COMMISSION 33: STRUCTURE AND DYNAMICS OF THE GALACTIC SYSTEM

2007 ◽  
Vol 3 (T26B) ◽  
pp. 177-177
Author(s):  
Patricia A. Whitelock ◽  
Ortwin Gerhard ◽  
David Spergel ◽  
Yurij N. Efremov ◽  
Wyn Evans ◽  
...  

Commission 33 held a brief business session on 21 August within the science session organized jointly with its parent Division VII.

1988 ◽  
pp. 377-421
Author(s):  
W. B. Burton ◽  
M. Mayor ◽  
J. Bahcall ◽  
L. Balasz ◽  
J. Binney ◽  
...  

1976 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 37-72
Author(s):  
L. Perek

It has become a tradition for Commission 33 to invite several authors to contribute to the Report. The scope of the Commission is so wide that it is beyond the possibilities of any one individual to do this work without assistance. B. Westerlund contributed Section 2, S. W. McCuskey Sections 3 and 4, T. Elvius the paragraph on high-latitude studies, F. J. Kerr Sections 3, 4 and 5B, J. Einasto Sections 6B and D, and a summary of the current research by Soviet astronomers, K. C. Freeman Sections 6C, E. L. Woltjer Section 6F, and L. Perek Sections 1, 5A, and 6A. Section 6B contains this time a paragraph on the Galactic Corona as seen from the point of view of galactic models, while Section 4 contains a paragraph on the structure of the Galactic Halo.


1980 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 133-133
Author(s):  
W. B. Burton

The papers which follow here were given at the Joint Discussion on Nuclei of Normal Galaxies, held in Montreal on August 21, 1979, at the XVIIth General Assembly of the International Astronomical Union. This Joint Discussion was jointly sponsored by IAU Commission 28 on Galaxies, by Commission 33 on Structure and Dynamics of the Galactic System, by Commission 34 on Interstellar Matter and Planetary Nebulae, and by Commission 40 on Radio Astronomy. The scientific organizing committee consisted of W. B. Burton (Minnesota), chairman, R. D. Ekers (Groningen), H. Okuda (Kyoto), D. E. Osterbrock (Lick), V. I. Pronik (Crimea), and D. W. Weedman (Pennsylvania).While preparing for this Joint Discussion, the organizing committee struggled with the problem of finding a suitable definition for the notorious word “normal” as applied to the enormously complicated phenomena of galaxies. What has become clear is that galactic nuclei of all sorts share an involvement in a continuous hierarchy. Thus the lower extent of the energy range exhibited by nuclei of Seyfert galaxies overlaps the upper extent of the energy range of galactic nuclei which most of us would classify as normal. Likewise, many agreeably-normal nuclei show signs of disruptive activity, high velocity dispersions, morphological asymmetries, and ejection. It has also become clear that study of nuclear phenomena must extend to include study of the entire bulge or core region. These matters are reflected in the papers which follow. These papers also collectively emphasize that galactic nuclei reveal different properties at different wave-lengths; presented at the Joint Discussion were results derived from optical and infrared data, as well as from millimeter and longer wavelength radio data. The papers also serve to put work on the nucleus of our own galaxy, which shows many of the same puzzling properties found in other normal galactic nuclei, into a pleasantly wider perspective.


1982 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 383-412
Author(s):  
G. G. Kuzmin

According to Commission 33 traditions, the report contains contributions from a number of authors: K2 , D.L. Crawford, §3, W.B. Burton and F.J. Kerr, §4, W.B. Burton, §5, K. Loden, §6 A and C, R. Wielen, f-6 B, U. Haud and J. Einasto, §6 D and §7, D. Lynden-Bel], §6 E and F, M. Fujimoto.


1988 ◽  
Vol 20 (01) ◽  
pp. 385-396

The previous report on structure and dynamics of the galactic system was given by Wielen (41.155.100). The recently recommended values for solar distance to the galactic center (8.5 kpc) and our rotation speed around it (220 km.s-1) were discussed by Trimble (42.155.043).The distance scale of the Galaxy was reviewed by Barkhatovaet al. (40.155.088). A discussion of typical corrugation scales in the Galaxy was given by Spicker and Feitsinger (42.155.003), who concluded that three distinct scales seem to exist: 1-2 kpc, 4-8 kpc, and > 13 kpc. These corrugations are reflected in the distribution of O and B-stars and HII regions, and to a lesser extent in the HI distribution. Feitzinger and Spicker (39.155.026) investigated the corrugation phenomenon for the (heliocentric) longitude range 10° ≤ l ≤ 240° as derived from HI studies.


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