9,001 research outputs found
The History of Cosmic Baryons: X-ray Emission vs. Star Formation Rate
We relate the star formation from cold baryons in virialized structures to
the X-ray properties of the associated diffuse, hot baryonic component. Our
computations use the standard ``semi-analytic'' models to describe i) the
evolution of dark matter halos through merging after the hierarchical
clustering, ii) the star formation governed by radiative cooling and by
supernova feedback, iii) the hydro- and thermodynamics of the hot gas, rendered
with our Punctuated Equilibria model. So we relate the X-ray observables
concerning the intra-cluster medium to the thermal energy of the gas pre-heated
and expelled by supernovae following star formation, and then accreted during
the subsequent merging events. We show that at fluxes fainter than erg/cm s (well within the reach of next generation X-ray
observatories) the X-ray counts of extended extragalactic sources (as well as
the faint end of the luminosity function, the contribution to the soft X-ray
background, and the correlation at the group scales) increase
considerably when the star formation rate is enhanced for z>1 as indicated by
growing optical/infrared evidence. Specifically, the counts in the range 0.5-2
keV are increased by factors when the the feedback is decreased and
star formation is enhanced as to yield a flat shape of the star formation rate
for 2<z<4.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
X-ray and TeV emissions from High Frequency Peaked BL Lacs
The majority of the extragalactic sources yet detected at TeV photon energies
belong to the class of "high frequency peaked BL Lacs" (HBLs) that exhibit a
spectral energy distribution with a lower peak in the X-ray band. Such spectra
are well described in terms of a log-parabolic shape with a considerable
curvature, and widely interpreted as synchrotron emission from
ultrarelativistic electrons outflowing in a relativistic jet; these are
expected to radiate also in gamma-rays by the inverse Compton process. Recently
we have compared the X-ray spectral parameter distributions of TeV detected
HBLs (TBLs) with those undetected (UBLs), and found that the distributions of
the peak energies E_p are similarly symmetric around a value of a few keVs for
both subclasses, while the X-ray spectra are broader for TBLs than for UBLs.
Here we propose an acceleration scenario to interpret both the E_p and the
spectral curvature distributions in terms of a coherent and a stochastic
acceleration mechanisms, respectively. We show how the curvature parameter b<
0.3 - 0.7 of the synchrotron X rays, that depends only on the latter
acceleration component, can be related to the inverse Compton luminosity in
gamma-rays, so introducing a link between the X-ray and the TeV observations of
HBLs.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Astrophysical Journal publishe
XMM-Newton Observations of Evolution of Cluster X-Ray Scaling Relations at z=0.4-0.7
We present a spatially-resolved analysis of the temperature and gas density
profiles of galaxy clusters at z=0.4-0.7 observed with XMM-Newton. These data
are used to derive the total cluster mass within the radius r_500 without
assuming isothermality, and also to measure the average temperature and total
X-ray luminosity excluding the cooling cores. We derive the high-redshift M-T
and L-T relations and compare them with the local measurements. The
high-redshift L-T relation has low scatter and evolves as L ~ (1+z)^{1.8\pm0.3}
for a fixed T, in good agreement with several previous Chandra and XMM-Newton
studies (Vikhlinin et al., Lumb et al., Maughan et al.). The observed evolution
of the M-T relation follows M_500 = A T^{3/2} E(z)^{-alpha}, where we measure
alpha=0.88\pm0.23. This is in good agreement with predictions of the
self-similar theory, alpha=1.Comment: ApJ in press, updated to match the accepted versio
Dark Matter Halos: The Dynamical Basis of Effective Empirical Models
We investigate the dynamical basis of the classic empirical models
(specifically, Sersic-Einasto and generalized NFW) that are widely used to
describe the distributions of collisionless matter in galaxies. We submit that
such a basis is provided by our \alpha-profiles, shown to constitute solutions
of the Jeans dynamical equilibrium with physical boundary conditions. We show
how to set the parameters of the empirical in terms of the dynamical models; we
find the empirical models, and specifically Sersic-Einasto, to constitute a
simple and close approximation to the dynamical models. Finally, we discuss how
these provide an useful baseline for assessing the impact of the small-scale
dynamics that may modulate the density slope in the central galaxy regions.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, Accepted by Advances in Astronom
Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effects from Quasars in Galaxies and Groups
The energy fed by active galactic nuclei to the surrounding diffuse baryons
changes their amount, temperature, and distribution; so in groups and in member
galaxies it affects the X-ray luminosity and also the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich
effect. Here we compute how the latter is enhanced by the transient blastwave
driven by an active quasar, and is depressed when the equilibrium is recovered
with a depleted density. We constrain such depressions and enhancements with
the masses of relic black holes in galaxies and the X-ray luminosities in
groups. We discuss how all these linked observables can tell the quasar
contribution to the thermal history of the baryons pervading galaxies and
groups.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, uses REVTeX4 and emulateapj.cls. Accepted by ApJ
Marine Fungi of Iceland: A Preliminary Account of Ascomycetes
This paper reports, for the first time, 25 species of marine pyrenomycetes from Icelandic waters. Taxonomic notes are included for certain species.
Surtsey, a submarine volcanic upthrust off the south coast of Iceland (Thorarinsson, 1967), is a current center for cooperative geophysical, geochemical, and biological investigations on an international scale. The mycological portion of the total biological research effort of the Surtsey project has emphasized a survey of the marine and freshwater mycoflora on the mainland of Iceland itself as a necessary prerequisite to ecological studies on Surtsey. With the exception of two reports on aquatic phycomycetes (Larsen, 1931, and Johnson, 1966), the aquatic mycoflora of Iceland is unknown. Thus Iceland, rather than Surtsey, has become the immediate focal point for mycological investigations
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