51 research outputs found
Discovery of the compact X-ray source inside the Cygnus Loop
We detected an X-ray compact source inside the Cygnus Loop during the
observation project of the whole Cygnus Loop with the ASCA GIS. The source
intensity is 0.11 c s for GIS and 0.15 c s for SIS, which is the
strongest in the ASCA band. The X-ray spectra are well fitted by a power law
spectrum of a photon index of \error{-2.1}{0.1} with neutral H column of
(\error{3.1}{0.6}). Taking into account the
interstellar absorption feature, this source is X-ray bright mainly above 1 keV
suggesting either an AGN or a rotating neutron star. So far, we did not detect
intensity variation nor coherent pulsation mainly due to the limited
observation time. There are several optical bright stellar objects within the
error region of the X-ray image. We carried out the optical spectroscopy for
the brightest source (V=+12.6) and found it to be a G star. The follow up deep
observation both in optical and in X-ray wavelengths are strongly required.Comment: Accepted for Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan 17
pages, 3 figur
Survey and classification of functional characteristics in neural network technique for the diagnosis of ischemic heart disease: A systematic review
Background: Nowadays, the prevalence of ischemic heart diseases (IHDs) leads to destructive effects such as patient death. Late diagnosis of such diseases as well as their invasive diagnostic approaches made researchers provide a decision support system based on neural network techniques, while using minimum data set for timely diagnosis. In this regard, selecting minimum useful features is significant for designing neural network structure and it paves the way to attain maximum accuracy in obtaining the results. Methods: In this systematic review, valid databases using sensitive keywords were initially searched out to find articles related to "diagnosing the ischemic heart disease using artificial neural networks" and afterwards, scientific methods were used to analyze and classify the content. Findings: Researchers applied various extractable features from demographic data, medical history, signs and symptoms, and paraclinical examinations, to design the neural network structure. Among them, the features obtained from electrocardiographic test, embedded in paraclinical examinations, had led to a remarkable increase of efficiency in neural network. Conclusion: Utilizing such diagnostic decision support systems in practical environments depends on their high confidence coefficient and physicians� acceptability. Therefore, it can be useful to improve maturity in the design of the neural network structure depending on the choice of the minimum optimal features, and to create required infrastructures to input patients� real, accurate, and flowing data in these systems. © 2018, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences(IUMS). All rights reserved
Survey and classification of functional characteristics in neural network technique for the diagnosis of ischemic heart disease: A systematic review
Background: Nowadays, the prevalence of ischemic heart diseases (IHDs) leads to destructive effects such as patient death. Late diagnosis of such diseases as well as their invasive diagnostic approaches made researchers provide a decision support system based on neural network techniques, while using minimum data set for timely diagnosis. In this regard, selecting minimum useful features is significant for designing neural network structure and it paves the way to attain maximum accuracy in obtaining the results. Methods: In this systematic review, valid databases using sensitive keywords were initially searched out to find articles related to "diagnosing the ischemic heart disease using artificial neural networks" and afterwards, scientific methods were used to analyze and classify the content. Findings: Researchers applied various extractable features from demographic data, medical history, signs and symptoms, and paraclinical examinations, to design the neural network structure. Among them, the features obtained from electrocardiographic test, embedded in paraclinical examinations, had led to a remarkable increase of efficiency in neural network. Conclusion: Utilizing such diagnostic decision support systems in practical environments depends on their high confidence coefficient and physicians� acceptability. Therefore, it can be useful to improve maturity in the design of the neural network structure depending on the choice of the minimum optimal features, and to create required infrastructures to input patients� real, accurate, and flowing data in these systems. © 2018, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences(IUMS). All rights reserved
Spectroscopic Monitoring Observations of Nova V1724 Aql in 2012
Spectroscopic and photometric monitoring observations of nova Apl 2012 (V1724 Apl) were conducted at Koyama Astronomical Observatory, Fujii-Kurosaki Observatory and Bisei Astronomical Observatory. The nova was initially considered as an outbursting pre-main-sequence young stellar object. Our monitoring observations have revealed the nova to be a Fe II type classical nova. The temporal evolution of spectra and light curves of the nova were similar to those of a slow nova (e.g., V1280 Sco and V5558 Sgr). We observed no evidence of molecule formation in V1724 Aql in contrast with V2676 Oph in which dust formation occurred after the molecular formation in the nova outflow
Near-infrared Observations of Nova V574 Puppis (2004)
We present results obtained from extensive near-infrared spectroscopic and
photometric observations of nova V574 Pup during its 2004 outburst. The
observations were obtained over four months, starting from 2004 November 25
(four days after the nova outburst) to 2005 March 20. The near-IR JHK light
curve is presented - no evidence is seen from it for dust formation to have
occurred during our observations. In the early decline phase, the JHK spectra
of the nova are dominated by emission lines of hydrogen Brackett and Paschen
series, OI, CI and HeI. We also detect the fairly uncommon Fe II line at 1.6872
micron in the early part of our observations. The strengths of the HeI lines at
1.0830 micron and 2.0585 micron are found to become very strong towards the end
of the observations indicating a progression towards higher excitation
conditions in the nova ejecta. The width of the emission lines do not show any
significant change during the course of our observations. The slope of the
continuum spectrum was found to have a lambda^{-2.75} dependence in the early
stages which gradually becomes flatter with time and changes to a free-free
spectral dependence towards the later stages. Recombination analysis of the HI
lines shows deviations from Case B conditions during the initial stages.
