84,489 research outputs found
INTEGRAL observations of five sources in the Galactic Center region
A number of new X-ray sources (IGR J17091-3624, IGR/XTE J17391-3021, IGR
J17464-3213 (= XTE J17464-3213 = H 1743-322), IGR J17597-2201, SAX/IGR
J18027-2017) have been observed with the INTEGRAL observatory during ultra deep
exposure of the Galactic Center region in August-September 2003. Most of them
were permanently visible by the INTEGRAL at energies higher than keV,
but IGR/XTE J17391-3021 was observed only during its flaring activity with a
flux maximum of mCrab. IGR J17091-3624, IGR J17464-3213 and IGR
J17597-2201 were detected up to -150 keV. In this paper we present
the analysis of INTEGRAL observations of these sources to determine the nature
of these objects. We conclude that all of them have a galactic origin. Two
sources are black hole candidates (IGR J17091-3624 and IGR J17464-3213), one is
an LMXB neutron star binary (presumably an X-ray burster) and two other sources
(IGR J17597-2201 and SAX/IGR J18027-2017) are neutron stars in high mass
binaries; one of them (SAX/IGR J18027-2017) is an accreting X-ray pulsar.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in A&
Chandra observations of the bursting X-ray transient SAX J1747.0-2853 during low-level accretion activity
We present Chandra/ACIS observations of the bursting X-ray transient SAX
J1747.0-2853 performed on 18 July 2001. We detected a bright source at the
position of R.A = 17^h 47^m 02.60^s and Dec. = -28 52' 58.9'' (J2000.0; with a
1 sigma error of ~0.7 arcseconds), consistent with the BeppoSAX and ASCA
positions of SAX J1747.0-2853 and with the Ariel V position of the transient GX
+0.2,-0.2, which was active during the 1970's. The 0.5-10 keV luminosity of the
source during our observations was ~3 x 10^{35} erg/s (assuming a distance of 9
kpc) demonstrating that the source was in a low-level accretion state. We also
report on the long-term light curve of the source as observed with the all sky
monitor aboard the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. After the initial 1998
outburst, two more outbursts (in 2000 and 2001) were detected with peak
luminosities about two orders of magnitude larger than our Chandra luminosity.
Our Chandra observation falls in-between those two outbursts, making the
outburst history for SAX J1747.0-2853 complex. Those bright 2000 and 2001
outbursts combined with the likely extended period of low level activity
in-between those outbursts strongly suggest that the classification of SAX
J1747.0-2853 as a faint X-ray transient was premature. It might be possible
that the other faint X-ray transients also can exhibit bright, extended
outbursts which would eliminate the need for a separate sub-class of X-ray
transients. We discuss our results also in the context of the behavior of X-ray
binaries accreting at low levels with luminosities around 10^{35} erg/s, a
poorly studied accretion rate regime.Comment: Accepte for publication in ApJ, 11 July 200
Variability in the Thermal Emission from Accreting Neutron Star Transients
The composition of the outer 100 m of a neutron star sets the heat flux that
flows outwards from the core. For an accreting neutron star in an X-ray
transient, the thermal quiescent flux depends sensitively on the amount of
hydrogen and helium remaining on the surface after an accretion outburst and on
the composition of the underlying ashes of previous H/He burning. Because H/He
has a higher thermal conductivity, a larger mass of H/He implies a shallower
thermal gradient through the low density envelope and hence a higher effective
temperature for a given core temperature. The mass of residual H and He varies
from outburst to outburst, so the thermal quiescent flux is variable even
though the core temperature is constant for timescales < 10 000 yr. Heavy
elements settle from a H/He envelope in a few hours; we therefore model the
quiescent envelope as two distinct layers, H/He over heavier elements, and
treat the mass of H/He as a free parameter. We find that the emergent thermal
quiescent flux can vary by a factor of 2 to 3 between different quiescent
epochs. The variation is more pronounced at lower interior temperatures, making
systems with low quiescent luminosities and frequent outbursts, such as SAX
J1808.4-3658, ideal candidates from which to observe this effect. We compute,
for different ash compositions, the interior temperatures of Cen X-4, Aql X-1,
and SAX J1808.4-3658. In the case of Aql X-1, the inferred high interior
temperature suggests that neutrino cooling contributes to the neutron star's
thermal balance.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, uses emulateapj5 and psnfss fonts. To be
published in The Astrophysical Journa
X-ray emission in the direction of the SNR G318.2+0.1
