119 research outputs found
Unveiling Soft Gamma-Ray Repeaters with INTEGRAL
Thanks to INTEGRAL's long exposures of the Galactic Plane, the two brightest
Soft Gamma-Ray Repeaters, SGR 1806-20 and SGR 1900+14, have been monitored and
studied in detail for the first time at hard-X/soft gamma rays.
This has produced a wealth of new scientific results, which we will review
here. Since SGR 1806-20 was particularly active during the last two years, more
than 300 short bursts have been observed with INTEGRAL. and their
characteristics have been studied with unprecedented sensitivity in the 15-200
keV range. A hardness-intensity anticorrelation within the bursts has been
discovered and the overall Number-Intensity distribution of the bursts has been
determined. In addition, a particularly active state, during which ~100 bursts
were emitted in ~10 minutes, has been observed on October 5 2004, indicating
that the source activity was rapidly increasing. This eventually led to the
Giant Flare of December 27th 2004, for which a possible soft gamma-ray (>80
keV) early afterglow has been detected.
The deep observations allowed us to discover the persistent emission in hard
X-rays (20-150 keV) from 1806-20 and 1900+14, the latter being in a quiescent
state, and to directly compare the spectral characteristics of all Magnetars
(two SGRs and three Anomalous X-ray Pulsars) detected with INTEGRAL.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, Presented at the conference "Isolated Neutron
Stars: from the Surface to the Interior", London, UK, 24-28 April 200
Magnetar outbursts: an observational review
Transient outbursts from magnetars have shown to be a key property of their
emission, and one of the main way to discover new sources of this class. From
the discovery of the first transient event around 2003, we now count about a
dozen of outbursts, which increased the number of these strongly magnetic
neutron stars by a third in six years. Magnetar outbursts might involve their
multi-band emission resulting in an increased activity from radio to hard
X-ray, usually with a soft X-ray flux increasing by a factor of 10-1000 with
respect to the quiescent level. A connected X-ray spectral evolution is also
often observed, with a spectral softening during the outburst decay. The flux
decay times vary a lot from source to source, ranging from a few weeks to
several years, as also the decay law which can be exponential-like, a power-law
or even multiple power-laws can be required to model the flux decrease. We
review here on the latest observational results on the multi-band emission of
magnetars, and summarize one by one all the transient events which could be
studied to date from these sources.Comment: 34 pages, 6 figures. Chapter of the Springer Book ASSP 7395
"High-energy emission from pulsars and their systems", proceeding of the Sant
Cugat Forum on Astrophysics (12-16 April 2010). Review updated to January
201
Relativistic wave equations for interacting massive particles with arbitrary half-intreger spins
New formulation of relativistic wave equations (RWE) for massive particles
with arbitrary half-integer spins s interacting with external electromagnetic
fields are proposed. They are based on wave functions which are irreducible
tensors of rank n=s-\frac12$) antisymmetric w.r.t. n pairs of indices,
whose components are bispinors. The form of RWE is straightforward and free of
inconsistencies associated with the other approaches to equations describing
interacting higher spin particles
The Upper Limit of Magnetic Field Strength in Dense Stellar Hadronic Matter
It is shown that in strongly magnetized neutron stars, there exist upper
limits of magnetic field strength, beyond which the self energies for both
neutron and proton components of neutron star matter become complex in nature.
As a consequence they decay within the strong interaction time scale. However,
in the ultra-strong magnetic field case, when the zeroth Landau level is only
occupied by protons, the system again becomes stable against strong decay.Comment: 6 pages Revtex, 2 .eps figures, fig.(1) is not include
Magnetoluminescence
Pulsar Wind Nebulae, Blazars, Gamma Ray Bursts and Magnetars all contain
regions where the electromagnetic energy density greatly exceeds the plasma
energy density. These sources exhibit dramatic flaring activity where the
electromagnetic energy distributed over large volumes, appears to be converted
efficiently into high energy particles and gamma-rays. We call this general
process magnetoluminescence. Global requirements on the underlying, extreme
particle acceleration processes are described and the likely importance of
relativistic beaming in enhancing the observed radiation from a flare is
emphasized. Recent research on fluid descriptions of unstable electromagnetic
configurations are summarized and progress on the associated kinetic
simulations that are needed to account for the acceleration and radiation is
discussed. Future observational, simulation and experimental opportunities are
briefly summarized.Comment: To appear in "Jets and Winds in Pulsar Wind Nebulae, Gamma-ray Bursts
and Blazars: Physics of Extreme Energy Release" of the Space Science Reviews
serie
Study protocol; Thyroid hormone Replacement for Untreated older adults with Subclinical hypothyroidism - a randomised placebo controlled Trial (TRUST).
