21 research outputs found
Fast Spinning Pulsars as Probes of Massive Black Holes' Gravity
Dwarf galaxies and globular clusters may contain intermediate mass black
holes ( to solar masses) in their cores. Estimates of
~ neutron stars in the central parsec of the Galaxy and similar numbers
in small elliptical galaxies and globular clusters along with an estimated high
probability of ms-pulsar formation in those environments has led many workers
to propose the use of ms-pulsar timing to measure the mass and spin of
intermediate mass black holes. Models of pulsar motion around a rotating black
hole generally assume geodesic motion of a "test" particle in the Kerr metric.
These approaches account for well-known effects like de Sitter precession and
the Lense-Thirring effect but they do not account for the non-linear effect of
the pulsar's stress-energy tensor on the space-time metric. Here we model the
motion of a pulsar near a black hole with the Mathisson-Papapetrou-Dixon (MPD)
equations. Numerical integration of the MPD equations for black holes of mass 2
X , and solar masses shows that the pulsar will not
remain in an orbital plane with motion vertical to the plane being largest
relative to the orbit's radial dimensions for the lower mass black holes. The
pulsar's out of plane motion will lead to timing variations that are up to ~10
microseconds different from those predicted by planar orbit models. Such
variations might be detectable in long term observations of millisecond
pulsars. If pulsar signals are used to measure the mass and spin of
intermediate mass black holes on the basis of dynamical models of the received
pulsar signal then the out of plane motion of the pulsar should be part of that
model.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS March 27, 201
Multivariate characterization of hydrogen Balmer emission in cataclysmic variables
The ratios of hydrogen Balmer emission line intensities in cataclysmic
variables are signatures of the physical processes that produce them. To
quantify those signatures relative to classifications of cataclysmic variable
types, we applied the multivariate statistical analysis methods of principal
components analysis and discriminant function analysis to the spectroscopic
emission data set of Williams (1983). The two analysis methods reveal two
different sources of variation in the ratios of the emission lines. The source
of variation seen in the principal components analysis was shown to be
correlated with the binary orbital period. The source of variation seen in the
discriminant function analysis was shown to be correlated with the equivalent
width of the H line. Comparison of the data scatterplot with
scatterplots of theoretical models shows that Balmer line emission from T CrB
systems is consistent with the photoionization of a surrounding nebula.
Otherwise, models that we considered do not reproduce the wide range of Balmer
decrements, including "inverted" decrements, seen in the data.Comment: Accepted by PAS
A neuroanatomical examination of embodied cognition: semantic generation to action-related stimuli
The theory of embodied cognition postulates that the brain represents semantic knowledge as a function of the interaction between the body and the environment. The goal of our research was to provide a neuroanatomical examination of embodied cognition using action-related pictures and words. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine whether there were shared and/or unique regions of activation between an ecologically valid semantic generation task and a motor task in the parietal-frontocentral network (PFN), as a function of stimulus format (pictures versus words) for two stimulus types (hand and foot). Unlike other methods for neuroimaging analyses involving subtractive logic or conjoint analyses, this method first isolates shared and unique regions of activation within-participants before generating an averaged map. The results demonstrated shared activation between the semantic generation and motor tasks, which was organized somatotopically in the PFN, as well as unique activation for the semantic generation tasks in proximity to the hand or foot motor cortex. We also found unique and shared regions of activation in the PFN as a function of stimulus format (pictures versus words). These results further elucidate embodied cognition in that they show that brain regions activated during actual motor movements were also activated when an individual verbally generates action-related semantic information. Disembodied cognition theories and limitations are also discussed
Periodicities in the high-mass X-ray binary system RXJ0146.9+6121/LSI+61 235
The high-mass X-ray binary RX J0146.9+6121, with optical counterpart LS I+61°235 (V831 Cas), is an intriguing system on the outskirts of the open cluster NGC 663. It contains the slowest Be type X-ray pulsar known with a pulse period of around 1400 s and, primarily from the study of variation in the emission line profile of Hα, it is known to have a Be decretion disc with a one-armed density wave period of approximately 1240 d. Here we present the results of an extensive photometric campaign, supplemented with optical spectroscopy, aimed at measuring short time-scale periodicities. We find three significant periodicities in the photometric data at, in order of statistical significance, 0.34, 0.67 and 0.10 d. We give arguments to support the interpretation that the 0.34 and 0.10 d periods could be due to stellar oscillations of the B-type primary star and that the 0.67 d period is the spin period of the Be star with a spin axis inclination of 23+10â8 degrees. We measured a systemic velocity of â37.0 ± 4.3 km sâ1 confirming that LS I+61°235 has a high probability of membership in the young cluster NGC 663 from which the system's age can be estimated as 20â25 Myr. From archival RXTE All Sky Monitor (ASM) data we further find âsuperâ X-ray outbursts roughly every 450 d. If these super outbursts are caused by the alignment of the compact star with the one-armed decretion disc enhancement, then the orbital period is approximately 330 d
Photometric Observations of Three High Mass X-Ray Binaries and a Search for Variations Induced by Orbital Motion
We searched for long period variation in V-band, Ic-band and RXTE X-ray light
curves of the High Mass X-ray Binaries (HMXBs) LS 1698 / RX J1037.5-5647, HD
110432 / 1H 1249-637 and HD 161103 / RX J1744.7-2713 in an attempt to discover
orbitally induced variation. Data were obtained primarily from the ASAS
database and were supplemented by shorter term observations made with the 24-
and 40-inch ANU telescopes and one of the robotic PROMPT telescopes. Fourier
periodograms suggested the existence of long period variation in the V-band
light curves of all three HMXBs, however folding the data at those periods did
not reveal convincing periodic variation. At this point we cannot rule out the
existence of long term V-band variation for these three sources and hints of
longer term variation may be seen in the higher precision PROMPT data. Long
term V-band observations, on the order of several years, taken at a frequency
of at least once per week and with a precision of 0.01 mag, therefore still
have a chance of revealing long term variation in these three HMXBs.Comment: Accepted, RAA, May, 201
The effect of two-temperature post-shock accretion flow on the linear polarization pulse in magnetic cataclysmic variables
The temperatures of electrons and ions in the post-shock accretion region of
a magnetic cataclysmic variable (mCV) will be equal at sufficiently high mass
flow rates or for sufficiently weak magnetic fields. At lower mass flow rates
or in stronger magnetic fields, efficient cyclotron cooling will cool the
electrons faster than the electrons can cool the ions and a two-temperature
flow will result. Here we investigate the differences in polarized radiation
expected from mCV post-shock accretion columns modeled with one- and
two-temperature hydrodynamics. In an mCV model with one accretion region, a
magnetic field >~30 MG and a specific mass flow rate of ~0.5 g/cm/cm/s, along
with a relatively generic geometric orientation of the system, we find that in
the ultraviolet either a single linear polarization pulse per binary orbit or
two pulses per binary orbit can be expected, depending on the accretion column
hydrodynamic structure (one- or two-temperature) modeled. Under conditions
where the physical flow is two-temperature, one pulse per orbit is predicted
from a single accretion region where a one-temperature model predicts two
pulses. The intensity light curves show similar pulse behavior but there is
very little difference between the circular polarization predictions of one-
and two-temperature models. Such discrepancies indicate that it is important to
model some aspect of two-temperature flow in indirect imaging procedures, like
Stokes imaging, especially at the edges of extended accretion regions, were the
specific mass flow is low, and especially for ultraviolet data.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space Scienc