324 research outputs found
Automatic Identification of Solar X-Ray Bright Points in Hinode X-Ray Data
We have automated a method that is used to find point sources in Chandra X-ray telescope data, to identify solar bright points in Hinode X-ray data. This tool, called lextrct, first identifies candidate sources that are brighter than the surrounding background. The algorithm also allows selected pixels to be excluded from the source-finding, thus allowing saturated pixels (from flares and/or active regions) to be ignored. We then use lextrct to fit the sources to two-dimensional, elliptical Gaussians. The size and orientation give an approximation of the shape of the bright points. We are in the process of analyzing observations through the Al_poly filter with a four-second exposure time, to obtain a catalogue of bright points, which will include their sizes, lifetimes, intensities, and position on the solar dis
A Catalog of Very Isolated Galaxies from the SDSS Data Release 1
We present a new catalog of isolated galaxies obtained through an automated
systematic search. These 2980 isolated galaxies were found in approximately
2099 sq deg of sky in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 1 (SDSS DR1)
photometry. The selection algorithm, implementing a variation on the criteria
developed by Karachentseva in 1973, proved to be very efficient and fast. This
catalog will be useful for studies of the general galaxy characteristics. Here
we report on our results.Comment: 67 pages, which includes 14 figures. Accepted for publication by A
Chandra Phase-Resolved Spectroscopy of the Crab Pulsar
We present the first phase-resolved study of the X-ray spectral properties of
the Crab Pulsar that covers all pulse phases. The superb angular resolution of
the Chandra X-ray Observatory enables distinguishing the pulsar from the
surrounding nebulosity, even at pulse minimum. Analysis of the pulse-averaged
spectrum measures interstellar X-ray extinction due primarily to photoelectric
absorption and secondarily to scattering by dust grains in the direction of the
Crab Nebula. We confirm previous findings that the line-of-sight to the Crab is
underabundant in oxygen, although more-so than recently measured. Using the
abundances and cross sections from Wilms, Allen & McCray (2000) we find [O/H] =
(3.33 +/-0.25) x 10**-4. Analysis of the spectrum as a function of pulse phase
measures the low-energy X-ray spectral index even at pulse minimum -- albeit
with large statistical uncertainty -- and we find marginal evidence for
variations of the spectral index. The data are also used to set a new (3-sigma)
upper limit to the temperature of the neutron star of log T(infinity) < 6.30.Comment: 20 Pages including 7 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
The X-ray Position and Optical Counterpart of the Accretion-Powered Millisecond Pulsar XTE J1814-338
We report the precise optical and X-ray localization of the 3.2 ms
accretion-powered X-ray pulsar XTE J1814-338 with data from the Chandra X-Ray
Observatory as well as optical observations conducted during the 2003 June
discovery outburst. Optical imaging of the field during the outburst of this
soft X-ray transient reveals an R = 18 star at the X-ray position. This star is
absent (R > 20) from an archival 1989 image of the field and brightened during
the 2003 outburst, and we therefore identify it as the optical counterpart of
XTE J1814-338. The best source position derived from optical astrometry is R.A.
= 18h13m39.s04, Dec.= -33d46m22.3s (J2000). The featureless X-ray spectrum of
the pulsar in outburst is best fit by an absorbed power-law (with photon index
= 1.41 +- 0.06) plus blackbody (with kT = 0.95 +- 0.13 keV) model, where the
blackbody component contributes approximately 10% of the source flux. The
optical broad-band spectrum shows evidence for an excess of infrared emission
with respect to an X-ray heated accretion disk model, suggesting a significant
contribution from the secondary or from a synchrotron-emitting region. A
follow-up observation performed when XTE J1814-338 was in quiescence reveals no
counterpart to a limiting magnitude of R = 23.3. This suggests that the
secondary is an M3 V or later-type star, and therefore very unlikely to be
responsible for the soft excess, making synchroton emission a more reasonable
candidate.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 6 pages; 3 figure
Merging Galaxies in the SDSS EDR
We present a new catalog of merging galaxies obtained through an automated
systematic search routine. The 1479 new pairs of merging galaxies were found in
approximately 462 sq deg of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Early Data Release
(SDSS EDR; Stoughton et al. 2002) photometric data, and the pair catalog is
complete for galaxies in the magnitude range 16.0 <= g* <= 20.
