1,336 research outputs found
High resolution threshold photoelectron spectroscopy by electron attachment
A system is provided for determining the stable energy levels of a species ion, of an atomic, molecular, or radical type, by application of ionizing energy of a predetermined level, such as through photoionization. The system adds a trapping gas to the gaseous species to provide a technique for detection of the energy levels. The electrons emitted from ionized species are captured by the trapping gas, only if the electrons have substantially zero kinetic energy. If the electrons have nearly zero energy, they are absorbed by the trapping gas to produce negative ions of the trapping gas that can be detected by a mass spectrometer. The applied energies (i.e. light frequencies) at which large quantities of trapping gas ions are detected, are the stable energy levels of the positive ion of the species. SF6 and CFCl3 have the narrowest acceptance bands, so that when they are used as the trapping gas, they bind electrons only when the electrons have very close to zero kinetic energy
Flux and Photon Spectral Index Distributions of Fermi-LAT Blazars And Contribution To The Extragalactic Gamma-ray Background
We present a determination of the distributions of photon spectral index and
gamma-ray flux - the so called LogN-LogS relation - for the 352 blazars
detected with a greater than approximately seven sigma detection threshold and
located above +/- 20 degrees Galactic latitude by the Large Area Telescope of
the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope in its first year catalog. Because the flux
detection threshold depends on the photon index, the observed raw distributions
do not provide the true LogN-LogS counts or the true distribution of the photon
index. We use the non-parametric methods developed by Efron and Petrosian to
reconstruct the intrinsic distributions from the observed ones which account
for the data truncations introduced by observational bias and includes the
effects of the possible correlation between the two variables. We demonstrate
the robustness of our procedures using a simulated data set of blazars and then
apply these to the real data and find that for the population as a whole the
intrinsic flux distribution can be represented by a broken power law with high
and low indexes of -2.37 +/- 0.13 and -1.70 +/- 0.26, respectively, and the
intrinsic photon index distribution can be represented by a Gaussian with mean
of 2.41 +/- 0.13 and width of 0.25 +/- 0.03. We also find the intrinsic
distributions for the sub-populations of BL Lac and FSRQs type blazars
separately. We then calculate the contribution of Fermi blazars to the diffuse
extragalactic gamma-ray background radiation. Under the assumption that the
flux distribution of blazars continues to arbitrarily low fluxes, we calculate
the best fit contribution of all blazars to the total extragalactic gamma-ray
output to be 60%, with a large uncertainty.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables, updated to published version with
additional figure
Flaring gamma-ray emission from high redshift blazars
High redshift blazars are among the most powerful objects in the Universe.
Although they represent a significant fraction of the extragalactic hard X-ray
sky, they are not commonly detected in gamma-rays. High redshift (z>2) objects
represent <10 per cent of the AGN population observed by Fermi so far, and
gamma-ray flaring activity from these sources is even more uncommon. The
characterization of the radio-to-gamma-ray properties of high redshift blazars
represent a powerful tool for the study of both the energetics of such extreme
objects and the Extragalactic Background Light. We present results of a
multi-band campaign on TXS 0536+145, which is the highest redshift flaring
gamma-ray blazar detected so far. At the peak of the flare the source reached
an apparent isotropic gamma-ray luminosity of 6.6x10^49 erg/s, which is
comparable with the luminosity observed from the most powerful blazars. The
physical properties derived from the multi-wavelength observations are then
compared with those shown by the high redshift population. In addition
preliminary results from the high redshift flaring blazar PKS 2149-306 will be
discussed.Comment: 2014 Fermi Symposium proceedings - eConf C14102.
Atomic carbon in the upper atmosphere of Titan
The atomic carbon emission C I line feature at 1657 Ă
(^(3)P^(0)_(J) -^(3)P_J ) in the upper atmosphere of Titan is first identified from the airglow spectra obtained by the Cassini Ultra-violet Imaging Spectrograph. A one-dimensional photochemical model of Titan is used to study the photochemistry of atomic carbon on Titan. Reaction between CH and atomic hydrogen is the major source of atomic carbon, and reactions with hydrocarbons (C_2H_2 and C_2H_4) are the most important loss processes. Resonance scattering of sunlight by atomic carbon is the dominant emission mechanism. The emission intensity calculations based on model results show good agreement with the observations
Laboratory studies of uv emissions of H_2 by electron impact. The Werner- and Lyman-band systems
We report a laboratory measurement of absolute emission cross sections of both the Lyman bands (B^1ÎŁ_u^+âX^1ÎŁ_g^+) and Werner bands (C^1Î _uâX^1Î _g^+) of H_2 by electron impact over the energy range from threshold to 400 eV with the same optical system. We find the emission cross section for the B^1ÎŁ_u^+âX^1ÎŁ_g^+ transition at 100 eV to be (3.55±0.8) Ă 10^(â17) cm^2 (2.7 Ă 10^(â17) cm^2, direct excitation, 0.85 Ă 10^(â17) cm^2, cascading) and the emission cross section for the C^1Î _uâX^1ÎŁ_g^+ transition at 100 eV to be (3.1±0.6) Ă 10^(â17) cm^2 (cascading is estimated to be not present). The cross-section ratio Qc/Qb for direct excitation is 1.21±0.30 at 300 eV in excellent agreement with published values for this ratio from theoretical calculations and experimental data of the optical oscillator strengths. We measure the cross section for cascading to the B state to be 24±10% of the total emission cross section both at 100 and 300 eV. We show that cascading increases to 51±20% of the total cross section of the B state at 20 eV. The vibrational population distribution of the B state is found to be a function of electron-impact energy as the importance of cascading relative to direct excitation changes with electron-impact energy
