Vassilis Charmandaris
University of Crete
447 Papers
7K Citations
Vassilis Charmandaris is an academic researcher from University of Crete. The author has contributed to research in topics: Galaxy & Luminous infrared galaxy. The author has an hindex of 82, co-authored 426 publications. Previous affiliations of Vassilis Charmandaris include Paris Observatory & Foundation for Research & Technology – Hellas.
Chat about Author
Papers
The Host Galaxies of Low-luminosity AGN and Starbursts in the Northern COLA Sample
P. N. Appleton,A. P. Marston,Thomas H. Jarrett,Vassilis Charmandaris,E. Corbett,Michael A. Dopita,L. J. Kewley,Andreas Zezas,Ray P. Norris +8 more
- 01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: The COLA (Compact Objects in Low-luminosity AGN) project is an ALL sky survey of galaxies in which the existence of compact radio sources (from 50-700mas) is correlated with other properties of the host galaxies as discussed by the authors.
2
Molecular Gas in Tidal Dwarf Galaxies: On-going Galaxy Formation
Jonathan Braine,Pierre-Alain Duc,Ute Lisenfeld,Elias Brinks,Vassilis Charmandaris,Stephane Leon +5 more
- 01 Jun 2004
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the process of galaxy formation as can be observed in the only currently forming galaxies -the so-called Tidal Dwarf Galaxies, hereafter TDGs -through observations of the molecular gas detected via its CO (Carbon Monoxide) emission.
2
Rest-Frame MIR Detection of an Extremely Luminous Lyman Break Galaxy with the Spitzer IRS
Harry Teplitz,Vassilis Charmandaris,L. Armus,P. N. Appleton,J. R. Houck,B. T. Soifer,Dan Weedman,Bernhard R. Brandl,J. van Cleve,Carl J. Grillmair,K. I. Uchida +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the first rest-frame ~4 micron detection of a Lyman break galaxy was presented using the 16 micron imaging capability of the Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph.
2
Erratum: “Comparing Chandra and SIRTF Observations for Obscured Starbursts and Active Galactic Nuclei at High Redshift” (ApJ, 600, 106 [2004])
TL;DR: In this paper, Rest-frame ISOCAM/CVF 5-16.3 m spectrum of Arp 220.3m was used to detect the exact flux density.
1