However, towards the end of our observations, the line strengths are well
simulated with case B model values with electron density n_e = 10^{9-10}
cm^{-3} and a temperature equal to 10^4 K. Based on our distance estimate to
the nova of 5.5 kpc and the observed free-free continuum emission in the later
part of the observations, we estimate the ionized mass of the ejecta to be
between 10^{-5} and 10^{-6} solar-mass.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
Observation of the first gravitational microlensing event in a sparse stellar field : the Tago event
We report the observation of the first gravitational microlensing event in a
sparse stellar field, involving the brightest (V=11.4 mag) andclosest (~ 1 kpc)
source star to date. This event was discovered by an amateurastronomer, A.
Tago, on 2006 October 31 as a transient brightening, by ~4.5 mag during a ~15
day period, of a normal A-type star (GSC 3656-1328) in the Cassiopeia
constellation. Analysis of both spectroscopic observations and the light curve
indicates that this event was caused by gravitational microlensing rather than
an intrinsically variable star. Discovery of this single event over a 30 year
period is roughly consistent with the expected microlensing rate for the whole
sky down to V = 12 mag stars. However, the probability for finding events with
such a high magnification (~ 50) is much smaller, by a factor ~1/50, which
implies that the true event rate may be higher than expected. This discovery
indicates the potential of all sky variability surveys, employing frequent
sampling by telescopes with small apertures and wide fields of view, for
finding such rare transient events, and using the observations to explore
galactic disk structure and search for exo-planets.Comment: 13 pages, 2 tables, 3 figures, accepted by Ap
Optical Spectroscopy of Type Ia Supernovae
We present 432 low-dispersion optical spectra of 32 Type Ia supernovae (SNe
Ia) that also have well-calibrated light curves. The coverage ranges from 6
epochs to 36 epochs of spectroscopy. Most of the data were obtained with the
1.5m Tillinghast telescope at the F. L. Whipple Observatory with typical
wavelength coverage of 3700-7400A and a resolution of ~7A. The earliest spectra
are thirteen days before B-band maximum; two-thirds of the SNe were observed
before maximum brightness. Coverage for some SNe continues almost to the
nebular phase. The consistency of the method of observation and the technique
of reduction makes this an ideal data set for studying the spectroscopic
diversity of SNe Ia.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal, 109 pages
(including data table), 44 figures, full resolution figures at
http://www.noao.edu/noao/staff/matheson/Iaspec.ps.g
A Kinematic Link between Boxy Bulges, Stellar Bars, and Nuclear Activity in NGC 3079 & NGC 4388
We present direct kinematic evidence for bar streaming motions in two active
galaxies with boxy stellar bulges. The Hawaii Imaging Fabry-Perot
Interferometer was used on the Canada-France-Hawaii 3.6-m telescope and the
University of Hawaii 2.2-m telescope to derive the two-dimensional velocity
field of the line-emitting gas in the disks of the Sc galaxy NGC 3079 and the
Sb galaxy NGC 4388. In contrast to previous work based on long-slit data, the
detection of the bar potential from the Fabry-Perot data does not rely on the
existence of inner Lindblad resonances or strong bar-induced shocks. Simple
kinematic models which approximate the intrinsic gas orbits as nonintersecting,
inclined elliptical annuli that conserve angular momentum characterize the
observed velocity fields. Box-shaped bulges in both NGC 3079 and NGC 4388 are
confirmed using new near-infrared images to reduce dust obscuration.
Morphological analysis of starlight in these galaxies is combined with the gas
kinematics derived from the Fabry-Perot spectra to test evolutionary models of
stellar bars that involve transitory boxy bulges, and to quantify the
importance of such bars in fueling active nuclei. Our data support the
evolutionary bar models, but fail to prove convincingly that the stellar bars
in NGC 3079 and NGC 4388 directly trigger or sustain the nuclear activity.
(abridged)Comment: 31 pages, 18 figures, Latex, requires aaspp4.sty. Accepted for the
Astronomical Journal (November issue
Galactic-Scale Outflow and Supersonic Ram-Pressure Stripping in the Virgo Cluster Galaxy NGC 4388
The Hawaii Imaging Fabry-Perot Interferometer (HIFI) on the University of
Hawaii 2.2m telescope was used to map the Halpha and [O III] 5007 A
emission-line profiles across the entire disk of the edge-on Sb galaxy NGC
4388. We confirm a rich complex of highly ionized gas that extends ~4 kpc above
the disk of this galaxy. Low-ionization gas associated with star formation is
also present in the disk. Evidence for bar streaming is detected in the disk
component and is discussed in a companion paper (Veilleux, Bland-Hawthorn, &
Cecil 1999; hereafter VBC). Non-rotational blueshifted velocities of 50 - 250
km/s are measured in the extraplanar gas north-east of the nucleus. The
brighter features in this complex tend to have more blueshifted velocities. A
redshifted cloud is also detected 2 kpc south-west of the nucleus. The velocity
field of the extraplanar gas of NGC 4388 appears to be unaffected by the
inferred supersonic (Mach number M ~ 3) motion of this galaxy through the ICM
of the Virgo cluster. We argue that this is because the galaxy and the high-|z|
gas lie behind a Mach cone with opening angle ~ 80 degrees. The shocked ICM
that flows near the galaxy has a velocity of ~ 500 km/s and exerts insufficient
ram pressure on the extraplanar gas to perturb its kinematics. We consider
several explanations of the velocity field of the extraplanar gas. Velocities,
especially blueshifted velocities on the N side of the galaxy, are best
explained as a bipolar outflow which is tilted by > 12 degrees from the normal
to the disk. The observed offset between the extraplanar gas and the radio
structure may be due to buoyancy or refractive bending by density gradients in
the halo gas. Velocity substructure in the outflowing gas also suggests an
interaction with ambient halo gas.Comment: 29 pages including 5 figures, Latex, requires aaspp4.sty, to appear
in ApJ, 520 (July 20, 1999 issue
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