1,009,990 research outputs found
The Brera Multi-scale Wavelet Chandra Survey. I. Serendipitous source catalogue
We present the BMW-Chandra source catalogue drawn from essentially all
Chandra ACIS-I pointed observations with an exposure time in excess of 10ks
public as of March 2003 (136 observations). Using the wavelet detection
algorithm developed by Lazzati et al. (1999) and Campana et al. (1999), which
can characterise both point-like and extended sources, we identified 21325
sources. Among them, 16758 are serendipitous, i.e. not associated with the
targets of the pointings, and do not require a non-automated analysis. This
makes our catalogue the largest compilation of Chandra sources to date. The
0.5--10 keV absorption corrected fluxes of these sources range from ~3E-16 to
9E-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1 with a median of 7E-15 erg cm^-2 s^-1. The catalogue
consists of count rates and relative errors in three energy bands (total,
0.5-7keV; soft, 0.5-2keV; and hard, 2-7keV), and source positions relative to
the highest signal-to-noise detection among the three bands. The wavelet
algorithm also provides an estimate of the extension of the source. We include
information drawn from the headers of the original files, as well, and
extracted source counts in four additional energy bands, SB1 (0.5-1keV), SB2
(1-2keV), HB1 (2-4keV), and HB2 (4-7keV). We computed the sky coverage for the
full catalogue and for a subset at high Galactic latitude (|b|> 20deg). The
complete catalogue provides a sky coverage in the soft band (0.5-2keV, S/N =3)
of ~8 deg^2 at a limiting flux of 1E-13 erg cm^-2 s^-1, and ~2 deg^2 at a
limiting flux of ~1E-15 erg cm^-2 s^-1.Comment: Accepted by A&A, Higher res. Figs 4 and 5 at
http://www.ifc.inaf.it/~romano/BMC/Docs/aapaper/9601f4.eps
http://www.ifc.inaf.it/~romano/BMC/Docs/aapaper/9601f5.eps, Catalog Web
pages: http://www.brera.inaf.it/BMC/bmc_home.html
http://www.ifc.inaf.it/~romano/BMC/bmc_home.html (Mirror
Theory of Multiband Superconductivity in Iron Pnictides
The precise nature of unconventional superconductivity in Iron Pnictides is
presently a hotly debated issue. Here, using insights from normal state
electronic structure and symmetry arguments, we show how an unconventional SC
emerges from the bad metal "normal" state. Short-ranged, multi-band spin- and
charge correlations generates nodeless SC in the active planar
bands, and an inter-band proximity effect induces out-of-plane gap nodes in the
passive band. While very good quantitative agreement with
various key observations in the SC state and reconciliation with NMR and
penetration depth data in the same picture are particularly attractive features
of our proposal, clinching evidence would be an experimental confirmation of
c-axis nodes in future work.Comment: 4 pages, 2 eps figures, submitted to PRL, text modifie
Characterizing Subcritical Assemblies with Time of Flight Fixed by Energy Estimation Distributions
We present the Time of Flight Fixed by Energy Estimation (TOFFEE) as a
measure of the fission chain dynamics in subcritical assemblies. TOFFEE is the
time between correlated gamma rays and neutrons, subtracted by the estimated
travel time of the incident neutron from its proton recoil. The measured
subcritical assembly was the BeRP ball, a 4.482 kg sphere of alpha-phase
weapons grade plutonium metal, which came in five configurations: bare, 0.5, 1,
and 1.5 in iron, and 1 in nickel closed fitting shell reflectors. We extend the
measurement with MCNPX-PoliMi simulations of shells ranging up to 6 inches in
thickness, and two new reflector materials: aluminum and tungsten. We also
simulated the BeRP ball with different masses ranging from 1 to 8 kg. A
two-region and single-region point kinetics models were used to model the
behavior of the positive side of the TOFFEE distribution from 0 to 100 ns. The
single region model of the bare cases gave positive linear correlations between
estimated and expected neutron decay constants and leakage multiplications. The
two-region model provided a way to estimate neutron multiplication for the
reflected cases, which correlated positively with expected multiplication, but
the nature of the correlation (sub or super linear) changed between material
types. Finally, we found that the areal density of the reflector shells had a
linear correlation with the integral of the two-region model fit. Therefore, we
expect that with knowledge of reflector composition, one could determine the
shell thickness, or vice versa. Furthermore, up to a certain amount and
thickness of the reflector, the two-region model provides a way of
distinguishing bare and reflected plutonium assemblies.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures, 3 table
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