7,031 research outputs found
Large amplitude oscillation of an erupting filament as seen in EUV, H-alpha and microwave observations
We present multiwavelength observations of a large-amplitude oscillation of a polar-crown filament on 15 October 2002, which has been reported by Isobe and Tripathi (Astron. Astrophys. 449, L17, 2006). The oscillation occurred during the slow rise (â1 kmâsâ1) of the filament. It completed three cycles before sudden acceleration and eruption. The oscillation and following eruption were clearly seen in observations recorded by the Extreme-Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT) onboard the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO). The oscillation was seen only in a part of the filament, and it appears to be a standing oscillation rather than a propagating wave. The amplitudes of velocity and spatial displacement of the oscillation in the plane of the sky were about 5 kmâsâ1 and 15â000 km, respectively. The period of oscillation was about two hours and did not change significantly during the oscillation. The oscillation was also observed in Hα by the Flare Monitoring Telescope at the Hida Observatory. We determine the three-dimensional motion of the oscillation from the Hα wing images. The maximum line-of-sight velocity was estimated to be a few tens of kilometers per second, although the uncertainty is large owing to the lack of line-profile information. Furthermore, we also identified the spatial displacement of the oscillation in 17-GHz microwave images from Nobeyama Radio Heliograph (NoRH). The filament oscillation seems to be triggered by magnetic reconnection between a filament barb and nearby emerging magnetic flux as was evident from the MDI magnetogram observations. No flare was observed to be associated with the onset of the oscillation. We also discuss possible implications of the oscillation as a diagnostic tool for the eruption mechanisms. We suggest that in the early phase of eruption a part of the filament lost its equilibrium first, while the remaining part was still in an equilibrium and oscillated
Effects of antibodies against dynein and tubulin on the stiffness of flagellar axonemes
Antidynein antibodies, previously shown to inhibit flagellar oscillation and active sliding of axonemal microtubules, increase the bending resistance of axonemes measured under relaxing conditions, but not the bending resistance of axonemes measured under rigor conditions. These observations suggest that antidynein antibodies can stabilize rigor cross-bridges between outer-doublet microtubules, by interfering with ATP-induced cross-bridge detachment. Stabilization of a small number of cross-bridge appears to be sufficient to cause substantial inhibition of the frequency of flagellar oscillation. Antitubulin antibodies, previously shown to inhibit flagellar oscillation without inhibiting active sliding of axonemal microtubules, do not increase the static bending resistance of axonemes. However, we observed a viscoelastic effect, corresponding to a large increase in the immediate bending resistance. This immediate bending resistance increase may be sufficient to explain inhibition of flagellar oscillation; but several alternative explanations cannot yet be excluded
A model for the interaction of high-energy particles in straight and bent crystals implemented in Geant4
A model for the simulation of orientational effects in straight and bent
periodic atomic structures is presented. The continuum potential approximation
has been adopted.The model allows the manipulation of particle trajectories by
means of straight and bent crystals and the scaling of the cross sections of
hadronic and electromagnetic processes for channeled particles. Based on such a
model, an extension of the Geant4 toolkit has been developed. The code has been
validated against data from channeling experiments carried out at CERN
Radial Bargmann representation for the Fock space of type B
Let be the probability and orthogonality measure for the
-Meixner-Pollaczek orthogonal polynomials, which has appeared in
\cite{BEH15} as the distribution of the -Gaussian process (the
Gaussian process of type B) over the -Fock space (the Fock space of
type B). The main purpose of this paper is to find the radial Bargmann
representation of . Our main results cover not only the
representation of -Gaussian distribution by \cite{LM95}, but also of
-Gaussian and symmetric free Meixner distributions on . In
addition, non-trivial commutation relations satisfied by -operators
are presented.Comment: 13 pages, minor changes have been mad
XMM-Newton observations of the neutron star X-ray transient KS 1731-260 in quiescence
We report on XMM-Newton observations performed on 2001 September 13-14 of the
neutron star X-ray transient KS 1731-260 in quiescence. The source was detected
at an unabsorbed 0.5-10 keV flux of only 4 - 8 x 10^{-14} erg/s, depending on
the model used to fit the data, which for a distance of 7 kpc implies a 0.5-10
keV X-ray luminosity of approximately 2 - 5 x 10^{32} erg/s. The September 2001
quiescent flux of KS 1731-260 is lower than that observed during the Chandra
observation in March 2001. In the cooling neutron star model for the quiescent
X-ray emission of neutron star X-ray transients, this decrease in the quiescent
flux implies that the crust of the neutron star in KS 1731-260 cooled down
rapidly between the two epochs, indicating that the crust has a high
conductivity. Furthermore, enhanced cooling in the neutron star core is also
favored by our results.Comment: Accepter for publication in ApJ Letters, 22 May 200
The hard X-ray tails in neutron star low mass X-ray binaries: BeppoSAX observations and possible theoretical explanation of the GX 17+2 case
We report results of a new spectral analysis of two BeppoSAX observations of
the Z source GX 17+2. In one of the two observations the source exhibits a
powerlaw-like hard (> 30 keV) X-ray tail which was described in a previous work
by a hybrid Comptonization model. Recent high-energy observations with INTEGRAL
of a sample of Low Mass X-Ray Binaries including both Z and atoll classes have
shown that bulk (dynamical) Comptonization of soft photons can be a possible
alternative mechanism for producing hard X-ray tails in such systems. We start
from the INTEGRAL results and we exploit the broad-band capability of BeppoSAX
to better investigate the physical processes at work. We use GX 17+2 as a
representative case. Moreover, we suggest that weakening (or disappearance) of
the hard X-ray tail can be explained by increasing radiation pressure
originated at the surface of the neutron star (NS). As a result the high
radiation pressure stops the bulk inflow and consequently this radiation
feedback of the NS surface leads to quenching the bulk Comptonization.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
A Chandra observation of the long-duration X-ray transient KS 1731-260 in quiescence: too cold a neutron star?
