138 research outputs found
RXTE Observations of Cygnus X-3
In the period between May 1997 and August 1997 a series of pointed RXTE
observations were made of Cyg X-3. During this period Cyg X-3 made a transition
from a quiescent radio state to a flare state (including a major flare) and
then returned to a quiescent radio state. Analyses of the observations are made
in the context of concurrent observations in the hard X-ray (CGRO/BATSE), soft
X-ray (RXTE/ASM) and the radio (Green Bank Interferometer, Ryle Telescope, and
RATAN-600). Preliminary analyses of the observations are presented.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. newarcrc.sty included. To appear in 2nd Workshop
of Relativistic Jets from Galactic Sources, R.N. Ogley and S.J. Bell Burnell
eds, NewAR 42, in pres
The Cross-Spectra of Cir X-1: Evolution of Time Lags
Earlier work showed that the track in the X-ray hardness-intensity diagram of
Cir X-1 corresponds to a Z track in its color-color diagram. In this paper, we
study the cross spectrum of Cir X-1 in different regions of the
hardness-intensity diagram with /PCA data. Comparing the light curves of
Cir X-1 for the energy band 1.8-5.1 keV to those for 5.1-13.1 keV, we find that
Cir X-1 exhibits a hard time lag on the horizontal branch, and a soft time lag
on both the normal and the flaring branch. This indicates that Cir X-1 is
similar to GX 5-1 and Cyg X-2 on the horizontal branch, but is different from
them on the normal branch. We briefly discuss the mechanism of the time lags in
the context of Comptonization models.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Discovery of a magnetar associated with the Soft Repeater SGR 1900+14
The soft-gamma repeater SGR 1900+14 became active again on June 1998 after a long period of quiescence; it remained at a low state of activity until August 1998, when it emitted a series of extraordinarily intense outbursts. We have observed the source with RXTE twice, during the onset of each active episode. We confirm the pulsations at the 5.16 s period reported earlier (Hurley et al. 1998b, Hurley et al. 1998 e) from SGR 1900+14. Here we report the detection of a secular spindown of the pulse period at an average rate of 1.1*10^{-10} s/s. In view of the strong similarities between SGRs, we attribute the spindown of SGR 1900+14 to magnetic dipole radiation, possibly accelerated by a quiescent flux, as in the case of SGR 1806-20 (Kouveliotou et al. 1998a). This allows an estimate of the pulsar dipolar magnetic field, which is 2-8*10^{14} G. Our results confirm that SGRs are magnetars
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Photometric observations of the radio bright B[e]/X-ray binary CI Cam
We present multiwavelength (optical, IR, radio) observations of CI Cam, the optical counterpart to the transient X-ray source XTE J0421+560. Pre-outburst quiescent observations reveal the presence of a dusty envelope around the system. Pronounced short term variability is observed at all wavebands from U-K, but no indication of prior flaring of a similar magnitude to the 1998 April outburst is found in these data.
Data obtained during the 1998 April X-ray flare reveal pronounced optical-radio flaring. The optical flux was observed to quickly return to quiescent levels, while the radio flare was of much longer duration. The optical component is likely to result from a combination of free-free/free-bound emission, emission line and thermal dust emission, caused by re-radiation of the X-ray flux, while the behaviour of the multiwavelength radio data is consistent with emission from expanding ejecta emitting via the synchrotron mechanism.
Post-outburst (1998 August-1999 March) U-M broadband photometric observations reveal that while the optical (UBV) flux remains at pre-outburst quiescent levels, near IR (JHKLM) fluxes exceed the pre-outburst fluxes by ~0.5 magnitudes. Modelling the pre- and post-outburst spectral energy distribution of CI Cam reveals that the structure and/or composition of the dusty component of the circumstellar envelope appears to have changed. Due to a lack of information on the precise chemical composition of the dust within the system several explanations for this behaviour are possible, such as the production of new dust at the inner edge of the envelope, or modification of the composition of the dust due to X-ray irradiation
Quantitative and molecular genetics of juvenile wood traits in radiata and slash/Caribbean pines.
The Juvenile Wood Initiative (JWI) project has been running successfully since July 2003 under a Research Agreement with FWPA and Letters of Association with the consortium partners STBA (Southern Tree Breeding Association), ArborGen and FPQ (Forestry Plantations Queensland). Over the last five and half years, JWI scientists in CSIRO, FPQ, and STBA have completed all 12 major milestones and 28 component milestones according to the project schedule. We have made benchmark progress in understanding the genetic control of wood formation and interrelationships among wood traits. The project has made 15 primary scientific findings and several results have been adopted by industry as summarized below. This progress was detailed in 10 technical reports to funding organizations and industry clients. Team scientists produced 16 scientific manuscripts (8 published, 1 in press, 2 submitted, and several others in the process of submission) and 15 conference papers or presentations.
Primary Scientific Findings. The 15 major scientific findings related to wood science, inheritance and the genetic basis of juvenile wood traits are:
1. An optimal method to predict stiffness of standing trees in slash/Caribbean pine is to combine gravimetric basic density from 12 mm increment cores with a standing tree prediction of MoE using a time of flight acoustic tool. This was the most accurate and cheapest way to rank trees for breeding selection for slash/Caribbean hybrid pine. This method was also recommended for radiata pine.
