1,596 research outputs found
Pulse Profiles, Accretion Column Dips and a Flare in GX 1+4 During a Faint State
The Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) spacecraft observed the X-ray pulsar
GX 1+4 for a period of 34 hours on July 19/20 1996. The source faded from an
intensity of ~20 mCrab to a minimum of <~0.7 mCrab and then partially recovered
towards the end of the observation. This extended minimum lasted ~40,000
seconds. Phase folded light curves at a barycentric rotation period of
124.36568 +/- 0.00020 seconds show that near the center of the extended minimum
the source stopped pulsing in the traditional sense but retained a weak dip
feature at the rotation period. Away from the extended minimum the dips are
progressively narrower at higher energies and may be interpreted as
obscurations or eclipses of the hot spot by the accretion column. The pulse
profile changed from leading-edge bright before the extended minimum to
trailing-edge bright after it. Data from the Burst and Transient Source
Experiment (BATSE) show that a torque reversal occurred <10 days after our
observation. Our data indicate that the observed rotation departs from a
constant period with a Pdot/P value of ~-1.5% per year at a 4.5 sigma
significance. We infer that we may have serendipitously obtained data, with
high sensitivity and temporal resolution about the time of an accretion disk
spin reversal. We also observed a rapid flare which had some precursor
activity, close to the center of the extended minimum.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journal (tentatively scheduled for vol. 529 #1, 20 Jan 2000
Spatially resolved spectra of 3C galaxy nuclei
We present and discuss visible-wavelength long-slit spectra of four low
redshift 3C galaxies obtained with the STIS instrument on the Hubble Space
Telescope. The slit was aligned with near-nuclear jet-like structure seen in
HST images of the galaxies, to give unprecedented spatial resolution of the
galaxy inner regions. In 3C 135 and 3C 171, the spectra reveal clumpy emission
line structures that indicate outward motions of a few hundred km s
within a centrally illuminated and ionised biconical region. There may also be
some low-ionisation high-velocity material associated with 3C 135. In 3C 264
and 3C 78, the jets have blue featureless spectra consistent with their
proposed synchrotron origin. There is weak associated line emission in the
innermost part of the jets with mild outflow velocity. These jets are bright
and highly collimated only within a circumnuclear region of lower galaxy
luminosity, which is not dusty. We discuss the origins of these central regions
and their connection with relativistic jets.Comment: 15 pages incl Tables, 12 diagrams, To appear in A
Stacking Gravitational Wave Signals from Soft Gamma Repeater Bursts
Soft gamma repeaters (SGRs) have unique properties that make them intriguing
targets for gravitational wave (GW) searches. They are nearby, their burst
emission mechanism may involve neutron star crust fractures and excitation of
quasi-normal modes, and they burst repeatedly and sometimes spectacularly. A
recent LIGO search for transient GW from these sources placed upper limits on a
set of almost 200 individual SGR bursts. These limits were within the
theoretically predicted range of some models. We present a new search strategy
which builds upon the method used there by "stacking" potential GW signals from
multiple SGR bursts. We assume that variation in the time difference between
burst electromagnetic emission and burst GW emission is small relative to the
GW signal duration, and we time-align GW excess power time-frequency tilings
containing individual burst triggers to their corresponding electromagnetic
emissions. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we confirm that gains in GW energy
sensitivity of N^{1/2} are possible, where N is the number of stacked SGR
bursts. Estimated sensitivities for a mock search for gravitational waves from
the 2006 March 29 storm from SGR 1900+14 are also presented, for two GW
emission models, "fluence-weighted" and "flat" (unweighted).Comment: 17 pages, 16 figures, submitted to PR
A Chandra study of particle acceleration in the multiple hotspots of nearby radio galaxies
We present Chandra observations of a small sample of nearby classical double
radio galaxies which have more than one radio hotspot in at least one of their
lobes. The X-ray emission from the hotspots of these comparatively low-power
objects is expected to be synchrotron in origin, and therefore to provide
information about the locations of high-energy particle acceleration. In some
models of the relationship between the jet and hotspot the hotspots that are
not the current jet termination point should be detached from the energy supply
from the active nucleus and therefore not capable of accelerating particles to
high energies. We find that in fact some secondary hotspots are X-ray sources,
and thus probably locations for high-energy particle acceleration after the
initial jet termination shock. In detail, though, we show that the spatial
structures seen in X-ray are not consistent with naive expectations from a
simple shock model: the current locations of the acceleration of the
