4,481 research outputs found
Four Years of Extreme Ultraviolet Observations of Markarian 421: II. Temporal Analysis
The Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer (EUVE) satellite accumulated ~one million
seconds of public data between 1994 and 1997 for the BL Lacertae object
Markarian 421. This is the second of two papers in which we present the results
of spectral and temporal analysis of this EUVE data set. We analyze in the
present paper the imaging data by means of power spectrum and structure
function techniques, while the spectral analysis is presented in a companion
paper. We find for MRK 421 a power spectrum with slope -2.14 +- 0.28 with a
break at ~3 days. This is the first time that a break in the power spectrum of
a BL Lacertae object has been found. We also find evidence of non-stationarity
for MRK 421 EUV emissionComment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 16 pages, 14
Postscript figures, 3 Table
Exercise and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: Two incompatible entities?
A greater understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms underpinning hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) has translated to improved medical care and better survival of affected individuals. Historically these patients were considered to be at high risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) during exercise; therefore, exercise recommendations were highly conservative and promoted a sedentary life style. There is emerging evidence that suggests that exercise in HCM has a favorable effect on cardiovascular remodeling and moderate exercise programs have not raised any safety concerns. Furthermore, individuals with HCM have a similar burden of atherosclerotic risk factors as the general population in whom exercise has been associated with a reduction in myocardial infarction, stroke, and heart failure, especially among those with a high-risk burden. Small studies revealed that athletes who choose to continue with regular competition do not demonstrate adverse outcomes when compared to those who discontinue sport, and active individuals implanted with an implantable cardioverter defibrillator do not have an increased risk of appropriate shocks or other adverse events. The recently published exercise recommendations from the European Association for Preventative Cardiology account for more contemporary evidence and adopt a more liberal stance regarding competitive and high intensity sport in individuals with low-risk HCM. This review addresses the issue of exercise in individuals with HCM, and explores current evidence supporting safety of exercise in HCM, potential caveats, and areas of further research
CLEAR: Covariant LEAst-square Re-fitting with applications to image restoration
In this paper, we propose a new framework to remove parts of the systematic
errors affecting popular restoration algorithms, with a special focus for image
processing tasks. Generalizing ideas that emerged for regularization,
we develop an approach re-fitting the results of standard methods towards the
input data. Total variation regularizations and non-local means are special
cases of interest. We identify important covariant information that should be
preserved by the re-fitting method, and emphasize the importance of preserving
the Jacobian (w.r.t. the observed signal) of the original estimator. Then, we
provide an approach that has a "twicing" flavor and allows re-fitting the
restored signal by adding back a local affine transformation of the residual
term. We illustrate the benefits of our method on numerical simulations for
image restoration tasks
X-ray Variability Characteristics of the Seyfert 1 Galaxy NGC 3783
We have characterized the energy-dependent X-ray variability properties of
the Seyfert~1 galaxy NGC 3783 using archival XMM-Newton and Rossi X-ray Timing
Explorer data. The high-frequency fluctuation power spectral density function
(PSD) slope is consistent with flattening towards higher energies. Light curve
cross correlation functions yield no significant lags, but peak coefficients
generally decrease as energy separation of the bands increases on both short
and long timescales. We have measured the coherence between various X-ray bands
over the temporal frequency range of 6e-8 to 1e-4 Hz; this range includes the
temporal frequency of the low-frequency power spectral density function (PSD)
break tentatively detected by Markowitz et al. and includes the lowest temporal
frequency over which coherence has been measured in any AGN to date. Coherence
is generally near unity at these temporal frequencies, though it decreases
slightly as energy separation of the bands increases. Temporal
frequency-dependent phase lags are detected on short time scales; phase lags
are consistent with increasing as energy separation increases or as temporal
frequency decreases. All of these results are similar to those obtained
previously for several Seyfert galaxies and stellar-mass black hole systems.
Qualitatively, these results are consistent with the variability models of
Kotov et al. and Lyubarskii, wherein the X-ray variability is due to inwardly
propagating variations in the local mass accretion rate.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal, 2005, vol.
635, p. 180; version 2 has minor grammatical changes; 23 pages; uses
emulateapj
The X-ray Power Spectral Density Function of the Seyfert Active Galactic Nucleus NGC 7469
We present the broadband X-ray power spectral density function (PSD) of the
X-ray-luminous Seyfert 1.2 NGC 7469, measured from Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
monitoring data and two XMM-Newton observations. We find significant evidence
for a turnover in the 2-10 keV PSD at a temporal frequency of 2.0(+3.0,-0.8)e-6
Hz or 1.0(+3.0,-0.6)e-6 Hz, depending on the exact form of the break
(sharply-broken or slowly-bending power-law, respectively). The ``surrogate''
Monte Carlo method of Press et al. (1992) was used to map out the probability
distributions of PSD model parameters and obtain reliable uncertainties (68 per
cent confidence limits quoted here). The corresponding break time scale of 5.8
(+/- 3.5) days or 11.6(+17.5,-8.7) days, respectively, is consistent with the
empirical relation between PSD break time scale, black hole mass and bolometric
luminosity of McHardy et al. Compared to the 2-10 keV PSD, the 10-20 keV PSD
has a much flatter shape at high temporal frequencies, and no PSD break is
significantly detected, suggesting an energy-dependent evolution not unlike
that exhibited by several Galactic black hole systems.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 17 pages, 10
figures (3 color
In-plane magnetic field-induced spin polarization and transition to insulating behavior in two-dimensional hole systems
Using a novel technique, we make quantitative measurements of the spin
polarization of dilute (3.4 to 6.8*10^{10} cm^{-2}) GaAs (311)A two-dimensional
holes as a function of an in-plane magnetic field. As the field is increased
the system gradually becomes spin polarized, with the degree of spin
polarization depending on the orientation of the field relative to the crystal
axes. Moreover, the behavior of the system turns from metallic to insulating
\textit{before} it is fully spin polarized. The minority-spin population at the
transition is ~8*10^{9} cm^{-2}, close to the density below which the system
makes a transition to an insulating state in the absence of a magnetic field.Comment: 4 pages with figure
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