Subclinical hypothyroidism (SCH) is a common condition in elderly people, defined as elevated serum thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) with normal circulating free thyroxine (fT4). Evidence is lacking about the effect of thyroid hormone treatment. We describe the protocol of a large randomised controlled trial (RCT) of Levothyroxine treatment for SCH.
Participants are community-dwelling subjects aged â„65 years with SCH, diagnosed by elevated TSH levels (â„4.6 and â€19.9 mU/L) on a minimum of two measuresââ„âthree months apart, with fT4 levels within laboratory reference range. The study is a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled parallel group trial, starting with levothyroxine 50 micrograms daily (25 micrograms in subjects <50Kg body weight or known coronary heart disease) with titration of dose in the active treatment group according to TSH level, and a mock titration in the placebo group. The primary outcomes are changes in two domains (hypothyroid symptoms and fatigue / vitality) on the thyroid-related quality of life questionnaire (ThyPRO) at one year. The study has 80% power (at pâ=â0.025, 2-tailed) to detect a change with levothyroxine treatment of 3.0% on the hypothyroid scale and 4.1% on the fatigue / vitality scale with a total target sample size of 750 patients. Secondary outcomes include general health-related quality of life (EuroQol), fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events, handgrip strength, executive cognitive function (Letter Digit Coding Test), basic and instrumental activities of daily living, haemoglobin, blood pressure, weight, body mass index and waist circumference. Patients are monitored for specific adverse events of interest including incident atrial fibrillation, heart failure and bone fracture.
This large multicentre RCT of levothyroxine treatment of subclinical hypothyroidism is powered to detect clinically relevant change in symptoms / quality of life and is likely to be highly influential in guiding treatment of this common condition.
Clinicaltrials.gov NCT01660126 ; registered 8th June 2012
High frequency oscillations during magnetar flares
The recent discovery of high frequency oscillations during giant flares from
the Soft Gamma Repeaters SGR 1806-20 and SGR 1900+14 may be the first direct
detection of vibrations in a neutron star crust. If this interpretation is
correct it offers a novel means of testing the neutron star equation of state,
crustal breaking strain, and magnetic field configuration. We review the
observational data on the magnetar oscillations, including new timing analysis
of the SGR 1806-20 giant flare using data from the Ramaty High Energy Solar
Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) and the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). We
discuss the implications for the study of neutron star structure and crust
thickness, and outline areas for future investigation.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of the conference
"Isolated Neutron Stars: from the Interior to the Surface" (April 2006,
London), eds. D. Page, R. Turolla, & S. Zane, Astrophysics & Space Science in
pres
Extrapolating SMBH correlations down the mass scale: the case for IMBHs in globular clusters
Empirical evidence for both stellar mass black holes M_bh<10^2 M_sun) and
supermassive black holes (SMBHs, M_bh>10^5 M_sun) is well established.
Moreover, every galaxy with a bulge appears to host a SMBH, whose mass is
correlated with the bulge mass, and even more strongly with the central stellar
velocity dispersion sigma_c, the `M-sigma' relation. On the other hand,
evidence for "intermediate-mass" black holes (IMBHs, with masses in the range
1^2 - 10^5 M_sun) is relatively sparse, with only a few mass measurements
reported in globular clusters (GCs), dwarf galaxies and low-mass AGNs. We
explore the question of whether globular clusters extend the M-sigma
relationship for galaxies to lower black hole masses and find that available
data for globular clusters are consistent with the extrapolation of this
relationship. We use this extrapolated M-sigma relationship to predict the
putative black hole masses of those globular clusters where existence of
central IMBH was proposed. We discuss how globular clusters can be used as a
constraint on theories making specific predictions for the low-mass end of the
M-sigma relation.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysics and
Space Science; fixed typos and a quote in Sec.
On the Crustal Matter of Magnetars
We have investigated some of the properties of dense sub-nuclear matter at
the crustal region (both the outer crust and the inner crust region) of a
magnetar. The relativistic version of Thomas-Fermi (TF) model is used in
presence of strong quantizing magnetic field for the outer crust matter. The
compressed matter in the outer crust, which is a crystal of metallic iron, is
replaced by a regular array of spherically symmetric Wigner-Seitz (WS) cells.
In the inner crust region, a mixture of iron and heavier neutron rich nuclei
along with electrons and free neutrons has been considered. Conventional
Harrison-Wheeler (HW) and Bethe-Baym-Pethick (BBP) equation of states are used
for the nuclear mass formula. A lot of significant changes in the
characteristic properties of dense crustal matter, both at the outer crust and
the inner crust, have been observed.Comment: 29 pages REVTEX manuscript, 15 .eps figures (included
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