highest-energy observable particles in powerful radio galaxies need not be
coincident with the peaks of radio or even optical emission.Comment: Accepted for ApJ. 33 pages, 8 figures inc. 2 in colo
J1420--0545: The radio galaxy larger than 3C236
We report the discovery of the largest giant radio galaxy, J1420-0545: a FR
type II radio source with an angular size of 17.4' identified with an optical
galaxy at z=0.3067. Thus, the projected linear size of the radio structure is
4.69 Mpc (if we assume that H_{0}=71 km\s\Mpc, Omega_{m}=0.27, and
Omega_{\Lambda}=0.73). This makes it larger than 3C236, which is the largest
double radio source known to date. New radio observations with the 100 m
Effelsberg telescope and the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope, as well as
optical identification with a host galaxy and its optical spectroscopy with the
William Herschel Telescope are reported. The spectrum of J1420-0545 is typical
of elliptical galaxies in which continuum emission with the characteristic
4000A discontinuity and the H and K absorption lines are dominated by evolved
stars. The dynamical age of the source, its jets' power, the energy density,
and the equipartition magnetic field are calculated and compared with the
corresponding parameters of other giant and normal-sized radio galaxies from a
comparison sample. The source is characterized by the exceptionally low density
of the surrounding IGM and an unexpectedly high expansion speed of the source
along the jet axis. All of these may suggest a large inhomogeneity of the IGM.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures, 3 table
Was the Cosmic Web of Protogalactic Material Permeated by Lobes of Radio Galaxies During the Quasar Era?
Evidence for extended active lifetimes (> 10^8 yr) for radio galaxies implies
that many large radio lobes were produced during the `quasar era', 1.5 < z < 3,
when the comoving density of radio sources was 2 -- 3 dex higher than the
present level. However, inverse Compton losses against the intense microwave
background substantially reduce the ages and numbers of sources that are
detected in flux-limited surveys. The realization that the galaxy forming
material in those epochs was concentrated in filaments occupying a small
fraction of the total volume then leads to the conclusion that radio lobes
permeated much of the volume occupied by the protogalactic material during that
era. The sustained overpressure in these extended lobes is likely to have
played an important role in triggering the high inferred rate of galaxy
formation at z > 1.5 and in the magnetization of the cosmic network of
filaments.Comment: 5 pages, 0 figures, submitted to ApJ Letters; uses emulateapj
The Electron Energy Distribution in the Hotspots of Cygnus A: Filling the Gap with the Spitzer Space Telescope
Here we present Spitzer Space Telescope imaging of Cyg A with the Infrared
Array Camera, resulting in the detection of the high-energy tails or cut-offs
in the synchrotron spectra for all four hotspots of this archetype radio
galaxy. When combined with the other data collected from the literature, our
observations allow for detailed modeling of the broad-band emission for the
brightest spots A and D. We confirm that the X-ray flux detected previously
from these features is consistent with the synchrotron self-Compton radiation
for the magnetic field intensity 170 muG in spot A, and 270 muG in spot D. We
also find that the energy density of the emitting electrons is most likely
larger by a factor of a few than the energy density of the hotspots' magnetic
field. We construct energy spectra of the radiating ultrarelativistic
electrons. We find that for both hotspots A and D these spectra are consistent
with a broken power-law extending from at least 100 MeV up to 100 GeV, and that
the spectral break corresponds almost exactly to the proton rest energy of 1
GeV. We argue that the shape of the electron continuum reflects two different
regimes of the electron acceleration process at mildly relativistic shocks,
rather than resulting from radiative cooling and/or absorption effects. In this
picture the protons' inertia defines the critical energy for the hotspot
electrons above which Fermi-type acceleration processes may play a major role,
but below which the operating acceleration mechanism has to be of a different
type. At energies >100 GeV, the electron spectra cut-off/steepen again, most
likely as a result of spectral aging due to radiative loss effects. We discuss
several implications of the presented analysis for the physics of extragalactic
jets.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figures and 2 tables included. Accepted for publication
in Ap
Degrees of controllability for quantum systems and applications to atomic systems
Precise definitions for different degrees of controllability for quantum
systems are given, and necessary and sufficient conditions are discussed. The
results are applied to determine the degree of controllability for various
atomic systems with degenerate energy levels and transition frequencies.Comment: 20 pages, IoP LaTeX, revised and expanded versio
On the origin of X-ray emission in some FR Is: ADAF or jet?
