Research Area: Galaxies



My astronomical research areas comprised the investigation of galaxies in different parts of the spectrum, especially starburst galaxies. With the exception of interacting galaxies we do not understand the starburst phenomenon in detail; starbursts can be found in the central regions (and disks) of massive spiral galaxies, but also in low-mass dwarf galaxies where the region of massive star formation may comprise the whole galaxy. In order to understand the mechanisms of starbursts, informations about the ISM in those galaxies, about star formation, mass distribution of stars and star formation efficiency are required.

For this reason I applied for a number of galaxies in different phases of starburst for X-ray observations with the ROSAT satellite. In total we have X-ray data for approximately 25 galaxies from our own applications and collaborations with colleagues; moreover we are using data sets from the ROSAT archive. The X-ray data are complemented by optical, UV- and radio observations.

In the following I will shortly characterize some of these projects:

In case of NGC 1808 we have published two papers (Dahlem et al. 1994, Junkes et al. 1995), with the analysis of the spectral distribution of the X-ray emission and a comparison of luminosity and star formation rate (SFR) with the results from other wavelengths.

A further research project is the investigation of the peculiar S0 galaxy NGC 5128 (Centaurus A) in several radio frequencies, especially the comparison of complete maps of the extended outer radio lobes, covering an area of 9 by 5 degrees in the sky. This project includes the analysis of radio data (with linear polarization---Stokes I,Q,U) in four wavelengths between 21 and 3.5 cm and will allow to investigate polarization properties of the source itself, but also Faraday rotation and depolarization caused by Galactic foreground structures (Galactic spur reaching out to the latitude of Cen A). The results at 6 cm wavelength have already been presented in Astronomy & Astrophysics (Junkes et al. 1993, see also Junkes & Haynes 1991); the complete observations have been analyzed and will hopefully be published in future.

Together with Stefan Döbereiner (MPE Garching) and Stefan Wagner (MPIA Heidelberg) I worked on the analysis of a very sensitive (65 ksec) high-resolution X-ray observation of the central part of Cen A with the ROSAT HRI detector. Results of this project were presented at the 17th Texas Symposium (Munich, Dec. 1994) and the ROSAT conference in Würzburg in September 1995.

The collaboration with Gerhard Hensler, now at Vienna University, Daniel Tschöke and Dominik Bomans (Bochum University) has resulted in a number of papers on starburst galaxies, namely NGC1705 (Hensler et al. 1998), NGC4410 (Tschöke et al. 1999), NGC4303 (Tschöke et al. 2000) and NGC4569 (Tschöke et al. 2001). A further paper on NGC2903 (Tschöke et al. 2003) has appeared recently.



Last modified on Thursday, December 9th, 2004.
Norbert Junkes (njunkes@mpifr-bonn.mpg.de )