1,461 research outputs found
The Energy-dependent X-ray Timing Characteristics of the Narrow Line Seyfert 1 Mkn 766
We present the energy-dependent power spectral density (PSD) and
cross-spectral properties of Mkn 766, obtained from combining data obtained
during an XMM-Newton observation spanning six revolutions in 2005 with data
obtained from an XMM-Newton long-look in 2001. The PSD shapes and rms-flux
relations are found to be consistent between the 2001 and 2005 observations,
suggesting the 2005 observation is simply a low-flux extension of the 2001
observation and permitting us to combine the two data sets. The resulting PSD
has the highest temporal frequency resolution for any AGN PSD measured to date.
Applying a broken power-law model yields break frequencies which increase in
temporal frequency with photon energy. Obtaining a good fit when assuming
energy-independent break frequencies requires the presence of a Lorentzian at
4.6+/-0.4 * 10^-4 Hz whose strength increases with photon energy, a behavior
seen in black hole X-ray binaries. The cross-spectral properties are measured;
temporal frequency-dependent soft-to-hard time lags are detected in this object
for the first time. Cross-spectral results are consistent with those for other
accreting black hole systems. The results are discussed in the context of
several variability models, including those based on inwardly-propagating
viscosity variations in the accretion disk.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 18 pages, 9
figures. Uses emulateapj5.st
Electron neutrino tagging through tertiary lepton detection
We discuss an experimental technique aimed at tagging electron neutrinos in
multi-GeV artificial sources on an event-by-event basis. It exploits in a novel
manner calorimetric and tracking technologies developed in the framework of the
LHC experiments and of rare kaon decay searches. The setup is suited for
slow-extraction, moderate power beams and it is based on an instrumented decay
tunnel equipped with tagging units that intercept secondary and tertiary
leptons from the bulk of undecayed \pi^+ and protons. We show that the taggers
are able to reduce the \nue contamination originating from K_e3 decays by about
one order of magnitude. Only a limited suppression (~60%) is achieved for \nue
produced by the decay-in-flight of muons; for low beam powers, similar
performance as for K_e3 can be reached supplementing the tagging system with an
instrumented beam dump.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures; minor changes, version to appear in EPJ
Gas Density Fluctuations in the Perseus Cluster: Clumping Factor and Velocity Power Spectrum
X-ray surface brightness fluctuations in the core of the Perseus Cluster are
analyzed, using deep observations with the Chandra observatory. The amplitude
of gas density fluctuations on different scales is measured in a set of radial
annuli. It varies from 8 to 12 per cent on scales of ~10-30 kpc within radii of
30-160 kpc from the cluster center and from 9 to 7 per cent on scales of ~20-30
kpc in an outer, 60-220 kpc annulus. Using a statistical linear relation
between the observed amplitude of density fluctuations and predicted velocity,
the characteristic velocity of gas motions on each scale is calculated. The
typical amplitudes of the velocity outside the central 30 kpc region are 90-140
km/s on ~20-30 kpc scales and 70-100 km/s on smaller scales ~7-10 kpc. The
velocity power spectrum is consistent with cascade of turbulence and its slope
is in a broad agreement with the slope for canonical Kolmogorov turbulence. The
gas clumping factor estimated from the power spectrum of the density
fluctuations is lower than 7-8 per cent for radii ~30-220 kpc from the center,
leading to a density bias of less than 3-4 per cent in the cluster core.
Uncertainties of the analysis are examined and discussed. Future measurements
of the gas velocities with the Astro-H, Athena and Smart-X observatories will
directly measure the gas density-velocity perturbation relation and further
reduce systematic uncertainties in these quantities.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, submitted to MNRAS, comments are welcom
Study of a Large NaI(Tl) Crystal
Using a narrow band positron beam, the response of a large high-resolution
NaI(Tl) crystal to an incident positron beam was measured. It was found that
nuclear interactions cause the appearance of additional peaks in the low energy
tail of the deposited energy spectrum
Two experiments for the price of one? -- The role of the second oscillation maximum in long baseline neutrino experiments
We investigate the quantitative impact that data from the second oscillation
maximum has on the performance of wide band beam neutrino oscillation
experiments. We present results for the physics sensitivities to standard three
flavor oscillation, as well as results for the sensitivity to non-standard
interactions. The quantitative study is performed using an experimental setup
similar to the Fermilab to DUSEL Long Baseline Neutrino Experiment (LBNE). We
find that, with the single exception of sensitivity to the mass hierarchy, the
second maximum plays only a marginal role due to the experimental difficulties
to obtain a statistically significant and sufficiently background-free event
sample at low energies. This conclusion is valid for both water Cherenkov and
liquid argon detectors. Moreover, we confirm that non-standard neutrino
interactions are very hard to distinguish experimentally from standard
three-flavor effects and can lead to a considerable loss of sensitivity to
\theta_{13}, the mass hierarchy and CP violation.Comment: RevTex 4.1, 23 pages, 10 figures; v2: Typos corrected, very minor
clarifications; matches published version; v3: Fixed a typo in the first
equation in sec. III
Probing Sterile Neutrino Parameters with Double Chooz, Daya Bay and RENO
In this work, we present a realistic analysis of the potential of the
present-day reactor experiments Double Chooz, Daya Bay and RENO for probing the
existence of sterile neutrinos. We present exclusion regions for sterile
oscillation parameters for each of these experiments, using simulations with
realistic estimates of systematic errors and detector resolutions, and compare
the sterile parameter sensitivity regions we obtain with the existing bounds
from other reactor experiments. We find that these experimental set-ups give
significant bounds on the parameter \Theta_{ee} especially in the low sterile
oscillation region 0.01 < \Delta m_{41}^2 < 0.05 eV^2. These bounds can add to
our understanding of the sterile neutrino sector since there is still a tension
in the allowed regions from different experiments for sterile parameters.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
A new design for the CERN-Fr\'ejus neutrino Super Beam
We present an optimization of the hadron focusing system for a low-energy
high-intensity conventional neutrino beam (Super-Beam) proposed on the basis of
the HP-SPL at CERN with a beam power of 4 MW and an energy of 4.5 GeV. The far
detector would be a 440 kton Water Cherenkov detector (MEMPHYS) located at a
baseline of 130 km in the Fr\'ejus site. The neutrino fluxes simulation relies
on a new GEANT4 based simulation coupled with an optimization algorithm based
on the maximization of the sensitivity limit on the mixing angle.
A new configuration adopting a multiple horn system with solid targets is
proposed which improves the sensitivity to and the CP violating
phase .Comment: 11 pages, 18 figures, 2 table
Rms-flux relation in the optical fast variability data of BL Lacertae object S5 0716+714
The possibility that BL Lac S5 0716+714 exhibits a linear root mean square
(rms)-flux relation in its IntraDay Variability (IDV) is analysed. The results
may be used as an argument in the existing debate regarding the source of
optical IDV in Active Galactic Nuclei. 63 time series in different optical
bands were used. A linear rms-flux relation at a confidence level higher than
65% was recovered for less than 8% of the cases. We were able to check if the
magnitude is log-normally distributed for eight timeseries and found, with a
confidence > 95%, that this is not the case.Comment: Accepted by Astrophysics and Space Scienc
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