The selection algorithm, implementing a variation on the original
Karachentsev (1972) criteria, proved to be very efficient and fast. Merging
galaxies were selected such that the inter-galaxy separations were less than
the sum of the component galaxies' radii.
We discuss the characteristics of the sample in terms of completeness, pair
separation, and the Holmberg effect. We also present an online atlas of images
for the SDSS EDR pairs obtained using the corrected frames from the SDSS EDR
database. The atlas images also include the relevant data for each pair member.
This catalog will be useful for conducting studies of the general
characteristics of merging galaxies, their environments, and their component
galaxies. The redshifts for a subset of the interacting and merging galaxies
and the distribution of angular sizes for these systems indicate the SDSS
provides a much deeper sample than almost any other wide-area catalog to date.Comment: 58 pages, which includes 15 figures and 6 tables. Figures 2, 8, 9,
10, 11, 13, and 14 are provided as JPEG files. For online atlas, see
http://home.fnal.gov/~sallam/MergePair/ . Accepted for publication in A
The u'g'r'i'z' Standard Star Network
We present the 158 standard stars that define the u'g'r'i'z' photometric
system. These stars form the basis for the photometric calibration of the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The defining instrument system and filters, the
observing process, the reduction techniques, and the software used to create
the stellar network are all described. We briefly discuss the history of the
star selection process, the derivation of a set of transformation equations for
the UBVRcIc system, and plans for future work.Comment: References to URLs in paper have been updated to reflect moved
website. Accepted by AJ. 50 pages, including 20 pages of text, 9 tables, and
15 figures. Plain ASCII text versions of Tables 8 and 9 can be found at
http://home.fnal.gov/~dtucker/ugriz/index.html (new URL
International Law for a New Millennium: A Colloquium Honoring the Vision of Louis B. Sohn
The colloquium honored Louis B. Sohn, one of the world\u27s foremost international law scholars. It was part of a series of activities including dedication of an international law library, and a portrait presentation. In recognition of Professor Sohn\u27s abiding involvement with the United Nations over the course of his life and the contributions he made to the institution even at such an early stage in his long career of academic and public service, the Rusk Center is pleased to present younger international law scholars who already have well-established reputations and whose work will affect that institution far into the next century, said Rusk Center Research Director Dorinda Dallmeyer, colloquium organizer. The first session was moderated by Rusk Center Director Thomas J. Schoenbaum, Dean and Virginia Rusk Professor of Law. The speakers included: Professor Jose\u27 E. Alvarez, University of Michigan, International Organizations and Compliance with International Law Professor Ruth E. Gordon, Villanova University, Failed States and the Resurrection of Trusteeship Professor S. James Anaya, University of Iowa, Development of Customary International Human Rights Law: The Influence of the United Nations and the Specialized Agencies The second session was moderated by Gabriel M. Wilner, Associate Dean for International and Graduate Legal Studies and Thomas M. Kirbo Professor of International Law. The speakers included: Professor Allyn Taylor, consultant to the World Health Organization, World Health Law: Internationalizing Domestic Regimes Professor Daniel M. Bodansky, University of Washington, Searching for Customary International Environmental Law Professor Jarat Chopra, Brown University, Responses to Political Peace-Maintenanc
The Static and Dynamic Lattice Changes Induced by Hydrogen Adsorption on NiAl(110)
Static and dynamic changes induced by adsorption of atomic hydrogen on the
NiAl(110) lattice at 130 K have been examined as a function of adsorbate
coverage. Adsorbed hydrogen exists in three distinct phases. At low coverages
the hydrogen is itinerant because of quantum tunneling between sites and
exhibits no observable vibrational modes. Between 0.4 ML and 0.6 ML, substrate
mediated interactions produce an ordered superstructure with c(2x2) symmetry,
and at higher coverages, hydrogen exists as a disordered lattice gas. This
picture of how hydrogen interacts with NiAl(110) is developed from our data and
compared to current theoretical predictions.Comment: 36 pages, including 12 figures, 2 tables and 58 reference
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