3,509 research outputs found
Discovery of pulsations in the X-ray transient 4U 1901+03
We describe observations of the 2003 outburst of the hard-spectrum X-ray
transient 4U 1901+03 with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. The outburst was
first detected in 2003 February by the All-Sky Monitor, and reached a peak
2.5-25 keV flux of 8x10^-9 ergs/cm^2/s (around 240 mCrab). The only other known
outburst occurred 32.2 yr earlier, likely the longest presently known
recurrence time for any X-ray transient. Proportional Counter Array (PCA)
observations over the 5-month duration of the 2003 outburst revealed a 2.763 s
pulsar in a 22.58 d orbit. The detection of pulsations down to a flux of
3x10^-11 ergs/cm^2/s (2.5-25 keV), along with the inferred long-term accretion
rate of 8.1x10^-11 M_sun/yr (assuming a distance of 10 kpc) suggests that the
surface magnetic field strength is below ~5x10^11 G. The corresponding
cyclotron energy is thus below 4 keV, consistent with the non-detection of
resonance features at high energies. Although we could not unambiguously
identify the optical counterpart, the lack of a bright IR candidate within the
1' RXTE error circle rules out a supergiant mass donor. The neutron star in 4U
1901+03 probably accretes from the wind of a main-sequence O-B star, like most
other high-mass binary X-ray pulsars. The almost circular orbit e=0.036
confirms the system's membership in a growing class of wide, low-eccentricity
systems in which the neutron stars may have received much smaller kicks as a
result of their natal supernova explosions.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted by ApJ. Very minor addition in response
to referee's comment; updated author affiliatio
Rigid Singularity Theorem in Globally Hyperbolic Spacetimes
We show the rigid singularity theorem, that is, a globally hyperbolic
spacetime satisfying the strong energy condition and containing past trapped
sets, either is timelike geodesically incomplete or splits isometrically as
space time. This result is related to Yau's Lorentzian splitting
conjecture.Comment: 3 pages, uses revtex.sty, to appear in Physical Review
Charmonium properties from lattice QCD + QED: hyperfine splitting, leptonic width, charm quark mass and
We have performed the first lattice QCD computations of the
properties (masses and decay constants) of ground-state charmonium mesons. Our
calculation uses the HISQ action to generate quark-line connected two-point
correlation functions on MILC gluon field configurations that include
quark masses going down to the physical point, tuning the quark mass from
and including the effect of the quark's electric charge
through quenched QED. We obtain (connected) =
120.3(1.1) MeV and interpret the difference with experiment as the impact on
of its decay to gluons, missing from the lattice calculation. This
allows us to determine =+7.3(1.2) MeV,
giving its value for the first time. Our result of 0.4104(17)
GeV, gives =5.637(49) keV, in agreement
with, but now more accurate than experiment. At the same time we have improved
the determination of the quark mass, including the impact of quenched QED
to give = 0.9841(51) GeV. We have also used
the time-moments of the vector charmonium current-current correlators to
improve the lattice QCD result for the quark HVP contribution to the
anomalous magnetic moment of the muon. We obtain , which is 2.5 higher than the value derived using moments
extracted from some sets of experimental data on . This value for includes our determination of
the effect of QED on this quantity, .Comment: Added extra discussion on QED setup, some new results to study the
effects of strong isospin breaking in the sea (including new Fig. 1) and a
fit stability plot for the hyperfine splitting (new Fig. 7). Version accepted
for publication in PR
Analysis of photochemical and dark glyoxal uptake: Implications for SOA formation
The dependence of glyoxal uptake onto deliquesced ammonium sulfate seed aerosol was studied under photochemical (light + hydroxyl radical (OH)) and dark conditions. In this study, the chemical composition of aerosol formed from glyoxal is identical in the presence or absence of OH. In addition, there was no observed OH dependence on either glyoxal uptake or glyoxal-driven aerosol growth for this study. These findings demonstrate that, for the system used here, glyoxal uptake is not affected by the presence of OH. In combination with previous studies, this shows that the exact nature of the type of seed aerosol, in particular the presence of a coating, has a large influence on fast photochemical uptake of glyoxal. Due to the challenge of relating this seed aerosol dependence to ambient conditions, this work highlights the resulting difficulty in quantitatively including SOA formation from glyoxal in models
Glyoxal uptake on ammonium sulphate seed aerosol: reaction products and reversibility of uptake under dark and irradiated conditions
Chamber studies of glyoxal uptake onto ammonium sulphate aerosol were performed under dark and irradiated conditions to gain further insight into processes controlling glyoxal uptake onto ambient aerosol. Organic fragments from glyoxal dimers and trimers were observed within the aerosol under dark and irradiated conditions. Glyoxal monomers and oligomers were the dominant organic compounds formed under the conditions of this study; glyoxal oligomer formation and overall organic growth were found to be reversible under dark conditions. Analysis of high-resolution time-of-flight aerosol mass spectra provides evidence for irreversible formation of carbon-nitrogen (C-N) compounds in the aerosol. We have identified 1H-imidazole-2-carboxaldehyde as one C-N product. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first time C-N compounds resulting from condensed phase reactions with ammonium sulphate seed have been detected in aerosol. Organosulphates were not detected under dark conditions. However, active photochemistry was found to occur within aerosol during irradiated experiments. Carboxylic acids and organic esters were identified within the aerosol. An organosulphate, which had been previously assigned as glyoxal sulphate in ambient samples and chamber studies of isoprene oxidation, was observed only in the irradiated experiments. Comparison with a laboratory synthesized standard and chemical considerations strongly suggest that this organosulphate is glycolic acid sulphate, an isomer of the previously proposed glyoxal sulphate. Our study shows that reversibility of glyoxal uptake should be taken into account in SOA models and also demonstrates the need for further investigation of C-N compound formation and photochemical processes, in particular organosulphate formation
