, Crovisier, Bockelée-Morvan, Colom, Moreno, Hartogh, Lis, Boissier, Paubert, Weaver, Russo, Vervack
005-10 Dense gas from an excellent proto brown dwarf candidate
Palau, de Gregorio-Monsalvo, Morata, Huelamo, Barrado y Navascués
011-10 Unbiased cens of Cores in the Pipe Nebula Bowl’s center
Frau, Girart, Beltrán, Morata, Alves, Franco, Busquet, Estalella, Masqué, Sánchez-Monge, Padovani
012-10 Cloud Core Structure from Observations of C18O Pagani, Goldmsith, Liseau, Li, De Luca, Bell
015-10 Tracing Dense Gas in IRDCs: A Prelude to Herschel, Act II
Linz, Schmiedeke, Pavlyuchenkov, Krause, Henning
016-10 A search for indications of small-scale clumpiness in massive cores
Pirogov, Zinchenko
017-10 A study of W40 pre-protostellar dense core Pirogov, Wu, Zhu
018-10 Tracing dust temperatures and co-lumn density: from Herschel to IRAM
Stutz, Launhardt, Henning, Kainulainen, Krause, Linz, Nielbock, Schmalzl, Steinacker
020-10 Fragmentation of Young Filaments within Molecular Clouds
Hacar, Kainulainen, Tafalla, Beuther, Qintana-Lacaci
021-10 Assembling molecular clouds: mm continuum and NIR extinction
Beuther, Kainulainen
024-10 Large scale kinematics of two Herschel filaments in Aquila
Peretto, André, Maury, Menshchikov, Konyves, Bontemps, Didelon, Attard
025-10 The Transition to Coherence in Dense Cores: B5 as a test
Pineda, Jimenez-Serra, Schnee, Caselli, Goodman, Arce, Tafalla, Hacar
026-10 Sequential star-formation in Isolated Dark Clouds - A kinematic study of the Bok globule CB 130
Schmalzl, Launhardt, Bourke, Stutz, Henning
029-10 Examining the Role of Magnetic Fields in Starless Cores
Lee, Looney, Raab, Mouschovias, Kunz
43Annual report 2010
ident. title of investigation authors
030-10 The magnetic precursor of C-type shocks in young molecular outflows
Roberts, Jiménez-Serra, Gusdorf, Martín-Pintado, Rodríguez-franco, Viti
033-10 Comparison of turbulence in two nearby molecular clouds
Hily-Blant, Falgarone, Hennebelle, Lesaffre
034-10 CH3OH masers and the magnetic field in the central
molecular zone Wiesemeyer, Strelnitski, Pratap, Thum
035-10 Magnetic field diagnostics in MSX IR dark clouds: 1. A search for Zeeman tracers in CL04
Poidevin, Wiesemeyer, Bastien, Vastel
037-10 A High Sensitivity Search for Millime-ter Radio Recombination Lines around YSO’s
Schuster, Sterzik, Lefloch, Thum, Guedel
038-10 On the chemical effects of the propagation of a X-ray wave front through the GMCs of the GC.
Amo Baladrón, Armijos, Riquelme, Martín-Pintado, Terrier, Ponti, Goldwurm
042-10 The chemical structure of Orion : Completion of the 2-D line survey at 1mm
Marcelino, Cernicharo, Bañó, Palau, Tercero, Guélin
043-10 Search for complex molecules in the Serpens core Kristensen, Öberg, Visser, Isokoski, Dishoeck
045-10 Ionization of cosmic-ray irradiated molecular clouds near the SNR W28
Montmerle, Ceccarelli, Dubus, Hily-Blant, Lefloch, Fiasson, Gallant, Gabici, Elitzur
046-10 Investigating the nitrogen isotopic fractionation mechanism in cold quiescent clouds: a search for 15N
2H+ and N15ND+ in L1544
Bizzocchi, Caselli, Dore
049-10 Dilution of the 13C Isotopic Species in Dark Cloud Yamamoto, Sakai, Sakai
050-10 Production of amino acids in the Perseus molecular complex?
Iglesias-Groth, Gómez, Manchado
Ident. Title of Investigation Authors
051-10 Search for medium-size anions in molecular sources Agúndez, Cernicharo, Guélin, Marcelino, Roueff, Mccarthy, Thaddeus
052-10 Chemical complexity in strongly UV-illuminated regions: 2 mm
Goicoechea, Fuente, Cernicharo, Bañó, Marcelino, García-Burillo, Usero
054-10 Tracing gas accretion in Galactic nuclei using the isotopic ratios
Riquelme, Amo Baladrón, Martín-Pintado, Mauersberger, Martín
055-10 The relation between evolution and deuteration in massive star formation
Fontani, Caselli, Jimenez-Serra, Tan, Butler, Leurini, Audard, Busquet, Estalella, Palau, Sanchez-Monge
056-10 Selective deuteration of methanol in protostars
Ratajczak, Faure, Kahane, Ceccarelli, Taquet, Quirico, Pacheco, Lefloch
061-10 Search of CH₂D+: a test of gas phase deuteration in warm environments
Roueff, Gerin, Lis, Wootten, Black, Guélin, Cernicharo, Marcelino
062-10 Initial Conditions of High-Mass Star Formation Tackenberg, Henning, Beuther
063-10 The molecular counterpart to HH jets from A stars Alonso-Albi, Bachiller, Ginard, Fuente
065-10 The interaction of molecular outflows and HII regions massive star forming regions
Gerin, Falgarone, De Luca, Godard, Lesaffre, Cabrit, Lis, Menten, Mookerjea, Bell, Black, Vastel, Coutens
068-10 A new pathfinder for water in warm proto-planetary disks
Ceccarelli, Cernicharo
069-10 DCN in protoplanetary disks: the missing link between molecular clouds and comets
Chapillon, Parise, Guilloteau
070-10 Tracing X-ray/UV irradiation of proto-planetary disks with ethynyl radical
Semenov, Guilloteau, Dutrey, Boehler, Chapillon, Gueth, Henning, Hersant, Launhardt, Pietu, Schreyer, Wakelam
072-10 Spatially resolving an extended debris disk around a nearby solar-type star
Lestrade, Phou, Lassus
073-10 Further observations of molecular emission from the symbiotic star RAqr
Bujarrabal, Ajewska, Alcolea, Quintana-Lacaci
074-10 Excited H₂O in M-type Asymptotic Giant Branch stars
Maercker, Menten, Olofsson, Ramstedt, Schöier
075-10 Thermal Emission from Colliding Winds in Wolf-Rayet Stars
Montes, Rodriguez, Perez-Torres, Alberdi
076-10 CO line emission toward magnetically active AGB stars
Ramstedt, Vlemmings, Castro-Carrizo, De Lima-leal-Ferreira, Maercker, Olofsson, Schöier
078-10 CO observations near the bow-shock in IRC+10216 Groenewegen
079-10 Unveiling the rich chemistry of yellow hypergiant stars: IRC+10420
Quintana-Lacaci, Bujarrabal, Castro-Carrizo, Sánchez-Contreras, Alcolea
081-10 Confirmation and excitation of CO and 13CO in water fountain stars
Rizzo, Gómez, Osorio, Suárez, Miranda
082-10 Study of the characteristics of the CSEs around Red supergiant stars
Quintana-Lacaci, Bujarrabal, Alcolea, Castro-Carrizo
083-10 High-Velocity Outflows in AGB Binaries discovered with GALEX
Sahai, Contreras, Findeisen, Gil De Paz
085-10 A complete and deep HERA map of M33 Braine, Schuster, Rodriguez, Kramer, Sievers, Gratier, Brouillet, Herpin, Bontemps, Israel, Van Der Werf, van der Tak, Tabatabaei, Henkel, Roellig, Combes, Wiedner, García-Burillo, Aalto, Xilouris, Wiklind, Mookerjea, Koribalski, Calzetti, Corbelli
44 Institut de Milimétrique
ident. title of investigation authors
086-10 The origin of the thick molecular disk of NGC 891 García-Burillo, Guélin, Usero, Fuente, Howk, Graciá-Carpio, Zylka
088-10 The Star Formation - Molecular Gas Connection in an Extended UV Disk
Watson, Martini, Böker, Gil De Paz, Lisenfeld, Schinnerer
089-10 HERA (13)CO(2-1) observations of the Antennae galaxies
Tabatabaei, Güsten, Kramer, Requena
090-10 18O/17O as a diagnostics of star forma-tion in the central minispiral of IC 342
Mauersberger, Aladro, Henkel, Wilson, Vila-vilaró
092-10 Molecules and dust in HeViCS galaxies Corbelli, Bianchi, Giovanardi, Magrini, Clemens, Gavazzi, Hunt, Sabatini, Baes, Delooze, Verstappen, Fritz, Garcia-Appadoo, Boselli, Jones, Madden, Bomans, Pierini, Zibetti, Xilouris, Grossi, Vlahakis, Davies, Cortese, Hughes, Bendo, Dariush, Pohlen, Smith, Fadda
094-10 CO Line Ratios and Physical Conditions in the HERACLES Sample
Rosolowsky, Weiss, Usero, Leroy, Walter, Schuster, Israel
095-10 Gas consumption and expulsion in starbursts Wild, Nesvadba, Lehnert
097-10 Carbon monoxide in low-metallicity starbursts Hunt, García-Burillo, Caselli, Combes, Bovinelli, Maiolino, Menten, Weiss
098-10 Studying the dust properties in starbursting dwarf galaxies
Lisenfeld, Relaño, Hermelo, Fischera
099-10 Molecular Gas Observations of Luminous Infrared Galaxies in the Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey (GOALS)
Iwasawa, Evans, Aalto, Frayer, Surace, Privon, Kim, Mazzarella, Armus
100-10 Molecular clouds in the hot intracluster medium: Virgo
Combes, Salomé, Braine
103-10 Understanding the densest molecular gas component in external galaxies
Bayet, Viti, Martín-Pintado, Martín, Aladro
104-10 The chemical classification of galaxies. Aladro, Martín, Riquelme, Martín-Pintado, Kramer, Güsten, Mauersberger, Weiβ, Requena-Torres, Armijos
105-10 Excitation of Dense Molecular Gas in Galaxy Nuclei Israel, Meijerink, Loenen
108-10 Densitometry and Thermometry of Starburst Galaxies
Menten, Henkel, Mangum, Darling
109-10 The extraordinary conditions of the molecular gas in nearby active galaxies
Rodríguez, Aalto, Mühle, Odriozola, Pérez Torres, Costagliola
110-10 A Dedicated Line Survey of Mrk 231 Henkel, Van Der Werf, Weiβ, Martín-Pintado, Aalto, Aladro, Roberts, Gonzalez-Alonso
112-10 Cold dust along the major axis of the spiral galaxy M33 - the HERM33S project.
Quintana-Lacaci, Kramer, Sievers, Buchbender, Tabatabaei, Akras, Xilouris, Aalto, Braine, Bertoldi, Van Der Werf, Wiedner
113-10 The First 3 mm Polarimetric Survey of a Complete Sample of Blazars
Agudo, Thum, Wiesemeyer, Marscher, Jorstad, Gómez
115-10 Hot molecular gas near the AGN of NGC 1068 Mühle, Henkel, Aalto
116-10 Coordinated cm to mm-monitoring of variability and spectral shape evolution of a selected Fermi blazar sample
Fuhrmann, Zensus, Nestoras, Krichbaum, Angelakis, Marchili, Ungerechts, Sievers, Riquelme, Readhead
118-10 Dust in Radio-Loud Broad Absorption Line Quasars Bruni, Mack, Salerno, Montenegro Montes, Carballo, Gonzalez-Serrano, Holt, Benn, Lujan
119-10 Molecular gas in a complete sample of young radio sources
Orienti, Mack, Dallacasa
121-10 A Fairly Short Proposal to Observe a Very Interesting Object
Baker, Shin, Strauss
122-10 Detecting dust continuum in two massive star forming galaxies at z>4
Karim, Schinnerer, Carilli, Bertoldi, Capak, Michalowski
124-10 Dust emission from lensed galaxies within and after the Epoch of Reionization
Boone, Schaerer, Pelló, Combes, Dessauges-Zavadsky, Semelin
128-10 Understanding the Lack of a [CII] Deficit at z~1 Hailey-Dunsheath, Stacey, Nikola, Tacconi
133-10 CO in Intermediate Redshift ULIRGs Boone, Lim, Gerin, Bayet, Papadopoulos, Trung, Matsushita
135-10 The search of molecular gas absorption at high-z Petitjean, Srianand, Gupta, Combes, Noterdaeme, Ledoux, Vergani
136-10 The brightest SMG in the North? – The EMIR view Lestrade, Salomé, Combes, Omont, Bertoldi, André, Schneider
137-10 MAMBO observations of the most luminous Herschel sources
Perez-Fournon, Omont, Isaak, Daddi, Ferrero, Castro-Rodriguez, Cava, Martín-Pintado, Elbaz, Burgarella, Ivison, Clements, Oliver, Rigopoulou, Dowell
Plateau de Bure Interferometer
ident. title of investigation authors
OF4E Deep study of the circumstellar envelo-pes of AGB & early post-AGB stars
Castro-Carrizo, Alcolea, Bujarrabal, Grewing, Lucas, Neri, Oloffson, Schöier, Winters, Lindqvist
R06D Dynamical disk perturbations in high accretion T Tauri stars
Cabrit, Pety, Dougados, Beust
R073 Disk Masses of the rho-Oph Brown Dwarfs Natta, Testi, Neri
R0AB Fuelling and Feedback in the Nucleus of NGC1068 Davies, Tacconi, Combes, Baker, Schinnerer, Hicks, Genzel, Sanchez
R0E7 Ionized Carbon in High-Redshift QSOs Bertoldi, Walter, Kurk, Carilli, Wagg, Aravena, Maiolino, Cox, Neri, Omont, Menten, Weiss
45Annual report 2010
ident. title of investigation authors
S042 The SED of the Cloverleaf at mm wavelengths: a key to the dust and gas properties in the circumnuclear ring
Guélin, Neri, Salomé, Cox, Winters, Zylka
S07B Tracing ionization structure of proto-planetary disks Semenov, Guilloteau, Henning, Dutrey, Chapillon, Gueth, Hersant, Launhardt, Pavlyuchenkov, Pietu, Schreyer, Wakelam
S081 The spiral features around the Herbig Ae star AB Auriga
Guilloteau, Tang, Ho, Ohashi, Piétu, Dutrey
S0D7 Star Forming Histories and Gas Fractions of Galaxies from z=1-3
Genzel, Tacconi, Davis, Bolatto, Bournaud, Burkert, Combes, Cooper, Cox, Schreiber, Garcia-Burillo, Gracia-Carpio, Lutz, Naab, Neri, Omont, Shapiro, Shapley, Sternberg, Weiner
T--1 CII 158 micron line toward the z=6.23 QSO J1048+4637
Bertoldi, Neri, Cox, Carilli, Walter, Wang
T--4 Climbing the ladder from the bottom up: mid-J CO lines in SMM00266+1708
Sharon, Baker, Harris, Tacconi, Lutz
T--5 Spectral variations during flaring activity at periastron passage of V773TauA
Massi, Menten, Loinard, Kerp, Torricelli-Ciampioni, Neidhöfer, Torres
T--6 1.2mm imaging of strong gravitational lens candidates selected in the Herschel-ATLAS SDP field
Omont, Bertoldi, Beelen, Dannerbauer, Negrello, Neri, Cox
T--7 H recombination lines in LKHA101 Thum
T--8 CH3CN in G29.96-0.02 Fontani
T--9 CO(7-6) and CI in the Eyelash Cox, Neri, Krips
T--A CO(1-2) in Pluto Bremer
T--B HCOP and HCN in CRL618 Castro-Carrizo
T--C CO isotopes in M82 Guélin
T--D CO detection of strong gravitational lens candidates selected in the Herschel-ATLAS SDP field
Omont, Bertoldi, Beelen, Dannerbauer, Negrello, Neri, Cox
T--E CO detection of strong gravitational lens candidates selected in the Herschel-ATLAS SDP field
Omont, Bertoldi, Beelen, Dannerbauer, Negrello, Neri, Cox
T--F Molecular Gas in the Most Distant Submm Galaxy and its Environment at z=5.3
Riechers, Capak, Carilli, Schinnerer, Bertoldi, Cox, Neri, Scoville, Yan
T--G Search for redshifted hydrogen fluoride in APM08279+5255
Lis, Phillips, Gerin, Neufeld, Cox, Neri
T--H [CII] in a GRB host galaxy at z=8.26 Walter, Bertoldi, Carilli, Cox, Greve, Neri, Riechers, Weiss
T--I Blind CO detection at 3mm in ATLAS15-141 Cox, Krips
T01F The nature of the C-rich evolved stars with high circumstellar expansion velocity
Quintana-Lacaci, Bujarrabal, Castro-Carrizo
T031 Molecular gas in type-2 quasars at z~0.1-0.4: Testing type-2/type-1 unification models
Krips, Neri, Cox
T04D Atomic carbon in high-redshift quasars Knudsen, Bertoldi, Cox, Omont, Fiolet, Carilli, Riechers
T057 M51: A Unique Laboratory to Study the Evolutionary Sequence of GMCs
Schinnerer, Leroy, Rix, Dumas, Kramer, Schuster, Thompson, Garcia-Burillo, Pety, Meidt
T058 Mapping the D/H ratio in the Martian atmosphere Fouchet, Moreno, Lellouch, Montmessin
T05C Physical modeling of the supersonically contracting star forming core ahead of HH80N
Masqué, Girart, Estalella, Beltrán, Osorio, Anglada
T05D Origin of Water in Low-Mass Protostars Jorgensen, Lindberg, Dishoeck
T05F Probing the formation of binary stars: A survey of Class 0 objects
André, Maury, Gueth, Hennebelle, Cabrit, Bate, Stamatellos, Duchêne, Bouvier, Belloche, Bontemps, Motte
T062 Completing the study of the proto-cluster IC 1396-N Fuente, Alonso-Albi, Beltran, Castro-Carrizo, Ceccarelli, Codella, Lefloch, Neri
T064 Kinematics of massive protostars in their earliest stage of evolution
Csengeri, Schneider, Motte, André, Bontemps, Herpin, Gueth, Hennebelle
T065 Properties of clusters forming around massive protostars
Palau, Fuente, Busquet, Zhang, Neri, Sánchez-Monge, Boissier, Pietu, Estalella, Fontani, Audard, Alonso-Albi, Ho, Zapata
T077 X-ray/mm Monitoring of Colliding Magnetospheres Salter, Getman, Hogerheijde, Blake, Wilner
T078 Origin of High-velocity CO in DG Tau Codella, Cabrit, Guedel, Gueth, Cesaroni, Dougados
T07B The structure of the ``Butterfly Star’s’’ famous edge-on disc with high resolution
Sauter, Wolf, Dutrey, Guilloteau, Boehler
T083 Exploration of the architecture of the planetary system around HR 8799
Moór, Ábrahám, Csengeri, Kiss, Kóspál, Mosoni, Sándor
T089 Unvealing the interaction between the molecular gas and extremely fast winds in the PPNe M 2-56
Castro-Carrizo, Contreras, Bujarrabal, Neri, Alcolea
T08C Molecular Clouds and Stellar Feedback in NGC 2403 Leroy, Schinnerer, Rosolowsky, Bolatto
T093 Dust grain disruption in NGC 1068 through SiO emission: radiation- or shock-driven?
