4,826 research outputs found
The transitional millisecond pulsar IGR J18245-2452 during its 2013 outburst at X-rays and soft gamma-rays
IGR~J18245--2452/PSR J1824--2452I is one of the rare transitional accreting
millisecond X-ray pulsars, showing direct evidence of switches between states
of rotation powered radio pulsations and accretion powered X-ray pulsations,
dubbed transitional pulsars. IGR~J18245--2452 is the only transitional pulsar
so far to have shown a full accretion episode, reaching an X-ray luminosity of
~erg~s permitting its discovery with INTEGRAL in 2013. In
this paper, we report on a detailed analysis of the data collected with the
IBIS/ISGRI and the two JEM-X monitors on-board INTEGRAL at the time of the 2013
outburst. We make use of some complementary data obtained with the instruments
on-board XMM-Newton and Swift in order to perform the averaged broad-band
spectral analysis of the source in the energy range 0.4 -- 250~keV. We have
found that this spectrum is the hardest among the accreting millisecond X-ray
pulsars. We improved the ephemeris, now valid across its full outburst, and
report the detection of pulsed emission up to keV in both the ISGRI
() and Fermi/GBM () bandpass. The alignment of the
ISGRI and Fermi GBM 20 -- 60 keV pulse profiles are consistent at a $\sim25\
\mu$s level. We compared the pulse profiles obtained at soft X-rays with \xmm\
with the soft \gr-ray ones, and derived the pulsed fractions of the fundamental
and first harmonic, as well as the time lag of the fundamental harmonic, up to
s, as a function of energy. We report on a thermonuclear X-ray burst
detected with \Integ, and using the properties of the previously type-I X-ray
burst, we show that all these events are powered primarily by helium ignited at
a depth of g cm. For such a helium
burst the estimated recurrence time of d is in
agreement with the observations.Comment: 10 pages, 6 Figures, 3 Tables Astronomy and Astrophysics Journal,
accepted for publication on the 13th of April 201
Dispatcher3 D1.1 - Technical resources and problem definition
This deliverable starts with the proposal of Dispatcher3 and incorporates the development produced during the first five months of the project: activities on different workpackages, interaction with Topic Manager and Project Officer, and input received during the first Advisory Board meeting and follow up
consultations.
This deliverable presents the definition of Dispatcher3 concept and methodology. It includes the high level the requirements of the prototype, preliminary data requirements, preliminary technical infrastructure requirements, preliminary data processing and analytic techniques identification and a preliminary definition of scenarios.
The deliverable aims at defining the view of the consortium on the project at these early stages, incorporating the feedback obtained from the Advisory Board and highlighting the further activities required to define some of the aspects of the project
Satellite material contaminant optical properties
The Air Force Wright Research and Development Center and the Arnold Engineering Development Center are continuing a program for measuring optical effects of satellite material outgassing products on cryo-optic surfaces. Presented here are infrared (4000 to 700 cm(-1)) transmittance data for contaminant films condensed on a 77 K geranium window. From the transmittance data, the contaminant film refractive and absorptive indices (n, k) were derived using an analytical thin-film interference model with a nonlinear least-squares algorithm. To date 19 materials have been studied with the optical contents determined for 13 of those. The materials include adhesives, paints, composites, films, and lubricants. This program is continuing and properties for other materials will be available in the future
Localized states and interaction induced delocalization in Bose gases with quenched disorder
Very diluted Bose gas placed into a disordered environment falls into a
fragmented localized state. At some critical density the repulsion between
particles overcomes the disorder. The gas transits into a coherent superfluid
state. In this article the geometrical and energetic characteristics of the
localized state at zero temperature and the critical density at which the
quantum phase transition from the localized to the superfluid state proceeds
are found.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figur
Finding Gravitational Lenses With X-rays
There are , 0.1 and 0.01 gravitationally lensed X-ray sources per
square degree with soft X-ray fluxes exceeding and
respectively. These sources will be detected
serendipitously with the Chandra X-ray Observatory at a rate of 1--3 lenses per
year of high resolution imaging. The low detection rate is due to the small
area over which the HRC and ACIS cameras have the <1\farcs5 FWHM resolution
necessary to find gravitational lenses produced by galaxies. Deep images of
rich clusters at intermediate redshifts should yield one wide separation
(\Delta\theta \gtorder 5\farcs0) multiply-imaged background X-ray source for
every , 30 and 300 clusters imaged to the same flux limits.Comment: 13 pages, including 5 figures, submitted to ApJ Letter
Density of states in an optical speckle potential
We study the single particle density of states of a one-dimensional speckle
potential, which is correlated and non-Gaussian. We consider both the repulsive
and the attractive cases. The system is controlled by a single dimensionless
parameter determined by the mass of the particle, the correlation length and
the average intensity of the field. Depending on the value of this parameter,
the system exhibits different regimes, characterized by the localization
properties of the eigenfunctions. We calculate the corresponding density of
states using the statistical properties of the speckle potential. We find good
agreement with the results of numerical simulations.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, revtex
Kinematics and Magnetic Properties of a Light Bridge in a Decaying Sunspot
We present the results obtained by analyzing high spatial and spectral
resolution data of the solar photosphere acquired by the CRisp Imaging
SpectroPolarimeter at the Swedish Solar Telescope on 6 August 2011, relevant to
a large sunspot with a light bridge (LB) observed in NOAA AR 11263. These data
are complemented by simultaneous Hinode Spectropolarimeter (SP) observation in
the Fe I 630.15 nm and 630.25 nm lines. The continuum intensity map shows a
discontinuity of the radial distribution of the penumbral filaments in
correspondence with the LB, which shows a dark lane (about 0.3" wide and about
8.0" long) along its main axis. The available data were inverted with the
Stokes Inversion based on Response functions (SIR) code and physical parameters
maps were obtained. The line-of-sight (LOS) velocity of the plasma along the LB
derived from the Doppler effect shows motions towards and away from the
observer up to 0.6 km/s, which are lower in value than the LOS velocities
observed in the neighbouring penumbral filaments. The noteworthy result is that
we find motions toward the observer up to 0.6 km/s in the dark lane where the
LB is located between two umbral cores, while the LOS velocity motion toward
the observer is strongly reduced where the LB is located between an umbral core
at one side and penumbral filaments on the other side. Statistically, the LOS
velocities correspond to upflows/downflows andcomparing these results with
Hinode/SP data, we conclude that the surrounding magnetic field configuration
(whether more or less inclined) could have a role in maintaining the conditions
for the process of plasma piling up along the dark lane. The results obtained
from our study support and confirm outcomes of recent magnetohydro-dynamic
simulations showing upflows along the main axis of a LBs
Spectroscopic Redshifts for Seven Lens Galaxies
We report VLT observations of 11 lensed quasars, designed to measure the
redshifts of their lens galaxies. We successfully determined the redshifts for
seven systems, five of which were previously unknown. The securely measured
redshifts for the lensing galaxies are: HE0047-1756 z=0.408; PMNJ0134-0931
z=0.766; HE0230-2130 z=0.522; HE0435-1223 z=0.455; SDSS0924+021 z=0.393;
LBQS1009-025 z=0.871; and WFIJ2033-472 z=0.658. For four additional systems
(BRI0952-0115, Q1017-207, Q1355-2257 and PMNJ1632-003) we estimate tentative
redshifts based on some features in their spectra.Comment: 8 pages, ApJ, submitte
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