32,056 research outputs found
Some determinants of organizational success
Organizational efficiency and productivity determined by variables associated with economics, psychology, and sociolog
A multiwavlength study of PSR B0628-28: The first overluminous rotation-powered pulsar?
The ROSAT source RX J0630.8-2834 was suggested by positional coincidence to
be the X-ray counterpart of the old field pulsar PSR B0628-28. This
association, however, was regarded to be unlikely based on the computed
energetics of the putative X-ray counterpart. In this paper we report on
multiwavelength observations of PSR B0628-28 made with the ESO/NTT observatory
in La Silla, the Jodrell Bank radio observatory and XMM-Newton. Although the
optical observations do not detect any counterpart of RX J0630.8-2834 down to a
limiting magnitude of V=26.1 mag and B=26.3 mag, XMM-Newton observations
finally confirmed it to be the pulsar's X-ray counterpart by detecting X-ray
pulses with the radio pulsar's spin-period. The X-ray pulse profile is
characterized by a single broad peak with a second smaller peak leading the
main pulse component by ~144 degree. The fraction of pulsed photons is (38 +-
7)% with no strong energy dependence in the XMM-Newton bandpass. The pulsar's
X-ray spectrum is well described by a single component power law with photon
index 2.63^{+0.23}_{-0.15}, indicating that the pulsar's X radiation is
dominated by non-thermal emission processes. A low level contribution of
thermal emission from residual cooling or from heated polar caps, cannot be
excluded. The pulsar's spin-down to X-ray energy conversion efficiency is
obtained to be ~16% for the radio dispersion measure inferred pulsar distance.
If confirmed, PSR B0628-28 would be the first X-ray overluminous
rotation-powered pulsar identified among all ~1400 radio pulsars known today.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. Find a paper copy with higher
resolution images at
ftp://ftp.xray.mpe.mpg.de/people/web/astro-ph-0505488_rev2.pd
A Coherent Timing Solution for the Nearby Isolated Neutron Star RX J0720.4-3125
We present the results of a dedicated effort to measure the spin-down rate of
the nearby isolated neutron star RX J0720.4-3125. Comparing arrival times of
the 8.39-sec pulsations for data from Chandra we derive an unambiguous timing
solution for RX J0720.4-3125 that is accurate to 5 years.
Adding data from XMM and ROSAT, the final solution yields
Pdot=(6.98+/-0.02)x10^(-14) s/s; for dipole spin-down, this implies a
characteristic age of 2 Myr and a magnetic field strength of 2.4e13 G. The
phase residuals are somewhat larger than those for purely regular spin-down,
but do not show conclusive evidence for higher-order terms or a glitch. From
our timing solution as well as recent X-ray spectroscopy, we concur with recent
suggestions that RX J0720.4-3125 is most likely an off-beam radio pulsar with a
moderately high magnetic field.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure. Accepted for publication in ApJ
The reaction 13C(alpha,n)16O: a background for the observation of geo-neutrinos
The absolute cross section of the C(,n)O reaction has
been measured at E = 0.8 to 8.0 MeV with an overall accuracy of 4%.
The precision is needed to subtract reliably a background in the observation of
geo-neutrinos, e.g. in the KamLAND detector.Comment: LaTex file, 13 pages including 3 ps figures. Any request to
[email protected]. Phys. Rev . C, to appea
Cumulant approach to weakly doped antiferromagnets
We present a new approach to static and dynamical properties of holes and
spins in weakly doped antiferromagnets in two dimensions. The calculations are
based on a recently introduced cumulant approach to ground--state properties of
correlated electronic systems. The present method allows to evaluate hole and
spin--wave dispersion relations by considering hole or spin excitations of the
ground state. Usually, these dispersions are found from time--dependent
correlation functions. To demonstrate the ability of the approach we first
derive the dispersion relation for the lowest single hole excitation at
half--filling. However, the main purpose of this paper is to focus on the
mutual influence of mobile holes and spin waves in the weakly doped system. It
is shown that low-energy spin excitations strongly admix to the ground--state.
