6,319 research outputs found
Revealing the X-ray source in IRAS 13224-3809 through flux-dependent reverberation lags
IRAS 13224-3809 was observed in 2011 for 500 ks with the XMM-Newton
observatory. We detect highly significant X-ray lags between soft (0.3 - 1 keV)
and hard (1.2 - 5 keV) energies. The hard band lags the soft at low frequencies
(i.e. hard lag), while the opposite (i.e. soft lag) is observed at high
frequencies. In this paper, we study the lag during flaring and quiescent
periods. We find that the frequency and absolute amplitude of the soft lag is
different during high-flux and low-flux periods. During the low flux intervals,
the soft lag is detected at higher frequencies and with smaller amplitude.
Assuming that the soft lag is associated with the light travel time between
primary and reprocessed emission, this behaviour suggests that the X-ray source
is more compact during low-flux intervals, and irradiates smaller radii of the
accretion disc (likely because of light bending effects). We continue with an
investigation of the lag dependence on energy, and find that isolating the
low-flux periods reveals a strong lag signature at the Fe K line energy,
similar to results found using 1.3 Ms of data on another well known Narrow-Line
Seyfert I galaxy, 1H0707-495.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The changing X-ray time lag in MCG-6-30-15
MCG-6-30-15 is one of the most observed Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxies in the
X-ray band. In this paper we examine the X-ray time lags in this source using a
total of 600 ks in observations (440 ks exposure) taken with the XMM-Newton
telescope (300 ks in 2001 and 300 ks in 2013). Both the old and new
observations show the usual hard lag that increases with energy, however, the
hard lag turns over to a soft lag at frequencies below ~1e-4 Hz. The highest
frequencies (~1e-3 Hz) in this source show a clear soft lag, as previously
presented for the first 300 ks observation, but no clear iron K lag is detected
in either the old or new observation. The soft lag is more significant in the
old observation than the new. The observations are consistent with a
reverberation interpretation, where the soft, reflected emission is delayed
with respect to the hard powerlaw component. These spectral timing results
suggest that two distinct variability mechanisms are important in this source:
intrinsic coronal variations (which lead to correlated variability in the
reprocessed emission), and geometrical changes in the corona. Variability due
to geometrical changes does not result in correlated variability in the
reflection, and therefore inhibits the clear detection of an iron K lag.Comment: Resubmitted to MNRAS after minor corrections. 11 pages, 10 figure
Measurement of the electron's electric dipole moment using YbF molecules: methods and data analysis
We recently reported a new measurement of the electron's electric dipole
moment using YbF molecules [Nature 473, 493 (2011)]. Here, we give a more
detailed description of the methods used to make this measurement, along with a
fuller analysis of the data. We show how our methods isolate the electric
dipole moment from imperfections in the experiment that might mimic it. We
describe the systematic errors that we discovered, and the small corrections
that we made to account for these. By making a set of additional measurements
with greatly exaggerated experimental imperfections, we find upper bounds on
possible uncorrected systematic errors which we use to determine the systematic
uncertainty in the measurement. We also calculate the size of some systematic
effects that have been important in previous electric dipole moment
measurements, such as the motional magnetic field effect and the geometric
phase, and show them to be negligibly small in the present experiment. Our
result is consistent with an electric dipole moment of zero, so we provide
upper bounds to its size at various confidence levels. Finally, we review the
prospects for future improvements in the precision of the experiment.Comment: 35 pages, 15 figure
Revealing the X-ray Variability of AGN with Principal Component Analysis
We analyse a sample of 26 active galactic nuclei with deep XMM-Newton
observations, using principal component analysis (PCA) to find model
independent spectra of the different variable components. In total, we identify
at least 12 qualitatively different patterns of spectral variability, involving
several different mechanisms, including five sources which show evidence of
variable relativistic reflection (MCG-6-30-15, NGC 4051, 1H 0707-495, NGC 3516
and Mrk 766) and three which show evidence of varying partial covering neutral
absorption (NGC 4395, NGC 1365, and NGC 4151). In over half of the sources
studied, the variability is dominated by changes in a power law continuum, both
in terms of changes in flux and power law index, which could be produced by
propagating fluctuations within the corona. Simulations are used to find unique
predictions for different physical models, and we then attempt to qualitatively
match the results from the simulations to the behaviour observed in the real
data. We are able to explain a large proportion of the variability in these
sources using simple models of spectral variability, but more complex models
may be needed for the remainder. We have begun the process of building up a
library of different principal components, so that spectral variability in AGN
can quickly be matched to physical processes. We show that PCA can be an
extremely powerful tool for distinguishing different patterns of variability in
AGN, and that it can be used effectively on the large amounts of high-quality
archival data available from the current generation of X-ray telescopes.Comment: 25 pages, 27 figures, accepted to MNRAS. Analysis code available on
request to lead author. Edit: Rogue table remove
Observations of MCG-5-23-16 with Suzaku, XMM-Newton and NuSTAR: Disk tomography and Compton hump reverberation
MCG-5-23-16 is one of the first AGN where relativistic reverberation in the
