949 research outputs found
VHE Observations of BL Lacertae Objects: 1995-2000
The results of observations of 29 BL Lacertae objects taken with the Whipple
Observatory 10 m gamma-ray Telescope between 1995 and 2000 are presented.Comment: 4 pages to be published in the Proceedings of the 28th International
Cosmic Ray Conference (Tsukuba, Japan 2003
Algorithm for the Calculation of Geodetic Distances for Maritime Jurisdictional Boundaries
This paper presents an algorithm which can be applied for the calculations of distances of hundred kilometres from the co-ordinates of their end points. Analysis of the simplifications are also presented and could be adopted for applications related to the Law of the Sea
Probing the Ionizing Continuum of Narrow-Line Seyfert 1 Galaxies. I.Observational Results
We present optical spectra and emission-line ratios of 12 Narrow-Line Seyfert
1 (NLS1) galaxies that we observed to study the ionizing EUV continuum. A
common feature in the EUV continuum of active galactic nuclei is the big blue
bump (BBB), generally associated with thermal accretion disk emission. While
Galactic absorption prevents direct access to the EUV range, it can be mapped
by measuring the strength of a variety of forbidden optical emission lines that
respond to different EUV continuum regions. We find that narrow emission-line
ratios involving [OII]3727, Hbeta, [OIII]5007, [OI]6300, Halpha,[NII]6583, and
[SII]6716,6731 indicate no significant difference between NLS1s and Broad-Line
Seyfert 1 (BLS1) galaxies, which suggests that the spectral energy
distributions of their ionizing EUV - soft X-ray continua are similar. The
relative strength of important forbidden high ionization lines like [NeV]3426
compared to HeII4686 and the relative strength of [FeX]6374 appear to show the
same range as in BLS1 galaxies. However, a trend of weaker
F([OI]6300)/F(Halpha) emission-line ratios is indicated for NLS1s compared to
BLS1s. To recover the broad emission-line profiles we used Gaussian components.
This approach indicates that the broad Hbeta profile can be well described with
a broad component (FWHM = 3275 +- 800 km/s) and an intermediate broad component
(FWHM = 1200 +- 300 km/s). The width of the broad component is in the typical
range of normal BLS1s. The emission-line flux that is associated with the broad
component in these NLS1s amounts to at least 60% of the total flux. Thus it
dominates the total line flux, similar to BLS1 galaxies.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures. accepted for publication in the
Astrophys.Journa
The 7-channel FIR HCN Interferometer on J-TEXT Tokamak
A seven-channel far-infrared hydrogen cyanide (HCN) laser interferometer has
been established aiming to provide the line integrated plasma density for the
J-TEXT experimental scenarios. A continuous wave glow discharge HCN laser
designed with a cavity length 3.4 m is used as the laser source with a
wavelength of 337 {\mu}m and an output power up to 100 mW. The system is
configured as a Mach-Zehnder type interferometer. Phase modulation is achieved
by a rotating grating, with a modulation frequency of 10 kHz which corresponds
to the temporal resolution of 0.1 ms. The beat signal is detected by TGS
detector. The phase shift induced by the plasma is derived by the comparator
with a phase sensitivity of 0.06 fringe. The experimental results measured by
the J-TEXT interferometer are presented in details. In addition, the inversed
electron density profile done by a conventional approach is also given. The
kinematic viscosity of dimethyl silicone and vibration control is key issues
for the system performance. The laser power stability under different kinematic
viscosity of silicone oil is presented. A visible improvement of measured
result on vibration reduction is shown in the paper.Comment: conference (15th-International Symposium on Laser-Aided Plasma
Diagnostics
A catalogue of absorption-line systems in QSO spectra
We present a new catalog of absprption-line systems identified in the quasar
spectra. It contains data on 821 QSOs and 8558 absorption systems comprizing
16139 absorption lines with measured redshifts in the QSO spectra. The catalog
includes absorption-line systems consisting of lines of heavy elements, lines
of neutral hydrogen, Lyman limit systems, damped Ly\alpha absorption systems,
and broad absorption-line systems. The catalog is available in electronic form
at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via
http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/qcat?J/A+A/412/707 and at
www.ioffe.ru/astro/QC. Using the data of the present catalog we also discuss
redshift distributions of absorption-line systems.Comment: 3 pages with 1 postscript figur
Spectroscopy and 3D imaging of the Crab nebula
Spectroscopy of the Crab nebula along different slit directions reveals the 3
dimensional structure of the optical nebula. On the basis of the linear radial
expansion result first discovered by Trimble (1968), we make a 3D model of the
optical emission. Results from a limited number of slit directions suggest that
optical lines originate from a complicated array of wisps that are located in a
rather thin shell, pierced by a jet. The jet is certainly not prominent in
optical emission lines, but the direction of the piercing is consistent with
the direction of the X-ray and radio jet. The shell's effective radius is ~ 79
seconds of arc, its thickness about a third of the radius and it is moving out
with an average velocity 1160 km/s.Comment: 21 pages, 14 figures, submitted to ApJ, 3D movie of the Crab nebula
available at http://www.fiz.uni-lj.si/~vidrih
Comment on "Correlation of the Highest-Energy Cosmic Rays with Nearby Extragalactic Objects"
We argue that the data published by the Pierre Auger Collaboration
(arXiv:0711.2256) disfavor at 99% confidence level their hypothesis that most
of the highest-energy cosmic rays are protons from nearby astrophysical
sources, either Active Galactic Nuclei or other objects with a similar spatial
distribution.Comment: 1000 words, 2 figures, scicite.st
Detecting Compton Reflection and a Broad Iron Line in MCG-5-23-16 with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
We report the detection with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer of a Compton
reflection signature in the Seyfert galaxy MCG-5-23-16. RXTE also resolves the
Fe K-alpha fluorescence line with FWHM ~48,000 km s^{-1}. This measurement
provides the first independent confirmation of ASCA detections in Seyfert
galaxies of broad Fe K-alpha lines that are thought to be the signature of
emission from the inner regions of an accretion disk orbiting a black hole.