The coupling of spin waves and holes leads to a strong suppression of the
staggered magnetization which can not be explained by a simple rigid--band
picture for the hole quasiparticles. Also the experimentally observed doping
dependence of the spin--wave excitation energies can be understood within our
formalism.Comment: REVTEX, 25 pages, 7 figures (EPS), to be published in Phys. Rev.
A technique for automatic real time scoring of several simultaneous sleep electroencephalograms
Automatic real-time scoring of simultaneous sleep electroencephalogram
DNA: From rigid base-pairs to semiflexible polymers
The sequence-dependent elasticity of double-helical DNA on a nm length scale
can be captured by the rigid base-pair model, whose strains are the relative
position and orientation of adjacent base-pairs. Corresponding elastic
potentials have been obtained from all-atom MD simulation and from
high-resolution structural data. On the scale of a hundred nm, DNA is
successfully described by a continuous worm-like chain model with homogeneous
elastic properties characterized by a set of four elastic constants, which have
been directly measured in single-molecule experiments. We present here a theory
that links these experiments on different scales, by systematically
coarse-graining the rigid base-pair model for random sequence DNA to an
effective worm-like chain description. The average helical geometry of the
molecule is exactly taken into account in our approach. We find that the
available microscopic parameters sets predict qualitatively similar mesoscopic
parameters. The thermal bending and twisting persistence lengths computed from
MD data are 42 and 48 nm, respectively. The static persistence lengths are
generally much higher, in agreement with cyclization experiments. All
microscopic parameter sets predict negative twist-stretch coupling. The
variability and anisotropy of bending stiffness in short random chains lead to
non-Gaussian bend angle distributions, but become unimportant after two helical
turns.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, 6 table
The X-ray nebula of the filled center supernova remnant 3C58 and its interaction with the environment
An \xmm observation of the plerionic supernova remnant 3C58 has allowed us to
study the X-ray nebula with unprecedented detail. A spatially resolved spectral
analysis with a resolution of 8\arcsec has yielded a precise determination of
the relation between the spectral index and the distance from the center. We do
not see any evidence for bright thermal emission from the central core. In
contrast with previous ASCA and {\em Einstein} results, we derive an upper
limit to the black-body 0.5-10 keV luminosity and emitting area of \ergsec and cm, respectively, ruling out
emission from the hot surface of the putative neutron star and also excluding
the "outer-gap" model for hot polar caps. We have performed for the first time
a spectral analysis of the outer regions of the X-ray nebula, where most of the
emission is still non-thermal, but where the addition of a soft (kT=0.2-0.3
keV) optically thin plasma component is required to fit the spectrum at
keV. This component provides 6% of the whole remnant observed flux in the
0.5-10.0 keV band. We show that a Sedov interpretation is incompatible with the
SN1181-3C58 association, unless there is a strong deviation from electron-ion
energy equipartition, and that an origin of this thermal emission in terms of
the expansion of the nebula into the ejecta core nicely fits all the radio and
X-ray observations.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The 10 to the 8th power bit solid state spacecraft data recorder
The results are summarized of a program to demonstrate the feasibility of Bubble Domain Memory Technology as a mass memory medium for spacecraft applications. The design, fabrication and test of a partially populated 10 to the 8th power Bit Data Recorder using 100 Kbit serial bubble memory chips is described. Design tradeoffs, design approach and performance are discussed. This effort resulted in a 10 to the 8th power bit recorder with a volume of 858.6 cu in and a weight of 47.2 pounds. The recorder is plug reconfigurable, having the capability of operating as one, two or four independent serial channel recorders or as a single sixteen bit byte parallel input recorder. Data rates up to 1.2 Mb/s in a serial mode and 2.4 Mb/s in a parallel mode may be supported. Fabrication and test of the recorder demonstrated the basic feasibility of Bubble Domain Memory technology for such applications. Test results indicate the need for improvement in memory element operating temperature range and detector performance
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