1,455 research outputs found
Diffuse Galactic Soft Gamma-Ray Emission
The Galactic diffuse soft gamma-ray (30-800 keV) emission has been measured
from the Galactic Center by the HIREGS balloon-borne germanium spectrometer to
determine the spectral characteristics and origin of the emission. The
resulting Galactic diffuse continuum is found to agree well with a single
power-law (plus positronium) over the entire energy range, consistent with RXTE
and COMPTEL/CGRO observations at lower and higher energies, respectively. We
find no evidence of spectral steepening below 200 keV, as has been reported in
previous observations. The spatial distribution along the Galactic ridge is
found to be nearly flat, with upper limits set on the longitudinal gradient,
and with no evidence of an edge in the observed region. The soft gamma-ray
diffuse spectrum is well modeled by inverse Compton scattering of interstellar
radiation off of cosmic-ray electrons, minimizing the need to invoke
inefficient nonthermal bremsstrahlung emission. The resulting power requirement
is well within that provided by Galactic supernovae. We speculate that the
measured spectrum provides the first direct constraints on the cosmic-ray
electron spectrum below 300 MeV.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figure, submitted to Ap
Gamma-Ray Polarimetry of Two X-Class Solar Flares
We have performed the first polarimetry of solar flare emission at gamma-ray
energies (0.2-1 MeV). These observations were performed with the Reuven Ramaty
High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) for two large flares: the GOES
X4.8-class solar flare of 2002 July 23, and the X17-class flare of 2003 October
28. We have marginal polarization detections in both flares, at levels of 21%
+/- 9% and -11% +/- 5% respectively. These measurements significantly constrain
the levels and directions of solar flare gamma-ray polarization, and begin to
probe the underlying electron distributions.Comment: 33 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Spectral Analysis of GRBs Measured by RHESSI
The Ge spectrometer of the RHESSI satellite is sensitive to Gamma Ray Bursts
(GRBs) from about 40 keV up to 17 MeV, thus ideally complementing the Swift/BAT
instrument whose sensitivity decreases above 150 keV. We present preliminary
results of spectral fits of RHESSI GRB data. After describing our method, the
RHESSI results are discussed and compared with Swift and Konus.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, conference proceedings, 'Swift and GRBs:
Unveiling the Relativistic Universe', San Servolo, Venice, 5-9 June 2006, to
appear in Il Nouvo Ciment
Wind-tunnel study of Tabor Center, Denver
CER82-83JAP-JEC-DB25, CER82-83JAP-JEC-DB25a.Includes bibliographical references (page 27).December 1982.CSU Project 2-95210.For Williams Realty Corporation
Wind-tunnel study of Rahardja Center, Singapore
CER83-84JAP-DWB-JEC19.CSU Project 2-95250.For T. Y. Lin International.Includes bibliographical references (pages 41-42).October 1983
IC 751: a new changing-look AGN discovered by NuSTAR
We present the results of five NuSTAR observations of the type 2 active
galactic nucleus (AGN) in IC 751, three of which were performed simultaneously
with XMM-Newton or Swift/XRT. We find that the nuclear X-ray source underwent a
clear transition from a Compton-thick () to a Compton-thin () state on timescales of months, which makes
IC 751 the first changing-look AGN discovered by NuSTAR. Changes of the
line-of-sight column density at a level are also found on a
time-scale of hours ().
From the lack of spectral variability on timescales of ks we infer
that the varying absorber is located beyond the emission-weighted average
radius of the broad-line region, and could therefore be related either to the
external part of the broad-line region or a clumpy molecular torus. By adopting
a physical torus X-ray spectral model, we are able to disentangle the column
density of the non-varying absorber () from that of the varying clouds
[], and to constrain that of
the material responsible for the reprocessed X-ray radiation (). We find evidence of significant intrinsic X-ray
variability, with the flux varying by a factor of five on timescales of a few
months in the 2-10 and 10-50 keV band.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 11 pages, 6 figure
Observations of MCG-5-23-16 with Suzaku, XMM-Newton and NuSTAR: Disk tomography and Compton hump reverberation
MCG-5-23-16 is one of the first AGN where relativistic reverberation in the
iron K line originating in the vicinity of the supermassive black hole was
found, based on a short XMM-Newton observation. In this work, we present the
results from long X-ray observations using Suzaku, XMM-Newton and NuSTAR
designed to map the emission region using X-ray reverberation. A relativistic
iron line is detected in the lag spectra on three different time-scales,
allowing the emission from different regions around the black hole to be
separated. Using NuSTAR coverage of energies above 10 keV reveals a lag between
these energies and the primary continuum, which is detected for the first time
in an AGN. This lag is a result of the Compton reflection hump responding to
changes in the primary source in a manner similar to the response of the
relativistic iron K line.Comment: Accepted for Publication in Ap
Dark matter line emission constraints from NuSTAR observations of the Bullet Cluster
Line emission from dark matter is well motivated for some candidates e.g.
sterile neutrinos. We present the first search for dark matter line emission in
the 3-80keV range in a pointed observation of the Bullet Cluster with NuSTAR.
We do not detect any significant line emission and instead we derive upper
limits (95% CL) on the flux, and interpret these constraints in the context of
sterile neutrinos and more generic dark matter candidates. NuSTAR does not have
the sensitivity to constrain the recently claimed line detection at 3.5keV, but
improves on the constraints for energies of 10-25keV.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Ap
New Constraints on the Black Hole Low/Hard State Inner Accretion Flow with NuSTAR
We report on an observation of the Galactic black hole candidate GRS 1739-278
during its 2014 outburst, obtained with NuSTAR. The source was captured at the
peak of a rising "low/hard" state, at a flux of ~0.3 Crab. A broad, skewed iron
line and disk reflection spectrum are revealed. Fits to the sensitive NuSTAR
spectra with a number of relativistically blurred disk reflection models yield
strong geometrical constraints on the disk and hard X-ray "corona". Two models
that explicitly assume a "lamppost" corona find its base to have a vertical
height above the black hole of h = 5 (+7, -2) GM/c^2 and h = 18 +/-4 GM/c^2
(90% confidence errors); models that do not assume a "lamppost" return
emissivity profiles that are broadly consistent with coronae of this size.
Given that X-ray microlensing studies of quasars and reverberation lags in
Seyferts find similarly compact coronae, observations may now signal that
compact coronae are fundamental across the black hole mass scale. All of the
models fit to GRS 1739-278 find that the accretion disk extends very close to
the black hole - the least stringent constraint is r = 5 (+3,-4) GM/c^2. Only
two of the models deliver meaningful spin constraints, but a = 0.8 +/-0.2 is
consistent with all of the fits. Overall, the data provide especially
compelling evidence of an association between compact hard X-ray coronae and
the base of relativistic radio jets in black holes.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
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