Under the assumption that reflection arises from an isotropic source located
above a neutral accretion disk, and using a theoretical model that accounts for
the dependence of the reflected spectrum on inclination angle, we derive a 90%
confidence range for the disk inclination of i = 50 to 81 degrees. The large
inclination is consistent with that expected from the unified model for
MCG-5-23-16 based on its Seyfert 1.9 classification. If we assume that the
high-energy cutoff in the incident spectrum lies at energies larger than a few
hundred keV, then the equivalent width of the Fe K-alpha line is much larger
than predicted for the amount of reflection. This implies either an enhanced
iron abundance, a covering factor of reflecting material > 0.5, or a cutoff in
the incident spectrum at energies between ~60 and ~200 keV.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, LaTeX. 14 pages including 3 figures,
with 1 table as a separate postscript file. Typo corrected in abstrac
LINER/H II "Transition" Nuclei and the Nature of NGC 4569
Motivated by the discovery of young, massive stars in the nuclei of some
LINER/H II ``transition'' nuclei such as NGC 4569, we have computed
photoionization models to determine whether some of these objects may be
powered solely by young star clusters rather than by accretion-powered active
nuclei. The models were calculated with the photoionization code CLOUDY, using
evolving starburst continua generated by the the STARBURST99 code of Leitherer
et al. (1999). We find that the models are able to reproduce the emission-line
spectra of transition nuclei, but only for instantaneous bursts of solar or
higher metallicity, and only for ages of ~3-5 Myr, the period when the
extreme-ultraviolet continuum is dominated by emission from Wolf-Rayet stars.
For clusters younger than 3 Myr or older than 6 Myr, and for models with a
constant star-formation rate, the softer ionizing continuum results in an
emission spectrum more typical of H II regions. This model predicts that
Wolf-Rayet emission features should appear in the spectra of transition nuclei.
While such features have not generally been detected to date, they could be
revealed in observations having higher spatial resolution. Demographic
arguments suggest that this starburst model may not apply to the majority of
transition nuclei, particularly those in early-type host galaxies, but it could
account for some members of the transition class in hosts of type Sa and later.
The starburst models during the Wolf-Rayet-dominated phase can also reproduce
the narrow-line spectra of some LINERs, but only under conditions of
above-solar metallicity and only if high-density gas is present (n_e >~ 10^5
cm^{-3}). This scenario could be applicable to some ``Type 2'' LINERs which do
not show any clear signs of nonstellar activity.Comment: To appear in PASP. 22 pages, includes 9 figures, uses AASTeX v5.
The Nature of LINERs
We present -band (m) spectroscopy of a sample of nine
galaxies showing some degree of LINER activity (classical LINERs, weak-[O {\sc
i}] LINERs and transition objects), together with -band spectroscopy for
some of them. A careful subtraction of the stellar continuum allows us to
obtain reliable [Fe {\sc ii}]m/Pa line ratios. We conclude
that different types of LINERs (i.e., photoionized by a stellar continuum or by
an AGN) cannot be easily distinguished based solely on the [Fe {\sc ii}]m/Pa line ratio.
The emission line properties of many LINERs can be explained in terms of an
aging starburst. The optical line ratios of these LINERs are reproduced by a
model with a metal-rich H {\sc ii} region component photoionized with a single
stellar temperature K, plus a supernova remnant (SNR) component.
The [Fe {\sc ii}] line is predominantly excited by shocks produced by SNRs in
starbursts and starburst-dominated LINERs, while Pa tracks H {\sc ii}
regions ionized by massive young stars. The contribution from SNRs to the
overall emission line spectrum is constrained by the [Fe {\sc ii}]m/Pa line ratio. Although our models for aging starbursts are
constrained only by these infrared lines, they consistently explain the optical
spectra of the galaxies also.
The LINER-starburst connection is tested by predicting the time dependence of
the ratio of the ionizing luminosity () to the supernova rate
(SNr), /(SNr). We predict the relative number of starbursts to
starburst-dominated LINERs (aging starbursts) and show that it is in
approximate agreement with survey findings for nearby galaxies.Comment: Accepted in ApJ (19 pages, 8 figures, uses emulateapj.sty
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