Circular No. 4889 Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams INTERNATIONAL ASTRONOMICAL UNION Postal Address: Central Bureau for Astronomical Telegrams Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A. Telephone 617-495-7244/7440/7444 (for emergency use only) TWX 710-320-6842 ASTROGRAM CAM EASYLINK 62794505 MARSDEN or GREEN@CFA.BITNET MARSDEN or GREEN@CFAPS2.SPAN EXTRAGALACTIC N2H+ R. Mauersberger and C. Henkel, Max-Planck-Institut fuer Radioastronomie, Bonn, report: "We have detected extragalactic N2H+ from NGC 253, Maffei 2, IC 342, M82, and NGC 6946. This is the third molecular ion detected outside the Galaxy. The measurements were carried out with the Theiy 30-m telescope in Spain. A preliminary comparison of N2H+ and CS data from the five galaxies and from dense cores in our Galaxy suggests that relative abundances and excitation of N2H+ may be similar in both groups of sources." GALACTIC CENTER ANNIHILATION RADIATION The U.S.-France collaboration in gamma-ray spectroscopy (J. Matteson, M. Pelling, B. Bowman, M. Briggs, D. Gruber, R. Lingenfelter, and L. Peterson, University of California at San Diego; R. Lin, P. Feffer, D. Smith, and K. Hurley, University of California at Berkeley; C. Cork, D. Landis, P. Luke, N. Madden, D. Malone, R. Pehl, and M. Pollard, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory; P. von Ballmoos, M. Niel, and G. Vedrenne, Centre d'Etudes Spatiales des Rayonnements; and P. Durouchoux, Centre d'Etudes Nucleaires de Saclay) reports: "We have detected a low flux of very narrow 511-keV electron-positron annihilation radiation from the galactic center (GC) region, indicating that the luminosity of the compact source of annihilation radiation has decreased below the level observed 7 months earlier. The GC was observed on May 22 with a new high-resolution gamma-ray spectrometer that has a 20-deg FWHM field-of-view, twelve 130-cm3 Ge detectors, and an energy resolution of 2.1 keV FWHM. The 6-hr observation was from a high-altitude balloon launched from Alice Springs, Australia. Results from multi-parameter Gaussian fits to the data are: flux = (6.49 +/- 1.93) x 10E-4 photons cmE-2 sE-1 and width < 1.8 keV (95 percent confidence). If the flux is interpreted as diffuse galactic emission, the instrument's 24-deg effective aperture gives a flux of (1.55 +/- 0.46) x 10E-3 photons cmE-2 sE-1 radE-1, in agreement with the results of Share et al. 1988 (Ap.J. 326, 717). The line-width limit is consistent with annihilation in the warm (10E4 K) phase of the interstellar medium. The flux and line-width limit are each 0.5 of the measurements by Leventhal et al. 1989 (Nature 339, 36) with a 17-deg field-of-view in 1988 Oct., when the compact source was active, implying that the broader width is associated with the compact source." 1989 November 2 (4889) Daniel W. E. Green
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