4,196 research outputs found
On the Origin of the Wide HI Absorption Line Toward Sgr A*
We have imaged a region of about 5' extent surrounding Sgr A* in the HI 21
cm-line absorption using the Very Large Array. A Gaussian decomposition of the
optical depth spectra at positions within about 2' (approx. 5 pc at 8.5 kpc) of
Sgr A* detects a wide line underlying the many narrow absorption lines. The
wide line has a mean peak optical depth of 0.32 +/- 0.12 centered at a mean
velocity of V(lsr) = -4 +/- 15 km/s. The mean full width at half maximum is 119
+/- 42 km/s. Such a wide line is absent in the spectra at positions beyond
about 2' from Sgr A*. The position-velocity diagrams in optical depth reveal
that the wide line originates in various components of the circumnuclear disk
(radius approx. 1.3') surrounding Sgr A*. These components contribute to the
optical depth of the wide line in different velocity ranges. The
position-velocity diagrams do not reveal any diffuse feature which could be
attributed to a large number of HI clouds along the line of sight to Sgr A*.
Consequently, the wide line has no implications either to a global population
of shocked HI clouds in the Galaxy or to the energetics of the interstellar
medium as was earlier thought.Comment: LaTeX, 12 pages and 9 figures, accepted for publication in J.
Astrophys. Ast
Altitude Limits for Rotating Vector Model Fitting of Pulsar Polarization
Traditional pulsar polarization sweep analysis starts from the point dipole
rotating vector model (RVM) approximation. If augmented by a measurement of the
sweep phase shift, one obtains an estimate of the emission altitude
(Blaskiewicz, Cordes, & Wasserman). However, a more realistic treatment of
field line sweepback and finite altitude effects shows that this estimate
breaks down at modest altitude ~ 0.1R_{LC}. Such radio emission altitudes turn
out to be relevant to the young energetic and millisecond pulsars that dominate
the \gamma-ray population. We quantify the breakdown height as a function of
viewing geometry and provide simple fitting formulae that allow observers to
correct RVM-based height estimates, preserving reasonable accuracy to R ~
0.3R_{LC}. We discuss briefly other observables that can check and improve
height estimates
Transient radio emisison from SAX J1808.4-3658
We report on the detection of radio emission from the accretion-powered X-ray
millisecond pulsar SAX J1808.4-3658, using the Australia Telescope Compact
Array. We detected a ~0.8 mJy source at the position of SAX J1808.4-3658 on
1998 April 27, approximately one day after the onset of a rapid decline in the
X-ray flux; no such source was seen on the previous day. We consider this
emission to be related to the radio emission from other X-ray binaries, and is
most likely associated with an ejection of material from the system. No radio
emission was detected at later epochs, indicating that if SAX J1808.4-3658 is a
radio pulsar during X-ray quiescence then its monochromatic luminosity must be
less than L(1.4 GHz) ~6 mJy/kpc^2.Comment: 6 pages, uses emulateapj.sty, one embedded PS figure. Accepted to ApJ
Letter
Phenomenological constitutive model for a CNT turf
AbstractCarbon nanotubes (CNT), grown on a substrate, form a turf – a complex structure of intertwined, mostly nominally vertical tubes, cross-linked by adhesive contact and few bracing tubes. The turfs are compliant and good thermal and electrical conductors. In this paper, we consider the micromechanical analysis of the turf deformation reported earlier, and develop a phenomenological constitutive model of the turf. We benchmark the developed model using a finite element implementation and compare the model predictions to the results two different nanoindentation tests.The model includes: nonlinear elastic deformation, small Kelvin–Voigt type relaxation, caused by the thermally activated sliding of contacts, and adhesive contact between the turf and the indenter. The pre-existing (locked-in) strain energy of bent nanotubes produces a high initial tangent modulus, followed by an order of magnitude decrease in the tangent modulus with increasing deformation. The strong adhesion between the turf and indenter tip is due to the van der Waals interactions.The finite element simulations capture the results from the nanoindentation experiments, including the loading, unloading, viscoelastic relaxation during hold, and adhesive pull-off
Analysis of Senior-Subordinated Structures Backed by Private-Label Mortgages
This paper does a valuation analysis of senior-subordinated struc ture tranches backed by non-agency mortgages. The valuation is done using Monte Carlo simulation and employs the CIR interest rate process in conjunction with an empirical model estimated for non-agency mortgage prepayments and defaults. The sensitivity of the value of tranches to a number of variables are analyzed. We find that the interest rate process parameters significantly affect prepayments and defaults but not the relative value of the senior tranche. It is found that with the shifting o f prepayments, the senior tranche does not dominate all the junior tranches at all interest rates. The shifting of prepayments has the unintended effect of providing stability to the junior tranches by making their cashflows less sensitive to prepayments. Our main conclusion is that while the shifting o f prepayments increases protection from default to the senior tranche for a given level of subordination, it has the unwanted effect of lowering its value through increased contraction risk. This value loss should be taken into account in determining the optimum level of subordination
Self-consistency of relativistic observables with general relativity in the white dwarf-neutron star binary pulsar PSR J1141-6545
Here we report timing measurements of the relativistic binary pulsar PSR
J1141-6545 that constrain the component masses and demonstrate that the orbital
period derivative \dot Pb = (-4+/-1)x10^-13 is consistent with gravitational
wave emission as described by the general theory of relativity. The mass of the
neutron star and its companion are 1.30+/-0.02 Mo and 0.986+/-0.020 Mo
respectively, suggesting a white dwarf companion, and extending the range of
systems for which general relativity provides a correct description. On
evolutionary grounds, the progenitor mass of PSR J1141-6545 should be near the
minimum for neutron star production. Its mass is two standard deviations below
the mean of the other neutron stars, suggesting a relationship between
progenitor and remnant masses.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, revised version to Ap J Letter
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