Usero, García-Burillo, Fuente, Graciá-Carpio, Krips, Planesas, Neri
T09C Probing extreme AGN feedback in radio galaxies Garcia-Burillo, Combes, Usero, Morganti, Soria-Ruiz, Fuente, Oosterloo, Neri
T0A1 Testing the mechanism of bulge growth in cluster starbursts: where is the gas?
Geach, Smail, Bower, Edge
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ident. title of investigation authors
T0A3 Cross-calibrating masses of quasar host galaxies Jahnke, Walter, Riechers
T0A4 The CO Morphology of a High-Redshift Galaxy Detected in [CII]
Hailey-Dunsheath, Stacey, Nikola, Tacconi
T0AA High-resolution Observations of CO in the Brightest Submillimetre Galaxy
Cox, Swinbank, Neri, Krips, Smail, Edge, Harris, Baker, Longmore, Ivison, Weiss
T0AB High-resolution mapping of a lensed UV-selected star-forming galaxy
Baker, Lutz, Tacconi, Lin, Allam, Tucker, Shapley, Diehl
T0AD Characterising the molecular gas in a high-redshift obscured quasar
Martinez-Sansigre, Lacy, Schinnerer, Rawlings
T0AF A Systematic Study of CO Excitation in High-Redshift Quasar Host Galaxies
Riechers, Walter, Carilli, Neri, Cox, Weiss, Bertoldi
T0B2 Where are the sites of active star formation in the Lyα blob LAB1?
Dannerbauer, Walter, Tapken, Yang, Matsuda, Yamada, Hayashino
T0B5 Unveiling a population of massive dust-enshrouded galaxies at z>3
Cirasuolo, Dannerbauer, Ivison, Greve, Dunlop, McLure, Daddi
T0B7 The Spatially Resolved Star Formation Law in Clustered z>4 Submm Galaxies
Riechers, Daddi, Carilli, Walter, Morrison, Krips, Dannerbauer, Elbaz
T0BA Molecular gas and dust in an extreme star forming galaxy in the young universe
Schinnerer, Carilli, Smolvcic, Capak, Bertoldi
T0C4 Ionized Carbon in High-Redshift QSOs Bertoldi, Walter, Knudsen, Carilli, Wang, Neri, Maiolino, Cox, Omont, Menten, Weiss, Aravena, Wagg, Riechers, Kurk
T0C5 The [CII]-forest: a new powerful tool for cosmology Maiolino, Gallerani, Ferrara, Lutz, Genzel, Tacconi
T0C6 [CII] Emission in Actively Starforming Galaxies at Redshifts ~6.5-7.0
Walter, Carilli, Riechers, Bertoldi, Cox, Neri, Weiss, Wagg, Ouchi, Egami, Iono, Nakanishi
T0C7 [CII] in a GRB host galaxy at z=8.26 Walter, Bertoldi, Carilli, Cox, Greve, Neri, Riechers, Weiss
T0C8 Millimetre observations of GRB afterglows in the it Swift and it Fermi era (ToO)
Castro-Tirado, Bremer, Winters, Gorosabel, Guziy, De Ugarte Postigo, Pérez-Ramírez, Jelinek, Kubánek
T0C9 The Polarization of Sgr A* on a 25 Schwarzschild Radii Scale
Krichbaum, Trippe, Bremer, Wiesemeyer, Lu, Graham, Roy, Alef, Zensus
T0CC IRAM Lensing Survey: Probing Galaxy Formation in the Early Universe
Kneib, Clément, Cuby, Peroux, Ilbert, Jablonka, Boone, Combes, Neri, Krips, Lagache, Beelen, Pello, Courbin, Meylan, Schaerer, Dessauges, Knudsen, Van der Werf, Richard, Smail, Swinbank, Chapman, Ivison, Egami, Altieri, Valtchanov
U--1 Multi-line CO snapshot of the brightest HerMES lensed SMG at z=2.95
Omont, Neri, Beelen, Krips, Perez-Fournon, Gavazzi, Cooray, Bock, Clements, Dowell, Ivison, Lupu, Vieira
U--2 Detecting stellar outflow feedback in a spectacular rotating-clump cluster galaxy
Genzel, Tacconi
U--3 Multi-line CO snapshots of Three Bright HerMES lensed SMGs
Fiolet, Omont, Beelen, Krips, Perez-Fournon, Aussel, Dannerbauer, Cooray, Riechers, The Hermes Consortium
U--5 Molecular filament in the Crab Nebula Salome, Hily-Blant, Castro-Carrizo, Ferland, Combes, Baldwin, Loh
U--6 Bright CO(5-4) from a lensed SMG at redshift 5.7 Omont, Cooray, Riechers, Cox, Krips, Neri
U001 Imaging the inner coma of comet 103P/Hartley 2 Boissier, Bockelée-Morvan, Biver, Crovisier, Moreno, Colom, Groussin, Jorda, Lamy
U002 Absorption line clouds toward SgrB2 Schilke, Lis, Qin, Rolffs, Comito, Belloche, Menten
U003 Methyl formate and methanol: two key complex organic molecules
Taquet, Ceccarelli, Kahane, Neri, Ratajczak, Faure, Lefloch, Pacheco, Bacmann, Quirico, Wiesenfeld, Szalewicz
U009 Studying Low Mass Star Formation Within a Dense Filament in Serpens
Trippe, Brown, Brown, Eriksson
U00B The relation between deuteration and evolution in massive star formation
Fontani, Gueth, Caselli, Tan, Butler, Jimenez-Serra, Busquet, Palau, Sanchez-Monge
U00D Connecting massive embedded protostars on their natal IRDC
Ragan, Beuther, Henning, Linz
U00F The protostellar population in the IR-dark ``tail” in IC 1396N
Beltrán, Fontani, Codella, Massi, López
U010 Unveiling the kinematics of the ionized jet in Cepheus A HW2
Jimenez-Serra, Martin-Pintado, Thum, Patel
U011 The Impact of Grain Evolution on Protoplanetary Disc Chemistry: The CN/HCN ratio
Guilloteau, Henning, Dutrey, Chapillon, Semenov, Wakelam, Launhardt, Pietu, Schreyer, Boehler, Hincelin
U019 Testing the Anion Chemistry in IRC+10216 Guélin, Cernicharo, Agundez, Winters, Thaddeus, Mccarthy
U01E Measuring the dynamics of a Tidal Dwarf Galaxy: insight on the missing baryons
Lisenfeld, Duc, Brinks, Charmandaris, Braine, Bournaud
U020 Shock and star formation in the Stephan’s Quintet galaxy collision
Guillard, Boulanger, Duc, Appleton, Cluver, Falgarone, Lisenfeld, Ogle, Pineau des Forêts
U021 The Disk-Starburst Transition in the Centers of HERACLES Galaxies
Walter, Leroy, Bigiel, Sandstrom, Bolatto, Weiss, Schuster
U026 The physics of AGN feedback in Mrk231 Feruglio, Fiore, Maiolino, Piconcelli, Aussel, Lamastra
U02A Revealing the quasar feedback through broad CO lines
Maiolino, Feruglio, Fiore, Piconcelli, Neri
47Annual report 2010
ident. title of investigation authors
U030 The Dense Star-Forming Interstellar Medium in `Normal’ High Redshift Galaxies
Riechers, Walter, Carilli, Daddi, Dannerbauer, Cox
U031 The z=1 Star Formation Law with Herschel and IRAM Saintonge, Lutz, Magnelli, Berta, Tacconi, Genzel, Nordon, Popesso, Schreiber, Rodighiero, Maiolino
U034 Understanding the Origins of [CII] Emission in z~1 Quasars
Hailey-Dunsheath, Stacey, Nikola, Tacconi
U036 A pilot study of the molecular gas in cluster ULIRGs at z>1
Pope, Armus, Brodwin, Bussmann, Desai, Dey, Jannuzi, Le Floc’h, Melbourne, Soifer
U038 CO excitation conditions in 1<z<2 QSOs Krips, Neri, Cox, Beelen, Barvainis, Riechers, Walter
U03C Quasars Probing Quasars: CO Observations of Projected Quasar Pairs
Hennawi, Prochaska, Walter
U03E CO(3-2) in the z=2.83 Lyman-Break Galaxy Westphal-MM8
Casey, Chapman, Baker, Swinbank, Coppin
U043 Characterizing the CN line SED in the z=3.91 quasar APM 08279+5255
Garcia-Burillo, Usero, Fuente, Graciá-Carpio, Planesas, Cernicharo, Salomé, Guélin, Neri, Cox, Tacconi
U044 Search for CH+(1-0) absorption in high-z galaxy haloes
Falgarone, Bournaud, Cox, Elbaz, Godard, Hily-Blant, Neri, Nurit, Omont, Phillips
U045 Revealing the Nature of Lyα Nebulae in the Distant Universe
Yang, Walter, Decarli, Dannerbauer, Weiss, Chapman
U049 Molecular Gas in the Largest Spectro-scopically Confirmed Sample of z>4 SMGs
Karim, Schinnerer, Carilli, Bertoldi, Capak, Smolcic
U04B A search for cold molecular gas in a gravitationally lensed galaxy at z=4.92
Livermore, Swinbank, Bower, Smail, Edge, Richard, Coppin
U04C Herschel-Spire dropout z>5 galaxy candidates: chasing their redshifts
Daddi, Cirasuolo, Cooray, Burgarella, Dannerbauer, Dickinson, Dowell, Elbaz, Ivison, Krips, Le Floc’h, Morrison, Omont, Perez-Fournon, The Hermes Consortium
U04E Molecular gas and CO excitation in z~6 quasar host galaxies
Wang, Carilli, Riechers, Neri, Walter, Wagg, Bertoldi, Menten, Cox, Strauss, Omont, Fan, Jiang
U04F Molecular Gas Excitation in the Highest Redshift Quasar Host Galaxy
Riechers, Carilli, Wang, Walter, Neri, Cox, Weiss, Bertoldi, Maiolino
U050 [CII] Emission in Actively Starforming Galaxies at Redshifts 6.6-7.0
Walter, Carilli, Riechers, Bertoldi, Cox, Neri, Weiss, Wagg, Ouchi, Egami, Iono, Nakanishi
U052 Class 0 protostars with PdBI: Solving the angular momentum problem?
André, Maury, Testi, Launhardt, Codella, Cabrit, Gueth, Lefloch, Maret, Bottinelli, Bacmann, Belloche, Bontemps, Hennebelle, Klessen, Dullemond
U056 The HH7 bow shock: A benchmark for shock models Gratier, Cabrit, Gerin, Lesaffre, Pety, Pineau des Forêts
U068 Chemical study of the disk around AB Aur Fuente, Cernicharo, Agúndez, Neri, Goicoechea, Berné, Marcelino, Fontani
U06D Are faint protoplanetary disks just smaller rather than more tenuous?
Piétu, Guilloteau, Dutrey, Boehler
U07F The molecular gas reservoir in M82: how much ‘fuel’ is left ‘undisturbed’?
Fuente, Garcia-Burillo, Gerin, Krips, Neri, Usero, Pilleri
U084 Formation and Evolution of Circum-nuclear Starburst Rings II Dense Gas
Van der Laan, Schinnerer, Emsellem, Dumas, Mundell, Wozniak, Haan, Böker
U093 A search for radio-jet driven molecular outflow from 3C305
Guillard, Boulanger, Nesvadba, Ogle, Salomé, Emonts, Appleton
U09E An Exploratory Redshift Survey in the Hubble Deep Field North
Walter, Carilli, Daddi, Cox, Riechers, Decarli, Bertoldi, Weiss, Neri, Menten, Dannerbauer, Bell, Dickinson, Ellis, Chiu, Krumholz, Robertson
U0A1 Cross-calibrating masses of quasar host galaxies Jahnke, Walter, Decarli, Riechers
U0B6 The 13CO ladder in SMM J2135-0102 Swinbank, Smail, Cox, Danielson, Edge, Harris, Ivison, Krips, Neri
U0BD On the Variations of Fundamental Constants and AGN feedback
Weiss, Walter, Downes, Henkel, Menten, Carilli, Cox
U0C4 Search for H₂O, H₂O+ and OH+ in the z=3.91 lensed QSO APM 08279+5255
Van der Werf, Alba, Walter, Weiss, Spaans, Loenen, Meijerink
U0C6 Ionized Nitrogen ([NII]) at High Redshift Walter, Maiolino, Carilli, Riechers, Bertoldi, Weiss, Cox, Neri
U0D6 Locating the FIR-bright companion to the z=6.42 QSO J1148+5251
Leipski, Walter, Meisenheimer, Herschel-Collaboration
48 Institut de Milimétrique
annex ii
PUBLICATIONS IN 2010The list of refereed publications, conference and workshop papers as well as thesis based upon data obtained using the IRAM instruments are provided in the following two tables: the first table gives the publications with the IRAM staff members as (c0)-author (including technical publications by the IRAM staff ) and the second table those with results from the user’s community.
The running number is the cumulative number since the first annual report was published for the year 1987.
2010 publication list: IRAM community1472 The molecular gas content of the advanced
S+E merger NGC 4441. Evidence for an extended decoupled nuclear disc?
Jütte E., Aalto S., Hüttemeister S. A&A 509, A19
1473 Detection of N15NH+ in L1544 Bizzocchi L., Caselli P., Dore L. A&A 510, L5
1474 A rotating molecular jet in Orion Zapata L. A., Schmid-Burgk J., Muders D., Schilke P., Menten K., Guesten R. A&A 510, A2
1475 Three intermediate-mass young stellar objects with different properties emerging from the same natal cloud in IRAS 00117+6412
Palau A., Sánchez-Monge Á., Busquet G., Estalella R., Zhang Q., Ho P. T. P., Beltrán M. T., Beuther H. A&A 510, A5
1476 A multi-wavelength study of the young star V1118 Orionis in outburst
Audard M., Stringfellow G. S., Güdel M., Skinner S. L., Walter F. M., Guinan E. F., Hamilton R. T., Briggs K. R., Baldovin-Saavedra C.
A&A 511, A63
1477 L1506: a prestellar core in the making Pagani L., Ristorcelli I., Boudet N., Giard M., Abergel A., Bernard J.-P. A&A 512, A3
1478 Abundance anomaly of the 13C species of CCH
Sakai N., Saruwatari O., Sakai T., Takano S., Yamamoto S. A&A 512, A31
1479 Toward understanding the formation of multiple systems. A pilot IRAM-PdBI survey of Class 0 objects
Maury A. J., André P., Hennebelle P., Motte F., Stamatellos D., Bate M., Belloche A., Duchêne G., Whitworth A.
A&A 512, A40
1480 Nitrogen chemistry and depletion in starless cores
Hily-Blant P., Walmsley M., Pineau Des Forêts G., Flower D. A&A 513, A41
1481 Initial phases of massive star formation in high infrared extinction clouds *. I. Physical parameters
Rygl K. L. J., Wyrowski F., Schuller F., Menten K. M. A&A 515, A42
1482 Vibrationally excited HC3N in NGC 4418 Costagliola F., Aalto S. A&A 515, A71
1483 Circumstellar molecular composition of the oxygen-rich AGB star IK Tauri. II. In-depth non-LTE chemical abundance analysis
Decin L., de Beck E., Brünken S., Müller H. S. P., Menten K. M., Kim H., Willacy K., de Koter A., Wyrowski F.
A&A 516, A69
1484 Physical structure of the envelopes of intermediate-mass protostars
Crimier N., Ceccarelli C., Alonso-Albi T., Fuente A., Caselli P., Johnstone D., Kahane C., Lefloch B., Maret S., Plume R., Rizzo J. R., Tafalla M., van Dishoeck E., Wyrowski F.
A&A 516, A102
1485 The puzzling behavior of HNCO isomers in molecular clouds
Marcelino N., Brünken S., Cernicharo J., Quan D., Roueff E., Herbst E., Thaddeus P. A&A 516, A105
1486 Interstellar HOCN in the Galactic center region
Brünken S., Belloche A., Martìn S., Verheyen L., Menten K. M. A&A 516, A109
1487 The NHD/NH ratio toward pre-protostellar cores around the UC H II region in IRAS 20293+3952
Busquet G., Palau A., Estalella R., Girart J. M., Sánchez-Monge Á., Viti S., Ho P. T. P., Zhang Q. A&A 517, L6
1488 TIMASSS: the IRAS16293-2422 millimeter and submillimeter spectral survey: tentative detection of deuterated methyl formate (DCOOCH
3)
Demyk K., Bottinelli S., Caux E., Vastel C., Ceccarelli C., Kahane C., Castets A. A&A 517, A17
1489 A comparative study of high-mass cluster forming clumps
López-Sepulcre A., Cesaroni R., Walmsley C. M. A&A 517, A66
1490 A line confusion limited millimeter survey of Orion KL . I. Sulfur carbon chains
Tercero B., Cernicharo J., Pardo J. R., Goicoechea J. R. A&A 517, A96
1491 Herschel ATLAS: The cosmic star formation history of quasar host galaxies
Serjeant S., Bertoldi F., Blain A. W., Clements D. L., Cooray A., Danese L., Dunlop J., Dunne L., Eales S., Falder J., Hatziminaoglou E., Hughes D. H., Ibar E., Jarvis M. J., Lawrence A., Lee M. G., MichaŃowski M., Negrello M., Omont A., Page M., Pearson C., van der Werf P. P., White G., Amblard A., Auld R., Baes M., Bonfield D. G., Burgarella D., Buttiglione S., Cava A., Dariush A., de Zotti G., Dye S., Frayer D., Fritz J., Gonzalez-Nuevo J., Herranz D., Ivison R. J., Lagache G., Leeuw L., Lopez-Caniego M., Maddox S., Pascale E., Pohlen M., Rigby E., Rodighiero G., Samui S., Sibthorpe B., Smith D. J. B., Temi P., Thompson M., Valtchanov I., Verma A.
A&A 518, L7
49Annual report 2010
1492 The far-infrared/radio correlation as probed by Herschel
Ivison R. J., Magnelli B., Ibar E., Andreani P., Elbaz D., Altieri B., Amblard A., Arumugam V., Auld R., Aussel H., Babbedge T., Berta S., Blain A., Bock J., Bongiovanni A., Boselli A., Buat V., Burgarella D., Castro-Rodrìguez N., Cava A., Cepa J., Chanial P., Cimatti A., Cirasuolo M., Clements D. L., Conley A., Conversi L., Cooray A., Daddi E., Dominguez H., Dowell C. D., Dwek E., Eales S., Farrah D., Förster Schreiber N., Fox M., Franceschini A., Gear W., Genzel R., Glenn J., Griffin M., Gruppioni C., Halpern M., Hatziminaoglou E., Isaak K., Lagache G., Levenson L., Lu N., Lutz D., Madden S., Maffei B., Magdis G., Mainetti G., Maiolino R., Marchetti L., Morrison G. E., Mortier A. M. J., Nguyen H. T., Nordon R., O’Halloran B., Oliver S. J., Omont A., Owen F. N., Page M. J., Panuzzo P., Papageorgiou A., Pearson C. P., Pérez-Fournon I., Pérez Garcìa A. M., Poglitsch A., Pohlen M., Popesso P., Pozzi F., Rawlings J. I., Raymond G., Rigopoulou D., Riguccini L., Rizzo D., Rodighiero G., Roseboom I. G., Rowan-Robinson M., Saintonge A., Sanchez Portal M., Santini P., Schulz B., Scott D., Seymour N., Shao L., Shupe D. L., Smith A. J., Stevens J. A., Sturm E., Symeonidis M., Tacconi L., Trichas M., Tugwell K. E., Vaccari M., Valtchanov I., Vieira J., Vigroux L., Wang L., Ward R., Wright G., Xu C. K., Zemcov M.
