695 research outputs found

    Low intensity H-beta emission from the interstellar medium

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    A search for diffuse galactic H beta emission not associated with any known H II regions was conducted using a 2-inch-diamenter pressure-scanned Fabry-Perot spectrometer at the Coude focus of a 36-inch telescope. Observations were made near the directions of four pulsars. Emissions with intensities from 40,000 to 400,000 photons/sq cm sec ster (corresponding to emission measures of approximately 10 - 100) were detected in three of the directions. The data indicate an average ionization rate (assuming steady state) of approximately 10 to the minus 14th power/H-atom sec for the interstellar hydrogen in these directions and temperatures between 1000 and 10,000 K for the emitting regions. Plans were made to continue the investigation of these very faint hydrogen emission sources using a 6-inch-diameter Fabry-Perot spectrometer

    Rapid X-ray variability in the Seyfert galaxy NGC 6814

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    The HEAO-1 A-2 high time resolution X-ray observations of the X-ray emitting Seyfert I Galaxy NGC 6814 are reported. In sharp distinction with a sample of over 30 active galactic nuclei this object showed strong X-ray variability on timescales less than 3 hours. The mean flux on a timescale of 90 minutes varied by a factor of approximately 2.5 corresponding to Delta L sub x being approximately 1 x 10 to the 43rd power ergs/sec. An autocorrelation analysis shows a characteristic time for variability of 100 (+60 or -25) seconds. There is no indication of spectral variability with an upper limit on a change in the power law spectral index of the absolute value of Delta gamma .37, for a factor two change in intensity. The constraints of such rapid variability on a wide variety of X-ray source mechanisms are considered

    A change in the X-ray spectrum of MK 421

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    HEAO-1 experiment A-2 observations of the BL Lac object MK421 in May 1978 show a marked spectral change from the OSO-8 observations of May 1977. The source was not detected above 10 keV in May 1978. The 2-10 keV spectrum could be well fit by a power law of energy slope 2.2 is less than or minus 4.2; thermal bremsstrahlung models with T less than 2 X 10 to the 7th power deg K are also acceptable. There was no indication of any low energy turnover, so that the inferred column density N sub H is less than 7 X 10 to the 21st power at/sq cm. The total flux is consistent with an extrapolation of the UV data from IUE, but the slope is not consistent with the UV slope. Possible models for the origin of the spectral transition are discussed

    HEAO-1 spectra of X-ray emitting Seyfert 1 galaxies

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    The A-2 experiment on HEAO-1 determined spectral parameters for seven Seyfert 1 galaxies: NGC3783, NGC4151, NGC5548, NGC6814, MK509, MCG8-11-11, and ES0141-G55. The X-ray spectra above 5 keV can be well fit by power laws of energy index alpha between .3 and 1.0 and, with the exception of MK509, by a high temperature (kt 15 keV) thermal bremsstrahlung spectrum. The column densities, with the exception of NGC4151, are less than 5 x 10 to the 22nd power at/sq cm with only the low luminosity objects having measurable columns. Galaxy ES0141-G55 showed a strong soft X-ray excess in March 1978 similar to that seen in the BL lac object MK421. Variability on a six month time scale was exhibited by MCG8-11-11, NGC3783, and possibly NGC6814. Various correlations between optical and X-ray properties are discussed. Using the typical Seyfert 1 spectrum their contribution to the diffuse X-ray background above five keV is computed

    The X-ray emitting galaxy Cen-A

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    OSO-8 X-ray observations of Cen-A in 1975 and 1976 are reported. The source spectrum is well fit in both years by a power law of number index 1.62 and absorption due to 1.3 x 10 to the 23rd power at/sq cm. The total flux varied by a factor 2 between 1975 and 1976. In 1976 there were approximately 40% flux variations on a time scale of days. The 6.4 keV Fe fluorescent line and the 7.1 keV absorption edge were measured implying Fe/H approximately equals .000016. Simultaneous radio measurements show variation in phase with X-ray variability. Models considering radio, milimeter, IR and X-ray data show that all the data can be accounted for by a model in which the X-rays are due to a synchrotron self-Compton source embedded in a cold H(2) cloud

