1,602 research outputs found
Limits on the Position Wander of Sgr A*
We present measurements with the VLBA of the variability in the centroid
position of Sgr A* relative to a background quasar at 7-mm wavelength. We find
an average centroid wander of 71 +/- 45 micro-arcsec for time scales between 50
and 100 min and 113 +/- 50 micro-arcsec for timescales between 100 and 200 min,
with no secular trend. These are sufficient to begin constraining the viability
of the hot-spot model for the radio variability of Sgr A*. It is possible to
rule out hot spots with orbital radii above 15GM_SgrA*/c^2 that contribute more
than 30% of the total 7-mm flux. However, closer or less luminous hot spots
remain unconstrained. Since the fractional variability of Sgr A* during our
observations was ~20% on time scales of hours, the hot-spot model for Sgr A*'s
radio variability remains consistent with these limits. Improved monitoring of
Sgr A*'s centroid position has the potential to place significant constraints
upon the existence and morphology of inhomogeneities in a supermassive black
hole accretion flow.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures submitted to Ap
Solid state television camera system Patent
Solid state television camera system consisting of monolithic semiconductor mosaic sensor and molecular digital readout system
RBSC-NVSS Sample. I. Radio and Optical Identifications of a Complete Sample of 1500 Bright X-ray Sources
We cross-identified the ROSAT Bright Source Catalog (RBSC) and the NRAO VLA
Sky Survey (NVSS) to construct the RBSC-NVSS sample of the brightest X-ray
sources (>= 0.1 counts/s or ~1E-12 ergs/cm/cm/s in the 0.1-2.4 keV band) that
are also radio sources (S >= 2.5 mJy at 1.4 GHz) in the 7.8 sr of extragalactic
sky with |b| > 15 degrees. and delta > -40 degrees. The sky density of NVSS
sources is low enough that they can be reliably identified with RBSC sources
having average rms positional uncertainties = 10 arcsec. We used the more
accurate radio positions to make reliable X-ray/radio/optical identifications
down to the POSS plate limits. We obtained optical spectra for many of the
bright identifications lacking published redshifts. The resulting X-ray/radio
sample is unique in its size (N ~ 1500 objects), composition (a mixture of
nearly normal galaxies, Seyfert galaxies, quasars, and clusters), and low
average redshift ( ~ 0.1).Comment: 35 LaTeX pages including 6 eps figures + 40 LaTeX page table2
(landscape) w/ AASTeX 5.0; accepted to ApJ
Experimental philosophy leading to a small scale digital data base of the conterminous United States for designing experiments with remotely sensed data
Research using satellite remotely sensed data, even within any single scientific discipline, often lacked a unifying principle or strategy with which to plan or integrate studies conducted over an area so large that exhaustive examination is infeasible, e.g., the U.S.A. However, such a series of studies would seem to be at the heart of what makes satellite remote sensing unique, that is the ability to select for study from among remotely sensed data sets distributed widely over the U.S., over time, where the resources do not exist to examine all of them. Using this philosophical underpinning and the concept of a unifying principle, an operational procedure for developing a sampling strategy and formal testable hypotheses was constructed. The procedure is applicable across disciplines, when the investigator restates the research question in symbolic form, i.e., quantifies it. The procedure is set within the statistical framework of general linear models. The dependent variable is any arbitrary function of remotely sensed data and the independent variables are values or levels of factors which represent regional climatic conditions and/or properties of the Earth's surface. These factors are operationally defined as maps from the U.S. National Atlas (U.S.G.S., 1970). Eighty-five maps from the National Atlas, representing climatic and surface attributes, were automated by point counting at an effective resolution of one observation every 17.6 km (11 miles) yielding 22,505 observations per map. The maps were registered to one another in a two step procedure producing a coarse, then fine scale registration. After registration, the maps were iteratively checked for errors using manual and automated procedures. The error free maps were annotated with identification and legend information and then stored as card images, one map to a file. A sampling design will be accomplished through a regionalization analysis of the National Atlas data base (presently being conducted). From this analysis a map of homogeneous regions of the U.S.A. will be created and samples (LANDSAT scenes) assigned by region
The Intrinsic Size of Sagittarius A* from 0.35 cm to 6 cm
We present new high-resolution observations of Sagittarius A* at wavelengths
of 17.4 to 23.8 cm with the Very Large Array in A configuration with the Pie
Town Very Long Baseline Array antenna. We use the measured sizes to calibrate
the interstellar scattering law and find that the major axis size of the
scattering law is smaller by ~6% than previous estimates. Using the new