We investigate the X-ray origin in FR Is using the radio, submillimetre,
optical, and {\em Chandra} X-ray data of a small sample consisting of eight FR
I sources. These sources are very dim, with X-ray luminosities ( is the X-ray luminosity
between 2-10 keV). We try to fit the multiwaveband spectrum using a coupled
accretion-jet model. In this model, the accretion flow is described by an
advection-dominated accretion flow (ADAF) while in the innermost region of ADAF
a fraction of accretion flow is transferred into the vertical direction and
forms a jet. We find that X-ray emission in the source with the highest () is from the ADAF. The results for
the four sources with moderate ( several ) are complicated. Two are mainly from the ADAFs, one from
the jet, and the other from the sum of the jet and ADAF. The X-ray emission in
the three least luminous sources () is dominated by the jet although for one source it can also be
interpreted by the ADAF since the quality of X-ray data is low. We conclude
that these results roughly support the predictions of Yuan & Cui (2005) where
they predict that when the X-ray luminosity of the system is below a critical
value, the X-radiation will not be dominated by the emission from the ADAF any
longer, but by the jet. We also investigate the fuel supply in these sources.
We find that the accretion rates in four sources among the five in which we can
have good constraints to their accretion rates must be higher than the Bondi
rates. This implies that other fuel supply, such as the gas released by the
stellar population inside the Bondi radius, should be important.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The XMM-Newton Detection of Diffuse Inverse Compton X-rays from Lobes of the FR-II Radio Galaxy 3C98
The XMM-Newton observation of the nearby FR-II radio galaxy 3C 98 is
reported. In two exposures on the target, faint diffuse X-ray emission
associated with the radio lobes was significantly detected, together with a
bright X-ray active nucleus, of which the 2 -- 10 keV intrinsic luminosity is
(4 -- 8) \times 10^{42} erg s-1. The EPIC spectra of the northern and southern
lobes are reproduced by a single power law model modified by the Galactic
absorption, with a photon index of 2.2-0.5+0.6 and 1.7-0.6+0.7 respectively.
These indices are consistent with that of the radio synchrotron spectrum, 1.73
+- 0.01 The luminosity of the northern and southern lobes are measured to be
8.3-2.6+3.3 \times 10^{40} erg s-1 and 9.2-4.3+5.7 \times 10^{40} erg s-1,
respectively, in the 0.7 -- 7 keV range. The diffuse X-ray emission is
interpreted as an inverse-Compton emission, produced when the
synchrotron-emitting energetic electrons in the lobes scatter off the cosmic
microwave background photons. The magnetic field in the lobes is calculated to
be about 1.7 \mu G, which is about 2.5 times lower than the value estimated
under the minimum energy condition. The energy density of the electrons is
inferred to exceed that in the magnetic fields by a factor of 40 -- 50.Comment: 23 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
- …