1,598 research outputs found
Estimating turbulent velocities in the elliptical galaxies NGC 5044 and NGC 5813
The interstellar and intra-cluster medium in giant elliptical galaxies and
clusters of galaxies is often assumed to be in hydrostatic equilibrium.
Numerical simulations, however, show that about 5-30% of the pressure in a
cluster is provided by turbulence induced by, for example, the central AGN and
merger activity. We aim to put constraints on the turbulent velocities and
turbulent pressure in the ICM of the giant elliptical galaxies NGC 5044 and NGC
5813 using XMM-Newton RGS observations. The magnitude of the turbulence is
estimated using the Fe XVII lines at 15.01 A, 17.05 A, and 17.10 A in the RGS
spectra. At low turbulent velocities, the gas becomes optically thick in the
15.01 A line due to resonant scattering, while the 17 A lines remain optically
thin. By comparing the (I(17.05)+I(17.10))/I(15.01) line ratio from RGS with
simulated line ratios for different Mach numbers, the level of turbulence is
constrained. The measurement is limited by systematic uncertainties in the
atomic data, which are at the 20-30% level. We find that the line ratio in NGC
5813 is significantly higher than in NGC 5044. This difference can be explained
by a higher level of turbulence in NGC 5044. The high turbulent velocities and
the fraction of the turbulent pressure support of >40% in NGC 5044, assuming
isotropic turbulence, confirm that it is a highly disturbed system, probably
due to an off-axis merger. The turbulent pressure support in NGC 5813 is more
modest at 15-45%. The (I(17.05)+I(17.10))/I(15.01) line ratio in an optically
thin plasma, calculated using AtomDB v2.0.1, is 2 sigma above the ratio
measured in NGC 5044, which cannot be explained by resonant scattering. This
shows that the discrepancies between theoretical, laboratory, and astrophysical
data on Fe XVII lines need to be reduced to improve the accuracy of the
determination of turbulent velocities using resonant scattering.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Intersublevel Polaron Dephasing in Self-Assembled Quantum Dots
Polaron dephasing processes are investigated in InAs/GaAs dots using
far-infrared transient four wave mixing (FWM) spectroscopy. We observe an
oscillatory behaviour in the FWM signal shortly (< 5 ps) after resonant
excitation of the lowest energy conduction band transition due to coherent
acoustic phonon generation. The subsequent single exponential decay yields long
intraband dephasing times of 90 ps. We find excellent agreement between our
measured and calculated FWM dynamics, and show that both real and virtual
acoustic phonon processes are necessary to explain the temperature dependence
of the polarization decay.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys Rev Let
Overview of the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer Mission
The Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer satellite observes light in the
far-ultraviolet spectral region, 905 - 1187 A with high spectral resolution.
The instrument consists of four coaligned prime-focus telescopes and Rowland
spectrographs with microchannel plate detectors. Two of the telescope channels
use Al:LiF coatings for optimum reflectivity from approximately 1000 to 1187 A
and the other two use SiC coatings for optimized throughput between 905 and
1105 A. The gratings are holographically ruled to largely correct for
astigmatism and to minimize scattered light. The microchannel plate detectors
have KBr photocathodes and use photon counting to achieve good quantum
efficiency with low background signal. The sensitivity is sufficient to examine
reddened lines of sight within the Milky Way as well as active galactic nuclei
and QSOs for absorption line studies of both Milky Way and extra-galactic gas
clouds. This spectral region contains a number of key scientific diagnostics,
including O VI, H I, D I and the strong electronic transitions of H2 and HD.Comment: To appear in FUSE special issue of the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
6 pages + 4 figure
Thermodynamics of heterogeneous crystal nucleation in contact and immersion modes
One of most intriguing problems of heterogeneous crystal nucleation in
droplets is its strong enhancement in the contact mode (when the foreign
particle is presumably in some kind of contact with the droplet surface)
compared to the immersion mode (particle immersed in the droplet). Many
heterogeneous centers have different nucleation thresholds when they act in
contact or immersion modes, indicating that the mechanisms may be actually
different for the different modes. Underlying physical reasons for this
enhancement have remained largely unclear. In this paper we present a model for
the thermodynamic enhancement of heterogeneous crystal nucleation in the
contact mode compared to the immersion one. To determine if and how the surface
of a liquid droplet can thermodynamically stimulate its heterogeneous
crystallization, we examine crystal nucleation in the immersion and contact
modes by deriving and comparing with each other the reversible works of
formation of crystal nuclei in these cases. As a numerical illustration, the
proposed model is applied to the heterogeneous nucleation of Ih crystals on
generic macroscopic foreign particles in water droplets at T=253 K. Our results
show that the droplet surface does thermodynamically favor the contact mode
over the immersion one. Surprisingly, our numerical evaluations suggest that
the line tension contribution to this enhancement from the contact of three
water phases (vapor-liquid-crystal) may be of the same order of magnitude as or
even larger than the surface tension contribution
X-ray spectral study of the hot gas in three Clusters of Galaxies
We study the physical properties of three clusters of galaxies, selected from
