2,282 research outputs found
ROSAT PSPC detection of soft X-ray absorption in GB 1428+4217: The most distant matter yet probed with X-ray spectroscopy
We report on a ROSAT PSPC observation of the highly-luminous z = 4.72
radio-loud quasar GB 1428+4217 obtained between 1998 December 11 and 17, the
final days of the ROSAT satellite. The low-energy sensitivity of the PSPC
detector was employed to constrain the intrinsic X-ray absorption of the
currently most distant X-ray detected object. Here we present the detection of
significant soft X-ray absorption towards GB 1428+4217, making the absorbing
material the most distant matter yet probed with X-ray spectroscopy. X-ray
variability by 25+-8 per cent is detected on a timescale of 6500 s in the rest
frame. The X-ray variation requires an unusually high radiative efficiency of
at least 4.2, further supporting the blazar nature of the source.Comment: 6 pages incl. 6 figures, accepted for publication in Monthly Notice
The XMM-Newton Slew Survey
XMM-Newton, with the huge collecting area of its mirrors and the high quantum
efficiency of its EPIC detectors, is the most sensitive X-ray observatory ever
flown. This is strikingly evident during slew exposures, which, while yielding
only at most 14 seconds of on-source exposure time, actually constitute a 2-10
keV survey ten times deeper than all other "all-sky" surveys. The current
(April 2005) XMM archive contains 374 slew exposures which give a uniform
coverage over around 10,000 square degrees (approx. 25% of the sky). Here we
describe the results of pilot studies, the current status of the XMM-Newton
Slew Survey, up-to-date results and our progress towards constructing a
catalogue of slew detections in the full 0.2-12 keV energy band.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, XMM-Newton EPIC Consortium Meeting, Schloss
Ringberg, Germany, April 2005, to appear in MPE Repor
Multiwavelength appearance of Vela Jr.: Is it up to expectations?
Vela Jr. is one of the youngest and likely nearest among the known galactic
supernova remnants (SNRs). Discovered in 1997 it has been studied since then at
quite a few wavelengths, that spread over almost 20 decades in energy. Here we
present and discuss Vela Jr. properties revealed by these multiwavelength
observations, and confront them with the SNR model expectations. Questions that
remained unanswered at the time of publication of the paper of Iyudin et al.
(2005), e.g. what is the nature of the SNR's proposed central compact source
CXOU J085201.4-461753, and why is the ISM absorption column density apparently
associated with RX J0852.0-4622 much greater than the typical column of the
Vela SNR, can be addressed using the latest radio and X-ray observations of
Vela Jr.. These, and other related questions are addressed in the following.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in ESA SP-622,
Proceedings of the 6th INTEGRAL Workshop held in Moscow, Russia, July 02-08,
200
Candidate tidal disruption events from the XMM-Newton Slew Survey
In recent years, giant amplitude X-ray flares have been observed from a
handful of non-active galaxies. The most plausible scenario of these unusual
phenomena is tidal disruption of a star by a quiescent supermassive black hole
at the centre of the galaxy. Comparing the XMM-Newton Slew Survey Source
Catalogue with the ROSAT PSPC All-Sky Survey five galaxies have been detected a
factor of up to 88 brighter in XMM-Newton with respect to ROSAT PSPC upper
limits and presenting a soft X-ray colour. X-ray luminosities of these sources
derived from slew observations have been found in the range 10^41-10^44 erg
s^-1, fully consistent with the tidal disruption model. This model predicts
that during the peak of the outburst, flares reach X-ray luminosities up to
10^45 erg s^-1, which is close to the Eddington luminosity of the black hole,
and afterwards a decay of the flux on a time scale of months to years is
expected. Multi-wavelength follow-up observations have been performed on these
highly variable objects in order to disentangle their nature and to investigate
their dynamical evolution. Here we present sources coming from the XMM-Newton
Slew Survey that could fit in the paradigm of tidal disruption events. X-ray
and optical observations revealed that two of these objects are in full
agreement with that scenario and three other sources that, showing signs of
optical activity, need further investigation within the transient galactic
nuclei phenomena.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, A&A accepte
The XMM-Newton EPIC Background and the production of Background Blank Sky Event Files
We describe in detail the nature of XMM-Newton EPIC background and its
various complex components, summarising the new findings of the XMM-Newton EPIC
background working group, and provide XMM-Newton background blank sky event
files for use in the data analysis of diffuse and extended sources. Blank sky
event file data sets are produced from the stacking of data, taken from 189
observations resulting from the Second XMM-Newton Serendipitous Source
Catalogue (2XMMp) reprocessing. The data underwent several filtering steps,
using a revised and improved method over previous work, which we describe in
detail. We investigate several properties of the final blank sky data sets. The
user is directed to the location of the final data sets. There is a final data
set for each EPIC instrument-filter-mode combination.Comment: Paper accepted by A&A 22 December 2006. 14 pages, 8 figures. Paper
can also be found at http://www.star.le.ac.uk/~jac48/publications
Orientable Z_n-distance Magic Labeling of the Cartesian Product of Many Cycles
The following generalization of distance magic graphs was introduced in [2]. A directed Z_n-distance magic labeling of an oriented graph of order n is a bijection with the property that there is a (called the magic constant) such that w(x)= \sum_{y\in N_{G}^{+}(x)} \overrightarrow{\ell}(y) - \sum_{y\in N_{G}^{-}(x)} \overrightarrow{\ell}(y)= \mu\overrightarrow{G}\overrightarrow{\ell}\overrightarrow{G}\overrightarrow{\ell}$ we call an orientable Z_n-distance magic labeling. In this paper, we find orientable Z_n-distance magic labelings of the Cartesian product of cycles. In addition, we show that even-ordered hypercubes are orientable Z_n-distance magic
Extended sources in the XMM-Newton slew survey
The low background, good spatial resolution and great sensitivity of the
EPIC-pn camera on XMM-Newton give useful limits for the detection of extended
sources even during the short exposures made during slewing maneouvers. In this
paper we attempt to illustrate the potential of the XMM-Newton slew survey as a
tool for analysing flux-limited samples of clusters of galaxies and other
sources of spatially extended X-ray emission.Comment: 2 pages, 4 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "The X-ray
Universe 2005", San Lorenzo de El Escorial (Spain), 26-30 September 200
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