A&A 518, L31
1493 HerMES: Far infrared properties of known AGN in the HerMES fields
Hatziminaoglou E., Omont A., Stevens J. A., Amblard A., Arumugam V., Auld R., Aussel H., Babbedge T., Blain A., Bock J., Boselli A., Buat V., Burgarella D., Castro-Rodrìguez N., Cava A., Chanial P., Clements D. L., Conley A., Conversi L., Cooray A., Dowell C. D., Dwek E., Dye S., Eales S., Elbaz D., Farrah D., Fox M., Franceschini A., Gear W., Glenn J., González Solares E. A., Griffin M., Halpern M., Ibar E., Isaak K., Ivison R. J., Lagache G., Levenson L., Lu N., Madden S., Maffei B., Mainetti G., Marchetti L., Mortier A. M. J., Nguyen H. T., O’Halloran B., Oliver S. J., Page M. J., Panuzzo P., Papageorgiou A., Pearson C. P., Pérez-Fournon I., Pohlen M., Rawlings J. I., Rigopoulou D., Rizzo D., Roseboom I. G., Rowan-Robinson M., Sanchez Portal M., Schulz B., Scott D., Seymour N., Shupe D. L., Smith A. J., Symeonidis M., Trichas M., Tugwell K. E., Vaccari M., Valtchanov I., Vigroux L., Wang L., Ward R., Wright G., Xu C. K., Zemcov M.
A&A 518, L33
1494 Dust-temperature of an isolated star-forming cloud: Herschel observations of the Bok globule CB244
Stutz A., Launhardt R., Linz H., Krause O., Henning T., Kainulainen J., Nielbock M., Steinacker J., André P. A&A 518, L87
1495 Strong absorption by interstellar hydrogen fluoride: Herschel/HIFI observations of the sight-line to G10.6-0.4 (W31C)
Neufeld D. A., Sonnentrucker P., Phillips T. G., Lis D. C., de Luca M., Goicoechea J. R., Black J. H., Gerin M., Bell T., Boulanger F., Cernicharo J., Coutens A., Dartois E., Kazmierczak M., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., Geballe T. R., Giesen T., Godard B., Goldsmith P. F., Gry C., Gupta H., Hennebelle P., Herbst E., Hily-Blant P., Joblin C., KoŃos R., KreŃowski J., Martìn-Pintado J., Menten K. M., Monje R., Mookerjea B., Pearson J., Perault M., Persson C., Plume R., Salez M., Schlemmer S., Schmidt M., Stutzki J., Teyssier D., Vastel C., Yu S., Cais P., Caux E., Liseau R., Morris P., Planesas P.
A&A 518, L108
1496 A study of the distant activity of comet C/2006 W3 (Christensen) with Herschel and ground-based radio telescopes
Bockelée-Morvan D., Hartogh P., Crovisier J., Vandenbussche B., Swinyard B. M., Biver N., Lis D. C., Jarchow C., Moreno R., Hutsemékers D., Jehin E., Küppers M., Lara L. M., Lellouch E., Manfroid J., de Val-Borro M., Szutowicz S., Banaszkiewicz M., Bensch F., Blecka M. I., Emprechtinger M., Encrenaz T., Fulton T., Kidger M., Rengel M., Waelkens C., Bergin E., Blake G. A., Blommaert J. A. D. L., Cernicharo J., Decin L., Encrenaz P., de Graauw T., Leeks S., Medvedev A. S., Naylor D., Schieder R., Thomas N.
A&A 518, L149
1497 Quasar feedback revealed by giant molecular outflows
Feruglio C., Maiolino R., Piconcelli E., Menci N., Aussel H., Lamastra A., Fiore F. A&A 518, L155
1498 Chemical study of intermediate-mass (IM) Class 0 protostars. CO depletion and N2
H+ deuteration
Alonso-Albi T., Fuente A., Crimier N., Caselli P., Ceccarelli C., Johnstone D., Planesas P., Rizzo J. R., Wyrowski F., Tafalla M., Lefloch B., Maret S., Dominik C.
A&A 518, A52
1499 The physical and dynamical structure of Serpens. Two very different sub-(proto)clusters
Duarte-Cabral A., Fuller G. A., Peretto N., Hatchell J., Ladd E. F., Buckle J., Richer J., Graves S. F. A&A 519, A27
1500 Molecular absorption lines toward star-forming regions: a comparative study of HCO+, HNC, HCN, and CN
Godard B., Falgarone E., Gerin M., Hily-Blant P., de Luca M. A&A 520, A20
1501 Dynamic star formation in the massive DR21 filament
Schneider N., Csengeri T., Bontemps S., Motte F., Simon R., Hennebelle P., Federrath C., Klessen R. A&A 520, A49
1502 The molecular environment of the Galactic star forming region G19.61-0.23
Santangelo G., Testi L., Leurini S., Walmsley C. M., Cesaroni R., Bronfman L., Carey S., Gregorini L., Menten K. M., Molinari S., Noriega-Crespo A., Olmi L., Schuller F.
A&A 520, A50
1503 W49A: a starburst triggered by expanding shells
Peng T.-C., Wyrowski F., van der Tak F. F. S., Menten K. M., Walmsley C. M. A&A 520, A84
1504 Recurring millimeter flares as evidence for star-star magnetic reconnection events in the DQ Tauri PMS binary system
Salter D. M., Kóspál Á., Getman K. V., Hogerheijde M. R., van Kempen T. A., Carpenter J. M., Blake G. A., Wilner D.
A&A 521, A32
1505 A candidate protostellar object in the L 1457/MBM 12 cloud
Heithausen A., Böttner C. A&A 521, L58
1506 Discovery of an extremely bright submillimeter galaxy at z = 3.93
Lestrade J.-F., Combes F., Salomé P., Omont A., Bertoldi F., André P., Schneider N. A&A 522, L4
1507 Spectral energy distributions of 6.7 GHz methanol masers
Pandian J. D., Momjian E., Xu Y., Menten K. M., Goldsmith P. F. A&A 522, A8
1508 Tracing early evolutionary stages of high-mass star formation with molecular lines
Marseille M. G., van der Tak F. F. S., Herpin F., Jacq T. A&A 522, A40
1509 Probing the mass-loss history of AGB and red supergiant stars from CO rotational line profiles. II. CO line survey of evolved stars: derivation of mass-loss rate formulae
de Beck E., Decin L., de Koter A., Justtanont K., Verhoelst T., Kemper F., Menten K. M. A&A 523, A18
1510 Detection of extended molecular gas in the disk of the LSB galaxy Malin 2
Das M., Boone F., Viallefond F. A&A 523, A63
1511 Fragmentation and mass segregation in the massive dense cores of Cygnus X
Bontemps S., Motte F., Csengeri T., Schneider N. A&A 524, A18
1512 Molecular content of the circumstellar disk in AB Aurigae. First detection of SO in a circumstellar disk
Fuente A., Cernicharo J., Agúndez M., Berné O., Goicoechea J. R., Alonso-Albi T., Marcelino N. A&A 524, A19
1513 Mid-infrared spectroscopy of Spitzer-selected ultra-luminous starbursts at z~2
Fiolet N., Omont A., Lagache G., Bertincourt B., Fadda D., Baker A. J., Beelen A., Berta S., Boulanger F., Farrah D., Kovács A., Lonsdale C., Owen F., Polletta M., Shupe D., Yan L.
A&A 524, A33
50 Institut de Milimétrique
1514 NGC 6240: merger-induced star formation and gas dynamics
Engel H., Davies R. I., Genzel R., Tacconi L. J., Hicks E. K. S., Sturm E., Naab T., Johansson P. H., Karl S. J., Max C. E., Medling A., van der Werf P. P.
A&A 524, A56
1515 Environment of MAMBO Galaxies in the COSMOS Field
Aravena M., Bertoldi F., Carilli C., Schinnerer E., McCracken H. J., Salvato M., Riechers D., Sheth K., Smŏlcić V., Capak P., Koekemoer A. M., Menten K. M.
ApJ 708, L36
1516 The Dust Emissivity Spectral Index in the Starless Core TMC-1C
Schnee S., Enoch M., Noriega-Crespo A., Sayers J., Terebey S., Caselli P., Foster J., Goodman A., Kauffmann J., Padgett D., Rebull L., Sargent A., Shetty R.
ApJ 708, 127
1517 Water Vapor in the Inner 25 AU of a Young Disk Around a Low-Mass Protostar
Jørgensen J. K., van Dishoeck E. F. ApJ 710, L72
1518 Panchromatic Observations and Modeling of the HV Tau C Edge-on Disk
Duchêne G., McCabe C., Pinte C., Stapelfeldt K. R., Ménard F., Duvert G., Ghez A. M., Maness H. L., Bouy H., Barrado y Navascués D., Morales-Calderón M., Wolf S., Padgett D. L., Brooke T. Y., Noriega-Crespo A.
ApJ 712, 112
1519 Dust and HCO+ Gas in the Star-Forming Core W3-SE
Zhu L., Wright M. C. H., Zhao J.-H., Wu Y. ApJ 712, 674
1520 Multiple Shells Around G79.29+0.46 Revealed from Near-IR to Millimeter Data
Jiménez-Esteban F. M., Rizzo J. R., Palau A. ApJ 713, 429
1521 On the Break in the Fermi-Large Area Telescope Spectrum of 3C 454.3
Finke J. D., Dermer C. D. ApJ 714, L303
1522 Rotational Spectrum and Tentative Detection of DCOOCH
3-Methyl Formate in Orion
Margulès L., Huet T. R., Demaison J., Carvajal M., Kleiner I., Møllendal H., Tercero B., Marcelino N., Cernicharo J.
ApJ 714, 1120
1523 The Early Stages of Star Formation in Infrared Dark Clouds: Characterizing the Core Dust Properties
Rathborne J. M., Jackson J. M., Chambers E. T., Stojimirovic I., Simon R., Shipman R., Frieswijk W. ApJ 715, 310
1524 A Cold Complex Chemistry Toward the Low-mass Protostar B1-b: Evidence for Complex Molecule Production in Ices
Öberg K. I., Bottinelli S., Jørgensen J. K., van Dishoeck E. F. ApJ 716, 825
1525 A Large, Massive, Rotating Disk Around an Isolated Young Stellar Object
Quanz S. P., Beuther H., Steinacker J., Linz H., Birkmann S. M., Krause O., Henning T., Zhang Q. ApJ 717, 693
1526 The Initial Conditions of Clustered Star Formation. III. The Deuterium Fractionation of the Ophiuchus B2 Core
Friesen R. K., Di Francesco J., Myers P. C., Belloche A., Shirley Y. L., Bourke T. L., André P. ApJ 718, 666
1527 A Spitzer c2d Legacy Survey to Identify and Characterize Disks with Inner Dust Holes
Merìn B., Brown J. M., Oliveira I., Herczeg G. J., van Dishoeck E. F., Bottinelli S., Evans N. J., II, Cieza L., Spezzi L., Alcalá J. M., Harvey P. M., Blake G. A., Bayo A., Geers V. G., Lahuis F., Prusti T., Augereau J.-C., Olofsson J., Walter F. M., Chiu K.
ApJ 718, 1200
1528 Identification of Two Bright z > 3 Submillimeter Galaxy Candidates in the COSMOS Field
Aravena M., Younger J. D., Fazio G. G., Gurwell M., Espada D., Bertoldi F., Capak P., Wilner D. ApJ 719, L15
1529 Multi-transition Study of M51’S Molecular Gas Spiral Arms
Schinnerer E., Weiß A., Aalto S., Scoville N. Z. ApJ 719, 1588
1530 IRAS 22198+6336: Discovery of an Intermediate-mass Hot Core
Sánchez-Monge Á., Palau A., Estalella R., Kurtz S., Zhang Q., Di Francesco J., Shepherd D. ApJ 721, L107
1531 Cold Molecular Gas in the Inner Two Kiloparsecs of NGC 4151
Dumas G., Schinnerer E., Mundell C. G. ApJ 721, 911
1532 The Spitzer c2d Survey of Nearby Dense Cores. IX. Discovery of a Very Low
Luminosity Object Driving a Molecular Outflow in the Dense Core L673-7
Dunham M. M., Evans N. J., Bourke T. L., Myers P. C., Huard T. L., Stutz A. M. ApJ 721, 995
1533 Distributions of Carbon-chain Molecules in L1527
Sakai N., Sakai T., Hirota T., Yamamoto S. ApJ 722, 1633
1534 Detection of a Molecular Disk Orbiting the Nearby, ”old,” Classical T Tauri Star MP Muscae
Kastner J. H., Hily-Blant P., Sacco G. G., Forveille T., Zuckerman B. ApJ 723, L248
1535 The Dynamics of Dense Cores in the Perseus Molecular Cloud. II. The
Relationship Between Dense Cores and the Cloud
Kirk H., Pineda J. E., Johnstone D., Goodman A. ApJ 723, 457
1536 Young Starless Cores Embedded in the Magnetically Dominated Pipe Nebula
Frau P., Girart J. M., Beltrán M. T., Morata O., Masqué J. M., Busquet G., Alves F. O., Sánchez-Monge Á., Estalella R., Franco G. A. P.
ApJ 723, 1665
1537 A Very Close Binary Black Hole in a Giant Elliptical Galaxy 3C 66B and its Black Hole Merger
Iguchi S., Okuda T., Sudou H. ApJ 724, L166
1538 Search for Interstellar Methoxyacetonitrile and Cyanoethanol: Insights Into Coupling of Cyano- to Methanol and Ammonia Chemistry
Braakman R., Belloche A., Blake G. A., Menten K. M. ApJ 724, 994
1539 The Relationship Between Molecular Gas and Star Formation in Low-mass E/S0 Galaxies
Wei L. H., Vogel S. N., Kannappan S. J., Baker A. J., Stark D. V., Laine S. ApJ 725, L62
1540 The HDO/H₂O Ratio in Gas in the Inner Regions of a Low-mass Protostar
Jørgensen J. K., van Dishoeck E. F. ApJ 725, L172
1541 The Cool Interstellar Medium in Elliptical Galaxies. II. Gas Content in the Volume-limited Sample and Results from the Combined Elliptical and Lenticular Surveys
Welch G. A., Sage L. J., Young L. M. ApJ 725, 100
51Annual report 2010
1542 Magnetic Fields in Interstellar Clouds from Zeeman Observations: Inference of Total Field Strengths by Bayesian Analysis
Crutcher R. M., Wandelt B., Heiles C., Falgarone E., Troland T. H. ApJ 725, 466
1543 Arm and Interarm Star Formation in Spiral Galaxies
Foyle K., Rix H.-W., Walter F., Leroy A. K. ApJ 725, 534
1544 MAMBO observations at 240GHz of optically obscured Spitzer sources: source clumps and radio activity at high redshift
Andreani P., Magliocchetti M., de Zotti G. MNRAS 401, 15
1545 The standard model of star formation applied to massive stars: accretion discs and envelopes in molecular lines
Keto E., Zhang Q. MNRAS 406, 102
1546 Multi-wavelength simulations of atmospheric radiation from Io with a 3-D spherical-shell backward Monte Carlo radiative transfer model
Gratiy S. L., Walker A. C., Levin D. A., Goldstein D. B., Varghese P. L., Trafton L. M., Moore C. H. Icarus 207, 394
1547 Radio Observations of Cool Gas, Dust, and Star Formation in the First Galaxies
Carilli C. L. AIP Conf. Proc. 1294, 234
1548 Molecular Gas in Hickson Compact Groups Martinez-Badenes V., Verdes-Montenegro L., Lisenfeld U., Espada D. ASPC 421, 267
1549 Feedback in high redshift radio galaxies De Breuck C., Nesvadba N., Lehnert M., Best P. 38th COSPAR Sci. Assembly, 2613
1550 CO Upper Limits on Jupiter’s Atmosphere After the July 2009 Impact
Moreno R., Bezard B., Marten A., Lellough E., Drossart P., Hartogh P., Cavalalie T., Rengel M., Orton G., Ortiz J. L.
Geophys. Research Abstracts 12, EGU General Assembly 2010, 14960
1551 Recent Results on Astrochemistry: the Role of IRAM
Cernicharo J. JENAM 2010, 58
1552 Chemistry and Dynamics in the Taurus Molecular Cloud-1 (TMC-1)
Choi Y., Lee J., Bourke T. L., Evans N. J. Bulletin of the American Astronom Soc. 36, 1136
1553 High Resolution mm-observations Of The Double Core In The Isolated Dark Cloud CB17
Schmalzl M., Launhardt R., Bourke T., Chen X., Arce H., Henning T. Bulletin of the American Astronom Soc. 36, 1136
1554 Comprehensive Multi-waveband Monitoring of Gamma-ray Blazars
Marscher A. P., Jorstad S. G., Larionov V. M., Agudo I., Aller M. F., Aller H. D., Lahteenmaki A., Smith P. S., Krichbaum T., McHardy I. M.
Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc., 41, 709
1555 Detection of Water Vapor in Comet 81P/Wild2 by Herschel
de Val-Borro M., Hartogh P., Crovisier J., Bockelée-Morvan D., Biver N., Lis D. C., Moreno R., Jarchow C., Rengel M., Szutowicz S., HssO Team
Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42, 946
1556 Comet 10P/Tempel 2 Outgassing and Composition from Herschel and Ground-based Sub-millimeter Observations
Biver N., Szutowicz S., Bockelée-Morvan D., Crovisier J., Moreno R., Hartogh P., de Val-Borro M., Rengel M., Lis D. C., Kidger M., Küppers M., HssO Team
Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42,, 946
1557 Comet 29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann Observed with the Herschel Space Observatory: Detection of Water Vapour and Dust Far-IR Thermal Emission
Bockelee-Morvan D., Biver N., Crovisier J., de Val-Borro M., Fulton T., Hartogh P., Hutsemékers D., Jarchow C., Jehin E., Kidger M., Kueppers M., Lellouch E., Lis D., Manfroid J., Moreno R., Rengel M., Swinyard B. C., Szutowicz S., Vandenbussche B., HssO Team
Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42,, 946
1558 Wind Measurements In Venus’ Upper Mesosphere With The IRAM-Plateau De Bure Interferometer
Moullet A., Moreno R., Lellouch E., Sagawa H., Gurwell M. Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42, 974
1559 The Environment of Bright Submillimeter Galaxies at z ~ 2
Aravena M. Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42, 315
1560 Spatially Resolved Molecular Gas Kinematics in a Lensed UV-Selected Galaxy at z = 2.26
Baker A. J., Lutz D., Tacconi L. J., Lin H., Allam S. S., Tucker D. L., Shapley A. E., Diehl H. T. Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42, 447
1561 Hot-Dust, Star-Forming Ultraluminous Galaxies at High-Redshift
Casey C. Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42, 533
1562 Interferometric Followup Of CO (1-0) Detections With The Zpectrometer
Sharon C. E., Baker A. J., Harris A. I., Seitz S., Tacconi L. J., Lutz D. Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42, 248
1563 Characterizing Non-axisymmetric Structure in Protostellar Envelopes
Tobin J. J., Hartmann L., Bergin E., Looney L. W., Chiang H., Heitsch F. Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42, 255
52 Institut de Milimétrique
1564 HI Mapping Of The Circumstellar Environment Of X Her: An AGB Star Associated With A High-Velocity Cloud?
Matthews L. D., Johnson M. C., Gerard E., Le Bertre T., Libert Y. Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42, 266
1565 Monitoring the inner jet of 3C84 with GMVA Kim M. J., Lee S.-S., Krichbaum T.P., Lobanov A.P., Alef W., Witzel A., Zensus J.A. The Bulletin of the Korean Astronom. Soc. 35, 34
1566 Detection of Interstellar Urea with Carma Kuo H.-L., Snyder L. E., Friedel D. N., Looney L. W., McCall B. J., Remijan A. J., Lovas F. J., Hollis J. M. Internat. Symp. On Molecular Spectroscopy, 65th Meeting, RF03
1567 Star formation activity in cores within infrared dark clouds
Chambers E. T. PhD Thesis
2010 publication list. IRAM (co)Authors:1389 Circumstellar H I and CO around the carbon
stars V1942 Sagittarii and V Coronae BorealisLibert Y., Gérard E., Thum C., Winters J. M., Matthews L. D., Le Bertre T. A&A 510, A14
1390 First attempt at interpreting millimetric observations of CO in comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp) using 3D+t hydrodynamical coma simulations
Boissier J., Bockelée-Morvan D., Rodionov A. V., Crifo J.-F. A&A 510, A24
1391 Molecular gas in NUclei of GAlaxies (NUGA) XIII. The interacting Seyfert 2/LINER galaxy NGC 5953
Casasola V., Hunt L. K., Combes F., Garcìa-Burillo S., Boone F., Eckart A., Neri R., Schinnerer E. A&A 510, A52
1392 Detection of the high z GRB 080913 and its implications on progenitors and energy extraction mechanisms
Pérez-Ramìrez D., de Ugarte Postigo A., Gorosabel J., Aloy M. A., Jóhannesson G., Guerrero M. A., Osborne J. P., Page K. L., Warwick R. S., Horváth I., Veres P., Jelìnek M., Kubánek P., Guziy S., Bremer M., Winters J. M., Riva A., Castro-Tirado A. J.
A&A 510, A105
1393 H₂CO and CH3OH maps of the Orion Bar
photodissociation regionLeurini S., Parise B., Schilke P., Pety J., Rolffs R. A&A 511, A82
1394 Dust properties of protoplanetary disks in the Taurus-Auriga star forming region from millimeter wavelengths
Ricci L., Testi L., Natta A., Neri R., Cabrit S., Herczeg G. J. A&A 512, A15
1395 The molecular interstellar medium of the Local Group dwarf NGC 6822. The molecular ISM of NGC 6822
Gratier P., Braine J., Rodriguez-Fernandez N. J., Israel F. P., Schuster K. F., Brouillet N., Gardan E. A&A 512, A68
1396 A millimeter survey of ultra-compact HII-regions and associated molecular clouds
Churchwell E., Sievers A., Thum C. A&A 513, A9
1397 Measurement of the Crab nebula polarization at 90 GHz as a calibrator for CMB experiments
Aumont J., Conversi L., Thum C., Wiesemeyer H., Falgarone E., Macìas-Pérez J. F., Piacentini F., Pointecouteau E., Ponthieu N., Puget J. L., Rosset C., Tauber J. A., Tristram M.
A&A 514, A70
1398 The first IRAM/PdBI polarimetric millimeter survey of active galactic nuclei. I. Global properties of the sample
Trippe S., Neri R., Krips M., Castro-Carrizo A., Bremer M., Piétu V., Fontana A. L. A&A 515, A40
1399 H I and CO in the circumstellar environment of the S-type star RS Cancri
Libert Y., Winters J. M., Le Bertre T., Gérard E., Matthews L. D. A&A 515, A112
1400 CO observations of symbiotic stellar systems Bujarrabal V., MikoŃajewska J., Alcolea J., Quintana-Lacaci G. A&A 516, A19
1401 HNCO enhancement by shocks in the L1157 molecular outflow
Rodrìguez-Fernández N. J., Tafalla M., Gueth F., Bachiller R. A&A 516, A98
1402 Weak 13CO in the Cloverleaf quasar: evidence for a young, early generation starburst
Henkel C., Downes D., Weiß A., Riechers D., Walter F. A&A 516, A111
1403 Astronomical identification of CN-, the smallest observed molecular anion
Agúndez M., Cernicharo J., Guélin M., Kahane C., Roueff E., KŃos J., Aoiz F. J., Lique F., Marcelino N., Goicoechea J. R., González Garcìa M., Gottlieb C. A., McCarthy M. C., Thaddeus P.
A&A 517, L2
1404 Revisiting the theory of interferometric wide-field synthesis
Pety J., Rodrìguez-Fernández N. A&A 517, A12
1405 Coordinated NIR/mm observations of flare emission from Sagittarius A*
Kunneriath D., Witzel G., Eckart A., Zamaninasab M., Gießübel R., Schödel R., Baganoff F. K., Morris M. R., Dovčiak M., Duschl W. J., Garcìa-Marìn M., Karas V., König S., Krichbaum T. P., Krips M., Lu R.-S., Mauerhan J., Moultaka J., Mužić K., Sabha N., Najarro F., Pott J.-U., Schuster K. F., Sjouwerman L. O., Straubmeier C., Thum C., Vogel S. N., Teuben P., Weiss A., Wiesemeyer H., Zensus J. A.
A&A 517, A46
1406 Class I and Class II methanol masers in high-mass star-forming regions
Fontani F., Cesaroni R., Furuya R. S. A&A 517, A56
53Annual report 2010
1407 The Herschel-SPIRE instrument and its in-flight performance
Griffin M. J., Abergel A., Abreu A., Ade P. A. R., André P., Augueres J.-L., Babbedge T., Bae Y., Baillie T., Baluteau J.-P., Barlow M. J., Bendo G., Benielli D., Bock J. J., Bonhomme P., Brisbin D., Brockley-Blatt C., Caldwell M., Cara C., Castro-Rodriguez N., Cerulli R., Chanial P., Chen S., Clark E., Clements D. L., Clerc L., Coker J., Communal D., Conversi L., Cox P., Crumb D., Cunningham C., Daly F., Davis G. R., de Antoni P., Delderfield J., Devin N., di Giorgio A., Didschuns I., Dohlen K., Donati M., Dowell A., Dowell C. D., Duband L., Dumaye L., Emery R. J., Ferlet M., Ferrand D., Fontignie J., Fox M., Franceschini A., Frerking M., Fulton T., Garcia J., Gastaud R., Gear W. K., Glenn J., Goizel A., Griffin D. K., Grundy T., Guest S., Guillemet L., Hargrave P. C., Harwit M., Hastings P., Hatziminaoglou E., Herman M., Hinde B., Hristov V., Huang M., Imhof P., Isaak K. J., Israelsson U., Ivison R. J., Jennings D., Kiernan B., King K. J., Lange A. E., Latter W., Laurent G., Laurent P., Leeks S. J., Lellouch E., Levenson L., Li B., Li J., Lilienthal J., Lim T., Liu S. J., Lu N., Madden S., Mainetti G., Marliani P., McKay D., Mercier K., Molinari S., Morris H., Moseley H., Mulder J., Mur M., Naylor D. A., Nguyen H., O’Halloran B., Oliver S., Olofsson G., Olofsson H.-G., Orfei R., Page M. J., Pain I., Panuzzo P., Papageorgiou A., Parks G., Parr-Burman P., Pearce A., Pearson C., Pérez-Fournon I., Pinsard F., Pisano G., Podosek J., Pohlen M., Polehampton E. T., Pouliquen D., Rigopoulou D., Rizzo D., Roseboom I. G., Roussel H., Rowan-Robinson M., Rownd B., Saraceno P., Sauvage M., Savage R., Savini G., Sawyer E., Scharmberg C., Schmitt D., Schneider N., Schulz B., Schwartz A., Shafer R., Shupe D. L., Sibthorpe B., Sidher S., Smith A., Smith A. J., Smith D., Spencer L., Stobie B., Sudiwala R., Sukhatme K., Surace C., Stevens J. A., Swinyard B. M., Trichas M., Tourette T., Triou H., Tseng S., Tucker C., Turner A., Vaccari M., Valtchanov I., Vigroux L., Virique E., Voellmer G., Walker H., Ward R., Waskett T., Weilert M., Wesson R., White G. J., Whitehouse N., Wilson C. D., Winter B., Woodcraft A. L., Wright G. S., Xu C. K., Zavagno A., Zemcov M., Zhang L., Zonca E.
A&A 518, L3
1408 The Herschel-Heterodyne Instrument for the Far-Infrared (HIFI)
de Graauw T., Helmich F. P., Phillips T. G., Stutzki J., Caux E., Whyborn N. D., Dieleman P., Roelfsema P. R., Aarts H., Assendorp R., Bachiller R., Baechtold W., Barcia A., Beintema D. A., Belitsky V., Benz A. O., Bieber R., Boogert A., Borys C., Bumble B., Caïs P., Caris M., Cerulli-Irelli P., Chattopadhyay G., Cherednichenko S., Ciechanowicz M., Coeur-Joly O., Comito C., Cros A., de Jonge A., de Lange G., Delforges B., Delorme Y., den Boggende T., Desbat J.-M., Diez-González C., di Giorgio A. M., Dubbeldam L., Edwards K., Eggens M., Erickson N., Evers J., Fich M., Finn T., Franke B., Gaier T., Gal C., Gao J. R., Gallego J.-D., Gauffre S., Gill J. J., Glenz S., Golstein H., Goulooze H., Gunsing T., Güsten R., Hartogh P., Hatch W. A., Higgins R., Honingh E. C., Huisman R., Jackson B. D., Jacobs H., Jacobs K., Jarchow C., Javadi H., Jellema W., Justen M., Karpov A., Kasemann C., Kawamura J., Keizer G., Kester D., Klapwijk T. M., Klein T., Kollberg E., Kooi J., Kooiman P.-P., Kopf B., Krause M., Krieg J.-M., Kramer C., Kruizenga B., Kuhn T., Laauwen W., Lai R., Larsson B., Leduc H. G., Leinz C., Lin R. H., Liseau R., Liu G. S., Loose A., López-Fernandez I., Lord S., Luinge W., Marston A., Martìn-Pintado J., Maestrini A., Maiwald F. W., McCoey C., Mehdi I., Megej A., Melchior M., Meinsma L., Merkel H., Michalska M., Monstein C., Moratschke D., Morris P., Muller H., Murphy J. A., Naber A., Natale E., Nowosielski W., Nuzzolo F., Olberg M., Olbrich M., Orfei R., Orleanski P., Ossenkopf V., Peacock T., Pearson J. C., Peron I., Phillip-May S., Piazzo L., Planesas P., Rataj M., Ravera L., Risacher C., Salez M., Samoska L. A., Saraceno P., Schieder R., Schlecht E., Schlöder F., Schmülling F., Schultz M., Schuster K., Siebertz O., Smit H., Szczerba R., Shipman R., Steinmetz E., Stern J. A., Stokroos M., Teipen R., Teyssier D., Tils T., Trappe N., van Baaren C., van Leeuwen B.-J., van de Stadt H., Visser H., Wildeman K. J., Wafelbakker C. K., Ward J. S., Wesselius P., Wild W., Wulff S., Wunsch H.-J., Tielens X., Zaal P., Zirath H., Zmuidzinas J., Zwart F.
A&A 518, L6
1409 Black hole accretion and star formation as drivers of gas excitation and chemistry in Markarian 231
van der Werf P. P., Isaak K. G., Meijerink R., Spaans M., Rykala A., Fulton T., Loenen A. F., Walter F., Weiß A., Armus L., Fischer J., Israel F. P., Harris A. I., Veilleux S., Henkel C., Savini G., Lord S., Smith H. A., González-Alfonso E., Naylor D., Aalto S., Charmandaris V., Dasyra K. M., Evans A., Gao Y., Greve T. R., Güsten R., Kramer C., Martìn-Pintado J., Mazzarella J., Papadopoulos P. P., Sanders D. B., Spinoglio L., Stacey G., Vlahakis C., Wiedner M. C., Xilouris E. M.
A&A 518, L42
1410 Herschel observations of water vapour in Markarian 231
González-Alfonso E., Fischer J., Isaak K., Rykala A., Savini G., Spaans M., van der Werf P., Meijerink R., Israel F. P., Loenen A. F., Vlahakis C., Smith H. A., Charmandaris V., Aalto S., Henkel C., Weiß A., Walter F., Greve T. R., Martìn-Pintado J., Naylor D. A., Spinoglio L., Veilleux S., Harris A. I., Armus L., Lord S., Mazzarella J., Xilouris E. M., Sanders D. B., Dasyra K. M., Wiedner M. C., Kramer C., Papadopoulos P. P., Stacey G. J., Evans A. S., Gao Y.
A&A 518, L43
1411 PACS and SPIRE photometer maps of M 33: First results of the HERschel M 33 Extended Survey (HERM33ES)
Kramer C., Buchbender C., Xilouris E. M., Boquien M., Braine J., Calzetti D., Lord S., Mookerjea B., Quintana-Lacaci G., Relaño M., Stacey G., Tabatabaei F. S., Verley S., Aalto S., Akras S., Albrecht M., Anderl S., Beck R., Bertoldi F., Combes F., Dumke M., Garcia-Burillo S., Gonzalez M., Gratier P., Güsten R., Henkel C., Israel F. P., Koribalski B., Lundgren A., Martin-Pintado J., Röllig M., Rosolowsky E., Schuster K. F., Sheth K., Sievers A., Stutzki J., Tilanus R. P. J., van der Tak F., van der Werf P., Wiedner M. C.
A&A 518, L67
1412 Properties of compact 250 mm emission and H II regions in M 33 (HERM33ES)
Verley S., Relaño M., Kramer C., Xilouris E. M., Boquien M., Calzetti D., Combes F., Buchbender C., Braine J., Quintana-Lacaci G., Tabatabaei F. S., Lord S., Israel F., Stacey G., van der Werf P.
A&A 518, L68
1413 Cool gas and dust in M 33: Results from the HERschel M 33 Extended Survey (HERM33ES)
Braine J., Gratier P., Kramer C., Xilouris E. M., Rosolowsky E., Buchbender C., Boquien M., Calzetti D., Quintana-Lacaci G., Tabatabaei F., Verley S., Israel F., van der Tak F., Aalto S., Combes F., Garcia-Burillo S., Gonzalez M., Henkel C., Koribalski B., Mookerjea B., Roellig M., Schuster K. F., Relaño M., Bertoldi F., van der Werf P., Wiedner M.
A&A 518, L69
1414 100 mm and 160 mm emission as resolved star-formation rate estimators in M 33 (HERM33ES)
Boquien M., Calzetti D., Kramer C., Xilouris E. M., Bertoldi F., Braine J., Buchbender C., Combes F., Israel F., Koribalski B., Lord S., Quintana-Lacaci G., Relaño M., Röllig M., Stacey G., Tabatabaei F. S., Tilanus R. P. J., van der Tak F., van der Werf P., Verley S.
A&A 518, L70
1415 Initial highlights of the HOBYS key program, the Herschel imaging survey of OB young stellar objects
Motte F., Zavagno A., Bontemps S., Schneider N., Hennemann M., di Francesco J., André P., Saraceno P., Griffin M., Marston A., Ward-Thompson D., White G., Minier V., Men’shchikov A., Hill T., Abergel A., Anderson L. D., Aussel H., Balog Z., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Cox P., Csengeri T., Deharveng L., Didelon P., di Giorgio A.-M., Hargrave P., Huang M., Kirk J., Leeks S., Li J. Z., Martin P., Molinari S., Nguyen-Luong Q., Olofsson G., Persi P., Peretto N., Pezzuto S., Roussel H., Russeil D., Sadavoy S., Sauvage M., Sibthorpe B., Spinoglio L., Testi L., Teyssier D., Vavrek R., Wilson C. D., Woodcraft A.
A&A 518, L77
1416 HIFI observations of warm gas in DR21: Shock versus radiative heating
Ossenkopf V., Röllig M., Simon R., Schneider N., Okada Y., Stutzki J., Gerin M., Akyilmaz M., Beintema D., Benz A. O., Berne O., Boulanger F., Bumble B., Coeur-Joly O., Dedes C., Diez-Gonzalez M. C., France K., Fuente A., Gallego J. D., Goicoechea J. R., Güsten R., Harris A., Higgins R., Jackson B., Jarchow C., Joblin C., Klein T., Kramer C., Lord S., Martin P., Martin-Pintado J., Mookerjea B., Neufeld D. A., Phillips T., Rizzo J. R., van der Tak F. F. S., Teyssier D., Yorke H.
A&A 518, L79
1417 Physical properties of the SH₂-104 H II region as seen by Herschel
Rodón J. A., Zavagno A., Baluteau J.-P., Anderson L. D., Polehampton E., Abergel A., Motte F., Bontemps S., Ade P., André P., Arab H., Beichman C., Bernard J.-P., Blagrave K., Boulanger F., Cohen M., Compiegne M., Cox P., Dartois E., Davis G., Emery R., Fulton T., Gry C., Habart E., Halpern M., Huang M., Joblin C., Jones S. C., Kirk J., Lagache G., Lin T., Madden S., Makiwa G., Martin P., Miville-Deschênes M.-A., Molinari S., Moseley H., Naylor D., Okumura K., Orieux F., Pinheiro Gonçalves D., Rodet T., Russeil D., Saraceno P., Sidher S., Spencer L., Swinyard B., Ward-Thompson D., White G.
A&A 518, L80
54 Institut de Milimétrique
1418 Herschel-SPIRE spectroscopy of G29.96-0.02: Fitting the full SED
Kirk J. M., Polehampton E., Anderson L. D., Baluteau J.-P., Bontemps S., Joblin C., Jones S. C., Naylor D. A., Ward-Thompson D., White G. J., Abergel A., Ade P., André P., Arab H., Bernard J.-P., Blagrave K., Boulanger F., Cohen M., Compiegne M., Cox P., Dartois E., Davis G., Emery R., Fulton T., Gry C., Habart E., Huang M., Lagache G., Lim T., Madden S., Makiwa G., Martin P., Miville-Deschênes M.-A., Molinari S., Moseley H., Motte F., Okumura K., Pinheiro Gonçalves D., Rodón J. A., Russeil D., Saraceno P., Sidher S., Spencer L., Swinyard B., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L82
1419 The Herschel view of star formation in the Rosette molecular cloud under the influence of NGC 2244
Schneider N., Motte F., Bontemps S., Hennemann M., di Francesco J., André P., Zavagno A., Csengeri T., Men’shchikov A., Abergel A., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Cox P., Didelon P., di Giorgio A.-M., Gastaud R., Griffin M., Hargrave P., Hill T., Huang M., Kirk J., Könyves V., Leeks S., Li J. Z., Marston A., Martin P., Minier V., Molinari S., Olofsson G., Panuzzo P., Persi P., Pezzuto S., Roussel H., Russeil D., Sadavoy S., Saraceno P., Sauvage M., Sibthorpe B., Spinoglio L., Testi L., Teyssier D., Vavrek R., Ward-Thompson D., White G., Wilson C. D., Woodcraft A.
