8,080 research outputs found
Discovery of a New 89 Second X-ray Pulsar XTE J1906+09
We report on the discovery of a new pulsating X-ray source during Rossi X-ray
Timing Explorer observations of a low galactic latitude field centered at RA
(J2000) = 19 hr 05 m 43 s and Dec (J2000) = +08 deg 58 arcmin 48 arcsec.
Significant pulsations were detected by both the PCA and HEXTE instruments
aboard RXTE at a fundamental period of 89.17 +/- 0.02 seconds, with higher
harmonics also visible in the 2-10 keV power spectrum. The folded lightcurve
from the source is multiply peaked at lower energies, and changes to single
peaked morphology above ~20 keV. The phase averaged spectrum from the source is
well fit by strongly absorbed power law or thermal bremsstrahlung spectral
models of photon index 1.9 +/- 0.1 or temperature 19.5 +/- 4.6 keV,
respectively. The mean neutral hydrogen column density is approximately 10^23
cm^-2, suggesting a distance of >10 kpc to the source and a minimum 2-10 keV
X-ray luminosity of 2*10^{35} ergs s^{-1}. By comparison with other pulsars
with similar periods and luminosities, we suggest that XTE J1906+09 has a
supergiant companion with an underfilled Roche lobe. We speculate further that
one of the M stars in a peculiar M star binary system may be the companion.Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures. Accepted by ApJ Letter
Disappearing Pulses in Vela X-1
We present results from a 20 h RXTE observation of Vela X-1, ncluding a
peculiar low state of a few hours duration, during which the pulsation of the
X-ray emission ceased, while significant non-pulsed emission remained. This
``quiescent state'' was preceded by a ``normal state'' without any unusual
signs and followed by a ``high state'' of several hours of increased activity
with strong, flaring pulsations. while there is clear spectral evolution from
the normal state to the low state, the spectra of the following high state are
surprisingly similar to those of the low state.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of the 5th Compton Symposium, AIP, in
pres
Spectrum of the gamma-ray diffuse component observed from HEAO-1
The spectrum of the diffuse X and gamma ray background was measured between 15 keV and 4 MeV with the scintillation detectors aboard the HEAO 1 satellite. The apertures of the detectors were modulated on time scales of hours and the difference in counting rates measured the diffuse component flux. The observed spectrum is presented and compared with other measurements. At least two components are indicated, one below -100 keV and the other above. Possible origins are discussed
The flux phase problem on the ring
We give a simple proof to derive the optimal flux which minimizes the ground
state energy in one dimensional Hubbard model, provided the number of particles
is even.Comment: 8 pages, to appear in J. Phys. A: Math. Ge
A discrete methodology for controlling the sign of curvature and torsion for NURBS
This paper develops a discrete methodology for approximating the so-called convex domain of a NURBS curve, namely the domain in the ambient space, where a user-specified control point is free to move so that the curvature and torsion retains its sign along the NURBS parametric domain of definition. The methodology provides a monotonic sequence of convex polyhedra, converging from the interior to the convex domain. If the latter is non-empty, a simple algorithm is proposed, that yields a sequence of polytopes converging uniformly to the restriction of the convex domain to any user-specified bounding box. The algorithm is illustrated for a pair of planar and a spatial Bézier configuration
2-10 keV luminosity of high-mass binaries as a gauge of ongoing star-formation rate
Based on recent work on spectral decomposition of the emission of
star-forming galaxies, we assess whether the integrated 2-10 keV emission from
high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs), L_{2-10}^{HMXB}, can be used as a reliable
estimator of ongoing star formation rate (SFR). Using a sample of 46 local (z <
0.1) star forming galaxies, and spectral modeling of ASCA, BeppoSAX, and
XMM-Newton data, we demonstrate the existence of a linear SFR-L_{2-10}^{HMXB}
relation which holds over ~5 decades in X-ray luminosity and SFR. The total
2-10 keV luminosity is not a precise SFR indicator because at low SFR (i.e., in
normal and moderately-starbursting galaxies) it is substantially affected by
the emission of low-mass X-ray binaries, which do not trace the current SFR due
to their long evolution lifetimes, while at very high SFR (i.e., for very
luminous FIR-selected galaxies) it is frequently affected by the presence of
strongly obscured AGNs. The availability of purely SB-powered galaxies - whose
2-10 keV emission is mainly due to HMXBs - allows us to properly calibrate the
SFR-L_{2-10}^{HMXB} relation. The SFR-L_{2-10}^{HMXB} relation holds also for
distant (z ~ 1) galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field North sample, for which we
lack spectral information, but whose SFR can be estimated from deep radio data.
If confirmed by more detailed observations, it may be possible to use the
deduced relation to identify distant galaxies that are X-ray overluminous for
their (independently estimated) SFR, and are therefore likely to hide strongly
absorbed AGNs.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, in press (15 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables
Induced Gamma-band Activity Elicited by Visual Representation of Unattended Objects
Peer reviewedPostprin
On the Second Law of thermodynamics and the piston problem
The piston problem is investigated in the case where the length of the
cylinder is infinite (on both sides) and the ratio is a very small
parameter, where is the mass of one particle of the gaz and is the mass
of the piston. Introducing initial conditions such that the stochastic motion
of the piston remains in the average at the origin (no drift), it is shown that
the time evolution of the fluids, analytically derived from Liouville equation,
agrees with the Second Law of thermodynamics.
We thus have a non equilibrium microscopical model whose evolution can be
explicitly shown to obey the two laws of thermodynamics.Comment: 29 pages, 9 figures submitted to Journal of Statistical Physics
(2003
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