2,143 research outputs found

    A mechanical coordinate converter

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    Mechanical converter for spherical coordinates used in polariscope balloon program

    Polarimetry from high-altitude balloons

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    Polarimetry at 2850a and 2250a from high altitude balloon

    Probes of Diffusive Shock Acceleration using Gamma-Ray Burst Prompt Emission

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    The principal paradigm for gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) suggests that the prompt transient gamma-ray signal arises from multiple shocks internal to the relativistic expansion. This paper explores how GRB prompt emission spectra can constrain electron (or ion) acceleration properties at the relativistic shocks that pertain to GRB models. The array of possible high-energy power-law indices in accelerated populations is highlighted, focusing on how spectra above 1 MeV can probe the field obliquity in GRB internal shocks, and the character of hydromagnetic turbulence in their environs. When encompassing the MeV-band spectral break, fits to BATSE/EGRET burst data indicate that the preponderance of electrons responsible for the prompt emission reside in an intrinsically non-thermal population. This differs markedly from typical populations generated in acceleration simulations; potential resolutions of this conflict such as the action of self-absorption are mentioned. Spectral modeling also suggests that the synchrotron mechanism is favored over synchrotron self-Compton scenarios due to the latter's typically broad curvature near the peak. Such diagnostics will be enhanced by the broadband spectral coverage of bursts by the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope; the GBM will provide key information on the lower energy portions of the non-thermal particle population, while the LAT will constrain the power-law regime of particle acceleration.Comment: 6 pages, 1 embedded figure, to appear in Proc. of the 6th Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium, eds. C. A. Meegan, N. Gehrels, and C. Kouveliotou (AIP Conf. Proc., New York

    Spectrophotometry of planets, asteroids and satellites from the international ultraviolet explorer satellite

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    A total of 14 8 hour I.U.E. observing sessions resulted in 39 spectra of 11 asteroids and 9 solar type stars as well as 57 spectra at various locations on the disk of Jupiter. The Jupiter observations include a total of 5 center to limb series of spectra at various latitudes and a North South series along the central meridian. In the range from 2000-3000 A, the planet shows a striking decrease in brightness at latitudes greater than about 30 degrees, and exhibits limb brightening at low latitudes and limb darkening at high latitudes. Preliminary results indicate that about 6 km-amagats of clean hydrogen are required above a haze of absorbing aerosols to reproduce the limb brightening observed at 2500 A in the equatorial regions. At higher latitudes, the aerosols extend to even higher levels of the atmosphere. Comparison of the Jovian data with detailed model calculations and the analyses of the asteroid spectra are still in progress with other support

    The First INTEGRAL AGN Catalog

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    We present the first INTEGRAL AGN catalog, based on observations performed from launch of the mission in October 2002 until January 2004. The catalog includes 42 AGN, of which 10 are Seyfert 1, 17 are Seyfert 2, and 9 are intermediate Seyfert 1.5. The fraction of blazars is rather small with 5 detected objects, and only one galaxy cluster and no star-burst galaxies have been detected so far. A complete subset consists of 32 AGN with a significance limit of 7 sigma in the INTEGRAL/ISGRI 20-40 keV data. Although the sample is not flux limited, the distribution of sources shows a ratio of obscured to unobscured AGN of 1.5 - 2.0, consistent with luminosity dependent unified models for AGN. Only four Compton-thick AGN are found in the sample. Based on the INTEGRAL data presented here, the Seyfert 2 spectra are slightly harder (Gamma = 1.95 +- 0.01) than Seyfert 1.5 (Gamma = 2.10 +- 0.02) and Seyfert 1 (Gamma = 2.11 +- 0.05).Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Ap

    Anisotropy in the sky distributions of the short and intermediate gamma-ray bursts: Breakdown of the cosmological principle?

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    After the discovery of the anisotropy in the sky-distribution of intermediate gamma-ray bursts recently also the distribution of the short gamma-ray bursts is proven to be anisotropic. The impact of these behaviors on the validity of the cosmological principle is shortly discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of the Sixth Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium, edited by C.A. Meegan, N. Gehrels, and C. Kouvelioto

    The Progenitor of the New COMPTEL/ROSAT Supernova Remnant in Vela

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    We show that (1) the newly discovered supernova remnant (SNR), GRO J0852--4642/RX J0852.0--4622, was created by a core-collapse supernova of a massive star, and (2) the same supernova event which produced the 44^{44}Ti detected by COMPTEL from this source is probably also responsible for a large fraction of the observed 26^{26}Al emission in the Vela region detected by the same instrument. The first conclusion is based on the fact that the remnant is currently expanding too slowly given its young age for it to be caused by a Type Ia supernova. If the current SNR shell expansion speed is greater than 3000 km/s, a 15M15 M_\odot Type II supernova with a moderate kinetic energy exploding at about 150 pc away is favored. If the SNR expansion speed is lower than 2000 km s1^{-1}, as derived naively from the X-ray data, a much more energetic supernova is required to have occurred at 250\sim250 pc away in a dense environment at the edge of the Gum nebula. This progenitor has a preferred ejecta mass of 10M\le10 M_\odot and therefore, it is probably a Type Ib or Type Ic supernova. However, the required high ambient density of nH100cm3n_H \ge 100 cm^{-3} in this scenario is difficult to reconcile with the regional CO data. A combination of our estimates of the age/energetics of the new SNR and the almost perfect positional coincidence of the new SNR with the centroid of the COMPTEL 26 ^{26}Al emission feature of the Vela region strongly favors a causal connection. If confirmed, this will be the first case where both 44^{44}Ti and 26^{26}Al are detected from the same young SNR and together they can be used to select preferred theoretical core-collapse supernova models.Comment: Revised, 10 pages, 2 figures, to appear in ApJ Lett Vol.514 on April 1, 199

    Gamma-Ray Telescopes (in "400 Years of Astronomical Telescopes")

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    The last half-century has seen dramatic developments in gamma-ray telescopes, from their initial conception and development through to their blossoming into full maturity as a potent research tool in astronomy. Gamma-ray telescopes are leading research in diverse areas such as gamma-ray bursts, blazars, Galactic transients, and the Galactic distribution of aluminum-26.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures/ in "400 Years of Astronomical Telescopes: A Review of History, Science and Technology", ed. B.R. Brandl, R. Stuik, & J.K. Katgert-Merkeli (Exp. Astron. 26, 111-122 [2009]

    INTEGRAL and XMM-Newton Spectral Studies of NGC 4388

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    We present first INTEGRAL and XMM-Newton observations of a Seyfert galaxy, the type 2 AGN NGC 4388. Several INTEGRAL observations performed in 2003 allow us to study the spectrum in the 20 - 300 keV range. In addition two XMM-Newton observations give detailed insight into the 0.2 - 10 keV emission. The measurements presented here and comparison with previous observations by BeppoSAX, SIGMA and CGRO/OSSE show that the overall spectrum from soft X-rays up to the gamma-rays can be described by a highly absorbed (N_H = 2.7e23 1/cm^2) and variable non-thermal component in addition to constant non-absorbed thermal emission (T = 0.8 keV) of low abundance (7% solar), plus a constant Fe K-alpha and K-beta line. The hard X-ray component is well described by a simple power law with a mean photon index of 1.7. During the INTEGRAL observations the 20 - 100 keV flux increased by a factor of 1.4. The analysis of XMM-Newton data implies that the emission below 3 keV is decoupled from the AGN and probably due to extended emission as seen in Chandra observations. The constant iron line emission is apparently also decoupled from the direct emission of the central engine and likely to be generated in the obscuring material, e.g. in the molecular torus.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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