36,378 research outputs found
On -extensions of the Hankel determinants of certain automatic sequences
In 1998, Allouche, Peyri\`ere, Wen and Wen considered the Thue--Morse
sequence, and proved that all the Hankel determinants of the period-doubling
sequence are odd integral numbers. We speak of -extension when the entries
along the diagonal in the Hankel determinant are all multiplied by~. Then we
prove that the -extension of each Hankel determinant of the period-doubling
sequence is a polynomial in , whose leading coefficient is the {\it only
one} to be an odd integral number. Our proof makes use of the combinatorial
set-up developed by Bugeaud and Han, which appears to be very suitable for this
study, as the parameter counts the number of fixed points of a permutation.
Finally, we prove that all the -extensions of the Hankel determinants of the
regular paperfolding sequence are polynomials in of degree less than or
equal to
A decades-long fast-rise-exponential-decay flare in low-luminosity AGN NGC 7213
We analysed the four-decades-long X-ray light curve of the low-luminosity
active galactic nucleus (LLAGN) NGC 7213 and discovered a
fast-rise-exponential-decay (FRED) pattern, i.e. the X-ray luminosity increased
by a factor of within 200d, and then decreased exponentially with
an -folding time d ( yr). For the theoretical
understanding of the observations, we examined three variability models
proposed in the literature: the thermal-viscous disc instability model, the
radiation pressure instability model, and the tidal disruption event (TDE)
model. We find that a delayed tidal disruption of a main-sequence star is most
favourable; either the thermal-viscous disk instability model or radiation
pressure instability model fails to explain some key properties observed, thus
we argue them unlikely.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, updated version after proof
correction
Fundamental Plane of Black Hole Activity in Quiescent Regime
A correlation among the radio luminosity (), X-ray luminosity
(), and black hole mass () in active galactic nuclei
(AGNs) and black hole binaries is known to exist and is called the "Fundamental
Plane" of black hole activity. Yuan & Cui (2005) predicts that the radio/X-ray
correlation index, , changes from to
when decreases below a
critical value . While many works favor such a change, there are
also several works claiming the opposite. In this paper, we gather from
literature a largest quiescent AGN (defined as ) sample to date, consisting of sources. We find that these
quiescent AGNs follow a radio/X-ray relationship, in
excellent agreement with the Yuan \& Cui prediction. The reason for the
discrepancy between the present result and some previous works is that their
samples contain not only quiescent sources but also "normal" ones (i.e.,
). In this case, the quiescent sources will
mix up with those normal ones in and . The value of
will then be between and , with the exact value
being determined by the sample composition, i.e., the fraction of the quiescent
and normal sources. Based on this result, we propose that a more physical way
to study the Fundamental Plane is to replace and with
and , respectively.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
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