iron K line originating in the vicinity of the supermassive black hole was
found, based on a short XMM-Newton observation. In this work, we present the
results from long X-ray observations using Suzaku, XMM-Newton and NuSTAR
designed to map the emission region using X-ray reverberation. A relativistic
iron line is detected in the lag spectra on three different time-scales,
allowing the emission from different regions around the black hole to be
separated. Using NuSTAR coverage of energies above 10 keV reveals a lag between
these energies and the primary continuum, which is detected for the first time
in an AGN. This lag is a result of the Compton reflection hump responding to
changes in the primary source in a manner similar to the response of the
relativistic iron K line.Comment: Accepted for Publication in Ap
Discovery of fe Kα X-Ray reverberation around the black holes in MCG-5-23-16 and NGC 7314
Several X-ray observations have recently revealed the presence of
reverberation time delays between spectral components in AGN. Most of the
observed lags are between the power-law Comptonization component, seen
directly, and the soft excess produced by reflection in the vicinity of the
black hole. NGC 4151 was the first object to show these lags in the iron K
band. Here, we report the discovery of reverberation lags in the Fe K band in
two other sources: MCG-5-23-16 and NGC 7314. In both objects, the 6-7 keV band,
where the Fe K line peaks, lags the bands at lower and higher energies with a
time delay of ~ 1 kilo-seconds. These lags are unlikely to be due to the narrow
Fe K line. They are fully consistent with reverberation of the
relativistically-broadened iron K line. The measured lags, their time-scale and
spectral modeling, indicate that most of the radiation is emitted at ~ 5 and 24
gravitational radii for MCG-5-23-16 and NGC 7314 respectively
The Compton hump and variable blue wing in the extreme low-flux NuSTAR observations of 1H0707-495
The Narrow-line Seyfert I galaxy, 1H0707-495, has been well observed in the
0.3-10 keV band, revealing a dramatic drop in flux in the iron K alpha band, a
strong soft excess, and short timescale reverberation lags associated with
these spectral features. In this paper, we present the first results of a deep
250 ks NuSTAR observation of 1H0707-495, which includes the first sensitive
observations above 10 keV. Even though the NuSTAR observations caught the
source in an extreme low-flux state, the Compton hump is still significantly
detected. NuSTAR, with its high effective area above 7 keV, clearly detects the
drop in flux in the iron K alpha band, and by comparing these observations with
archival XMM-Newton observations, we find that the energy of this drop
increases with increasing flux. We discuss possible explanations for this, the
most likely of which is that the drop in flux is the blue wing of the
relativistically broadened iron K alpha emission line. When the flux is low,
the coronal source height is low, thus enhancing the most gravitationally
redshifted emission.Comment: Submitted to MNRAS, comments are welcome. 9 pages, 5 figure
Non-Emergency Medical Transportation Needs of Middle-Aged and Older Adults: A Rural-Urban Comparison in Delaware, USA.
Background: Older adults in rural areas have unique transportation barriers to accessing medical care, which include a lack of mass transit options and considerable distances to health-related services. This study contrasts non-emergency medical transportation (NEMT) service utilization patterns and associated costs for Medicaid middle-aged and older adults in rural versus urban areas. Methods: Data were analyzed from 39,194 NEMT users of LogistiCare-brokered services in Delaware residing in rural (68.3%) and urban (30.9%) areas. Multivariable logistic analyses compared trip characteristics by rurality designation. Results: Rural (37.2%) and urban (41.2%) participants used services more frequently for dialysis than for any other medical concern. Older age and personal accompaniment were more common and wheel chair use was less common for rural trips. The mean cost per trip was greater for rural users (difference of $2910 per trip), which was attributed to the greater distance per trip in rural areas. Conclusions: Among a sample who were eligible for subsidized NEMT and who utilized this service, rural trips tended to be longer and, therefore, higher in cost. Over 50% of trips were made for dialysis highlighting the need to address prevention and, potentially, health service improvements for rural dialysis patients
A Persistent Disk Wind in GRS 1915+105 with NICER
The bright, erratic black hole X-ray binary GRS 1915+105 has long been a
target for studies of disk instabilities, radio/infrared jets, and accretion
disk winds, with implications that often apply to sources that do not exhibit
its exotic X-ray variability. With the launch of NICER, we have a new
opportunity to study the disk wind in GRS 1915+105 and its variability on short
and long timescales. Here we present our analysis of 39 NICER observations of
GRS 1915+105 collected during five months of the mission data validation and
verification phase, focusing on Fe XXV and Fe XXVI absorption. We report the
detection of strong Fe XXVI in 32 (>80%) of these observations, with another
four marginal detections; Fe XXV is less common, but both likely arise in the
well-known disk wind. We explore how the properties of this wind depends on
broad characteristics of the X-ray lightcurve: mean count rate, hardness ratio,
and fractional RMS variability. The trends with count rate and RMS are
consistent with an average wind column density that is fairly steady between
observations but varies rapidly with the source on timescales of seconds. The
line dependence on spectral hardness echoes known behavior of disk winds in
outbursts of Galactic black holes; these results clearly indicate that NICER is
a powerful tool for studying black hole winds.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL. Comments welcom
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