82 research outputs found
BVRI Surface Photometry of Isolated Spiral Galaxies
A release of multicolor broad band (BVRI) photometry for a subsample of 44
isolated spirals drawn from the Catalogue of Isolated Galaxies (CIG) is
presented. Total magnitudes and colors at various circular apertures, as well
as some global structural/morphological parameters are estimated. Morphology is
reevaluated through optical and sharp/filtered R band images, (B-I) color index
maps, and archive near-IR JHK images from the Two-Micron Survey. The CAS
structural parameters (Concentration, Asymmetry, and Clumpiness) were
calculated from the images in each one of the bands. The fraction of galaxies
with well identified optical/near-IR bars (SB) is 63%, while a 17% more shows
evidence of weak or suspected bars (SAB). The sample average value of the
maximum bar ellipticity is 0.4. Half of the galaxies in the sample shows rings.
We identify two candidates for isolated galaxies with disturbed morphology. The
structural CAS parameters change with the observed band, and the tendencies
they follow with the morphological type and global color are more evident in
the redder bands. In any band, the major difference between our isolated
spirals and a sample of interacting spirals is revealed in the A-S plane. A
deep and uniformly observed sample of isolated galaxies is intended for various
purposes including (i) comparative studies of environmental effects, (ii)
confronting model predictions of galaxy evolution and (iii) evaluating the
change of galaxy properties with redshift.Comment: 44 pages, 9 figures and 7 tables included. To appear in The
Astronomical Journal. For the 43 appendix figures 4.1-4.43 see
http://www.astroscu.unam.mx/~avila/Figs4.1_4.43.tar.gz (7.2 Mb tar.gz file
A fast 2D image reconstruction algorithm from 1D data for the Gaia mission
A fast 2-dimensional image reconstruction method is presented, which takes as
input 1-dimensional data acquired from scans across a central source in
different orientations. The resultant reconstructed images do not show
artefacts due to non-uniform coverage in the orientations of the scans across
the central source, and are successful in avoiding a high background due to
contamination of the flux from the central source across the reconstructed
image. Due to the weighting scheme employed this method is also naturally
robust to hot pixels. This method was developed specifically with Gaia data in
mind, but should be useful in combining data with mismatched resolutions in
different directions.Comment: accepted (18 pages, 13 figures) will appear in Experimental Astronom
The host galaxies and explosion sites of long-duration gamma-ray bursts: Hubble Space Telescope near-infrared imaging
We present the results of a Hubble Space Telescope WFC3/F160WSnapshot survey of the host galaxies of 39 long-duration gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs) at z < 3. We have non-detections of hosts at the locations of four bursts. Sufficient accuracy to astrometrically align optical afterglowimages and determine the location of the LGRB within its hostwas possible for 31/35 detected hosts. In agreement with other work, we find the luminosity distribution of LGRB hosts is significantly fainter than that of a star formation rate-weighted field galaxy sample over the same redshift range, indicating LGRBs are not unbiasedly tracing the star formation rate. Morphologically, the sample of LGRB hosts is dominated by spiral-like or irregular galaxies. We find evidence for evolution of the population of LGRB hosts towards lower luminosity, higher concentrated hosts at lower redshifts. Their half-light radii are consistent with other LGRB host samples where measurements were made on rest-frame UV observations. In agreement with recent work, we find their 80 per cent enclosed flux radii distribution to be more extended than previously thought, making them intermediate between core-collapse supernova (CCSN) and superluminous supernova (SLSN) hosts. The galactocentric projectedoffset distribution confirms LGRBs as centrally concentrated, much more so than CCSNe and similar to SLSNe. LGRBs are strongly biased towards the brighter regions in their host light distributions, regardless of their offset. We find a correlation between the luminosity of the LGRB explosion site and the intrinsic column density, NH, towards the burst. © 2017 The Authors
The two-hour orbit of a binary millisecond X-ray pulsar
Typical radio pulsars are magnetized neutron stars that are born rapidly
rotating and slow down as they age on time scales of 10 to 100 million years.
However, millisecond radio pulsars spin very rapidly even though many are
billions of years old. The most compelling explanation is that they have been
"spun up" by the transfer of angular momentum during accretion of material from
a companion star in so-called low-mass X-ray binary systems, LMXBs. (LMXBs
consist of a neutron star or black hole accreting from a companion less than
one solar mass.) The recent detection of coherent X-ray pulsations with a
millisecond period from a suspected LMXB system appears to confirm this link.