a BeppoSAX Wide Field Camera (WFC) survey. These sources are identified as 1RXS
J153934.7-833535, 1RXS J160147.6-754507, and 1RXS J081232.3-571423 in the ROSAT
All-Sky Survey catalogue. We obtained XMM-Newton follow-up observations for
these three clusters. We fit single and multi-temperature models to spectra
obtained from the EPIC-pn camera to determine the temperature, the chemical
composition of the gas and their radial distribution. Since two observations
are contaminated by a high soft-proton background, we develop a new method to
estimate the effect of this background on the data. For the first time, we
present the temperature and iron abundance of two of these three clusters. The
iron abundance of 1RXS J153934.7-33535 decreases with radius. The fits to the
XMM-Newton and Chandra data show that the radial temperature profile within 3'
towards the centre either flattens or lowers. A Chandra image of the source
suggests the presence of X-ray cavities. The gas properties in 1RXS
J160147.6-754507 are consistent with a flat radial distribution of iron and
temperature within 2' from the centre. 1RXS J081232.3-571423 is a relatively
cool cluster with a temperature of about 3 keV. The radial temperature and iron
profiles suggest that 1RXS J153934.7-833535 is a cool core cluster. The Chandra
image shows substructure which points toward AGN feedback in the core. The flat
radial profiles of the temperature and iron abundance in 1RXS J160147.6-754507
are similar to the profiles of non-cool-core clusters.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 8 pages, 8 figures; corrected typos,
added data points on which fig 1 and 2 are based as comment to source file
Defining and measuring displacement: is relocation from restructured neighbourhoods always unwelcome and disruptive?
Current regeneration policy has been described as âstate-led gentrificationâ, with comparisons made with the âsocial disruptionâ caused by slum clearance of the 1950s and 1960s. This article takes issue with this approach in relation to the study of the restructuring of social housing areas. The terms âforced relocationâ and âdisplacementâ are often too crude to describe what actually happens within processes of restructuring and the effects upon residents. Displacement in particular has important dimensions other than the physical one of moving. Evidence from a recent study of people who have moved out of restructured areas shows that although there is some evidence of physical displacement, there is little evidence of social or psychosocial displacement after relocation. Prior attitudes to moving and aspects of the process of relocationâthe degree of choice and distance involvedâare important moderators of the outcomes. Issues of time and context are insufficiently taken into consideration in studies and accounts of restructuring, relocation and displacement
Cold fronts and multi-temperature structures in the core of Abell 2052
The physics of the coolest phases in the hot Intra-Cluster Medium (ICM) of
clusters of galaxies is yet to be fully unveiled. X-ray cavities blown by the
central Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) contain enough energy to heat the
surrounding gas and stop cooling, but locally blobs or filaments of gas appear
to be able to cool to low temperatures of 10^4 K. In X-rays, however, gas with
temperatures lower than 0.5 keV is not observed. Using a deep XMM-Newton
observation of the cluster of galaxies Abell 2052, we derive 2D maps of the
temperature, entropy, and iron abundance in the core region. About 130 kpc
South-West of the central galaxy, we discover a discontinuity in the surface
brightness of the hot gas which is consistent with a cold front. Interestingly,
the iron abundance jumps from ~0.75 to ~0.5 across the front. In a smaller
region to the North-West of the central galaxy we find a relatively high
contribution of cool 0.5 keV gas, but no X-ray emitting gas is detected below
that temperature. However, the region appears to be associated with much cooler
H-alpha filaments in the optical waveband. The elliptical shape of the cold
front in the SW of the cluster suggests that the front is caused by sloshing of
the hot gas in the clusters gravitational potential. This effect is probably an
important mechanism to transport metals from the core region to the outer parts
of the cluster. The smooth temperature profile across the sharp jump in the
metalicity indicates the presence of heat conduction and the lack of mixing
across the discontinuity. The cool blob of gas NW of the central galaxy was
probably pushed away from the core and squeezed by the adjacent bubble, where
it can cool efficiently and relatively undisturbed by the AGN. Shock induced
mixing between the two phases may cause the 0.5 keV gas to cool non-radiatively
and explain our non-detection of gas below 0.5 keV.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, A&A, in pres
The On-Orbit Performance of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer
We report the first year on-orbit performance results for the Galaxy
Evolution Explorer (GALEX), a NASA Small Explorer that is performing a survey
of the sky in two ultraviolet bands. The instrument comprises a 50 cm diameter
modified Ritchey-Chretien telescope with a 1.25 degree field of view,
selectable imaging and objective grism spectroscopic modes, and an innovative
optical system with a thin-film multilayer dichroic beam splitter that enables
simultaneous imaging by a pair of photon counting, microchannel plate, delay
line readout detectors. Initial measurements demonstrate that GALEX is
performing well, meeting its requirements for resolution, efficiency,
astrometry, bandpass definition and survey sensitivity.Comment: This paper will be published as part of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer
(GALEX) Astrophysical Journal Letters Special Issu
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