A&A 518, L83
1420 Herschel observations of embedded protostellar clusters in the Rosette molecular cloud
Hennemann M., Motte F., Bontemps S., Schneider N., Csengeri T., Balog Z., di Francesco J., Zavagno A., André P., Men’shchikov A., Abergel A., Ali B., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Cox P., Didelon P., di Giorgio A.-M., Griffin M., Hargrave P., Hill T., Horeau B., Huang M., Kirk J., Leeks S., Li J. Z., Marston A., Martin P., Molinari S., Nguyen Luong Q., Olofsson G., Persi P., Pezzuto S., Russeil D., Saraceno P., Sauvage M., Sibthorpe B., Spinoglio L., Testi L., Ward-Thompson D., White G., Wilson C., Woodcraft A.
A&A 518, L84
1421 The Herschel first look at protostars in the Aquila rift
Bontemps S., André P., Könyves V., Men’shchikov A., Schneider N., Maury A., Peretto N., Arzoumanian D., Attard M., Motte F., Minier V., Didelon P., Saraceno P., Abergel A., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Cambrésy L., Cox P., di Francesco J., di Giorgo A. M., Griffin M., Hargrave P., Huang M., Kirk J., Li J., Martin P., Merìn B., Molinari S., Olofsson G., Pezzuto S., Prusti T., Roussel H., Russeil D., Sauvage M., Sibthorpe B., Spinoglio L., Testi L., Vavrek R., Ward-Thompson D., White G., Wilson C., Woodcraft A., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L85
1422 Small-scale structure in the Rosette molecular cloud revealed by Herschel
di Francesco J., Sadavoy S., Motte F., Schneider N., Hennemann M., Csengeri T., Bontemps S., Balog Z., Zavagno A., André P., Saraceno P., Griffin M., Men’shchikov A., Abergel A., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Cox P., Deharveng L., Didelon P., di Giorgio A.-M., Hargrave P., Huang M., Kirk J., Leeks S., Li J. Z., Marston A., Martin P., Minier V., Molinari S., Olofsson G., Persi P., Pezzuto S., Russeil D., Sauvage M., Sibthorpe B., Spinoglio L., Testi L., Teyssier D., Vavrek R., Ward-Thompson D., White G., Wilson C., Woodcraft A.
A&A 518, L91
1423 A Herschel study of the properties of starless cores in the Polaris Flare dark cloud region using PACS and SPIRE
Ward-Thompson D., Kirk J. M., André P., Saraceno P., Didelon P., Könyves V., Schneider N., Abergel A., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Bontemps S., Cambrésy L., Cox P., di Francesco J., di Giorgio A. M., Griffin M., Hargrave P., Huang M., Li J. Z., Martin P., Men’shchikov A., Minier V., Molinari S., Motte F., Olofsson G., Pezzuto S., Russeil D., Sauvage M., Sibthorpe B., Spinoglio L., Testi L., White G., Wilson C., Woodcraft A., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L92
1424 Evolution of interstellar dust with Herschel. First results in the photodissociation regions of NGC 7023
Abergel A., Arab H., Compiègne M., Kirk J. M., Ade P., Anderson L. D., André P., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Blagrave K., Bontemps S., Boulanger F., Cohen M., Cox P., Dartois E., Davis G., Emery R., Fulton T., Gry C., Habart E., Huang M., Joblin C., Jones S. C., Lagache G., Lim T., Madden S., Makiwa G., Martin P., Miville-Deschênes M.-A., Molinari S., Moseley H., Motte F., Naylor D., Okumura K., Pinheiro Gonçalves D., Polehampton E., Rodon J., Russeil D., Saraceno P., Sauvage M., Sidher S., Spencer L., Swinyard B., Ward-Thompson D., White G. J., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L96
1425 The physical properties of the dust in the RCW 120 H II region as seen by Herschel
Anderson L. D., Zavagno A., Rodón J. A., Russeil D., Abergel A., Ade P., André P., Arab H., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Blagrave K., Bontemps S., Boulanger F., Cohen M., Compiègne M., Cox P., Dartois E., Davis G., Emery R., Fulton T., Gry C., Habart E., Huang M., Joblin C., Jones S. C., Kirk J. M., Lagache G., Lim T., Madden S., Makiwa G., Martin P., Miville-Deschênes M.-A., Molinari S., Moseley H., Motte F., Naylor D. A., Okumura K., Pinheiro Gonçalves D., Polehampton E., Saraceno P., Sauvage M., Sidher S., Spencer L., Swinyard B., Ward-Thompson D., White G. J.
A&A 518, L99
1426 From filamentary clouds to prestellar cores to the stellar IMF: Initial highlights from the Herschel Gould Belt Survey
André P., Men’shchikov A., Bontemps S., Könyves V., Motte F., Schneider N., Didelon P., Minier V., Saraceno P., Ward-Thompson D., di Francesco J., White G., Molinari S., Testi L., Abergel A., Griffin M., Henning T., Royer P., Merìn B., Vavrek R., Attard M., Arzoumanian D., Wilson C. D., Ade P., Aussel H., Baluteau J.-P., Benedettini M., Bernard J.-P., Blommaert J. A. D. L., Cambrésy L., Cox P., di Giorgio A., Hargrave P., Hennemann M., Huang M., Kirk J., Krause O., Launhardt R., Leeks S., Le Pennec J., Li J. Z., Martin P. G., Maury A., Olofsson G., Omont A., Peretto N., Pezzuto S., Prusti T., Roussel H., Russeil D., Sauvage M., Sibthorpe B., Sicilia-Aguilar A., Spinoglio L., Waelkens C., Woodcraft A., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L102
1427 Filamentary structures and compact objects in the Aquila and Polaris clouds observed by Herschel
Men’shchikov A., André P., Didelon P., Könyves V., Schneider N., Motte F., Bontemps S., Arzoumanian D., Attard M., Abergel A., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Cambrésy L., Cox P., di Francesco J., di Giorgio A. M., Griffin M., Hargrave P., Huang M., Kirk J., Li J. Z., Martin P., Minier V., Miville-Deschênes M.-A., Molinari S., Olofsson G., Pezzuto S., Roussel H., Russeil D., Saraceno P., Sauvage M., Sibthorpe B., Spinoglio L., Testi L., Ward-Thompson D., White G., Wilson C. D., Woodcraft A., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L103
1428 Herschel-SPIRE observations of the Polaris flare: Structure of the diffuse interstellar medium at the sub-parsec scale
Miville-Deschênes M.-A., Martin P. G., Abergel A., Bernard J.-P., Boulanger F., Lagache G., Anderson L. D., André P., Arab H., Baluteau J.-P., Blagrave K., Bontemps S., Cohen M., Compiegne M., Cox P., Dartois E., Davis G., Emery R., Fulton T., Gry C., Habart E., Huang M., Joblin C., Jones S. C., Kirk J., Lim T., Madden S., Makiwa G., Menshchikov A., Molinari S., Moseley H., Motte F., Naylor D. A., Okumura K., Pinheiro Gonçalves D., Polehampton E., Rodón J. A., Russeil D., Saraceno P., Schneider N., Sidher S., Spencer L., Swinyard B., Ward-Thompson D., White G. J., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L104
1429 The Aquila prestellar core population revealed by Herschel
Könyves V., André P., Men’shchikov A., Schneider N., Arzoumanian D., Bontemps S., Attard M., Motte F., Didelon P., Maury A., Abergel A., Ali B., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Cambrésy L., Cox P., di Francesco J., di Giorgio A. M., Griffin M. J., Hargrave P., Huang M., Kirk J., Li J. Z., Martin P., Minier V., Molinari S., Olofsson G., Pezzuto S., Russeil D., Roussel H., Saraceno P., Sauvage M., Sibthorpe B., Spinoglio L., Testi L., Ward-Thompson D., White G., Wilson C. D., Woodcraft A., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L106
1430 Detection of interstellar oxidaniumyl: Abundant H₂O+ towards the star-forming regions DR21, Sgr B2, and NGC6334
Ossenkopf V., Müller H. S. P., Lis D. C., Schilke P., Bell T. A., Bruderer S., Bergin E., Ceccarelli C., Comito C., Stutzki J., Bacman A., Baudry A., Benz A. O., Benedettini M., Berne O., Blake G., Boogert A., Bottinelli S., Boulanger F., Cabrit S., Caselli P., Caux E., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Coutens A., Crimier N., Crockett N. R., Daniel F., Demyk K., Dieleman P., Dominik C., Dubernet M. L., Emprechtinger M., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., France K., Fuente A., Gerin M., Giesen T. F., di Giorgio A. M., Goicoechea J. R., Goldsmith P. F., Güsten R., Harris A., Helmich F., Herbst E., Hily-Blant P., Jacobs K., Jacq T., Joblin C., Johnstone D., Kahane C., Kama M., Klein T., Klotz A., Kramer C., Langer W., Lefloch B., Leinz C., Lorenzani A., Lord S. D., Maret S., Martin P. G., Martin-Pintado J., McCoey C., Melchior M., Melnick G. J., Menten K. M., Mookerjea B., Morris P., Murphy J. A., Neufeld D. A., Nisini B., Pacheco S., Pagani L., Parise B., Pearson J. C., Pérault M., Phillips T. G., Plume R., Quin S.-L., Rizzo R., Röllig M., Salez M., Saraceno P., Schlemmer S., Simon R., Schuster K., van der Tak F. F. S., Tielens A. G. G. M., Teyssier D., Trappe N., Vastel C., Viti S., Wakelam V., Walters A., Wang S., Whyborn N., van der Wiel M., Yorke H. W., Yu S., Zmuidzinas J.
A&A 518, L111
55Annual report 2010
1431 The CHESS spectral survey of star forming regions: Peering into the protostellar shock L1157-B1. I. Shock chemical complexity
Codella C., Lefloch B., Ceccarelli C., Cernicharo J., Caux E., Lorenzani A., Viti S., Hily-Blant P., Parise B., Maret S., Nisini B., Caselli P., Cabrit S., Pagani L., Benedettini M., Boogert A., Gueth F., Melnick G., Neufeld D., Pacheco S., Salez M., Schuster K., Bacmann A., Baudry A., Bell T., Bergin E. A., Blake G., Bottinelli S., Castets A., Comito C., Coutens A., Crimier N., Dominik C., Demyk K., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., Fuente A., Gerin M., Goldsmith P., Helmich F., Hennebelle P., Henning T., Herbst E., Jacq T., Kahane C., Kama M., Klotz A., Langer W., Lis D., Lord S., Pearson J., Phillips T., Saraceno P., Schilke P., Tielens X., van der Tak F., van der Wiel M., Vastel C., Wakelam V., Walters A., Wyrowski F., Yorke H., Borys C., Delorme Y., Kramer C., Larsson B., Mehdi I., Ossenkopf V., Stutzki J.
A&A 518, L112
1432 The CHESS spectral survey of star forming regions: Peering into the protostellar shock L1157-B1. II. Shock dynamics
Lefloch B., Cabrit S., Codella C., Melnick G., Cernicharo J., Caux E., Benedettini M., Boogert A., Caselli P., Ceccarelli C., Gueth F., Hily-Blant P., Lorenzani A., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Pacheco S., Pagani L., Pardo J. R., Parise B., Salez M., Schuster K., Viti S., Bacmann A., Baudry A., Bell T., Bergin E. A., Blake G., Bottinelli S., Castets A., Comito C., Coutens A., Crimier N., Dominik C., Demyk K., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., Fuente A., Gerin M., Goldsmith P., Helmich F., Hennebelle P., Henning T., Herbst E., Jacq T., Kahane C., Kama M., Klotz A., Langer W., Lis D., Lord S., Maret S., Pearson J., Phillips T., Saraceno P., Schilke P., Tielens X., van der Tak F., van der Wiel M., Vastel C., Wakelam V., Walters A., Wyrowski F., Yorke H., Bachiller R., Borys C., de Lange G., Delorme Y., Kramer C., Larsson B., Lai R., Maiwald F. W., Martin-Pintado J., Mehdi I., Ossenkopf V., Siegel P., Stutzki J., Wunsch J. H.
A&A 518, L113
1433 Herschel-SPIRE spectroscopy of the DR21 molecular cloud core
White G. J., Abergel A., Spencer L., Schneider N., Naylor D. A., Anderson L. D., Joblin C., Ade P., André P., Arab H., Baluteau J.-P., Bernard J.-P., Blagrave K., Bontemps S., Boulanger F., Cohen M., Compiegne M., Cox P., Dartois E., Davis G., Emery R., Fulton T., Gom B., Griffin M., Gry C., Habart E., Huang M., Jones S., Kirk J. M., Lagache G., Leeks S., Lim T., Madden S., Makiwa G., Martin P., Miville-Deschênes M.-A., Molinari S., Moseley H., Motte F., Okumura K., Pinheiro Gonçalves D., Polehampton E., Rodet T., Rodón J. A., Russeil D., Saraceno P., Sidher S., Swinyard B. M., Ward-Thompson D., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L114
1434 SPIRE spectroscopy of the prototypical Orion Bar photodissociation region
Habart E., Dartois E., Abergel A., Baluteau J.-P., Naylor D., Polehampton E., Joblin C., Ade P., Anderson L. D., André P., Arab H., Bernard J.-P., Blagrave K., Bontemps S., Boulanger F., Cohen M., Compiegne M., Cox P., Davis G., Emery R., Fulton T., Gry C., Huang M., Jones S. C., Kirk J., Lagache G., Lim T., Madden S., Makiwa G., Martin P., Miville-Deschênes M.-A., Molinari S., Moseley H., Motte F., Okumura K., Pinheiro Gonçalves D., Rodon J., Russeil D., Saraceno P., Sidher S., Spencer L., Swinyard B., Ward-Thompson D., White G. J., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L116
1435 First detection of the methylidyne cation (CH+) fundamental rotational line with the Herschel/SPIRE FTS
Naylor D. A., Dartois E., Habart E., Abergel A., Baluteau J.-P., Jones S. C., Polehampton E., Ade P., Anderson L. D., André P., Arab H., Bernard J.-P., Blagrave K., Bontemps S., Boulanger F., Cohen M., Compiègne M., Cox P., Davis G., Emery R., Fulton T., Gry C., Huang M., Joblin C., Kirk J. M., Lagache G., Lim T., Madden S., Makiwa G., Martin P., Miville-Deschênes M.-A., Molinari S., Moseley H., Motte F., Okumura K., Pinheiro Gonçalves D., Rodón J. A., Russeil D., Saraceno P., Sidher S., Spencer L., Swinyard B., Ward-Thompson D., White G. J., Zavagno A.
A&A 518, L117
1436 Strong CH+ J = 1-0 emission and absorption in DR21
Falgarone E., Ossenkopf V., Gerin M., Lesaffre P., Godard B., Pearson J., Cabrit S., Joblin C., Benz A. O., Boulanger F., Fuente A., Güsten R., Harris A., Klein T., Kramer C., Lord S., Martin P., Martin-Pintado J., Neufeld D., Phillips T. G., Röllig M., Simon R., Stutzki J., van der Tak F., Teyssier D., Yorke H., Erickson N., Fich M., Jellema W., Marston A., Risacher C., Salez M., Schmülling F.
A&A 518, L118
1437 Water cooling of shocks in protostellar outflows. Herschel-PACS map of L1157
Nisini B., Benedettini M., Codella C., Giannini T., Liseau R., Neufeld D., Tafalla M., van Dishoeck E. F., Bachiller R., Baudry A., Benz A. O., Bergin E., Bjerkeli P., Blake G., Bontemps S., Braine J., Bruderer S., Caselli P., Cernicharo J., Daniel F., Encrenaz P., di Giorgio A. M., Dominik C., Doty S., Fich M., Fuente A., Goicoechea J. R., de Graauw T., Helmich F., Herczeg G., Herpin F., Hogerheijde M., Jacq T., Johnstone D., Jørgensen J., Kaufman M., Kristensen L., Larsson B., Lis D., Marseille M., McCoey C., Melnick G., Olberg M., Parise B., Pearson J., Plume R., Risacher C., Santiago J., Saraceno P., Shipman R., van Kempen T. A., Visser R., Viti S., Wampfler S., Wyrowski F., van der Tak F., Yıldız U. A., Delforge B., Desbat J., Hatch W. A., Péron I., Schieder R., Stern J. A., Teyssier D., Whyborn N.
A&A 518, L120
1438 TANGO I: Interstellar medium in nearby radio galaxies. Molecular gas
Ocaña Flaquer B., Leon S., Combes F., Lim J. A&A 518, A9
1439 The CO luminosity and CO-H₂ conversion factor of diffuse ISM: does CO emission trace dense molecular gas?
Liszt H. S., Pety J., Lucas R. A&A 518, A45
1440 Extinction AV, R towards emission nebulae
derived from common upper level Paschen-Balmer hydrogen lines
Greve A. A&A 518, A62
1441 [C II] line emission in BRI 1335-0417 at z = 4.4 Wagg J., Carilli C. L., Wilner D. J., Cox P., De Breuck C., Menten K., Riechers D. A., Walter F. A&A 519, L1
1442 Molecular gas chemistry in AGN. II. High-resolution imaging of SiO emission in NGC 1068: shocks or XDR?
Garcìa-Burillo S., Usero A., Fuente A., Martìn-Pintado J., Boone F., Aalto S., Krips M., Neri R., Schinnerer E., Tacconi L. J.
A&A 519, A2
1443 Molecular cloud formation and the star formation efficiency in M 33. Molecule and star formation in M 33
Braine J., Gratier P., Kramer C., Schuster K. F., Tabatabaei F., Gardan E. A&A 520, A107
1444 HIFI spectroscopy of low-level water transitions in M 82
Weiß A., Requena-Torres M. A., Güsten R., Garcìa-Burillo S., Harris A. I., Israel F. P., Klein T., Kramer C., Lord S., Martin-Pintado J., Röllig M., Stutzki J., Szczerba R., van der Werf P. P., Philipp-May S., Yorke H., Akyilmaz M., Gal C., Higgins R., Marston A., Roberts J., Schlöder F., Schultz M., Teyssier D., Whyborn N., Wunsch H. J.
A&A 521, L1
1445 Excitation of the molecular gas in the nuclear region of M 82
Loenen A. F., van der Werf P. P., Güsten R., Meijerink R., Israel F. P., Requena-Torres M. A., Garcìa-Burillo S., Harris A. I., Klein T., Kramer C., Lord S., Martìn-Pintado J., Röllig M., Stutzki J., Szczerba R., Weiß A., Philipp-May S., Yorke H., Caux E., Delforge B., Helmich F., Lorenzani A., Morris P., Philips T. G., Risacher C., Tielens A. G. G. M.