Here we report observations showing that the orbital period of this binary
system is two hours, which establishes it as an LMXB. We also find an apparent
modulation of the X-ray flux at the orbital period (at the two per cent level),
with a broad minimum when the pulsar is behind this low-mass companion star.
This system seems closely related to the "black widow" millisecond radio
pulsars, which are evaporating their companions through irradiation. It may
appear as an eclipsing radio pulsar during periods of X-ray quiescence.Comment: 4 pages with 1 figure. Style files included. Fig. 2 deleted and text
revised. To appear in Nature. Press embargo until 18:00 GMT on 1998 July 2
HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE OBSERVATIONS OF THE AFTERGLOW, SUPERNOVA, AND HOST GALAXY ASSOCIATED WITH THE EXTREMELY BRIGHT GRB 130427A
We present Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations of the exceptionally bright and luminous Swift gamma-ray burst (GRB), GRB 130427A. At z = 0.34, this burst affords an excellent opportunity to study the supernova (SN) and host galaxy associated with an intrinsically extremely luminous burst (Eiso > 1054 erg):more luminous than any previous GRB with a spectroscopically associated SN.We use the combination of the image quality, UV capability, and invariant point-spread function of HST to provide the best possible separation of the afterglow, host, and SN contributions to the observed light~17 rest-frame days after the burst, utilizing a host subtraction spectrum obtained one year later. Advanced Camera for Surveys grism observations show that the associated SN, SN 2013cq, has an overall spectral shape and luminosity similar to SN 1998bw (with a photospheric velocity, vph ~ 15,000 km s-1). The positions of the bluer features are better matched by the higher velocity SN 2010bh (vph ~ 30,000 km s-1), but this SN is significantly fainter and fails to reproduce the overall spectral shape, perhaps indicative of velocity structure in the ejecta. We find that the burst originated ~4 kpc from the nucleus of a moderately star forming (1M_ yr-1), possibly interacting disk galaxy. The absolute magnitude, physical size, and morphology of this galaxy, as well as the location of the GRB within it, are also strikingly similar to those of GRB 980425/SN 1998bw. The similarity of the SNe and environment from both the most luminous and least luminous GRBs suggests that broadly similar progenitor stars can create GRBs across six orders of magnitude in isotropic energy
The Late-time Afterglow Evolution of Long Gamma-Ray Bursts GRB 160625B and GRB 160509A
We present post-jet-break Hubble Space Telescope, Very Large Array, and Chandra observations of the afterglow of the long γ-ray bursts GRB 160625B (between 69 and 209 days) and GRB 160509A (between 35 and 80 days). We calculate the post-jet-break decline rates of the light curves and find the afterglow of GRB 160625B is inconsistent with a simple t −3/4 steepening over the break, expected from the geometric effect of the jet edge entering our line of sight. However, the favored optical post-break decline () is also inconsistent with the f ν ∝ t −p decline (where p ≈ 2.3 from the pre-break light curve), which is expected from exponential lateral expansion of the jet; perhaps suggesting lateral expansion that only affects a fraction of the jet. The post-break decline of GRB 160509A is consistent with both the t −3/4 steepening and with f ν ∝ t −p . We also use boxfit to fit afterglow models to both light curves and find both to be energetically consistent with a millisecond magnetar central engine, but the magnetar parameters need to be extreme (i.e., E ~ 3 × 1052 erg). Finally, the late-time radio light curves of both afterglows are not reproduced well by boxfit and are inconsistent with predictions from the standard jet model; instead, both are well represented by a single power-law decline (roughly f ν ∝ t −1) with no breaks. This requires a highly chromatic jet break () and possibly a two-component jet for both bursts
Entangled-State Cycles of Atomic Collective-Spin States
We study quantum trajectories of collective atomic spin states of
effective two-level atoms driven with laser and cavity fields. We show that
interesting ``entangled-state cycles'' arise probabilistically when the (Raman)
transition rates between the two atomic levels are set equal. For odd (even)
, there are () possible cycles. During each cycle the
-qubit state switches, with each cavity photon emission, between the states
, where is a Dicke state in a rotated
collective basis. The quantum number (), which distinguishes the
particular cycle, is determined by the photon counting record and varies
randomly from one trajectory to the next. For even it is also possible,
under the same conditions, to prepare probabilistically (but in steady state)
the Dicke state , i.e., an -qubit state with excitations,
which is of particular interest in the context of multipartite entanglement.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figure
