After years of effort Davor Krajnović now published the M3G (MUSE Most Massive Galaxies) survey paper: https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.04968
He shows that from these massive galaxies, the brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) are all slow rotators.
I think I like Fig. 5 the most, showing an astonishing five spin components in PGC 046832.
#M3G #MUSEVLT #Galaxies #BCGs

RE: https://mastodon.social/@esoastronomy/115660342759864952

Hah, and while their attempts to take pictures of the ELT from the plane are just as bad as mine, I noticed that at 07:26 they are showing my MUSE picture demonstrating AO correction of Planetary Nebula NGC 6563. 😀
#MUSEVLT #PlanetaryNebula #Astronomy

I contributed a bit of data processing and got to be co-author on another paper in this month's A&A. 😀
Martin Ochmann was able to use narrow-field MUSE data to extract and model the Ca-triplet and OI emission (1st picture) of the accretion disk of NGC 4593. I know very little about AGN and their BLR but apparently the one can get a nearly perfect fit to a double-peaked CaII profile (2nd picture) using a not too complex disk model. The resulting low intrinsic turbulence seems to be something special...
https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/full_html/2025/05/aa54800-25/aa54800-25.html
#AGN #musevlt #BLR #NGC4593
Double-peaked Ca II traces a relativistic broad-line region disk in NGC 4593 | Astronomy & Astrophysics (A&A)

Astronomy & Astrophysics (A&A) is an international journal which publishes papers on all aspects of astronomy and astrophysics

Cas van Erp's paper on the extragalactic diffuse interstellar bands (xDIBs) in NGC 6240 has now appeared in A&A.
This is the first real mapping of two of these very faint interstellar absorption features in a galaxy at such large distance. Only possible because the MUSE spectrograph is so sensitive and the students worked hard on these data.
https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/full_html/2025/05/aa53947-25/aa53947-25.html
#xDIBs #DIBs #NGC6240 #musevlt
Mapping the diffuse interstellar bands λ5780 and λ6284 in the luminous infrared galaxy merger NGC 6240 | Astronomy & Astrophysics (A&A)

Astronomy & Astrophysics (A&A) is an international journal which publishes papers on all aspects of astronomy and astrophysics

Yay, MUSE again! (At least for the inset.)
https://www.eso.org/public/images/potw2513a/
#musevlt
Supermassive black hole caught playing with its food

Supermassive black hole caught playing with its food

www.eso.org
New paper by Norberto Castro where I was able to contribute (https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.21391). In MUSE NFM data we discovered what seems to be an outflow originating from the massive Wolf-Rayet binary Mk34 in the 30 Doradus region.The ionized gas in the direction of the outflow (red polygon in the image) has line ratios that sets it apart from the surrounding medium.
#WRstars #Mk34 #30Dor #LMC #musevlt
Outflow from the very massive Wolf-Rayet binary Melnick 34

Melnick 34 (Mk 34) is one of the most massive binary systems known and is one of the brightest X-ray point sources in the 30 Doradus region. We investigated the impact of this massive system on the surrounding interstellar medium (ISM) using the optical spectroscopic capabilities of the narrow-field mode (NFM) of the Multi-Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE). MUSE-NFM spatially resolved the ISM in the vicinity of Mk 34 with a resolution comparable to that of the HST. The analysis of the [NII]$λ$6583 and [SII]$λ$6717 emission lines reveals a cone-like structure apparently originating from Mk 34 and extending southeast. Electron density maps and radial velocity measurements of the ISM lines further support an outflow scenario traced by these emissions. While no clear northwestern counterpart to this outflow was observed, we note increased extinction in that direction, towards the R136 cluster. The ISM material along the projected diagonal of the outflow on both sides of Mk 34 shows similar properties in terms of the emission line ratios seen in the Baldwin-Phillips-Terlevich diagram. These results are consistent across two observational epochs. Additionally, we examined the residual maps within a 0.5" radius of Mk 34 after modeling and subtracting the point spread function. The observed variations in the residuals could potentially be linked to Mk 34's known periodic behavior. However, further observations with appropriate cadence are needed to fully monitor the 155 day periodicity of Mk 34's X-ray emissions.

arXiv.org
The #AAS Nova blog mentions the PNLF as one of the methods to investigate the Hubble Tension and highlights Jacoby et al. 2024 (where I was able to contribute a little bit).
https://aasnova.org/2024/07/31/monthly-roundup-perspectives-on-the-hubble-tension/
#PNLF #musevlt #H0 #HubbleTension
Monthly Roundup: Perspectives on the Hubble Tension

The Hubble tension is one of the most pressing problems in cosmology. Today, we're looking at five articles that address the Hubble tension — either suggesting ways to alleviate it or staunchly reinforcing its existence.

AAS Nova
Crazy oversubscription on ESO's UT4. 😯
#telescope #P114 #musevlt
This (Johnston et al., https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.04099) is already the 2nd paper on the partial MUSE data of #Malin1 (following Junais et al., https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/full_html/2024/01/aa47669-23/aa47669-23.html).
Fingers crossed that we'll finally get the remaining 3/4 now that we have shown how useful it is.
#musevlt
A MUSE View of the Core of the Giant Low Surface Brightness Galaxy Malin 1

Aims. The central region of the Giant Low Surface Brightness galaxy Malin 1 has long been known to have a complex morphology with evidence of a bulge, disc, and potentially a bar hosting asymmetric star formation. In this work, we use VLT/MUSE data to resolve the central region of Malin 1 in order to determine its structure. Methods. We use careful light profile fitting in every image slice of the datacube to create wavelength-dependent models of each morphological component, from which we could cleanly extract their spectra. We then used the kinematics and emission line properties from these spectra to better understand the nature of each component extracted from our model fit. Results. We report the detection of a pair of distinct sources at the centre of this galaxy with a separation of ~1.05", which corresponds to a separation on sky of ~1.9 kpc. The radial velocity data of each object confirms that they both lie in the kinematic core of the galaxy, and analysis of the emission lines reveals that the central compact source is more consistent with being ionized by star formation and/or a LINER, while the off-centre compact source lies closer to the separation between star-forming galaxies and AGN. Conclusions. This evidence suggests that the centre of Malin 1 hosts either a bar with asymmetric star formation or two distinct components in which the off-centre compact source could either be a star-forming clump containing one or more star clusters that is in the process of falling into the core of the galaxy and which will eventually merge with the central NSC, or a clump of gas infalling into the centre of the galaxy from either outside or from the disc and triggering star formation there.

arXiv.org
The off-center source seems to be ionized mostly by star-formation (with a bit of shocks?), forming ~25x more stars than the nucleus. It could be a young star cluster to soon merge with the main nucleus.
#Malin1 #musevlt