79 research outputs found
The Recurrent Eclipsing Nova U Sco: A Short Review
U Scorpii is the recurrent nova with the shortest inter-outburst period, only ten years. The last active phase took place at the beginning of 2010, and it provided a large amount of data from both ground-based and space observatories. This paper reviews some of the more relevant recent findings and points out some, still unanswered, questions
The relationship between soft X-rays and the 1640 Ă… feature fluxes in late-type stars
The λ 1640 feature has been observed in a sample of late type stars of different luminosity classes. The intensity was measured from IUE low dispersion spectra, and it has been compared with the observed X-ray fluxes, finding a relationship between both quantities for "solar type" stars. The X-ray fluxes derived from this relationship for a reduced sample of stars are consistent with the observed ones in the case of "solar type" stars. "Non solar type" stars exhibit discrepancies that could be explained assuming that the λ 1640 feature is formed by contriÂbuters other than He II, which supply an important fraction of this emission in "solar type" stars. The obtained empirical relationship has been used to derive the X-ray flux for some stars that have not been observed in the X-ray range
The INES System IV: The IUE Absolute Flux Scale
This paper deals with the definition of the input fluxes used for the
calibration of the IUE Final Archive. The method adopted consists on the
determination of the shape of the detector's sensitivity curves using IUE low
resolution observations with model fluxes of the DA white dwarf G191-B2B. A
scale factor was then determined so that the IUE observations of some bright
OAO-2 standards match the original measurements from Meade (1978) in the
spectral region 2100-2300 A. The ultraviolet fluxes of six standard stars used
as input for the Final Archive photometric calibration together with the model
fluxes of G191-B2B normalized to the OAO-2 scale are given. A comparison with
the independent FOS calibration shows that the IUE flux scale for the
Ultraviolet is 7.2% lower. We consider this mainly to be caused by the
different normalization procedures. It is shown that the present flux
calibration applies to spectra processed with the INES low resolution
extraction software.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures. To appear in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Star formation in the nucleus of the galaxy NGC-5253
Summary. Optical and ultraviolet spectroscopic observations of the nucleus of the galaxy NGC5253 are analyzed. This galaxy presents the typical features of an elliptical system at large distances from its center. However, its nucleus is dominated by an emission complex composed by severa) giant H rr regions. The analysis of the optical spectra shows that the metallic abundances in the nucleus of the galaxy are below the solar values. The presence of O stars can be deduced from the numerous absorption Iines present in the UV spectrum. The UV emission lines indicate a high effective temperature for the ionizing star cluster. The comparison of the observations with evolutive models of W(Hp) and the slope of the UV continuum shows that the age of the brightest knot of the nucleus of NGC 5253 is less than three millions years. The exact age depends on the choice of the extinction law, not well known in this type of objects. An LMCÂ like law (consistent with the low metallicity of the object) leads to an age of 2.3 106 yr, and to an IMF similar or slightly flatter than that found by Salpeter for the solar neighbourhood, with an upper mass limit in the range 60 M 0 < M0P < 120 M 0
XMM-Newton observations of the INTEGRAL X-ray transient J17544-2619
On 2003 September 17 INTEGRAL discovered a bright transient source 3 degrees
from the Galactic Center, IGR J17544-2619. The field containing the transient
was observed by XMM-Newton on 2003 March 17 and September 11 and 17. A bright
source, at a position consistent with the INTEGRAL location, was detected by
the European Photon Imaging Camera (EPIC) during both September observations
with mean 0.5-10 keV unabsorbed luminosities of 1.1x10^35 and 5.7x10^35 erg s-1
for an (assumed) distance of 8 kpc. The source was not detected in 2003 March,
with a 0.5-10 keV luminosity of < 3.8x10^32 erg s-1. The September 11 and 17
EPIC spectra can be represented by a power-law model with photon indices of
2.25+/-0.15 and 1.42+/-0.17, respectively. Thus, the 0.5-10 keV spectrum
hardens with increasing intensity. The low-energy absorption during both
September observations is comparable to the interstellar value. The X-ray
lightcurves for both September observations show energy dependent flaring which
may be modeled by changes in either low-energy absorption or power-law index.Comment: Six pages, five figures; to appear in Astronomy and Astrophysic
WSO/UV: World Space Observatory/Ultraviolet
We summarize the capabilities of the World Space Observatory (UV) Project
(WSO/UV). An example of the importance of this project (with a planned launch
date of 2007/8) for the study of Classical Novae is given.Comment: 4 pages, To appear in the proceeedings of the "Classical Nova
Explosions" conference, eds. M. Hernanz and J. Jose, AI
UCM 2257+2438, a new narrow-line seyfert 1 galaxy
Multiwavelength observations of the galaxy UCM 2257+2438 found in the Universidad Complutense of Madrid (UCM) objective-prism survey are reported. The optic spectroscopy, CCD imaging, near-infrared and IRAS photometric data suggest that this object is a narrow-line Seyfert 1 placed in the nucleus of a Sa nearly face-on galaxy with a significant contribution from starlight
Survey of emission-line galaxies: Universidad Complutense de Madrid list
A low-dispersion objective-prism survey for low-redshift emission-line galaxies (ELGs) is being carried out by the University Complutense de Madrid with the Schmidt telescope at the German-Spanish Observatory of Calar Alto (Almeria, Spain). A 4° full aperture prism, which provides a dispersion of 1950 Å mm^-1, and IIIaF emulsion combination has been used to search for ELGs selected by the presence of H_α emission in their spectra. Our survey has proved to be able to recover objects already found by similar surveys with different techniques and, what is more important, to discover new objects not previously cataloged. A compilation of descriptions and positions, along with finding charts when necessary, is presented for 160 extragalactic emission-line objects. This is the first list, which contains objects located in a region of the sky covering 270 deg^2 in 10 fields near α = 0^h and δ = 20°
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