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With the advent of larger ground-based
and space borne telescopes, covering a broad spectral range, galactic
evolution has grown into a major research area. SOFIA will
significantly contribute to, or solve, several of the key issues,
some of which are briefly discussed here.
Interacting Galaxies and Clusters
Evidence is growing that interaction between galaxies
may be the dominant driving force behind the evolution and diversification
of galaxies (e.g. Moore et al. 1996). Most of the luminous and
ultraluminous galaxies including quasars and other AGN's known
today are part of interacting or merging binaries or multiple galactic
systems (e.g. Sanders et al. 1988, Disney et al. 1995, Miles et
al. 1996, Sanders & Mirabel 1996 and references therein). Such
interaction almost always destroys the previous structure of the
interstellar gas and dust in the participating galaxies. Angular
momentum transfer easily triggers the infall of giant molecular
gas and dust clouds towards the central regions of the galaxies
where they collide with each other and eventually start a powerful
starburst (SB). New populations of stars are generated by such
events and the morphological type of the galaxy may change completely.
Numerical calculations show that the majority of cluster galaxies
have already gone through one or more such interactions (Moore
et al 1996).
Although interaction processes between galaxies
leading to SB events seem to be crucial for the understanding of
galactic evolution as a whole, our knowledge of the phenomena involved
is yet preliminary. The reason is that most signposts for such
interaction processes show up first and most clearly in the infrared.
Existing stars are not very much affected by interactions since
stellar collisions are negligible. Collisions between molecular
clouds, however, generate a plethora of shocks, turbulences, heating
of dust particles and excitation, most of which can only be traced
in the infrared. The possible aftermath of such an event, a powerful
SB or eventually an active galactic nucleus (AGN), will create
a lighthouse beam in the far infrared in the form of the huge spectral
bump in the wavelength range 60µm to 100µm. It resembles
reradiation of dust exposed to the powerful source of energy in
the nucleus and it's bolometric luminosity can exceed that of our
galaxy by more than 4 orders of magnitude. Since the detection
of such galaxies by IRAS (Soifer, Houk, & Neugebauer 1987 and references
therein), SOFIA will become the first MIR/FIR observatory
sensitive enough to efficiently observe such targets. It will thus
be possible for the first time:
- to analyze these events on a more statistical basis in particular
in isolated clusters,
- to determine the spectral energy distribution (SED) of the
sources involved,
- to measure their dust temperatures and separate components
of different temperatures,
- to spatially resolve and investigate nearby merging systems
in the MIR & FIR,
- to detect interacting systems at larger redshifts.
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Medium and high-z galaxies
If all the galaxies we observe today underwent violent
episodes to form their different populations of stars, we should
be able to see the footprints of those events in the history of
the observable universe. Looking at the spectral energy distribution
(SED) of normal and luminous infrared galaxies (LIRG) it is obvious
that galaxies with high redshifts and the highest luminosities
will be detected most easily in the MIR and FIR spectral range.
There has already been a successful attempt using the ISO satellite
at 6µm and 15µm to detect and identify luminous infrared
galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field (Rowan-Robinson et al. 1997).
Nine of the 10 objects with predicted 100µm fluxes are either
stronger than SOFIA's (5Sigma, 1h, 40 mJy) sensitivity or
fainter within a factor of 3, which still is practicable.
With SOFIA's predicted sensitivity one can
determine the largest distance at which galaxies of a given luminosity
can be detected with SOFIA at 100µm. Ultraluminous
infrared galaxies (ULIRG) with L = 1012 Lo can
be observed out to z ~ 1 and galaxies comparable to the most luminous
galaxies known can be detected out to z ~ 3. The sensitivity is
high enough to study the evolution of IR bright galaxies in clusters
at around z = 0.3 ~0.4, which are typical distances for so called "Butcher-Oemler" clusters
(Couch et al. 1994). Although the atmospheric background will limit SOFIA's
sensitivity generally to galaxies of z <= 1, the spatial resolution
of SOFIA between 30µm and 250µm will be unprecedented.
It will allow us
- to disentangle crowded field much better than ISO and SIRTF,
- to detect and complete the sample of IR bright galaxies out
to a higher redshift, at wavelengths where ISO and SIRTF are
confusion limited,
- to identify IR counterparts of deep optical and NIR images
of the Hubble Space Telescope (HST),
- to search for galaxies in an early phase of their evolution
(e.g. blue galaxy clusters),
- to determine their SEDs if their 100µm flux density exceeds
~100mJy,
- to compare the interaction rate and characteristics of the
star formation events on different z scales.
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In addition it is very likely to observe or even
discover new classes of objects. The so-called ERO's, for example,
seem to be a population of very red galaxies discovered in the
near infrared (e.g. Elston, Rieke, & Rieke 1988, 1989; Cimatti
et al. 1997). Very little is yet known about their nature, their
SED's, their sources of far infrared emission, and even their redshifts.
Graham & Dey (1996) speculate that their 200µm flux density
may reach 100mJy, well within the range observable with SOFIA.
The nature of the recently discovered extragalactic
FIR-background (e.g. Guiderdoni et al. 1997, Harwit 1999) is still
under debate. SOFIA's cameras will be ideally suited for
follow-up observations and should be able to prove whether the
FIR-background is being emitted by high-z galaxies and what the
characteristics of those objects are.
ISO follow-up
The Infrared Space Observatory
(ISO) has already delivered a wealth of data, in particular many
new results on the evolution and nature of starburst galaxies,
ULIRG's and active galactic nuclei (AGN)(see A.&A. Lett., 315,
(1996), special ISO issue). Providing a mirror diameter more than
4 times larger than ISO, SOFIA is ideally suited to follow-up
on those targets in much greater spatial detail and with an improved
spectroscopic sensitivity.
In the case of SB galaxies it will thus be possible
to proceed from ISO's determination of integral SB parameters to
a spatially detailed analysis in the waveband between 15µm
and 40µm on many sources. Individual SB regions will be localized
and their dust temperature and distribution will be determined.
Ratios of spectral line maps, such as [NeIII]/[NeII] (15µm/13µm)
or [SIV]/[SIII] (18µm/33µm/), will be used to determine
the radiation field, the excitation conditions and the dynamics
in these regions and thus analyze the SB parameters. Dust components
of low temperature will be searched for. These trace cold masses,
which are important contributors to the galaxies total mass budget;
the latter is still not well defined for the majority of the galaxies.
The Seyfert activity still bears two unsolved questions:
The existence of the so called unified scheme that would
allow us to understand different types of Seyfert activity within
the frame of a single model, and the type of physical and/or evolutionary
connection between Seyfert- and SB activity which are often closely
associated with each other. The study of the small Seyfert nuclei,
however, is difficult. AGN are often so closely associated with
SBs or even surrounded and obscured by them that the nuclei themselves
are not directly accessible in the optical and near-infrared (NIR)
or their emission cannot be separated from the SB component. In
the MIR, however, the situation is much improved because the combined
emission of starlight and dust emission from the SBs reaches a
minimum there, whereas the emission of the active nuclei has its
maximum.
SOFIAs excellent spatial resolution will
enable us for the first time to isolate the nuclear emission reliably
from the rest of the galaxy, to study the nuclear energetic properties,
the SED of the hot dust and its heating mechanism as a function
of different Seyfert types and SB environments. High excitation
lines like [NeV] (24µm) and [OIV] (26µm) are much less
obscured compared to the NIR and trace the narrow line regions.
| The content of this page was
excerpted from a PDF document "SOFIA
Astronomy and Technology in the 21st Century" by Alfred
Krabbe and Hans-Peter Roeser. |

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