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1.
J Phys Chem A ; 124(1): 240-246, 2020 Jan 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31801346

RESUMO

The rotational spectrum of the most stable conformer of ethylene glycol (HO(CH2)2OH) has been recorded between 360-890 GHz using a frequency-modulation submillimeter spectrometer. The refinement and extension of the spectroscopic parameters over previous efforts provide predicted catalog frequencies for ethylene glycol with sufficient accuracy for comparison to high-frequency astronomical data. The improvement in the cataloged line positions, and the need for improved accuracy enabled by high-frequency laboratory work, is demonstrated by an analysis of ethylene glycol emission at 890 GHz in the high-mass star-forming region NGC 6334I in ALMA Band 10 observations. The need for accurate rotational spectra at submillimeter wavelengths/THz frequencies is discussed.

2.
Nature ; 470(7332): 66-8, 2011 Feb 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21217688

RESUMO

Supermassive black holes are now thought to lie at the heart of every giant galaxy with a spheroidal component, including our own Milky Way. The birth and growth of the first 'seed' black holes in the earlier Universe, however, is observationally unconstrained and we are only beginning to piece together a scenario for their subsequent evolution. Here we report that the nearby dwarf starburst galaxy Henize 2-10 (refs 5 and 6) contains a compact radio source at the dynamical centre of the galaxy that is spatially coincident with a hard X-ray source. From these observations, we conclude that Henize 2-10 harbours an actively accreting central black hole with a mass of approximately one million solar masses. This nearby dwarf galaxy, simultaneously hosting a massive black hole and an extreme burst of star formation, is analogous in many ways to galaxies in the infant Universe during the early stages of black-hole growth and galaxy mass assembly. Our results confirm that nearby star-forming dwarf galaxies can indeed form massive black holes, and that by implication so can their primordial counterparts. Moreover, the lack of a substantial spheroidal component in Henize 2-10 indicates that supermassive black-hole growth may precede the build-up of galaxy spheroids.

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