After more than a decade of actively accreting at about a tenth of the
Eddington critical mass accretion rate, the neutron-star X-ray transient KS
1731-260 returned to quiescence in early 2001. We present a Chandra/ACIS-S
observation taken several months after this transition. We detected the source
at an unabsorbed flux of ~2 x 10^{-13} erg/cm^2/s (0.5-10 keV). For a distance
of 7 kpc, this results in a 0.5-10 keV luminosity of ~1 x 10^{33} erg/s and a
bolometric luminosity approximately twice that. This quiescent luminosity is
very similar to that of the other quiescent neutron star systems. However, if
this luminosity is due to the cooling of the neutron star, this low luminosity
may indicate that the source spends at least several hundreds of years in
quiescence in between outbursts for the neutron star to cool. If true, then it
might be the first such X-ray transient to be identified and a class of
hundreds of similar systems may be present in the Galaxy. Alternatively,
enhanced neutrino cooling could occur in the core of the neutron star which
would cool the star more rapidly. However, in that case the neutron star in KS
1731-260 would be more massive than those in the prototypical neutron star
transients (e.g., Aql X-1 or 4U 1608-52).Comment: Accepted for publicaton in ApJ letters, 13 September 200
Thermal to Nonthermal Energy Partition at the Early Rise Phase of Solar Flares
In some flares the thermal component appears much earlier than the nonthermal
component in X-ray range. Using sensitive microwave observations we revisit
this finding made by Battaglia et al. (2009) based on RHESSI data analysis. We
have found that nonthermal microwave emission produced by accelerated electrons
with energy of at least several hundred keV, appears as early as the thermal
soft X-ray emission indicative that the electron acceleration takes place at
the very early flare phase. The non-detection of the hard X-rays at that early
stage of the flares is, thus, an artifact of a limited RHESSI sensitivity. In
all considered events, the microwave emission intensity increases at the early
flare phase. We found that either thermal or nonthermal gyrosynchrotron
emission can dominate the low-frequency part of the microwave spectrum below
the spectral peak occurring at 3-10 GHz. In contrast, the high-frequency
optically thin part of the spectrum is always formed by the nonthermal,
accelerated electron component, whose power-law energy spectrum can extend up
to a few MeV at this early flare stage. This means that even though the total
number of accelerated electrons is small at this stage, their nonthermal
spectrum is fully developed. This implies that an acceleration process of
available seed particles is fully operational. While, creation of this seed
population (the process commonly called `injection' of the particles from the
thermal pool into acceleration) has a rather low efficiency at this stage,
although, the plasma heating efficiency is high. This imbalance between the
heating and acceleration (in favor of the heating) is difficult to reconcile
within most of available flare energization models. Being reminiscent of the
tradeoff between the Joule heating and runaway electron acceleration, it puts
additional constraints on the electron injection into the acceleration process.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, accepted for Ap
Direction Detector on an Excitable Field: Field Computation with Coincidence Detection
Living organisms process information without any central control unit and
without any ruling clock. We have been studying a novel computational strategy
that uses a geometrically arranged excitable field, i.e., "field computation."
As an extension of this research, in the present article we report the
construction of a "direction detector" on an excitable field. Using a numerical
simulation, we show that the direction of a input source signal can be detected
by applying the characteristic as a "coincidence detector" embedded on an
excitable field. In addition, we show that this direction detection actually
works in an experiment using an excitable chemical system. These results are
discussed in relation to the future development of "field computation."Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
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