Discovery of the accretion-powered millisecond pulsar SWIFT J1756.9-2508 with a low-mass companion
We report on the discovery by the Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Explorer of the
eighth known transient accretion-powered millisecond pulsar, SWIFT
J1756.9-2508, as part of routine observations with the Swift Burst Alert
Telescope hard X-ray transient monitor. The pulsar was subsequently observed by
both the X-Ray Telescope on Swift and the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer
Proportional Counter Array. It has a spin frequency of 182 Hz (5.5 ms) and an
orbital period of 54.7 minutes. The minimum companion mass is between 0.0067
and 0.0086 solar masses, depending on the mass of the neutron star, and the
upper limit on the mass is 0.030 solar masses (95% confidence level). Such a
low mass is inconsistent with brown dwarf models, and comparison with white
dwarf models suggests that the companion is a He-dominated donor whose thermal
cooling has been at least modestly slowed by irradiation from the accretion
flux. No X-ray bursts, dips, eclipses or quasi-periodic oscillations were
detected. The current outburst lasted approximately 13 days and no earlier
outbursts were found in archival data.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, accepted by Astrophysical Journal Letter
A -estimate for the parabolic Monge-Amp\`{e}re equation on complete non-compact K\"ahler manifolds
In this article we study the K\"ahler Ricci flow, the corresponding parabolic
Monge Amp\`{e}re equation and complete non-compact K\"ahler Ricci flat
manifolds. In our main result Theorem \ref{mainthm} we prove that if
is sufficiently close to being K\"ahler Ricci flat in a suitable sense, then
the K\"ahler Ricci flow \eqref{KRF} has a long time smooth solution
converging smoothly uniformly on compact sets to a complete K\"ahler Ricci flat
metric on . The main step is to obtain a uniform -estimates for the
corresponding parabolic Monge Amp\`{e}re equation. Our results on this can be
viewed as a parabolic version of the main results in \cite{TY3} on the elliptic
Monge Amp\`{e}re equation
Corrigin area land resources survey
This land resource survey of the Corrigin area covers some 1.8 million hectares of the central wheatbelt over the shires of Beverley, Brookton, Bruce Rock, Corrigin, Cuballing, Cunderdin, Dumbleyung, Kellerberrin, Kondinin, Kulin, Lake Grace, Merredin, Narembeen, Narrogin, Pingelly, Quairading, Tammin, Wandering and Wickepin. The survey is part of a regional scale soil-landscape mapping program designed to deliver seamless soil information for the agricultural area of south western Australia. The information provided will assist planners, researchers and land managers make decisions affecting sustainable land use and is designed for use at regional and catchment scales. This report and accompanying CD-ROM summarizes primary and interpreted information on the soil-landscapes of the Corrigin area. The report outlines the main degradation issues and supplies background information on climate, native vegetation and geology. An important additional outcome of the survey is a new theory on soil formation that has wide-ranging ramifications for agriculture, soil science, botany and geomorphology. Thirty-six soil-landscape systems, together with their component sub-systems and phases were recognised, mapped and described during the survey. This information, together with unmapped soil types and land qualities, is provided in the CD-ROM. The CD also showcases the main soils, provides geo-referenced soil pit and auger descriptions, maps of soil-landscapes and maps of selected degradation hazards
Stochastic Flux-Freezing and Magnetic Dynamo
We argue that magnetic flux-conservation in turbulent plasmas at high
magnetic Reynolds numbers neither holds in the conventional sense nor is
entirely broken, but instead is valid in a novel statistical sense associated
to the "spontaneous stochasticity" of Lagrangian particle tra jectories. The
latter phenomenon is due to the explosive separation of particles undergoing
turbulent Richardson diffusion, which leads to a breakdown of Laplacian
determinism for classical dynamics. We discuss empirical evidence for
spontaneous stochasticity, including our own new numerical results. We then use
a Lagrangian path-integral approach to establish stochastic flux-freezing for
resistive hydromagnetic equations and to argue, based on the properties of
Richardson diffusion, that flux-conservation must remain stochastic at infinite
magnetic Reynolds number. As an important application of these results we
consider the kinematic, fluctuation dynamo in non-helical, incompressible
turbulence at unit magnetic Prandtl number. We present results on the
Lagrangian dynamo mechanisms by a stochastic particle method which demonstrate
a strong similarity between the Pr = 1 and Pr = 0 dynamos. Stochasticity of
field-line motion is an essential ingredient of both. We finally consider
briefly some consequences for nonlinear MHD turbulence, dynamo and reconnectionComment: 29 pages, 10 figure
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