29,889 research outputs found

    A parents group and its relation to the problem of mental retardation

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    Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit

    Akn 564: an unusual component in the X-ray spectra of NLSy1 galaxies

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    We present an ASCA observation of the NLSy1 Ark 564. The X-ray light curve shows rapid variability, but no evidence for energy-dependence to these variations, within the 0.6 -- 10 keV bandpass. A strong (EW ~ 70 eV) spectral feature is observed close to 1 keV. A similar feature has been observed in TON S180 (another NLSy1) but has not been observed in broad-line Seyfert galaxies. The feature energy suggests a large contribution from Fe L-shell lines but its intensity is difficult to explain in terms of emission and/or absorption from photoionized gas. Models based on gas in thermal equilibrium with kT ~1 keV provide an alternative parameterization of the soft spectrum. The latter may be interpreted as the hot intercloud medium, undergoing rapid cooling and producing strong Fe L-shell recombination lines. In all cases the physical conditions are rather different from those observed in broad-line Seyferts. The hard X-ray spectrum shows a broad and asymmetric Fe Kalpha line of large equivalent width (~550 eV) which can be explained by a neutral disk viewed at ~ 60 degrees to the line-of-sight, contrary to the hypothesis that NLSy1s are viewed pole-on. The large EW of this line, the strong 1 keV emission and the strong optical Fe emission lines all suggest an extreme Fe abundance in this and perhaps other NLSy1s.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. LaTeX with encapsulated postscript. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa

    X-ray spectrum of the high polarization quasar PKS 1510-089

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    We present results on the X-ray spectra of the radio-loud, high-polarization quasar, PKS 1510-089, based on new data obtained using ASCA, and from archival ROSAT data. The X-ray spectrum obtained by ASCA is unusually hard, with the photon index=1.30+-0.06, while the (non-simultaneous) ROSAT data indicate a steeper spectrum (1.9+-0.3). The X-ray flux at 1 keV is within 10% during both observations. A break in the underlying continuum at about 0.7 keV is suggested. Flat X-ray spectra seem to be the characteristic of high polarization quasars, and their spectra also appear to be harder than that of the other radio-loud but low-polarization quasars. The multiwavelength spectrum of PKS 1510-089 is similar to many other gamma-ray blazars, suggesting the emission is dominated by that from a relativistic jet. A big blue-bump is also seen in its multiwavelength spectrum, suggesting the presence of a strong thermal component as well.Comment: 19 pages (Latex + 5 ps figures), Accpeted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal, December 20, 199

    Characterizations of probability distributions via bivariate regression of record values

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    Bairamov et al. (Aust N Z J Stat 47:543-547, 2005) characterize the exponential distribution in terms of the regression of a function of a record value with its adjacent record values as covariates. We extend these results to the case of non-adjacent covariates. We also consider a more general setting involving monotone transformations. As special cases, we present characterizations involving weighted arithmetic, geometric, and harmonic means.Comment: accepted in Metrik

    How `hot' are mixed quantum states?

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    Given a mixed quantum state ρ\rho of a qudit, we consider any observable MM as a kind of `thermometer' in the following sense. Given a source which emits pure states with these or those distributions, we select such distributions that the appropriate average value of the observable MM is equal to the average TrMρM\rho of MM in the stare ρ\rho. Among those distributions we find the most typical one, namely, having the highest differential entropy. We call this distribution conditional Gibbs ensemble as it turns out to be a Gibbs distribution characterized by a temperature-like parameter β\beta. The expressions establishing the liaisons between the density operator ρ\rho and its temperature parameter β\beta are provided. Within this approach, the uniform mixed state has the highest `temperature', which tends to zero as the state in question approaches to a pure state.Comment: Contribution to Quantum 2006: III workshop ad memoriam of Carlo Novero: Advances in Foundations of Quantum Mechanics and Quantum Information with atoms and photons. 2-5 May 2006 - Turin, Ital

    Large spin behavior of anomalous dimensions and short-long strings duality

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    We are considering the semi-classical string soliton solution of Gubser, Klebanov and Polyakov which represents highly excited states on the leading Regge trajectory, with large spin in AdS5AdS_5. A prescription relates this soliton solution with the corresponding field theory operators with many covariant derivatives, whose anomalous scaling dimension grows logarithmically with the space-time spin. We explicitly derive the dependence of anomalous dimension on spin for all leading and next-to-leading orders at strong coupling. We develop an iteration procedure which, in principle, allows to derive all terms in the large spin expansion of the anomalous scaling dimension of twist two operators. Our string theory results are consistent with the conjectured "reciprocity" relation, which has been verified to hold in perturbation theory up to five loops in N=4 SYM. We also derive a duality relation between long and short strings.Comment: 15 pages, 1 figure, comments and references adde

    ASCA observations of type-2 Seyfert galaxies: II. The Importance of X-ray Scattering and Reflection

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    We discuss the importance of X-ray scattering and Compton reflection in type-2 Seyfert galaxies, based upon the analysis of ASCA observations of 25 such sources. Consideration of the iron Kalpha, [O III] line and X-ray variability suggest that NGC 1068, NGC 4945, NGC 2992, Mrk 3, Mrk 463E and Mrk 273 are dominated by reprocessed X-rays. We examine the properties of these sources in more detail. We find that the iron Kalpha complex contains significant contributions from neutral and high-ionization species of iron. Compton reflection, hot gas and starburst emission all appear to make significant contributions to the observed X-ray spectra. Mrk 3 is the only source in this subsample which does not have a significant starburst contamination. The ASCA spectrum below 3 keV is dominated by hot scattering gas with U_X ~ 5, N_H ~ 4 x 10^23 cm^-2. This material is more highly ionized than the zone of material comprising the warm absorber seen in Seyfert~1 galaxies, but may contain a contribution from shock-heated gas associated with the jet. Estimates of the X-ray scattering fraction cover 0.25 - 5%. The spectrum above 3 keV appears to be dominated by a Compton reflection component although there is evidence that the primary continuum component becomes visible close to 10 keV.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures. LaTeX with encapsulated postscript. To appear in the Astrophysical Journal. Also available via http://lheawww.gsfc.nasa.gov/~george/papers/gnt_s2p2/abstract.htm

    Analysis of the second order exchange self energy of a dense electron gas

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    We investigate the evaluation of the six-fold integral representation for the second order exchange contribution to the self energy of a three dimensional electron gas at the Fermi surface.Comment: 6 page
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