    A large scale height galactic component of the diffuse 2-60 keV background

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    The diffuse 2-60 keV X-ray background has a galactic component clearly detectable by its strong variation with both galactic latitude and longitude. This galactic component is typically 10 percent of the extragalactic background toward the galactic center, half that strong toward the anticenter, and extrapolated to a few percent of the extragalactic background toward the galactic poles. It is acceptably modeled by a finite radius emission disk with a scale height of several kiloparsecs. The averaged galactic spectrum is best fitted by a thermal spectrum of kT about 9 keV, a spectrum much softer than the about 40 keV spectrum of the extragalactic component. The most likely source of this emission is low luminosity stars with large scale heights such as subdwarfs. Inverse Compton emission from GeV electrons on the microwave background contributes only a fraction of the galactic component unless the local cosmic ray electron spectrum and intensity are atypical

    The X-ray spectrum of 3C 273

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    An X-ray spectral measurement of the quasar 3C 273 with the HEAO-A2 experiment in June/July 1978 is reported. The best power law fit to the photon flux over the range 2-60 keV gives a slope of 1.41 + or - 0.02. However, structure is observed, indicating a slope of 1.52 between 2 keV and 9 keV and a slight flattening between 9 keV and 30 keV. Observations with the same experiment in December 1977 and OSO-8 in June 1976 allows confirmation of 40% intensity variability on the time scale of months, although within limits provided by the poorer statistical quality of the additional data no spectral change is discerned. Absorption from the source is found to be low, with the 1978 data yielding a 90% confidence upper limit to the hydrogen column density of 4.5 x 10 to the 21st power atoms/sq cm

    Pattern design methods for non-conventional bodies

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    The main goal of the study presented in this paper was to compare three different methodologies of pattern design methods. The case study was based on an individual body shape with a severe deformity in the spine with additional different measurements of the bust, waist and hip girths when compared with common standard measurement tables. This methodology comparison aims primarily to identify its performance regarding garment Fit and performance, in particularly, its potential related to electronic sensor integration for vital signals monitoring. Different performance results were obtained, with the best results obtained with the flat pattern block extracted from the 3D digital model surface methodology, followed by the flat pattern block using the studied individual personal measurements and the worst results obtained with the flat pattern block developed from a typical measurements table used by the industry and fashion schools.This work is financed by Project “Deus ex Machina”, NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000026, funded by CCDRN, through Sistema de Apoio à Investigação Cientifica e Tecnológica (Projetos Estruturados I&D&I) of Programa Operacional Regional do Norte, from Portugal 2020 and by FEDER funds through the Competitive Factors Operational Program (COMPETE) POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007136 and by national funds through FCT-Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology, under the project UID/CTM/000264.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    A complete X-ray sample of the high latitude sky from HEAO-1 A-2: log N lo S and luminosity functions

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    An experiment was performed in which a complete X-ray survey of the 8.2 steradians of the sky at galactic latitudes where the absolute value of b is 20 deg down to a limiting sensitivity of 3.1 x ten to the minus 11th power ergs/sq cm sec in the 2-10 keV band. Of the 85 detected sources 17 were identified with galactic objects, 61 were identified with extragalactic objects, and 7 remain unidentified. The log N - log S relation for the non-galactic objects is well fit by the Euclidean relationship. The X-ray spectra of these objects were used to construct log N - log S in physical units. The complete sample of identified sources was used to construct X-ray luminosity functions, using the absolute maximum likelihood method, for clusters galaxies and active galactic nuclei

    Cas A X-ray spectrum: Evidence for iron line emission

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    A sensitive measurement by rocket borne detectors of the X-ray flux from Cas A has revealed a steep continuum and a broad spectral feature in the region where line radiation from iron nuclei would be expected. The flux in this feature is .0122 plus or minus .0017 photons/sq cm/s: the total energy flux from 2 to 10 KeV is 1.02 x 10 to the minus 9th power ergs/sq cm/s. The presence of broad iron lines is consistent with a model in which approximately 13 MeV/nucleon iron nuclei charge exchange with surrounding interstellar oxygen and other heavy atoms. The model suggests that a substantial fraction of the energy from the outburst has gone into low energy cosmic rays which produce the observed HII region surrounding the remnant
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