23,653 research outputs found
HST Proper Motion confirms the optical identification of the nearby pulsar PSR 1929+10
We report on the proper motion measurement of the proposed optical
counterpart of the X-ray/radio pulsar PSR 1929+10. Using images obtained with
the HST/STIS (average epoch 2001.73) we computed a yearly displacement of +97
+/- 1 mas yr^{-1} in RA and +46 +/- 1 mas yr^{-1} in Dec since the epoch
(1994.52) of the original HST/FOC detection. Both the magnitude and direction
of the optical proper motion components are found to be fully consistent with
the most recent VLBA radio measurements. This result provides an unambiguous
confirmation of the pulsar optical identification. In addition, we have used
the combined STIS/FOC datasets to derive information on the pulsar spectrum,
which seems characterized by a power law component, apparently unrelated to the
X-ray emission.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJ Letter
A spectroscopic investigation of the O-type star population in four Cygnus OB associations. II. Determination of the fundamental parameters
Aims. Having established the binary status of nineteen O-type stars located
in four Cygnus OB associations, we now determine their fundamental parameters
to constrain their properties and their evolutionary status. We also
investigate their surface nitrogen abundances, which we compare with other
results from the literature obtained for galactic O-type stars. Methods. Using
optical spectra collected for each object in our sample and some UV data from
the archives, we apply the CMFGEN atmosphere code to determine their main
properties. For the binary systems, we have disentangled the components to
obtain their individual spectra and investigate them as if they were single
stars. Results. We find that the distances of several presumably single O-type
stars seem poorly constrained because their luminosities are not in agreement
with the "standard" luminosities of stars with similar spectral types. The ages
of these O-type stars are all less than 7 Myrs. Therefore, the ages of these
stars agree with those, quoted in the literature, of the four associations,
except for CygOB8 for which the stars seem older than the association itself.
However, we point out that the distance of certain stars is debatable relative
to values found in the literature. The N content of these stars put in
perspective with N contents of several other galactic O-type stars seems to
draw the same five groups as found in the "Hunter" diagram for the O and B-type
stars in the LMC even though their locations are obviously different. We
determine mass-loss rates for several objects from the Halpha line and UV
spectra. Finally, we confirm the "mass discrepancy" especially for O stars with
masses smaller than 30 Msun. .Comment: 11 pages, and 26 pages of Appendix. A&A in pres
Interference effects in above-threshold ionization from diatomic molecules: determining the internuclear separation
We calculate angle-resolved above-threshold ionization spectra for diatomic
molecules in linearly polarized laser fields, employing the strong-field
approximation. The interference structure resulting from the individual
contributions of the different scattering scenarios is discussed in detail,
with respect to the dependence on the internuclear distance and molecular
orientation. We show that, in general, the contributions from the processes in
which the electron is freed at one center and rescatters off the other obscure
the interference maxima and minima obtained from single-center processes.
However, around the boundary of the energy regions for which rescattering has a
classical counterpart, such processes play a negligible role and very clear
interference patterns are observed. In such energy regions, one is able to
infer the internuclear distance from the energy difference between adjacent
interference minima.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures; discussions slightly modified and an additional
figure inserted for clarit
Phase resolved spectroscopy of the Vela pulsar with XMM-Newton
The ~10^4 y old Vela Pulsar represents the bridge between the young Crab-like
and the middle-aged rotation powered pulsars. Its multiwavelength behaviour is
due to the superposition of different spectral components. We take advantage of
the unprecedented harvest of photons collected by XMM-Newton to assess the Vela
Pulsar spectral shape and to study the pulsar spectrum as a function of its
rotational phase. As for the middle-aged pulsars Geminga, PSR B0656+14 and PSR
B1055-52 (the "Three Musketeers"), the phase-integrated spectrum of Vela is
well described by a three-component model, consisting of two blackbodies
(T_bb1=(1.06+/-0.03)x10^6 K, R_bb1=5.1+/-0.3 km, T_bb2=(2.16+/-0.06)x10^6 K,
R_bb2=0.73+/-0.08 km) plus a power-law (gamma=2.2+/-0.3). The relative
contributions of the three components are seen to vary as a function of the
pulsar rotational phase. The two blackbodies have a shallow 7-9% modulation.
The cooler blackbody, possibly related to the bulk of the neutron star surface,
has a complex modulation, with two peaks per period, separated by ~0.35 in
phase, the radio pulse occurring exactly in between. The hotter blackbody,
possibly originating from a hot polar region, has a nearly sinusoidal
modulation, with a single, broad maximum aligned with the second peak of the
cooler blackbody, trailing the radio pulse by ~0.15 in phase. The non thermal
component, magnetospheric in origin, is present only during 20% of the pulsar
phase and appears to be opposite to the radio pulse. XMM-Newton phase-resolved
spectroscopy unveils the link between the thermally emitting surface of the
neutron star and its charge-filled magnetosphere, probing emission geometry as
a function of the pulsar rotation. This is a fundamental piece of information
for future 3-dimensional modeling of the pulsar magnetosphere.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Time Variability of Quasars: the Structure Function Variance
Significant progress in the description of quasar variability has been
recently made by employing SDSS and POSS data. Common to most studies is a
fundamental assumption that photometric observations at two epochs for a large
number of quasars will reveal the same statistical properties as well-sampled
light curves for individual objects. We critically test this assumption using
light curves for a sample of 2,600 spectroscopically confirmed quasars
observed about 50 times on average over 8 years by the SDSS stripe 82 survey.