A&A 521, L2
1446 Herschel/HIFI observations of high-J CO transitions in the protoplanetary nebula CRL 618
Bujarrabal V., Alcolea J., Soria-Ruiz R., Planesas P., Teyssier D., Marston A. P., Cernicharo J., Decin L., Dominik C., Justtanont K., de Koter A., Melnick G., Menten K. M., Neufeld D. A., Olofsson H., Schmidt M., Schöier F. L., Szczerba R., Waters L. B. F. M., Quintana-Lacaci G., Güsten R., Gallego J. D., Dìez-González M. C., Barcia A., López-Fernández I., Wildeman K., Tielens A. G. G. M., Jacobs K.
A&A 521, L3
56 Institut de Milimétrique
1447 Herschel/HIFI discovery of interstellar chloronium (H₂Cl)
Lis D. C., Pearson J. C., Neufeld D. A., Schilke P., Müller H. S. P., Gupta H., Bell T. A., Comito C., Phillips T. G., Bergin E. A., Ceccarelli C., Goldsmith P. F., Blake G. A., Bacmann A., Baudry A., Benedettini M., Benz A., Black J., Boogert A., Bottinelli S., Cabrit S., Caselli P., Castets A., Caux E., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Coutens A., Crimier N., Crockett N. R., Daniel F., Demyk K., Dominic C., Dubernet M.-L., Emprechtinger M., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., Fuente A., Gerin M., Giesen T. F., Goicoechea J. R., Helmich F., Hennebelle P., Henning T., Herbst E., Hily-Blant P., Hjalmarson Å., Hollenbach D., Jack T., Joblin C., Johnstone D., Kahane C., Kama M., Kaufman M., Klotz A., Langer W. D., Larsson B., Le Bourlot J., Lefloch B., Le Petit F., Li D., Liseau R., Lord S. D., Lorenzani A., Maret S., Martin P. G., Melnick G. J., Menten K. M., Morris P., Murphy J. A., Nagy Z., Nisini B., Ossenkopf V., Pacheco S., Pagani L., Parise B., Pérault M., Plume R., Qin S.-L., Roueff E., Salez M., Sandqvist A., Saraceno P., Schlemmer S., Schuster K., Snell R., Stutzki J., Tielens A., Trappe N., van der Tak F. F. S., van der Wiel M. H. D., van Dishoeck E., Vastel C., Viti S., Wakelam V., Walters A., Wang S., Wyrowski F., Yorke H. W., Yu S., Zmuidzinas J., Delorme Y., Desbat J.-P., Güsten R., Krieg J.-M., Delforge B.
A&A 521, L9
1448 CH+(1-0) and 13CH+(1-0) absorption lines in the direction of massive star-forming regions
Falgarone E., Godard B., Cernicharo J., de Luca M., Gerin M., Phillips T. G., Black J. H., Lis D. C., Bell T. A., Boulanger F., Coutens A., Dartois E., Encrenaz P., Giesen T., Goicoechea J. R., Goldsmith P. F., Gupta H., Gry C., Hennebelle P., Herbst E., Hily-Blant P., Joblin C., Kaźmierczak M., KoŃos R., KreŃowski J., Martin-Pintado J., Monje R., Mookerjea B., Neufeld D. A., Perault M., Pearson J. C., Persson C., Plume R., Salez M., Schmidt M., Sonnentrucker P., Stutzki J., Teyssier D., Vastel C., Yu S., Menten K., Geballe T. R., Schlemmer S., Shipman R., Tielens A. G. G. M., Philipp S., Cros A., Zmuidzinas J., Samoska L. A., Klein K., Lorenzani A., Szczerba R., Péron I., Cais P., Gaufre P., Cros A., Ravera L., Morris P., Lord S., Planesas P.
A&A 521, L15
1449 Herschel spectral surveys of star-forming regions. Overview of the 555-636 GHz range
Ceccarelli C., Bacmann A., Boogert A., Caux E., Dominik C., Lefloch B., Lis D., Schilke P., van der Tak F., Caselli P., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Comito C., Fuente A., Baudry A., Bell T., Benedettini M., Bergin E. A., Blake G. A., Bottinelli S., Cabrit S., Castets A., Coutens A., Crimier N., Demyk K., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., Gerin M., Goldsmith P. F., Helmich F., Hennebelle P., Henning T., Herbst E., Hily-Blant P., Jacq T., Kahane C., Kama M., Klotz A., Langer W., Lord S., Lorenzani A., Maret S., Melnick G., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Pacheco S., Pagani L., Parise B., Pearson J., Phillips T., Salez M., Saraceno P., Schuster K., Tielens X., van der Wiel M. H. D., Vastel C., Viti S., Wakelam V., Walters A., Wyrowski F., Yorke H., Liseau R., Olberg M., Szczerba R., Benz A. O., Melchior M.
A&A 521, L22
1450 Herschel observations in the ultracompact HII region Mon R2. Water in dense photon-dominated regions (PDRs)
Fuente A., Berné O., Cernicharo J., Rizzo J. R., González-Garcìa M., Goicoechea J. R., Pilleri P., Ossenkopf V., Gerin M., Güsten R., Akyilmaz M., Benz A. O., Boulanger F., Bruderer S., Dedes C., France K., Garcìa-Burillo S., Harris A., Joblin C., Klein T., Kramer C., Le Petit F., Lord S. D., Martin P. G., Martìn-Pintado J., Mookerjea B., Neufeld D. A., Okada Y., Pety J., Phillips T. G., Röllig M., Simon R., Stutzki J., van der Tak F., Teyssier D., Usero A., Yorke H., Schuster K., Melchior M., Lorenzani A., Szczerba R., Fich M., McCoey C., Pearson J., Dieleman P.
A&A 521, L23
1451 The origin of the [C II] emission in the S140 photon-dominated regions. New insights from HIFI
Dedes C., Röllig M., Mookerjea B., Okada Y., Ossenkopf V., Bruderer S., Benz A. O., Melchior M., Kramer C., Gerin M., Güsten R., Akyilmaz M., Berne O., Boulanger F., de Lange G., Dubbeldam L., France K., Fuente A., Goicoechea J. R., Harris A., Huisman R., Jellema W., Joblin C., Klein T., Le Petit F., Lord S., Martin P., Martin-Pintado J., Neufeld D. A., Philipp S., Phillips T., Pilleri P., Rizzo J. R., Salez M., Schieder R., Simon R., Siebertz O., Stutzki J., van der Tak F., Teyssier D., Yorke H.
A&A 521, L24
1452 Gas morphology and energetics at the surface of PDRs: New insights with Herschel observations of NGC 7023
Joblin C., Pilleri P., Montillaud J., Fuente A., Gerin M., Berné O., Ossenkopf V., Le Bourlot J., Teyssier D., Goicoechea J. R., Le Petit F., Röllig M., Akyilmaz M., Benz A. O., Boulanger F., Bruderer S., Dedes C., France K., Güsten R., Harris A., Klein T., Kramer C., Lord S. D., Martin P. G., Martin-Pintado J., Mookerjea B., Okada Y., Phillips T. G., Rizzo J. R., Simon R., Stutzki J., van der Tak F., Yorke H. W., Steinmetz E., Jarchow C., Hartogh P., Honingh C. E., Siebertz O., Caux E., Colin B.
A&A 521, L25
1453 The distribution of water in the high-mass star-forming region NGC 6334 I
Emprechtinger M., Lis D. C., Bell T., Phillips T. G., Schilke P., Comito C., Rolffs R., van der Tak F., Ceccarelli C., Aarts H., Bacmann A., Baudry A., Benedettini M., Bergin E. A., Blake G., Boogert A., Bottinelli S., Cabrit S., Caselli P., Castets A., Caux E., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Coutens A., Crimier N., Demyk K., Dominik C., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., Fuente A., Gerin M., Goldsmith P., Helmich F., Hennebelle P., Henning T., Herbst E., Hily-Blant P., Jacq T., Kahane C., Kama M., Klotz A., Kooi J., Langer W., Lefloch B., Loose A., Lord S., Lorenzani A., Maret S., Melnick G., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Ossenkopf V., Pacheco S., Pagani L., Parise B., Pearson J., Risacher C., Salez M., Saraceno P., Schuster K., Stutzki J., Tielens X., van der Wiel M., Vastel C., Viti S., Wakelam V., Walters A., Wyrowski F., Yorke H.
A&A 521, L28
1454 Water vapor toward starless cores: The Herschel view
Caselli P., Keto E., Pagani L., Aikawa Y., Yıldız U. A., van der Tak F. F. S., Tafalla M., Bergin E. A., Nisini B., Codella C., van Dishoeck E. F., Bachiller R., Baudry A., Benedettini M., Benz A. O., Bjerkeli P., Blake G. A., Bontemps S., Braine J., Bruderer S., Cernicharo J., Daniel F., di Giorgio A. M., Dominik C., Doty S. D., Encrenaz P., Fich M., Fuente A., Gaier T., Giannini T., Goicoechea J. R., de Graauw T., Helmich F., Herczeg G. J., Herpin F., Hogerheijde M. R., Jackson B., Jacq T., Javadi H., Johnstone D., Jørgensen J. K., Kester D., Kristensen L. E., Laauwen W., Larsson B., Lis D., Liseau R., Luinge W., Marseille M., McCoey C., Megej A., Melnick G., Neufeld D., Olberg M., Parise B., Pearson J. C., Plume R., Risacher C., Santiago-Garcìa J., Saraceno P., Shipman R., Siegel P., van Kempen T. A., Visser R., Wampfler S. F., Wyrowski F.
A&A 521, L29
1455 Water in low-mass star-forming regions with Herschel. HIFI spectroscopy of NGC 1333
Kristensen L. E., Visser R., van Dishoeck E. F., Yıldız U. A., Doty S. D., Herczeg G. J., Liu F.-C., Parise B., Jørgensen J. K., van Kempen T. A., Brinch C., Wampfler S. F., Bruderer S., Benz A. O., Hogerheijde M. R., Deul E., Bachiller R., Baudry A., Benedettini M., Bergin E. A., Bjerkeli P., Blake G. A., Bontemps S., Braine J., Caselli P., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Daniel F., de Graauw T., di Giorgio A. M., Dominik C., Encrenaz P., Fich M., Fuente A., Giannini T., Goicoechea J. R., Helmich F., Herpin F., Jacq T., Johnstone D., Kaufman M. J., Larsson B., Lis D., Liseau R., Marseille M., McCoey C., Melnick G., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Olberg M., Pearson J. C., Plume R., Risacher C., Santiago-Garcìa J., Saraceno P., Shipman R., Tafalla M., Tielens A. G. G. M., van der Tak F., Wyrowski F., Beintema D., de Jonge A., Dieleman P., Ossenkopf V., Roelfsema P., Stutzki J., Whyborn N.
A&A 521, L30
1456 Ortho-to-para ratio of interstellar heavy water
Vastel C., Ceccarelli C., Caux E., Coutens A., Cernicharo J., Bottinelli S., Demyk K., Faure A., Wiesenfeld L., Scribano Y., Bacmann A., Hily-Blant P., Maret S., Walters A., Bergin E. A., Blake G. A., Castets A., Crimier N., Dominik C., Encrenaz P., Gérin M., Hennebelle P., Kahane C., Klotz A., Melnick G., Pagani L., Parise B., Schilke P., Wakelam V., Baudry A., Bell T., Benedettini M., Boogert A., Cabrit S., Caselli P., Codella C., Comito C., Falgarone E., Fuente A., Goldsmith P. F., Helmich F., Henning T., Herbst E., Jacq T., Kama M., Langer W., Lefloch B., Lis D., Lord S., Lorenzani A., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Pacheco S., Pearson J., Phillips T., Salez M., Saraceno P., Schuster K., Tielens X., van der Tak F., van der Wiel M. H. D., Viti S., Wyrowski F., Yorke H., Cais P., Krieg J. M., Olberg M., Ravera L.
A&A 521, L31
57Annual report 2010
1457 Water abundances in high-mass protostellar envelopes: Herschel observations with HIFI
Marseille M. G., van der Tak F. F. S., Herpin F., Wyrowski F., Chavarrìa L., Pietropaoli B., Baudry A., Bontemps S., Cernicharo J., Jacq T., Frieswijk W., Shipman R., van Dishoeck E. F., Bachiller R., Benedettini M., Benz A. O., Bergin E., Bjerkeli P., Blake G. A., Braine J., Bruderer S., Caselli P., Caux E., Codella C., Daniel F., Dieleman P., di Giorgio A. M., Dominik C., Doty S. D., Encrenaz P., Fich M., Fuente A., Gaier T., Giannini T., Goicoechea J. R., de Graauw T., Helmich F., Herczeg G. J., Hogerheijde M. R., Jackson B., Javadi H., Jellema W., Johnstone D., Jørgensen J. K., Kester D., Kristensen L. E., Larsson B., Laauwen W., Lis D., Liseau R., Luinge W., McCoey C., Megej A., Melnick G., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Olberg M., Parise B., Pearson J. C., Plume R., Risacher C., Roelfsema P., Santiago-Garcìa J., Saraceno P., Siegel P., Stutzki J., Tafalla M., van Kempen T. A., Visser R., Wampfler S. F., Yıldız U. A.
A&A 521, L32
1458 Sensitive limits on the abundance of cold water vapor in the DM Tauri protoplanetary disk
Bergin E. A., Hogerheijde M. R., Brinch C., Fogel J., Yıldız U. A., Kristensen L. E., van Dishoeck E. F., Bell T. A., Blake G. A., Cernicharo J., Dominik C., Lis D., Melnick G., Neufeld D., Panić O., Pearson J. C., Bachiller R., Baudry A., Benedettini M., Benz A. O., Bjerkeli P., Bontemps S., Braine J., Bruderer S., Caselli P., Codella C., Daniel F., di Giorgio A. M., Doty S. D., Encrenaz P., Fich M., Fuente A., Giannini T., Goicoechea J. R., de Graauw T., Helmich F., Herczeg G. J., Herpin F., Jacq T., Johnstone D., Jørgensen J. K., Larsson B., Liseau R., Marseille M., McCoey C., Nisini B., Olberg M., Parise B., Plume R., Risacher C., Santiago-Garcìa J., Saraceno P., Shipman R., Tafalla M., van Kempen T. A., Visser R., Wampfler S. F., Wyrowski F., van der Tak F., Jellema W., Tielens A. G. G. M., Hartogh P., Stützki J., Szczerba R.
A&A 521, L33
1459 Hydrides in young stellar objects: Radiation tracers in a protostar-disk-outflow system
Benz A. O., Bruderer S., van Dishoeck E. F., Stäuber P., Wampfler S. F., Melchior M., Dedes C., Wyrowski F., Doty S. D., van der Tak F., Bächtold W., Csillaghy A., Megej A., Monstein C., Soldati M., Bachiller R., Baudry A., Benedettini M., Bergin E., Bjerkeli P., Blake G. A., Bontemps S., Braine J., Caselli P., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Daniel F., di Giorgio A. M., Dieleman P., Dominik C., Encrenaz P., Fich M., Fuente A., Giannini T., Goicoechea J. R., de Graauw T., Helmich F., Herczeg G. J., Herpin F., Hogerheijde M. R., Jacq T., Jellema W., Johnstone D., Jørgensen J. K., Kristensen L. E., Larsson B., Lis D., Liseau R., Marseille M., McCoey C., Melnick G., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Olberg M., Ossenkopf V., Parise B., Pearson J. C., Plume R., Risacher C., Santiago-Garcìa J., Saraceno P., Schieder R., Shipman R., Stutzki J., Tafalla M., Tielens A. G. G. M., van Kempen T. A., Visser R., Yıldız U. A.
A&A 521, L35
1460 Herschel observations of the hydroxyl radical (OH) in young stellar objects
Wampfler S. F., Herczeg G. J., Bruderer S., Benz A. O., van Dishoeck E. F., Kristensen L. E., Visser R., Doty S. D., Melchior M., van Kempen T. A., Yıldız U. A., Dedes C., Goicoechea J. R., Baudry A., Melnick G., Bachiller R., Benedettini M., Bergin E., Bjerkeli P., Blake G. A., Bontemps S., Braine J., Caselli P., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Daniel F., di Giorgio A. M., Dominik C., Encrenaz P., Fich M., Fuente A., Giannini T., de Graauw T., Helmich F., Herpin F., Hogerheijde M. R., Jacq T., Johnstone D., Jørgensen J. K., Larsson B., Lis D., Liseau R., Marseille M., McCoey C., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Olberg M., Parise B., Pearson J. C., Plume R., Risacher C., Santiago-Garcìa J., Saraceno P., Shipman R., Tafalla M., van der Tak F. F. S., Wyrowski F., Roelfsema P., Jellema W., Dieleman P., Caux E., Stutzki J.
A&A 521, L36
1461 Water in massive star-forming regions: HIFI observations of W3 IRS5
Chavarrìa L., Herpin F., Jacq T., Braine J., Bontemps S., Baudry A., Marseille M., van der Tak F., Pietropaoli B., Wyrowski F., Shipman R., Frieswijk W., van Dishoeck E. F., Cernicharo J., Bachiller R., Benedettini M., Benz A. O., Bergin E., Bjerkeli P., Blake G. A., Bruderer S., Caselli P., Codella C., Daniel F., di Giorgio A. M., Dominik C., Doty S. D., Encrenaz P., Fich M., Fuente A., Giannini T., Goicoechea J. R., de Graauw T., Hartogh P., Helmich F., Herczeg G. J., Hogerheijde M. R., Johnstone D., Jørgensen J. K., Kristensen L. E., Larsson B., Lis D., Liseau R., McCoey C., Melnick G., Nisini B., Olberg M., Parise B., Pearson J. C., Plume R., Risacher C., Santiago-Garcìa J., Saraceno P., Stutzki J., Szczerba R., Tafalla M., Tielens A., van Kempen T. A., Visser R., Wampfler S. F., Willem J., Yıldız U. A.
A&A 521, L37
1462 The methanol lines and hot core of OMC2-FIR4, an intermediate-mass protostar, with Herschel/HIFI
Kama M., Dominik C., Maret S., van der Tak F., Caux E., Ceccarelli C., Fuente A., Crimier N., Lord S., Bacmann A., Baudry A., Bell T., Benedettini M., Bergin E. A., Blake G. A., Boogert A., Bottinelli S., Cabrit S., Caselli P., Castets A., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Comito C., Coutens A., Demyk K., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., Gerin M., Goldsmith P. F., Helmich F., Hennebelle P., Henning T., Herbst E., Hily-Blant P., Jacq T., Kahane C., Klotz A., Langer W., Lefloch B., Lis D., Lorenzani A., Melnick G., Nisini B., Pacheco S., Pagani L., Parise B., Pearson J., Phillips T., Salez M., Saraceno P., Schilke P., Schuster K., Tielens X., van der Wiel M. H. D., Vastel C., Viti S., Wakelam V., Walters A., Wyrowski F., Yorke H., Cais P., Güsten R., Philipp S., Klein T., Helmich F.