The Hubble Space Telescope Cluster Supernova Survey: II. The Type Ia Supernova Rate in High-Redshift Galaxy Clusters
We report a measurement of the Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) rate in galaxy
clusters at 0.9 < z < 1.45 from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Cluster
Supernova Survey. This is the first cluster SN Ia rate measurement with
detected z > 0.9 SNe. Finding 8 +/- 1 cluster SNe Ia, we determine a SN Ia rate
of 0.50 +0.23-0.19 (stat) +0.10-0.09 (sys) SNuB (SNuB = 10^-12 SNe L_{sun,B}^-1
yr^-1). In units of stellar mass, this translates to 0.36 +0.16-0.13 (stat)
+0.07-0.06 (sys) SNuM (SNuM = 10^-12 SNe M_sun^-1 yr^-1). This represents a
factor of approximately 5 +/- 2 increase over measurements of the cluster rate
at z < 0.2. We parameterize the late-time SN Ia delay time distribution with a
power law (proportional to t^s). Under the assumption of a cluster formation
redshift of z_f = 3, our rate measurement in combination with lower-redshift
cluster SN Ia rates constrains s = -1.41 +0.47/-0.40, consistent with
measurements of the delay time distribution in the field. This measurement is
generally consistent with expectations for the "double degenerate" scenario and
inconsistent with some models for the "single degenerate" scenario predicting a
steeper delay time distribution at large delay times. We check for
environmental dependence and the influence of younger stellar populations by
calculating the rate specifically in cluster red-sequence galaxies and in
morphologically early-type galaxies, finding results similar to the full
cluster rate. Finally, the upper limit of one host-less cluster SN Ia detected
in the survey implies that the fraction of stars in the intra-cluster medium is
less than 0.47 (95% confidence), consistent with measurements at lower
redshifts.Comment: 29 pages, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ on 16 February
2011. See the HST Cluster Supernova Survey website at
http://supernova.lbl.gov/2009ClusterSurvey for a version with full-resolution
images and a complete listing of transient candidates from the survey. This
version fixes a typo in the metadata; the paper is unchanged from v
Gamma-rays from millisecond pulsars in Globular Clusters
Globular clusters (GCs) with their ages of the order of several billion years
contain many final products of evolution of stars such as: neutron stars, white
dwarfs and probably also black holes. These compact objects can be at present
responsible for the acceleration of particles to relativistic energies.
Therefore, gamma-ray emission is expected from GCs as a result of radiation
processes occurring either in the inner magnetosperes of millisecond pulsars or
in the vicinity of accreting neutron stars and white dwarfs or as a result of
interaction of particles leaving the compact objects with the strong radiation
field within the GC. Recently, GeV gamma-ray emission has been detected from
several GCs by the new satellite observatory Fermi. Also Cherenkov telescopes
reported interesting upper limits at the TeV energies which start to constrain
the content of GCs. We review the results of these gamma-ray observations in
the context of recent scenarios for their origin.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, will be published in Astrophysics and Space
Science Series (Springer), eds. N. Rea and D.F. Torre
Chandra and Hubble Space Telescope observations of dark gamma-ray bursts and their host galaxies
We present a study of 21 dark gamma-ray burst (GRB) host galaxies, predominantly using X-ray afterglows obtained with the Chandra X-Ray Observatory (CXO) to precisely locate the burst in deep Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging of the burst region. The host galaxies are well-detected in F160W in all but one case and in F606W imaging in 60 per cent of cases. We measure magnitudes and perform a morphological analysis of each galaxy. The asymmetry, concentration, and ellipticity of the dark burst hosts are compared against the host galaxies of optically bright GRBs. In agreement with other studies, we find that dark GRB hosts are redder and more luminous than the bulk of the GRB host population. The distribution of projected spatial offsets for dark GRBs from their host galaxy centroids is comparable to that of optically bright bursts. The dark GRB hosts are physically larger, more massive and redder, but are morphologically similar to the hosts of bright GRBs in terms of concentration and asymmetry. Our analysis constrains the fraction of high redshift (z > 5) GRBs in the sample to 14 per cent, implying an upper limit for the whole long-GRB population of ≤4.4 per cent. If dust is the primary cause of afterglow darkening amongst dark GRBs, the measured extinction may require a clumpy dust component in order to explain the observed offset and ellipticity distributions
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