2. Wood density breeding values were predicted for the first time in the STBA breeding population using a large sample of 7,078 trees (increment cores) and it was estimated that selection of the best 250 trees for deployment will produce wood density gains of 12.4%.
3. Large genetic variation for a suite of wood quality traits including density, MFA, spiral grain, shrinkage, acoustic and non-acoustic stiffness (MoE) for clear wood and standing trees were observed. Genetic gains of between 8 and 49% were predicted for these wood quality traits with selection intensity between 1 to 10% for radiata pine.
4. Site had a major effect on juvenile-mature wood transition age and the effect of selective breeding for a shorter juvenile wood formation phase was only moderate (about 10% genetic gain with 10% selection intensity, equivalent to about 2 years reduction of juvenile wood).
5. The study found no usable site by genotype interactions for the wood quality traits of density, MFA and MoE for both radiata and slash/Caribbean pines, suggesting that assessment of wood properties on one or two sites will provide reliable estimates of the genetic worth of individuals for use in future breeding.
6. There were significant and sizable genotype by environment interactions between the mainland and Tasmanian regions and within Tasmania for DBH and branch size.
7. Strong genetic correlations between rings for density, MFA and MoE for both radiata and slash/Caribbean pines were observed. This suggests that selection for improved wood properties in the innermost rings would also result in improvement of wood properties in the subsequent rings, as well as improved average performance of the entire core.
8. Strong genetic correlations between pure species and hybrid performance for each of the wood quality traits were observed in the hybrid pines. Parental performance can be used to identify the hybrid families which are most likely to have superior juvenile wood properties of the slash/Caribbean F1 hybrid in southeast Queensland.
9. Large unfavourable genetic correlations between growth and wood quality traits were a prominent feature in radiata pine, indicating that overcoming this unfavourable genetic correlation will be a major technical issue in progressing radiata pine breeding.
10. The project created the first radiata pine 18 k cDNA microarray and generated 5,952 radiata pine xylogenesis expressed sequence tags (ESTs) which assembled into 3,304 unigenes.
11. A total of 348 genes were identified as preferentially expressed genes in earlywood or latewood while a total of 168 genes were identified as preferentially expressed genes in either juvenile or mature wood.
12. Juvenile earlywood has a distinct transcriptome relative to other stages of wood development.
13. Discovered rapid decay of linkage disequilibrium (LD) in radiata pine with LD decaying to approximately 50% within 1,700 base pairs (within a typical gene). A total of 913 SNPS from sequencing 177,380 base pairs were identified for association genetic studies.
14. 149 SNPs from 44 genes and 255 SNPs from a further 51 genes (total 95 genes) were selected for association analysis with 62 wood traits, and 30 SNPs were shortlisted for their significant association with variation of wood quality traits (density, MFA and MoE) with individual significant SNPs accounting for between 1.9 and 9.7% of the total genetic variation in traits.
15. Index selection using breeding objectives was the most profitable selection method for radiata pine, but in the long term it may not be the most effective in dealing with negative genetic correlations between wood volume and quality traits. A combination of economic and biological approaches may be needed to deal with the strong adverse correlation
On the nature of XTE J0421+560/CI Cam
We present the results of the analysis of RXTE, BATSE and optical/infrared
data of the 1998 outburst of the X-ray transient system XTE J0421+560 (CI Cam).
The X-ray outburst shows a very fast decay (initial e-folding time ~0.5 days,
slowing down to ~2.3 days). The X-ray spectrum in the 2-25 keV band is complex,
softening considerably during decay and with strongly variable intrinsic
absorption. A strong iron emission line is observed. No fast time variability
is detected (<0.5 % rms in the 1-4096 Hz band at the outburst peak). The
analysis of the optical/IR data suggests that the secondary is a B[e] star
surrounded by cool dust and places the system at a distance of >~ 2 kpc. At
this distance the peak 2-25 keV luminosity is ~4 x 10^37 erg/s. We compare the
properties of this peculiar system with those of the Be/NS LMC transient A
0538-66 and suggest that CI Cam is of similar nature. The presence of strong
radio emission during outburst indicates that the compact object is likely to
be a black hole or a weakly magnetized neutron star.Comment: Accepted for publication on The Astrophysical Journal, July 199
A Jovian-mass Planet in Microlensing Event OGLE-2005-BLG-071
We report the discovery of a several-Jupiter mass planetary companion to the
primary lens star in microlensing event OGLE-2005-BLG-071. Precise (<1%)
photometry at the peak of the event yields an extremely high signal-to-noise
ratio detection of a deviation from the light curve expected from an isolated
lens. The planetary character of this deviation is easily and unambiguously
discernible from the gross features of the light curve. Detailed modeling
yields a tightly-constrained planet-star mass ratio of q=m_p/M=0.0071+/-0.0003.
This is the second robust detection of a planet with microlensing,
demonstrating that the technique itself is viable and that planets are not rare
in the systems probed by microlensing, which typically lie several kpc toward
the Galactic center.Comment: 4 pages. Minor changes. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
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