A&A 521, L39
1463 Herschel/HIFI observations of high-J CO lines in the NGC 1333 low-mass star-forming region
Yıldız U. A., van Dishoeck E. F., Kristensen L. E., Visser R., Jørgensen J. K., Herczeg G. J., van Kempen T. A., Hogerheijde M. R., Doty S. D., Benz A. O., Bruderer S., Wampfler S. F., Deul E., Bachiller R., Baudry A., Benedettini M., Bergin E., Bjerkeli P., Blake G. A., Bontemps S., Braine J., Caselli P., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Daniel F., di Giorgio A. M., Dominik C., Encrenaz P., Fich M., Fuente A., Giannini T., Goicoechea J. R., de Graauw T., Helmich F., Herpin F., Jacq T., Johnstone D., Larsson B., Lis D., Liseau R., Liu F.-C., Marseille M., McCoey C., Melnick G., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Olberg M., Parise B., Pearson J. C., Plume R., Risacher C., Santiago-Garcìa J., Saraceno P., Shipman R., Tafalla M., Tielens A. G. G. M., van der Tak F., Wyrowski F., Dieleman P., Jellema W., Ossenkopf V., Schieder R., Stutzki J.
A&A 521, L40
1464 First detection of ND in the solar-mass protostar IRAS16293-2422
Bacmann A., Caux E., Hily-Blant P., Parise B., Pagani L., Bottinelli S., Maret S., Vastel C., Ceccarelli C., Cernicharo J., Henning T., Castets A., Coutens A., Bergin E. A., Blake G. A., Crimier N., Demyk K., Dominik C., Gerin M., Hennebelle P., Kahane C., Klotz A., Melnick G., Schilke P., Wakelam V., Walters A., Baudry A., Bell T., Benedettini M., Boogert A., Cabrit S., Caselli P., Codella C., Comito C., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., Fuente A., Goldsmith P. F., Helmich F., Herbst E., Jacq T., Kama M., Langer W., Lefloch B., Lis D., Lord S., Lorenzani A., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Pacheco S., Pearson J., Phillips T., Salez M., Saraceno P., Schuster K., Tielens X., van der Tak F. F. S., van der Wiel M. H. D., Viti S., Wyrowski F., Yorke H., Faure A., Benz A., Coeur-Joly O., Cros A., Güsten R., Ravera L.
A&A 521, L42
1465 Herschel/HIFI observations of spectrally resolved methylidyne signatures toward the high-mass star-forming core NGC 6334I
van der Wiel M. H. D., van der Tak F. F. S., Lis D. C., Bell T., Bergin E. A., Comito C., Emprechtinger M., Schilke P., Caux E., Ceccarelli C., Baudry A., Goldsmith P. F., Herbst E., Langer W., Lord S., Neufeld D., Pearson J., Phillips T., Rolffs R., Yorke H., Bacmann A., Benedettini M., Blake G. A., Boogert A., Bottinelli S., Cabrit S., Caselli P., Castets A., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Coutens A., Crimier N., Demyk K., Dominik C., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., Fuente A., Gerin M., Helmich F., Hennebelle P., Henning T., Hily-Blant P., Jacq T., Kahane C., Kama M., Klotz A., Lefloch B., Lorenzani A., Maret S., Melnick G., Nisini B., Pacheco S., Pagani L., Parise B., Salez M., Saraceno P., Schuster K., Tielens A. G. G. M., Vastel C., Viti S., Wakelam V., Walters A., Wyrowski F., Edwards K., Zmuidzinas J., Morris P., Samoska L. A., Teyssier D.
A&A 521, L43
58 Institut de Milimétrique
1466 Herschel/HIFI detections of hydrides towards AFGL 2591. Envelope emission versus tenuous cloud absorption
Bruderer S., Benz A. O., van Dishoeck E. F., Melchior M., Doty S. D., van der Tak F., Stäuber P., Wampfler S. F., Dedes C., Yıldız U. A., Pagani L., Giannini T., de Graauw T., Whyborn N., Teyssier D., Jellema W., Shipman R., Schieder R., Honingh N., Caux E., Bächtold W., Csillaghy A., Monstein C., Bachiller R., Baudry A., Benedettini M., Bergin E., Bjerkeli P., Blake G. A., Bontemps S., Braine J., Caselli P., Cernicharo J., Codella C., Daniel F., di Giorgio A. M., Dominik C., Encrenaz P., Fich M., Fuente A., Goicoechea J. R., Helmich F., Herczeg G. J., Herpin F., Hogerheijde M. R., Jacq T., Johnstone D., Jørgensen J. K., Kristensen L. E., Larsson B., Lis D., Liseau R., Marseille M., McCoey C., Melnick G., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Olberg M., Parise B., Pearson J. C., Plume R., Risacher C., Santiago-Garcìa J., Saraceno P., Shipman R., Tafalla M., van Kempen T. A., Visser R., Wyrowski F.
A&A 521, L44
1467 Nitrogen hydrides in interstellar gas. Herschel/HIFI observations towards G10.6-0.4 (W31C)
Persson C. M., Black J. H., Cernicharo J., Goicoechea J. R., Hassel G. E., Herbst E., Gerin M., de Luca M., Bell T. A., Coutens A., Falgarone E., Goldsmith P. F., Gupta H., Kaźmierczak M., Lis D. C., Mookerjea B., Neufeld D. A., Pearson J., Phillips T. G., Sonnentrucker P., Stutzki J., Vastel C., Yu S., Boulanger F., Dartois E., Encrenaz P., Geballe T. R., Giesen T., Godard B., Gry C., Hennebelle P., Hily-Blant P., Joblin C., KoŃos R., KreŃowski J., Martìn-Pintado J., Menten K., Monje R., Perault M., Plume R., Salez M., Schlemmer S., Schmidt M., Teyssier D., Péron I., Cais P., Gaufre P., Cros A., Ravera L., Morris P., Lord S., Planesas P.
A&A 521, L45
1468 First results on Martian carbon monoxide from Herschel/HIFI observations
Hartogh P., BŃecka M. I., Jarchow C., Sagawa H., Lellouch E., de Val-Borro M., Rengel M., Medvedev A. S., Swinyard B. M., Moreno R., Cavalié T., Lis D. C., Banaszkiewicz M., Bockelée-Morvan D., Crovisier J., Encrenaz T., Küppers M., Lara L.-M., Szutowicz S., Vandenbussche B., Bensch F., Bergin E. A., Billebaud F., Biver N., Blake G. A., Blommaert J. A. D. L., Cernicharo J., Decin L., Encrenaz P., Feuchtgruber H., Fulton T., de Graauw T., Jehin E., Kidger M., Lorente R., Naylor D. A., Portyankina G., Sánchez-Portal M., Schieder R., Sidher S., Thomas N., Verdugo E., Waelkens C., Lorenzani A., Tofani G., Natale E., Pearson J., Klein T., Leinz C., Güsten R., Kramer C.
A&A 521, L48
1469 Nitrogen hydrides in the cold envelope of IRAS 16293-2422
Hily-Blant P., Maret S., Bacmann A., Bottinelli S., Parise B., Caux E., Faure A., Bergin E. A., Blake G. A., Castets A., Ceccarelli C., Cernicharo J., Coutens A., Crimier N., Demyk K., Dominik C., Gerin M., Hennebelle P., Henning T., Kahane C., Klotz A., Melnick G., Pagani L., Schilke P., Vastel C., Wakelam V., Walters A., Baudry A., Bell T., Benedettini M., Boogert A., Cabrit S., Caselli P., Codella C., Comito C., Encrenaz P., Falgarone E., Fuente A., Goldsmith P. F., Helmich F., Herbst E., Jacq T., Kama M., Langer W., Lefloch B., Lis D., Lord S., Lorenzani A., Neufeld D., Nisini B., Pacheco S., Phillips T., Salez M., Saraceno P., Schuster K., Tielens X., van der Tak F., van der Wiel M. H. D., Viti S., Wyrowski F., Yorke H.
A&A 521, L52
1470 NIKA: A millimeter-wave kinetic inductance camera
Monfardini A., Swenson L. J., Bideaud A., Désert F. X., Yates S. J. C., Benoit A., Baryshev A. M., Baselmans J. J. A., Doyle S., Klein B., Roesch M., Tucker C., Ade P., Calvo M., Camus P., Giordano C., Guesten R., Hoffmann C., Leclercq S., Mauskopf P., Schuster K. F.
A&A 521, A29
1471 Challenging gamma-ray burst models through the broadband dataset of GRB 060908
Covino S., Campana S., Conciatore M. L., D’Elia V., Palazzi E., Thöne C. C., Vergani S. D., Wiersema K., Brusasca M., Cucchiara A., Cobb B. E., Fernández-Soto A., Kann D. A., Malesani D., Tanvir N. R., Antonelli L. A., Bremer M., Castro-Tirado A. J., de Ugarte Postigo A., Molinari E., Nicastro L., Stefanon M., Testa V., Tosti G., Vitali F., Amati L., Chapman R., Conconi P., Cutispoto G., Fynbo J. P. U., Goldoni P., Henriksen C., Horne K. D., Malaspina G., Meurs E. J. A., Pian E., Stella L., Tagliaferri G., Ward P., Zerbi F. M.
A&A 521, A53
1472 Energetics of the molecular gas in the H₂ luminous radio galaxy 3C 326: Evidence for negative AGN feedback
Nesvadba N. P. H., Boulanger F., Salomé P., Guillard P., Lehnert M. D., Ogle P., Appleton P., Falgarone E., Pineau Des Forets G.
A&A 521, A65
1473 Heavy water around the L1448-mm protostar
Codella C., Ceccarelli C., Nisini B., Bachiller R., Cernicharo J., Gueth F., Fuente A., Lefloch B. A&A 522, L1
1474 Searching for the sub-stellar companions in the LkCa15 proto-planetary disk
Bonavita M., Chauvin G., Boccaletti A., Pietu V., Baudoz P., Beuzit J. L., Dutrey A., Guilloteau S., Lagrange A. M., Mouillet D., Niccolini G.
A&A 522, A2
1475 Molecular and atomic gas in the Local Group galaxy M 33
Gratier P., Braine J., Rodriguez-Fernandez N. J., Schuster K. F., Kramer C., Xilouris E. M., Tabatabaei F. S., Henkel C., Corbelli E., Israel F., van der Werf P. P., Calzetti D., Garcia-Burillo S., Sievers A., Combes F., Wiklind T., Brouillet N., Herpin F., Bontemps S., Aalto S., Koribalski B., van der Tak F., Wiedner M. C., Röllig M., Mookerjea B.
A&A 522, A3
1476 Simultaneous polarization monitoring of supernovae SN 2008D/XT 080109 and SN 2007uy: isolating geometry from dust
Gorosabel J., de Ugarte Postigo A., Castro-Tirado A. J., Agudo I., Jelìnek M., Leon S., Augusteijn T., Fynbo J. P. U., Hjorth J., MichaŃowski M. J., Xu D., Ferrero P., Kann D. A., Klose S., Rossi A., Madrid J. P., Llorente A., Bremer M., Winters J.-M.
A&A 522, A14
1477 Chemistry in disks. IV. Benchmarking gas-grain chemical models with surface reactions
Semenov D., Hersant F., Wakelam V., Dutrey A., Chapillon E., Guilloteau S., Henning T., Launhardt R., Piétu V., Schreyer K.
A&A 522, A42
1478 A large 12C/13C isotopic ratio in M 82 and NGC 253
Martìn S., Aladro R., Martìn-Pintado J., Mauersberger R. A&A 522, A62
1479 The multifrequency campaign on 3C 279 in January 2006
Collmar W., Böttcher M., Krichbaum T. P., Agudo I., Bottacini E., Bremer M., Burwitz V., Cuccchiara A., Grupe D., Gurwell M.
A&A 522, A66
1480 A molecular survey of outflow gas: velocity-dependent shock chemistry and the peculiar composition of the EHV gas
Tafalla M., Santiago-Garcìa J., Hacar A., Bachiller R. A&A 522, A91
1481 A survey of the Galactic center region in HCO+, H13CO+, and SiO
Riquelme D., Bronfman L., Mauersberger R., May J., Wilson T. L. A&A 523, A45
1482 Tracing gas accretion in the Galactic center using isotopic ratios
Riquelme D., Amo-Baladrón M. A., Martìn-Pintado J., Mauersberger R., Martìn S., Bronfman L. A&A 523, A51
1483 Mapping the ¹²CO J = 1-0 and J = 2-1 emission in AGB and early post-AGB circumstellar envelopes. I. The COSAS program, first sample
Castro-Carrizo A., Quintana-Lacaci G., Neri R., Bujarrabal V., Schöier F. L., Winters J. M., Olofsson H., Lindqvist M., Alcolea J., Lucas R., Grewing M.
A&A 523, A59
1484 An Extremely Top-Heavy Initial Mass Function in the Galactic Center Stellar Disks
Bartko H., Martins F., Trippe S., Fritz T. K., Genzel R., Ott T., Eisenhauer F., Gillessen S., Paumard T., Alexander T., Dodds-Eden K., Gerhard O., Levin Y., Mascetti L., Nayakshin S., Perets H. B., Perrin G., Pfuhl O., Reid M. J., Rouan D., Zilka M., Sternberg A.
ApJ 708, 834
1485 Very High Gas Fractions and Extended Gas Reservoirs in z = 1.5 Disk Galaxies
Daddi E., Bournaud F., Walter F., Dannerbauer H., Carilli C. L., Dickinson M., Elbaz D., Morrison G. E., Riechers D., Onodera M., Salmi F., Krips M., Stern D.
ApJ 713, 686
1486 Detections of CO Molecular Gas in 24 mm Bright ULIRGs at z ~ 2 in the Spitzer First Look Survey
Yan L., Tacconi L. J., Fiolet N., Sajina A., Omont A., Lutz D., Zamojski M., Neri R., Cox P., Dasyra K. M. ApJ 714, 100
59Annual report 2010
1487 Molecular Gas in z ~ 6 Quasar Host Galaxies Wang R., Carilli C. L., Neri R., Riechers D. A., Wagg J., Walter F., Bertoldi F., Menten K. M., Omont A., Cox P., Fan X.
ApJ 714, 699
1488 Ionization Near Zones Associated with Quasars at z ~ 6
Carilli C. L., Wang R., Fan X., Walter F., Kurk J., Riechers D., Wagg J., Hennawi J., Jiang L., Menten K. M., Bertoldi F., Strauss M. A., Cox P.
ApJ 714, 834
1489 Imaging the Molecular Gas in a Submillimeter Galaxy at z = 4.05: Cold Mode Accretion or a Major Merger?
Carilli C. L., Daddi E., Riechers D., Walter F., Weiss A., Dannerbauer H., Morrison G. E., Wagg J., Davé R., Elbaz D., Stern D., Dickinson M., Krips M., Aravena M.
ApJ 714, 1407
1490 Chemistry in Disks. III. Photochemistry and X-ray Driven Chemistry Probed by the Ethynyl Radical (CCH) in DM Tau, LkCa 15, and MWC 480
Henning T., Semenov D., Guilloteau S., Dutrey A., Hersant F., Wakelam V., Chapillon E., Launhardt R., Piétu V., Schreyer K.
ApJ 714, 1511
1491 Fast, Gusty Winds Blowing from the Core of the Pre-planetary Nebula M 2-56
Sánchez Contreras C., Cortijo-Ferrero C., Miranda L. F., Castro-Carrizo A., Bujarrabal V. ApJ 715, 143
1492 Flaring Behavior of the Quasar 3C 454.3 Across the Electromagnetic Spectrum
Jorstad S. G., Marscher A. P., Larionov V. M., Agudo I., Smith P. S., Gurwell M., Lähteenmäki A., Tornikoski M., Markowitz A., Arkharov A. A., Blinov D. A., Chatterjee R., D’Arcangelo F. D., Falcone A. D., Gómez J. L., Hagen-Thorn V. A., Jordan B., Kimeridze G. N., Konstantinova T. S., Kopatskaya E. N., Kurtanidze O., Larionova E. G., Larionova L. V., McHardy I. M., Melnichuk D. A., Roca-Sogorb M., Schmidt G. D., Skiff B., Taylor B., Thum C., Troitsky I. S., Wiesemeyer H.
ApJ 715, 362
1493 Far-infrared Properties of Spitzer-selected Luminous Starbursts
Kovács A., Omont A., Beelen A., Lonsdale C., Polletta M., Fiolet N., Greve T. R., Borys C., Cox P., De Breuck C., Dole H., Dowell C. D., Farrah D., Lagache G., Menten K. M., Bell T. A., Owen F.
ApJ 717, 29
1494 Cold Molecular Gas in Massive, Star-forming Disk Galaxies at z = 1.5
Aravena M., Carilli C., Daddi E., Wagg J., Walter F., Riechers D., Dannerbauer H., Morrison G. E., Stern D., Krips M.
ApJ 718, 177
1495 UGC8802: A Massive Disk Galaxy in Formation
Moran S. M., Kauffmann G., Heckman T. M., Gracia-Carpio J., Saintonge A., Catinella B., Wang J., Chen Y.-M., Tacconi L., Schiminovich D., Cox P., Giovanelli R., Haynes M., Kramer C.
ApJ 720, 1126
1496 A Massive Molecular Gas Reservoir in the z = 5.3 Submillimeter Galaxy AzTEC-3
Riechers D. A., Capak P. L., Carilli C. L., Cox P., Neri R., Scoville N. Z., Schinnerer E., Bertoldi F., Yan L. ApJ 720, L131
1497 GC-IRS13E - A Puzzling Association of Three Early-type Stars
Fritz T. K., Gillessen S., Dodds-Eden K., Martins F., Bartko H., Genzel R., Paumard T., Ott T., Pfuhl O., Trippe S., Eisenhauer F., Gratadour D.
ApJ 721, 395
1498 The High-density Ionized Gas in the Central Parsec of the Galaxy
Zhao J.-H., Blundell R., Moran J. M., Downes D., Schuster K. F., Marrone D. P. ApJ 723, 1097
1499 GRB 090313 and the Origin of Optical Peaks in Gamma-ray Burst Light Curves: Implications for Lorentz Factors and Radio Flares
Melandri A., Kobayashi S., Mundell C. G., Guidorzi C., de Ugarte Postigo A., Pooley G., Yoshida M., Bersier D., Castro-Tirado A. J., Jelìnek M., Gomboc A., Gorosabel J., Kubánek P., Bremer M., Winters J. M., Steele I. A., de Gregorio-Monsalvo I., Smith R. J., Garcìa-Appadoo D., Sota A., Lundgren A.
ApJ 723, 1331
1500 Photochemistry in the Inner Layers of Clumpy Circumstellar Envelopes: Formation of Water in C-rich Objects and of C-bearing Molecules in O-rich Objects
Agúndez M., Cernicharo J., Guélin M. ApJ 724, L133
1501 Most Submillimeter Galaxies are Major Mergers
Engel H., Tacconi L. J., Davies R. I., Neri R., Smail I., Chapman S. C., Genzel R., Cox P., Greve T. R., Ivison R. J., Blain A., Bertoldi F., Omont A.