scattering law, we are able to determine the intrinsic size of Sgr A* at
wavelengths from 0.35 cm to 6 cm using existing results from the VLBA. The new
law increases the intrinsic size at 0.7 cm by ~20% and <5% at 0.35 cm. The
intrinsic size is 13^{+7}_{-3} Schwarzschild radii at 0.35 cm and is
proportional to lambda^gamma, where gamma is in the range 1.3 to 1.7.Comment: ApJL, in pres
HydF as a scaffold protein in [FeFe] hydrogenase H-cluster biosynthesis
AbstractIn an effort to determine the specific protein component(s) responsible for in vitro activation of the [FeFe] hydrogenase (HydA), the individual maturation proteins HydE, HydF, and HydG from Clostridium acetobutylicum were purified from heterologous expressions in Escherichia coli. Our results demonstrate that HydF isolated from a strain expressing all three maturation proteins is sufficient to confer hydrogenase activity to purified inactive heterologously expressed HydA (expressed in the absence of HydE, HydF, and HydG). These results represent the first in vitro maturation of [FeFe] hydrogenase with purified proteins, and suggest that HydF functions as a scaffold upon which an H-cluster intermediate is synthesized
Spectroscopy with the Engineering Development Array: cold H at 63 MHz towards the Galactic Centre
The Engineering Development Array (EDA) is a single test station for Square
Kilometre Array (SKA) precursor technology. We have used the EDA to detect
low-frequency radio recombination lines (RRLs) from the Galactic Centre region.
Low-frequency RRLs are an area of interest for future low-frequency SKA work as
these lines provide important information on the physical properties of the
cold neutral medium. In this project we investigate the EDA, its bandpass and
the radio frequency interference environment for low-frequency spectroscopy. We
present line spectra from 30 to 325 MHz for the Galactic Centre region. The
decrease in sensitivity for the EDA at the low end of the receiver prevents
carbon and hydrogen RRLs to be detected below 40 and 60 MHz respectively. RFI
strongly affects frequencies in the range 276-292, 234-270, 131-138, 95-102 and
below 33 MHz. Cn RRLs were detected in absorption for quantum levels n
= 378 to 550 (39-121 MHz) and in emission for n = 272 to 306 (228-325 MHz).
Cn lines were detected in absorption for n = 387 to 696 (39-225 MHz).
Hn RRLs were detected in emission for n = 272 to 480 (59-325 MHz).
Hn lines were detected for n = 387 to 453 (141-225 MHz). The stacked
Hn detection at 63 MHz is the lowest frequency detection made for
hydrogen RRLs and shows that a cold (partially) ionized medium exists along the
line of sight to the Galactic Centre region. The size and velocity of this cold
H gas indicates that it is likely associated with the nearby
Riegel-Crutcher cloud.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures and 5 table
Spinning compact binary inspiral II: Conservative angular dynamics
We establish the evolution equations of the set of independent variables
characterizing the 2PN rigorous conservative dynamics of a spinning compact
binary, with the inclusion of the leading order spin-orbit, spin-spin and mass
quadrupole - mass monopole effects, for generic (noncircular, nonspherical)
orbits. More specifically, we give a closed system of first order ordinary
differential equations for the orbital elements of the osculating ellipse and
for the angles characterizing the spin orientations with respect to the
osculating orbit. We also prove that (i) the relative angle of the spins stays
constant for equal mass black holes, irrespective of their orientation, and
(ii) the special configuration of equal mass black holes with equal, but
antialigned spins, both laying in the plane of motion (leading to the largest
recoil found in numerical simulations) is preserved at 2PN level of accuracy,
with leading order spin-orbit, spin-spin and mass quadrupolar contributions
included.Comment: v2: 19 pages, extended, improved, published versio
Radiative Models of Sagittarius A* and M87 from Relativistic MHD Simulations
Ongoing millimeter VLBI observations with the Event Horizon Telescope allow
unprecedented study of the innermost portion of black hole accretion flows.
Interpreting the observations requires relativistic, time-dependent physical
modeling. We discuss the comparison of radiative transfer calculations from
general relativistic MHD simulations of Sagittarius A* and M87 with current and
future mm-VLBI observations. This comparison allows estimates of the viewing
geometry and physical conditions of the Sgr A* accretion flow. The viewing
geometry for M87 is already constrained from observations of its large-scale
jet, but, unlike Sgr A*, there is no consensus for its millimeter emission
geometry or electron population. Despite this uncertainty, as long as the
emission region is compact, robust predictions for the size of its jet
launching region can be made. For both sources, the black hole shadow may be
detected with future observations including ALMA and/or the LMT, which would
constitute the first direct evidence for a black hole event horizon.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, submitted to the proceedings of AHAR 2011: The
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