1,751 research outputs found
Host galaxies of AGN
The relationship of an AGN to its host galaxy is a crucial question in the study of galaxy evolution. We perform stellar population synthesis in the central regions of galaxies of different activity levels. A large number of stellar features are measured both in the optical and near-infrared. We find the nuclear stellar population to be related to the level of activity. These differences are no more conspicuous further away in the bulge of the galaxy
H.E.S.S. discovery of very-high-energy gamma-ray emission of PKS 1440-389
Blazars are the most abundant class of known extragalactic very-high-energy
(VHE, E>100 GeV) gamma-ray sources. However, one of the biggest difficulties in
investigating their VHE emission resides in their limited number, since less
than 60 of them are known by now. In this contribution we report on H.E.S.S.
observations of the BL Lac object PKS 1440-389. This source has been selected
as target for H.E.S.S. based on its high-energy gamma-ray properties measured
by Fermi-LAT. The extrapolation of this bright, hard-spectrum gamma-ray blazar
into the VHE regime made a detection on a relatively short time scale very
likely, despite its uncertain redshift. H.E.S.S. observations were carried out
with the 4-telescope array from February to May 2012 and resulted in a clear
detection of the source. Contemporaneous multi-wavelength data are used to
construct the spectral energy distribution of PKS 1440-389 which can be
described by a simple one-zone synchrotron-self Compton model.Comment: In Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference
(ICRC2015), The Hague, The Netherland
Inertial waves and modes excited by the libration of a rotating cube
We report experimental measurements of the flow in a cubic container
submitted to a longitudinal libration, i.e. a rotation modulated in time.
Velocity fields in a vertical and a horizontal plane are measured in the
librating frame using a corotating particle image velocimetry system. When the
libration frequency is smaller than twice the mean rotation rate
, inertial waves can propagate in the interior of the fluid. At
arbitrary excitation frequencies , the oscillating flow
shows two contributions: (i) a basic flow induced by the libration motion, and
(ii) inertial wave beams propagating obliquely upward and downward from the
horizontal edges of the cube. In addition to these two contributions, inertial
modes may also be excited at some specific resonant frequencies. We
characterize in particular the resonance of the mode of lowest order compatible
with the symmetries of the forcing, noted [2,1,+]. By comparing the measured
flow fields to the expected inviscid inertial modes computed numerically
[L.R.M. Maas, Fluid Dyn. Res. \textbf{33}, 373 (2003)], we show that only a
subset of inertial modes, matching the symmetries of the forcing, can be
excited by the libration.Comment: Phys. Fluids (in press
Depression, Relationship Quality, and Couplesâ Demand/Withdraw and Demand/Submit Sequential Interactions
This study investigated the associations among depression, relationship quality, and demand/withdraw and demand/submit behavior in couplesâ conflict interactions. Two 10-min conflict interactions were coded for each couple (N = 97) using Structural Analysis of Social Behavior (SASB; Benjamin, 1979a, 1987, 2000a). Depression was assessed categorically (via the presence of depressive disorders) and dimensionally (via symptom reports). Results revealed that relationship quality was negatively associated with demanding behavior, as well as receiving submissive or withdrawing behavior from oneâs partner. Relationship quality was positively associated with withdrawal. Demanding behavior was positively associated with womenâs depression symptoms but negatively associated with menâs depression symptoms. Sequential analysis revealed couplesâ behavior was highly stable across time. Initiation of demand/withdraw and demand/submit sequences were negatively associated with partnersâ relationship adjustment. Female demand/male withdraw was positively associated with menâs depression diagnosis. Results underscore the importance of sequential analysis when investigating associations among depression, relationship quality, and couplesâ interpersonal behavior
Constraining the solutions of an inverse method of stellar population synthesis
In three previous papers (Pelat 1997, 1998 and Moultaka & Pelat 2000), we set
out an inverse stellar population synthesis method which uses a database of
stellar spectra. Unlike other methods, this one provides a full knowledge of
all possible solutions as well as a good estimation of their stability;
moreover, it provides the unique approximate solution, when the problem is
overdetermined, using a rigorous minimization procedure. In Boisson et al.
(2000), this method has been applied to 10 active and 2 normal galaxies. In
this paper we analyse the results of the method after constraining the
solutions. Adding {\it a priori} physical conditions on the solutions
constitutes a good way to regularize the synthesis problem. As an illustration
we introduce physical constraints on the relative number of stars taking into
account our present knowledge of the initial mass function in galaxies. In
order to avoid biases on the solutions due to such constraints, we use
constraints involving only inequalities between the number of stars, after
dividing the H-R diagram into various groups of stellar masses. We discuss the
results for a well-known globular cluster of the galaxy M31 and discuss some of
the galaxies studied in Boisson et al. (2000). We find that, given the spectral
resolution and the spectral domain, the method is very stable according to such
constraints (i.e. the constrained solutions are almost the same as the
unconstrained one). However, an additional information can be derived about the
evolutionary stage of the last burst of star formation, but the precise age of
this particular burst seems to be questionable.Comment: Accepted in A&A. 15 pages, 5 figures and 6 table
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