ApJ 724, 233
1502 Identification of KCN in IRC+10216: Evidence for Selective Cyanide Chemistry
Pulliam R. L., Savage C., Agúndez M., Cernicharo J., Guélin M., Ziurys L. M. ApJ 725, L181
1503 Looking Into the Hearts of Bok Globules: Millimeter and Submillimeter Continuum Images of Isolated Star-forming Cores
Launhardt R., Nutter D., Ward-Thompson D., Bourke T. L., Henning T., Khanzadyan T., Schmalzl M., Wolf S., Zylka R.
ApJS 188, 139
1504 A 3.5 mm Polarimetric Survey of Radio-loud Active Galactic Nuclei
Agudo I., Thum C., Wiesemeyer H., Krichbaum T. P. ApJS 189, 1
1505 What is limiting near-infrared astrometry in the Galactic Centre?
Fritz T., Gillessen S., Trippe S., Ott T., Bartko H., Pfuhl O., Dodds-Eden K., Davies R., Eisenhauer F., Genzel R.
MNRAS 401, 1177
1506 High-precision astrometry with MICADO at the European Extremely Large Telescope
Trippe S., Davies R., Eisenhauer F., Schreiber N. M. F., Fritz T. K., Genzel R. MNRAS 402, 1126
1507 High-resolution CO and radio imaging of ULIRGs: extended CO structures and implications for the universal star formation law
Bothwell M. S., Chapman S. C., Tacconi L., Smail I., Ivison R. J., Casey C. M., Bertoldi F., Beswick R., Biggs A., Blain A. W., Cox P., Genzel R., Greve T. R., Kennicutt R., Muxlow T., Neri R., Omont A.
MNRAS 405, 219
1508 Parsec-scale SiO emission in an infrared dark cloud
Jiménez-Serra I., Caselli P., Tan J. C., Hernandez A. K., Fontani F., Butler M. J., van Loo S. MNRAS 406, 187
1509 A study of the gas-star formation relation over cosmic time
Genzel R., Tacconi L. J., Gracia-Carpio J., Sternberg A., Cooper M. C., Shapiro K., Bolatto A., Bouché N., Bournaud F., Burkert A., Combes F., Comerford J., Cox P., Davis M., Schreiber N. M. F., Garcia-Burillo S., Lutz D., Naab T., Neri R., Omont A., Shapley A., Weiner B.
MNRAS 407, 2091
1510 Molecular gas in SAURON early-type galaxies: detection of 13CO and HCN emission
Krips M., Crocker A. F., Bureau M., Combes F., Young L. M. MNRAS 407, 2261
1511 High molecular gas fractions in normal massive star-forming galaxies in the young Universe
Tacconi L. J., Genzel R., Neri R., Cox P., Cooper M. C., Shapiro K., Bolatto A., Bouché N., Bournaud F., Burkert A., Combes F., Comerford J., Davis M., Schreiber N. M. F., Garcia-Burillo S., Gracia-Carpio J., Lutz D., Naab T., Omont A., Shapley A., Sternberg A., Weiner B.
Nature 463, 781
1512 Intense star formation within resolved compact regions in a galaxy at z = 2.3
Swinbank A. M., Smail I., Longmore S., Harris A. I., Baker A. J., De Breuck C., Richard J., Edge A. C., Ivison R. J., Blundell R., Coppin K. E. K., Cox P., Gurwell M., Hainline L. J., Krips M., Lundgren A., Neri R., Siana B., Siringo G., Stark D. P., Wilner D., Younger J. D.
Nature 464, 733
1513 Warm water vapour in the sooty outflow from a luminous carbon star
Decin L., Agúndez M., Barlow M. J., Daniel F., Cernicharo J., Lombaert R., de Beck E., Royer P., Vandenbussche B., Wesson R., Polehampton E. T., Blommaert J. A. D. L., De Meester W., Exter K., Feuchtgruber H., Gear W. K., Gomez H. L., Groenewegen M. A. T., Guélin M., Hargrave P. C., Huygen R., Imhof P., Ivison R. J., Jean C., Kahane C., Kerschbaum F., Leeks S. J., Lim T., Matsuura M., Olofsson G., Posch T., Regibo S., Savini G., Sibthorpe B., Swinyard B. M., Yates J. A., Waelkens C.
Nature 467, 64
60 Institut de Milimétrique
1514 The Detection of a Population of Submillimeter-Bright, Strongly Lensed Galaxies
Negrello M., Hopwood R., De Zotti G., Cooray A., Verma A., Bock J., Frayer D. T., Gurwell M. A., Omont A., Neri R., Dannerbauer H., Leeuw L. L., Barton E., Cooke J., Kim S., da Cunha E., Rodighiero G., Cox P., Bonfield D. G., Jarvis M. J., Serjeant S., Ivison R. J., Dye S., Aretxaga I., Hughes D. H., Ibar E., Bertoldi F., Valtchanov I., Eales S., Dunne L., Driver S. P., Auld R., Buttiglione S., Cava A., Grady C. A., Clements D. L., Dariush A., Fritz J., Hill D., Hornbeck J. B., Kelvin L., Lagache G., Lopez-Caniego M., Gonzalez-Nuevo J., Maddox S., Pascale E., Pohlen M., Rigby E. E., Robotham A., Simpson C., Smith D. J. B., Temi P., Thompson M. A., Woodgate B. E., York D. G., Aguirre J. E., Beelen A., Blain A., Baker A. J., Birkinshaw M., Blundell R., Bradford C. M., Burgarella D., Danese L., Dunlop J. S., Fleuren S., Glenn J., Harris A. I., Kamenetzky J., Lupu R. E., Maddalena R. J., Madore B. F., Maloney P. R., Matsuhara H., Michaowski M. J., Murphy E. J., Naylor B. J., Nguyen H., Popescu C., Rawlings S., Rigopoulou D., Scott D., Scott K. S., Seibert M., Smail I., Tuffs R. J., Vieira J. D., van der Werf P. P., Zmuidzinas J.
Science 330, 800
1515 MICADO: the E-ELT adaptive optics imaging camera
Davies R., Ageorges N., Barl L., Bedin L. R., Bender R., Bernardi P., Chapron F., Clenet Y., Deep A., Deul E., Drost M., Eisenhauer F., Falomo R., Fiorentino G., Förster Schreiber N. M., Gendron E., Genzel R., Gratadour D., Greggio L., Grupp F., Held E., Herbst T., Hess H.-J., Hubert Z., Jahnke K., Kuijken K., Lutz D., Magrin D., Muschielok B., Navarro R., Noyola E., Paumard T., Piotto G., Ragazzoni R., Renzini A., Rousset G., Rix H.-W., Saglia R., Tacconi L., Thiel M., Tolstoy E., Trippe S., Tromp N., Valentijn E. A., Verdoes Kleijn G., Wegner M.
SPIE 7735, 77352A
1516 Characterization of lumped element kinetic inductance detectors for mm-wave detection
Roesch M., Bideaud A., Benoit A., Cruciani A., Désert F. X., Doyle S., Leclercq S., Mattiocco F., Schuster K. F., Swenson L., Monfardini A.
SPIE 7741, 77410N
1517 A review of the lumped element kinetic inductance detector
Doyle S., Mauskopf P., Zhang J., Monfardini A., Swenson L., Baselmans J. J. A., Yates S. J. C., Roesch M. SPIE 7741, 77410M
1518 The Beam Pattern of Reflector Antennas With Buckled Panels
Greve A., Morris D., Penalver J., Thum C., Bremer M. IEEE Trans. on Antennas and Propagation 58, 959
1519 No compelling evidence of distributed production of CO in Comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp) from millimeter interferometric data and a re-analysis of near-IR lines
Bockelée-Morvan D., Boissier J., Biver N., Crovisier J. Icarus 210, 898
1520 Thermal Design and Thermal Behaviour of Radio Telescopes and their Enclosures
Greve A., Bremer M. Astrophys. and Space Science Library No. 364
1521 High-speed phonon imaging using frequency-multiplexed kinetic inductance detectors
Swenson L. J., Cruciani A., Benoit A., Roesch M., Yung C. S., Bideaud A., Monfardini A. Applied Phys. Letters 96, 263511
1522 Does the LFIR- L
HCN Correlation Hold for Low
LFIR Isolated Galaxies? Flaquer B. O., Leon S., Espada D., Martìn S., Lisenfeld U., Verley S., Sabater J., Verdes-Montenegro L. ASPC 421, 274
1523 AGN Astrophysics via Multi-Frequency Monitoring of y-ray Blazars in the Fermi-GST Era
Angelakis E., Angelakis E., Fuhrmann L., Zensus J. A., Nestoras I., Marchili N., Krichbaum T. P., Ungerechts H., Max-Moerbeck W., Pavlidou V., Pearson T. J., Readhead A. C. S., Richards J. L., Stevenson M. A.
ASPC 427, 289
1524 Radio detection of V407 Cyg - the possible counterpart of the new Fermi LAT Gamma-ray Transient J2102+4542 with the Effelsberg 100-m, OVRO 40-m and IRAM 30-m telescopes
Nestoras I., Fuhrmann L., Bach U., Sokolovsky K., Ungerechts H., Riquelme D., Sievers A., Richards J. L., Max-Moerbeck W., Pearson T. J., Readhead A. C. S., F-Gamma Team
The Astronomer’s Telegram 2506, 1
1525 The Herschel M33 Extended Survey: first results
Bertoldi F., Kramer C., Xilouris E., Boquien M., Tabatabaei F., Consortium H. 38th COSPAR Scie. Assembly, 2493
1526 A dry high altitude observatory in continental Europe
Pérez E., Quesada J. A., Moles M., John D., Leon S., Ortìz J. L., Peñalver J. EAS Pub. Series 40, 119
1527 The Antarctic Submillimetre Telescope Minier V., Olmi L., Durand G., Daddi E., Israel F., Kramer C., Lagage P.-O., de Petris M., Sabbatini L., Spinoglio L., Schneider N., Tothill N., Tremblin P., Valenziano L., Veyssière C.
EAS Pub. Series 40, 269
1528 The interplay of dense gas and stars in M33 Kramer C., Buchbender C., Quintana-Lacaci G., Braine J., Gratier P., Rosolowsky E. Highlights of Astronomy 15, 415
1529 The discovery of glycolaldehyde in a star forming region
Beltràn M. T., Codella C., Viti S., Neri R., Cesaroni R. Highlights of Astronomy A 15, 701
1530 AMIGA Project. Radio Continuum and Nuclear Activity in a Complete Sample of Isolated Galaxies
Sabater J., Leon S., Verdes-Montenegro L., Lisenfeld U., Sulentic U., Verley S., Espada D., Ballu A., Bergond G. and Garcia E.
Highlights of Spanish Astrophysics V, 349
1531 SWIFT J195509+261406: Dramatic Flaring Activity from a New Galactic Magnetar
de Ugarte Postigo A., Castro-Tirado A. J., Gorosabel J., Fatkhullin T. A., Sokolov V. V., Jelìnek M., Sluse D., Ferrero P., Kann D. A., Klose S., Bremer M., Winters J. M., Nurenberger D., Pérez-Ramìrez D., Guerrero M. A., French J., Melady G., Hanlon L., McBreen B., Aceituno F. J., Cunniffe R., Kubánek P., Vitek S., Schulze S., Wilson A. C., Hudec R., González-Pérez J. M., Shahbaz T., Guziy S., Pavlenko L., Sonbas E., Trushki S., Bursov N., Nizhelskij N. A., Sabau-Graziati L.
Highlights of Spanish Astrophysics V, 399
1532 Virtual Observatory Activities in the AMIGA Group
Ruìz J. E., Santander-Vela J. d. D., Garcìa E., Espigares V., Leon S., Verdes-Montenegro L. Highlights of Spanish Astrophysics V, 533
1533 3mm Polarization Properties of Optical and g-RAY Classes of Blazars
Agudo I., Thum C., Wiesemeyer H., Krichbaum T. P. Internat. Journal of Modern Physics D 19, 923
61Annual report 2010
1534 IRAM: Recent Developments and Future Prospects
Cox P. JENAM 2010, 57
1535 A new three-stage evolution model for millimeter to centimeter wavelength outbursts in BL Lacertae
Qian S.-J., Krichbaum T. P., Witzel A., Zensus J. A., Zhang X.-Z., Ungerechts H., Aller H. D., Aller M. F. Research in Astron. and Astrophy. 10, 47
1536 The Herschel view of HII regions in M 33 (HERM33ES)
Verley S., Relaño M., Kramer C., Xilouris E. M., Boquien M., Calzetti D., Combes F., Buchbender C., Braine J., Quintana-Lacaci G., Tabatabaei F. S., Lord S., Israel F., Stacey G., van der Werf P.
SF2A-2010, 57
1537 Development, Fabrication and Characterization of lumped Element Kinetic Inductance Detectors for NIKA
Roesch M., Swenson L., Doyle S., Monfardini A. For the NIKA collaboration 21st Internat. Symp. on Space Terahertz Technology, NRAO, 72
1538 Pico Veleta Atmospheric Noise Limits At Millimeter Wavelengths
Benford D. J., Fixsen D. J., Leclercq S., Staguhn J. G. 21st Internat. Symp. on Space Terahertz Technology, NRAO, 273
1539 Constraining the Cold Gas and Dust in Cluster Cooling Flows
O’Dea C. P., Edge A., Hamer S., Fabian A., Johnstone R., Crawford C., Oonk R., Jaffe W., Hatch N., Baum S., Mittal R., Quillen A., Wilman R., Wise M., McNamara B., Bremer M., Combes F., Salome P., Boehringer H., Popesso P., Sarazin C. L., Allen S., Egami E., Donahue M., Voit M., Bregman J., Ferland G.
Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42, 398
1540 Molecular Gas Properties Of Early-type Galaxies
Crocker A. F., Krips M., Young L. M., Bureau M., Combes F., Atlas3d Team Bulletin of the American Astronom. Soc. 42, 484
1541 Science and Adaptive Optics Requirements of MICADO, the E-ELT adaptive optics imaging camera
Davies R., Ageorges N., Barl L., Bedin L., Bender R., Bernardi P., Chapron F., Clenet Y., Deep A., Deul E., Drost M., Eisenhauer F., Falomo R., Fiorentino G., Förster Schreiber N. M., Gendron E., Genzel R., Gratadour D., Greggio L., Grupp F., Held E., Herbst T., Hess H.-J., Hubert Z., Jahnke K., Kuijken K., Lutz D., Magrin D., Muschielok B., Navarro R., Noyola E., Paumard T., Piotto G., Ragazzoni R., Renzini A., Rousset G., Rix H.-W., Saglia R., Tacconi L., Thiel M., Tolstoy E., Trippe S., Tromp N., Valentijn E. A., Verdoes Kleijn G., Wegner M.
1st AO4ELT conference - Adaptative Optics for Extremely Large Telescopes, EDP Sciences, id.01002
1542 Heterodyne array receiver for radio astronomy in the 2mm band
Fontana A.-L., Lazareff B., Navarrini A., Bortolotti Y. European Microwave Conference 2010 (EuMC), 906
62 Institut de Milimétrique
annex ii
Committee Members
executive council
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique A. Baudry J.-M Hameury (President) J.-L. Puget
Max-Planck-Gesellschaft R. Genzel K. Menten (Vice-President) M. Schleier
Instituto Geografico Nacional R. Bachiller A. Barcia Cancio J. Gomez Gonzalez
scientific advisory coMMittee
J. Alcolea OAN-IGN, Spain Ph. André, CEA, France Fr. Boulanger, IAS, France P. Goldsmith, JPL, USA S. Guilloteau (Vice-Chair), Obs. Bordeaux, France
D. Muders, MPIfR, Germany L. Tacconi (Chair), MPE, Germany P. de Vicente, OAN-IGN, Spain F. Wyrowksi, MPIfR, Germany
proGraM coMMittee
H. Beuther, MPIA, Germany A. Blain, Caltech, USA S. Bontemps, Obs. de Bordeaux, France P.-A. Duc, CEA, France J. M. Girart, CSIC, Spain A. Fuente, OAN-IGN, Spain S. Garcia-Burillo, OAN, Spain
J.M. Girart, CSIC, Spain M. Hogerheijde, Leiden, Netherlands B. Lefloch, Obs. Grenoble, France E. Sturm, MPE, Germany A. Weiss, MPIfR, Germany C. Wilson, McMaster University, Canada
audit coMMission
C.N.R.S. B. Adans H. Redon
M.P.G. M. Horstmann M. Mansfeld
Front Cover
View of the Orion nebula, the closest region of massive star forming region, in the 12CO(2-1) emission, that traces the distribution of the cold (10-100 K) molecular gas. The map was obtained using HERA at the 30-meter telescope and has spatial resolution of 12” (or 0.025 pc). The dynamics of the molecular gas are shown in blue (for the emission with velocities between –5 and 8 km/s) and in red (for velocities between 12 and 25 km/s). The map in green shows the emission from warm (100 to 1000 K) dust and gas at the surface of the clouds, traced at 8 microns by the Midcourse Space Experiment satellite.
(O. Berné et al. 2010)
IRAM Annual Report 2010
The Institut de Radioastronomie Millimétrique (IRAM) is a multi-national scientific institute covering all aspects of radio astronomy at millimeter wavelengths: the operation of two high-altitude observatories – a 30-meter diameter telescope on Pico Veleta in the Sierra Nevada (southern Spain), and an interferometer of six 15 meter diameter telescopes on the Plateau de Bure in the French Alps – the development of telescopes and instrumentation, radio astronomical observations and their interpretation.
IRAM was founded in 1979 by two national research organizations: the CNRS and the Max-Planck-Gesellschaft – the Spanish Instituto Geográfico Nacional, initially an associate member, became a full member in 1990.
The technical and scientific staff of IRAM develops instrumentation and software for the specific needs of millimeter radioastronomy and for the benefit of the astronomical community. IRAM’s laboratories also supply devices to several European partners, including for the ALMA project.
IRAM’s scientists conduct forefront research in several domains of astrophysics, from nearby star-forming regions to objects at cosmological distances.
IRAM Partner Organizations:Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) – Paris, FranceMax-Planck-Gesellschaft (MPG) – München, DeutschlandInstituto Geografico Nacional (IGN) – Madrid, España
IRAM Addresses:
Institut de Radioastronomie Millimétrique300 rue de la piscine,Saint-Martin d’HèresF-38406 FranceTel: +33 [0]4 76 82 49 00Fax: +33 [0]4 76 51 59 38info@iram.fr www.iram.fr
Observatoire du Plateau de BureSaint-Etienne-en-DévoluyF-05250 FranceTel: +33 [0]4 92 52 53 60 Fax: +33 [0]4 92 52 53 61
Instituto de Radioastronomía MilimétricaAvenida Divina Pastora 7, Local 20,E-18012 Granada, EspañaTel: +34 958 80 54 54Fax: +34 958 22 23 63info@iram.es
Observatorio Radioastronómico de Pico VeletaSierra Nevada,Granada, EspañaTel: +34 958 48 20 02Fax: +34 958 48 11 49
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30-meter diameter telescope, Pico Veleta
6 x 15-meter interferometer, Plateau de Bure
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