We report the discovery of three X-ray sources within the radio shell G318.2+0.1, one of which may be extended. Two of the sources were detected during the \sax Galactic Plane Survey and one was found in archival \ros data. The fainter \sax source is coincident with an ultra-compact galactic H~{\sc ii} region, and we discuss the possibility that it can be a flaring young stellar object, while the other \sax source has no obvious counterpart. The PSPC source is consistent with emission from a foreground star. The hard spectrum of the brighter \sax source is consistent with a non-thermal origin, although a thermal nature cannot be formally excluded. If this source is associated with G318.2+0.1, then its hard spectrum suggests that it may be site of non-thermal electron acceleration
Discovery of SAX J1753.5-2349 and SAX J1806.5-2215: two X-ray bursters without detectable steady emission
We report the discovery with BeppoSAX-WFC of two new X-ray sources that were
only seen during bursts: SAX J1753.5-2349 and SAX J1806.5-2215. For both
sources, no steady emission was detected above an upper limit of 5 mCrab (2 to
8 keV) for 3 10**5 s around the burst events. The single burst detected from
SAX J1753.5-2349 shows spectral softening and a black body color temperature of
2.0 keV. Following the analogy with bursts in other sources the burst very
likely originates in a thermonuclear flash on a neutron star. The first of two
burst detected from SAX J1806.5-2215 does not show spectral softening and
cannot be confirmed as a thermonuclear flash.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Proceedings of the Symposium
"The Active X-Ray Sky: Results from BeppoSAX and Rossi-XTE", Rome, Italy,
21-24 October, 1997, Nuclear Physics B Proceedings Supplements. Eds. L.
Scarsi, H. Bradt, P. Giommi, and F. Fior
Briefs
Lee Bollinger speaks at a national workshop on television and violent behavior; Yale Kamisar publishes essays in the volume Police Interrogation and Confessions: Essays in Law and Policy; Professor Joseph Sax appointed Philip A. Hart Distinguished Professorship of Law; notes on the Law Quadrangle\u27s shape and architecture; Donald H. Regan recieves 1982 Franklin J. Machette Prize from the American Philosophical Association; Law School gets three new chairs, Professors James J. White, Jerold H. Israel, and John H. Jackson; List of visiting facult
Discovery of a large and bright bow shock nebula associated with low mass X-ray binary SAX J1712.6-3739
In a multiwavelength program dedicated to identifying optical counterparts of
faint persistent X-ray sources in the Galactic Bulge, we find an accurate X-ray
position of SAX J1712.6-3739 through Chandra observations, and discover its
faint optical counterpart using our data from EFOSC2 on the ESO 3.6m telescope.
We find this source to be a highly extincted neutron star LMXB with blue
optical colours. We serendipitously discover a relatively bright and large bow
shock shaped nebula in our deep narrowband H alpha imaging, most likely
associated with the X-ray binary. A nebula like this has never been observed
before in association with a LMXB, and as such provides a unique laboratory to
study the energetics of accretion and jets. We put forward different models to
explain the possible ways the LMXB may form this nebulosity, and outline how
they can be confirmed observationally.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS-Letters; 5 pages, 4 figures, 2
tables. Quality of figure 2 downgraded because of arXiv file size limit
Briefs
Law library addition to be dedicated in October; U-M is a leader in law teacher output; Wade H. McCree Jr. joins U-M Law Faculty; Gerald Rosberg spends year at State Department; some U-M students espouse more than just the law; Joseph Sax receives environmental awards; Vining inaugurates Windsor Lecture; Thomas Green gives UCLA\u27s Clark Lecture; Proffitt speaks at New Deans Workshop ; U-M Environmentalists recommend against toxic waste liability; visiting professors have varied expertis
An Environmental Common Law for Michigan
Extracts from testimony before the Committee on Conservation and Recreation, Michigan House of Representatives, on H. B. 3055, January 21 1970. The bill authorizes the Attorney General, local governments and private citizens to go to court and challenge activities which infring the right of the public to a clean, healthy, and attractive environment. Courts are empowered to take evidence in such cases and to enter orders prohibiting or modifying conduct that is shown to impair or threaten the quality of the environment. In 1969 the Western Michigan Environmental Action Council retained Professor Sax to draft a model environmental quality bill. H. B. 3055 incorporates the provisions of that model bill
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