We find that the dependence of the mean structure function computed for
individual quasars on luminosity, rest-frame wavelength and time is
qualitatively and quantitatively similar to the behavior of the structure
function derived from two-epoch observations of a much larger sample. We also
reproduce the result that the variability properties of radio and X-ray
selected subsamples are different. However, the scatter of the variability
structure function for fixed values of luminosity, rest-frame wavelength and
time is similar to the scatter induced by the variance of these quantities in
the analyzed sample. Hence, our results suggest that, although the statistical
properties of quasar variability inferred using two-epoch data capture some
underlying physics, there is significant additional information that can be
extracted from well-sampled light curves for individual objects.Comment: Presented at the "Classification and Discovery in Large Astronomical
Surveys" meeting, Ringberg Castle, 14-17 October, 200
Normas e padrões para produção de mudas de batata-doce com alta sanidade.
bitstream/item/78995/1/documento-330.pd
Star-Formation in Low Radio Luminosity AGN from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We investigate faint radio emission from low- to high-luminosity Active
Galactic Nuclei (AGN) selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). Their
radio properties are inferred by co-adding large ensembles of radio image
cut-outs from the FIRST survey, as almost all of the sources are individually
undetected. We correlate the median radio flux densities against a range of
other sample properties, including median values for redshift, [OIII]
luminosity, emission line ratios, and the strength of the 4000A break. We
detect a strong trend for sources that are actively undergoing star-formation
to have excess radio emission beyond the ~10^28 ergs/s/Hz level found for
sources without any discernible star-formation. Furthermore, this additional
radio emission correlates well with the strength of the 4000A break in the
optical spectrum, and may be used to assess the age of the star-forming
component. We examine two subsamples, one containing the systems with emission
line ratios most like star-forming systems, and one with the sources that have
characteristic AGN ratios. This division also separates the mechanism
responsible for the radio emission (star-formation vs. AGN). For both cases we
find a strong, almost identical, correlation between [OIII] and radio
luminosity, with the AGN sample extending toward lower, and the star-formation
sample toward higher luminosities. A clearer separation between the two
subsamples is seen as function of the central velocity dispersion of the host
galaxy. For systems with similar redshifts and velocity dispersions, the
star-formation subsample is brighter than the AGN in the radio by an order of
magnitude. This underlines the notion that the radio emission in star-forming
systems can dominate the emission associated with the AGN.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomical Journal; 15 pages, 8 color
figure
Human rights literacy: Moving towards rights-based education and transformative action through understandings of dignity, equality and freedom
The twentieth century has been characterised by the proliferation of human rights in the discursive practices of the United Nations (Baxi, 1997). In this article, we explore the continual process of rights-based education towards transformative action, and an open and democratic society, as dependent upon the facilitation of human rights literacy in teacher training. Our theoretical framework examines the continual process of moving towards an open and democratic society through the facilitation of human rights literacy, rights-based education and transformative action. We focus specifically on understandings of dignity, equality and freedom, as both rights (legal claims) and values (moral action) across horizontal and vertical applications, considering the internalisation and implementation of dignity, equality and freedom towards transformative action. Our analysis of data stemming from a project funded by the National Research Foundation (NRF) entitled ‘Human Rights Literacy: A quest for meaning’, brought student-teachers’ understandings into conversation with the proposed theoretical framework. In terms of understandings related to dignity, equality and freedom, participants seemingly understand human rights either as legal interests, or alternatively, as they pertain to values such as caring, ubuntu, respect, human dignity and equality. Legal understandings primarily focus on the vertical application of the Bill of Rights (RSA, 1996a) and the role of government in this regard, whereas understandings related to the realisation of values tended to focus on the horizontal applications of particularly dignity and equality as the product of the relation between self and other. We conclude the article by linking the analysis and the theoretical framework to education as a humanising practice within human rights as a common language of humanity. In so doing, we argue that human rights literacy and rights-based education transcend knowledge about human rights, moving towards transformative action and caring educational relations premised on freedom, dignity and equality. Finally, recommendations are made regarding human rights and rights-based education as transformative action within the South African context, towards an open and democratic society.Keywords: democracy; dignity; equality; freedom; human rights; human rights education; human rights literacy; rights based education; transformation; transformative actio
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