1,007 research outputs found
Optical-radio positional offsets for active galactic nuclei
Context. It will soon become possible to directly link the most accurate
radio reference frame with the Gaia optical reference frame using many common
extragalactic objects. It is important to know the level of coincidence between
the radio and optical positions of compact active galactic nuclei (AGN). Aims.
Using the best catalogues available at present, we investigate how many AGN
with significantly large optical-radio positional offsets exist as well as the
possible causes of these offsets. Methods. We performed a case study by finding
optical counterparts to the International Celestial Reference Frame (ICRF2)
radio sources in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 9 (DR9). The
ICRF2 catalogue was used as a reference because the radio positions determined
by Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) observations are about two orders
of magnitude more accurate than the optical positions. Results. We find 1297
objects in common for ICRF2 and SDSS DR9. Statistical analysis of the
optical-radio differences verifies that the SDSS DR9 positions are accurate to
~55 mas in both coordinates, with no systematic offset with respect to ICRF2.
We find 51 sources (~4% of the sample) for which the positional offset exceeds
170 mas (~3{\sigma}). Astrophysical explanations must exist for most of these
outliers. There are 3 known strong gravitational lenses among them. Dual AGN or
recoiling supermassive black holes may also be possible. Conclusions. The most
accurate Gaia-VLBI reference frame link will require a careful selection of a
common set of objects by eliminating the outliers. On the other hand, the
significant optical-radio positional non-coincidences may offer a new tool for
finding e.g. gravitational lenses or dual AGN candidates. Detailed follow-up
radio interferometric and optical spectroscopic observations are encouraged to
investigate the outlier sources found in this study.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
The Influence of Specimen Thickness on the High Temperature Corrosion Behavior of CMSX-4 during Thermal-Cycling Exposure
CMSX-4 is a single-crystalline Ni-base superalloy designed to be used at very high temperatures and high mechanical loadings. Its excellent corrosion resistance is due to external alumina-scale formation, which however can become less protective under thermal-cycling conditions. The metallic substrate in combination with its superficial oxide scale has to be considered as a composite suffering high stresses. Factors like different coefficients of thermal expansion between oxide and substrate during temperature changes or growing stresses affect the integrity of the oxide scale. This must also be strongly influenced by the thickness of the oxide scale and the substrate as well as the ability to relief such stresses, e.g., by creep deformation. In order to quantify these effects, thin-walled specimens of different thickness (t = 100500 lm) were prepared. Discontinuous measurements of their mass changes were carried out under thermal-cycling conditions at a hot dwell temperature of 1100 C up to 300 thermal cycles. Thin-walled specimens revealed a much lower oxide-spallation rate compared to thick-walled specimens, while thinwalled specimens might show a premature depletion of scale-forming elements. In order to determine which of these competetive factor is more detrimental in terms of a component’s lifetime, the degradation by internal precipitation was studied using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) in combination with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS). Additionally, a recently developed statistical spallation model was applied to experimental data [D. Poquillon and D. Monceau, Oxidation of Metals, 59, 409–431 (2003)]. The model describes the overall mass change by oxide scale spallation during thermal cycling exposure and is a useful simulation tool for oxide scale spallation processes accounting for variations in the specimen geometry. The evolution of the net-mass change vs. the number of thermal cycles seems to be strongly dependent on the sample thickness
Stability of Linear Continuous-Time Systems with Stochastically Switching Delays
Necessary and sufficient conditions for the stability of linear continuous-time systems with stochastically switching delays are presented in this paper. It is assumed that the delay random paths are piece-wise constant functions of time where a finite number of values may be taken by the delay. The stability is assessed in terms of the second moment of the state vector of the system. The solution operators of individual linear systems with constant de- lays, chosen from the set of all possible delay values, are extended to form new augmented operators. Then for proper formulation of the second moment in continuous time, tensor products of the augmented solution operators are used. Finally the finite-dimensional versions of the stability conditions, that can be obtained using various time discretization techniques, are presented. Some examples are provided that demonstrate how the stability conditions can be used to assess the stability of linear systems with stochastic delay
Near-infrared jet emission in the microquasar XTE J1550-564
Context: Microquasars are accreting Galactic sources that are also observed
to launch relativistic jets. A key signature of the ejection is non-thermal
radio emission. The level of this jet component at high frequencies is still
poorly constrained. Aims: The X-ray binary and microquasar black hole candidate
XTE J1550-564 exhibited a faint X-ray outburst in April 2003 during which it
stayed in the X-ray low/hard state. We took optical and near-infrared (NIR)
observations with the ESO/NTT telescope during this outburst to disentangle the
various contributions to the spectral energy distribution (SED) and investigate
the presence of a jet component. Methods: Photometric and spectroscopic
observations allowed us to construct an SED and also to produce a high
time-resolution lightcurve. Results: The SED shows an abrupt change of slope
from the NIR domain to the optical. The NIR emission is attributed to
non-thermal synchrotron emission from the compact, self-absorbed jet that is
known to be present in the low/hard state. This is corroborated by the fast
variability, colours, lack of prominent spectral features and evidence for
intrinsic polarisation. The SED suggests the jet break from the optically thick
to the thin regime occurs in the NIR. Conclusions: The simultaneous optical-NIR
data allow an independent confirmation of jet emission in the NIR. The
transition to optically thin synchrotron occurs at NIR frequencies or below,
which leads to an estimated characteristic size greater than 2x10^8cm and
magnetic field less than 5T for the jet base, assuming a homogeneous one-zone
synchrotron model.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics (Section 7.
Stellar structure and evolution; 8 pages, 6 figures
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