2,800 research outputs found
Temporal Evolution of the Vela Pulsar's Pulse Profile
The mechanisms of emission and changes in rotation frequency ('glitching') of
the Vela pulsar (J0835-4510) are not well understood. Further insight into
these mechanisms can be achieved by long-term studies of integrated pulse
width, timing residuals, and bright pulse rates. We have undertaken an
intensive observing campaign of Vela and collected over 6000 hours of single
pulse data. The data shows that the pulse width changes with time, including
marked jumps in width after micro-glitches (frequency changes). The abundance
of bright pulses also changes after some micro-glitches, but not all. The
secular changes in pulse width have three possible cyclic periods, that match
with X-ray periodicities of a helical jet that are interpreted as free
precession.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Statistical analysis of general aviation VG-VGH data
To represent the loads spectra of general aviation aircraft operating in the Continental United States, VG and VGH data collected since 1963 in eight operational categories were processed and analyzed. Adequacy of data sample and current operational categories, and parameter distributions required for valid data extrapolation were studied along with envelopes of equal probability of exceeding the normal load factor (n sub z) versus airspeed for gust and maneuver loads and the probability of exceeding current design maneuver, gust, and landing impact n sub z limits. The significant findings are included
Soliton solutions of the Kadomtsev-Petviashvili II equation
We study a general class of line-soliton solutions of the
Kadomtsev-Petviashvili II (KPII) equation by investigating the Wronskian form
of its tau-function. We show that, in addition to previously known line-soliton
solutions, this class also contains a large variety of new multi-soliton
solutions, many of which exhibit nontrivial spatial interaction patterns. We
also show that, in general, such solutions consist of unequal numbers of
incoming and outgoing line solitons. From the asymptotic analysis of the
tau-function, we explicitly characterize the incoming and outgoing
line-solitons of this class of solutions. We illustrate these results by
discussing several examples.Comment: 28 pages, 4 figure
Detection of Cold Atomic Clouds in the Magellanic Bridge
We report a detection of cold atomic hydrogen in the Magellanic Bridge using
21-cm absorption spectroscopy toward the radio source B0312-770. With a column
density of N_HI=1.2E20 cm^-2, a maximum absorption optical depth of tau=0.10
and a maximum 21-cm emission brightness temperature of 1.4 K, this line of
sight yields a spin temperature, T_s, between 20 K and 40 K. H I 21-cm
absorption and emission spectroscopy toward 7 other low column density
sightlines on the periphery of the LMC and SMC reveal absorption toward one
additional background radio source behind the SMC with tau=0.03. The data have
typical sensitivities of sigma_tau=0.005 to 0.070 in absorption and
sigma_{T_B}=0.03 K in emission. These data demonstrate the presence of a cold
atomic phase which is probably accompanied by molecular condensations in the
tenuous interstellar medium of the Bridge region. Young OB stars observed in
the Magellanic Bridge could form "in situ" from these cold condensations rather
than migrate from regions of active star formation in the main body of the SMC.
The existence of cold condensations and star formation in the Magellanic Bridge
might be understood as a small scale version of the mechanism that produces
star formation in the tidal tails of interacting galaxies.Comment: 25 pages, uses AASTeX and psfig; Accepted for Publication in the
Astronomical Journa
Quasi-BiHamiltonian Systems and Separability
Two quasi--biHamiltonian systems with three and four degrees of freedom are
presented. These systems are shown to be separable in terms of Nijenhuis
coordinates. Moreover the most general Pfaffian quasi-biHamiltonian system with
an arbitrary number of degrees of freedom is constructed (in terms of Nijenhuis
coordinates) and its separability is proved.Comment: 10 pages, AMS-LaTeX 1.1, to appear in J. Phys. A: Math. Gen. (May
1997
A 3-component extension of the Camassa-Holm hierarchy
We introduce a bi-Hamiltonian hierarchy on the loop-algebra of sl(2) endowed
with a suitable Poisson pair. It gives rise to the usual CH hierarchy by means
of a bi-Hamiltonian reduction, and its first nontrivial flow provides a
3-component extension of the CH equation.Comment: 15 pages; minor changes; to appear in Letters in Mathematical Physic
First Detection of HCO Absorption in the Magellanic System
We present the first detection of HCO absorption in the Magellanic
System. Using the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), we observed 9
extragalactic radio continuum sources behind the Magellanic System and detected
HCO absorption towards one source located behind the leading edge of the
Magellanic Bridge. The detection is located at LSR velocity of , with a full width at half maximum of and optical depth of .
Although there is abundant neutral hydrogen (HI) surrounding the sightline in
position-velocity space, at the exact location of the absorber the HI column
density is low, , and there is little evidence for dust
or CO emission from Planck observations. While the origin and survival of
molecules in such a diffuse environment remains unclear, dynamical events such
as HI flows and cloud collisions in this interacting system likely play an
important role.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 6 pages, 2 figures, 2 table
Testing the equivalence principle: why and how?
Part of the theoretical motivation for improving the present level of testing
of the equivalence principle is reviewed. The general rationale for optimizing
the choice of pairs of materials to be tested is presented. One introduces a
simplified rationale based on a trichotomy of competing classes of theoretical
models.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, uses ioplppt.sty, submitted to Class. Quantum Gra
Lensing Effects on the Protogalaxy Candidate cB58 and their Implications for the Cosmological Constant
The amplification of the protogalaxy candidate cB58 due to gravitational
lensing by the foreground cluster of galaxies MS1512.4+3647 is quantified based
on recent ROSAT and ASCA X-ray observations. It is found that the amplification
is at most 25 for any reasonable cosmological model with or without
cosmological constant. It is also argued that the system may be used to place
new constraints on the value of the cosmological constant. The gas mass
fraction for this cluster is found to be about 0.2.Comment: LaTex, 9 pages, 9 figures, uses aas2pp4.sty, Accepted for publication
in Ap
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