82 research outputs found
The X-ray emission from Nova V382 Velorum: I. The hard component observed with BeppoSAX
We present BeppoSAX observations of Nova Velorum 1999 (V382 Vel), done in a
broad X-ray band covering 0.1-300 keV only 15 days after the discovery and
again after 6 months. The nova was detected at day 15 with the BeppoSAX
instruments in the energy range 1.8-10 keV and we attribute the emission to
shocks in the ejecta. The plasma temperature was kT~6 keV and the unabsorbed
flux was F(x)~4.3 x 10(-11) erg/cm**2/s. The nebular material was affected by
high intrinsic absorption of the ejecta. 6 months after after the outburst, the
intrinsic absorption did not play a role, the nova had turned into a bright
supersoft source, and the hot nebular component previously detected had cooled
to a plasma temperature kT<=1 keV. No emission was detected in either
observation above 20 keV.Comment: 1 tex file, 2 figures as .ps, and 1 .sty file of MNRA
The X-ray emission from Nova V382 Velorum: II. The super-soft component observed with BeppoSAX
Nova Velorum 1999 (V382 Vel) was observed by BeppoSAX 6 months after optical
maximum and was detected as a bright X-ray supersoft source, with a count rate
3.454+-0.002 cts/s in the LECS. It was the softest and most luminous supersoft
source observed with this instrument. The flux in the 0.1-0.7 keV range was not
constant during the observation. It dropped by a factor of 2 in less than 1.5
hour and then was faint for at least 15 minutes, without significant spectral
changes.
The observed spectrum is not well fit with atmospheric models of a hot,
hydrogen burning white dwarf. This is due mainly to a supersoft excess in the
range 0.1-0.2 keV, but the fit can be significantly improved at higher energy
if at least one emission feature is superimposed. We suggest that a
``pseudocontinuum'' was detected, consisting of emission lines in the supersoft
X-ray range superimposed on the thermal continuum of a white dwarf atmosphere.
As a result, an accurate determination of the effective temperature and gravity
of the white dwarf at this post-outburst stage is not possible.Comment: To appear in MNRA
X-ray emission from classical and recurrent-novae observed with ROSAT
We have analysed 350 pointed and serendipitous observations of 108 different
classical and recurrent novae in outburst and in quiescence, contained in the
ROSAT archive. One aim was to search for super-soft X-ray sources and we found
only 3 of them among post-novae. Thus, the super-soft X-ray phase of novae is
relatively short lived (up to 10 years) and is observed only for up to 20% of
novae.
Most classical and recurrent novae instead emit hard X-rays (in the ROSAT
band) in the first months after the outburst, with peak X-ray luminosity of a
few times 10(33) erg/s. The emission, which we attribute to shocks in the nova
ejecta, lasts at least 2 years and even much longer under special circumstances
(like preexisting circumstellar material, or a prolonged wind phase).
We also investigate X-ray emission due to accretion in quiescent novae. Only
11 out of 81 Galactic classical and recurrent novae were detected. The average
X-ray uminosity is not higher than for dwarf novae, and some novae are variable
in X-rays on time scales of years.Comment: tex file of the text and 8 figure
Cooling of Neutron Stars: Two Types of Triplet Neutron Pairing
We consider cooling of neutron stars (NSs) with superfluid cores composed of
neutrons, protons, and electrons (assuming singlet-state pairing of protons,
and triplet-state pairing of neutrons). We mainly focus on (nonstandard)
triplet-state pairing of neutrons with the projection of the total
angular momentum of Cooper pairs onto quantization axis. The specific feature
of this pairing is that it leads to a power-law (nonexponential) reduction of
the emissivity of the main neutrino processes by neutron superfluidity. For a
wide range of neutron critical temperatures , the cooling of NSs with
the superfluidity is either the same as the cooling with the superfluidity, considered in the majority of papers, or much faster. The
cooling of NSs with density dependent critical temperatures and
can be imitated by the cooling of the NSs with some effective
critical temperatures and constant over NS cores. The
hypothesis of strong neutron superfluidity with is inconsistent
with current observations of thermal emission from NSs, but the hypothesis of
weak neutron superfluidity of any type does not contradict to observations.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Muons and emissivities of neutrinos in neutron star cores
In this work we consider the role of muons in various URCA processes relevant
for neutrino emissions in the core region of neutron stars. The calculations
are done for --stable nuclear matter with and without muons. We find
muons to appear at densities fm, slightly around the
saturation density for nuclear matter fm. The direct URCA
processes for nucleons are forbidden for densities below
fm, however the modified URCA processes with muons ), where is a
nucleon, result in neutrino emissivities comparable to those from
). This
opens up for further possibilities to explain the rapid cooling of neutrons
stars. Superconducting protons reduce however these emissivities at densities
below fm.Comment: 14 pages, Revtex style, 3 uuencoded figs include
Solar energetic particle transport near a heliospheric current sheet
Solar energetic particles (SEPs), a major component of space weather, propagate through the interplanetary medium strongly guided by the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF). In this work, we analyze the implications that a flat Heliospheric Current Sheet (HCS) has on proton propagation from SEP release sites to the Earth. We simulate proton propagation by integrating fully 3D trajectories near an analytically defined flat current sheet, collecting comprehensive statistics into histograms, fluence maps, and virtual observer time profiles within an energy range of 1–800 MeV. We show that protons experience significant current sheet drift to distant longitudes, causing time profiles to exhibit multiple components, which are a potential source of confusing interpretations of observations. We find that variation of the current sheet thickness within a realistic parameter range has little effect on particle propagation. We show that the IMF configuration strongly affects the deceleration of protons. We show that in our model, the presence of a flat equatorial HCS in the inner heliosphere limits the crossing of protons into the opposite hemisphere
Constraints on Decaying Dark Matter from Fermi Observations of Nearby Galaxies and Clusters
We analyze the impact of Fermi gamma-ray observations (primarily
non-detections) of selected nearby galaxies, including dwarf spheroidals, and
of clusters of galaxies on decaying dark matter models. We show that the fact
that galaxy clusters do not shine in gamma rays puts the most stringent limits
available to-date on the lifetime of dark matter particles for a wide range of
particle masses and decay final states. In particular, our results put strong
constraints on the possibility of ascribing to decaying dark matter both the
increasing positron fraction reported by PAMELA and the high-energy feature in
the electron-positron spectrum measured by Fermi. Observations of nearby dwarf
galaxies and of the Andromeda Galaxy (M31) do not provide as strong limits as
those from galaxy clusters, while still improving on previous constraints in
some cases.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, submitted to JCAP, revised version with some
additions and correction
Are strange stars distinguishable from neutron stars by their cooling behaviour?
The general statement that strange stars cool more rapidly than neutron stars
is investigated in greater detail. It is found that the direct Urca process
could be forbidden not only in neutron stars but also in strange stars. If so,
strange stars would be slowly cooling and their surface temperatures would be
more or less indistinguishable from those of slowly cooling neutron stars. The
case of enhanced cooling is reinvestigated as well. It is found that strange
stars cool significantly more rapidly than neutron stars within the first years after birth. This feature could become particularly interesting if
continued observation of SN 1987A would reveal the temperature of the possibly
existing pulsar at its centre.Comment: 10 pages, 3 ps-figures, to appear in the proceedings of the
International Symposium on ''Strangeness in Quark Matter 1997``, April
14--18, Thera (Santorini), Hella
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