A -ray determination of the Universe's star-formation history
The light emitted by all galaxies over the history of the Universe produces
the extragalactic background light (EBL) at ultraviolet, optical, and infrared
wavelengths. The EBL is a source of opacity for rays via photon-photon
interactions, leaving an imprint in the spectra of distant -ray
sources. We measure this attenuation using {739} active galaxies and one
gamma-ray burst detected by the {\it Fermi} Large Area Telescope. This allows
us to reconstruct the evolution of the EBL and determine the star-formation
history of the Universe over 90\% of cosmic time. Our star-formation history is
consistent with independent measurements from galaxy surveys, peaking at
redshift . Upper limits of the EBL at the epoch of re-ionization
suggest a turnover in the abundance of faint galaxies at .Comment: Published on Science. This is the authors' version of the manuscrip
BAT X-ray Survey - III: X-ray Spectra and Statistical Properties
In this concluding part of the series of three papers dedicated to the
Swift/BAT hard X-ray survey (BXS), we focus on the X-ray spectral analysis and
statistical properties of the source sample. Using a dedicated method to
extract time-averaged spectra of BAT sources we show that Galactic sources
have, generally, softer spectra than extragalactic objects and that Seyfert 2
galaxies are harder than Seyfert 1s. The averaged spectrum of all Seyfert
galaxies is consistent with a power-law with photon index of 2.00 (+/-0.07).
The cumulative flux-number relation for the extragalactic sources in the 14-170
keV band is best described by a power-law with a slope alpha=1.55 (+/-0.20) and
a normalization of 9.6 AGN deg (or 396(+/-80) AGN
all-sky) above a flux level of 2erg cm s (~0.85
mCrab). The integration of the cumulative flux per unit area indicates that BAT
resolves 1-2% of the X-ray background emission in the 14-170 keV band. A
sub-sample of 24 extragalactic sources above the 4.5 sigma detection limit is
used to study the statistical properties of AGN. This sample comprises local
Seyfert galaxies (z=0.026, median value) and ~10% blazars. We find that 55% of
the Seyfert galaxies are absorbed by column densities of Log(N_H)>22, but that
none is a bona fide Compton-thick. This study shows the capabilities of BAT to
probe the hard X-ray sky to the mCrab level.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal; 42 pages, 4
tables, 51 figure
Gamma-ray emission revealed at the western edge of SNR G344.7-0.1
We report on the investigation of a very high energy (VHE), Galactic
gamma-ray source recently discovered at >50GeV using the Large Area Telescope
(LAT) on board the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope. This object, 2FHL
J1703.4-4145, displays a very hard >50GeV spectrum with a photon index ~1.2 in
the 2FHL catalog and, as such, is one of the most extreme sources in the 2FHL
sub-sample of Galactic objects. A detailed analysis of the available
multi-wavelength data shows that this source is located on the western edge of
the supernova remnant (SNR) G344.7--0.1, along with extended TeV source, HESS
J1702-420. The observations and the spectral energy distribution modeling
support a scenario where this gamma-ray source is the byproduct of the
interaction between the SNR shock and the dense surrounding medium, with
escaping cosmic rays (CRs) diffusing into the dense environment and interacting
with a large local cloud, generating the observed TeV emission. If confirmed,
an interaction between the SNR CRs and a nearby cloud would make 2FHL
J1703.4-4145 another promising candidate for efficient particle acceleration of
the 2FHL Galactic sample, following the first candidate from our previous
investigation of a likely shock-cloud interaction occurring on the West edge of
the Vela SNR.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, Submitted to ApJ June 15, 2020. Accepted for
publication Oct 2, 202
EU External Relations: Exclusive Competence Revisited
This Article will focus on the question of exclusive competence in the field of EU external relations, especially in the light of recent developments. After a brief discussion on the origins and development of exclusive competence, a distinction will be made between common commercial policy, which has traditionally been the most important area of an explicit âa prioriâ exclusive competence, and what is often called an implicit exclusive competence, which, as it is today based on some general criteria enshrined in TFEU Article 3(2), may be called âsuperveningâ exclusive competence. With regard to both categories, the main focus will be on recent developments, notably the impact of the Treaty of Lisbon, which introduced the TFEU and its Articles 2 and 3, as well as the case law of the European Court of Justice (âECJâ or the âCourtâ) following the entry into force of the Treaty of Lisbon, on December 1, 2009
Systematic search for gamma-ray periodicity in active galactic nuclei detected by the Fermi Large Area Telescope
We use nine years of gamma-ray data provided by the Fermi Large Area
Telescope (LAT) to systematically study the light curves of more than two
thousand active galactic nuclei (AGN) included in recent Fermi-LAT catalogs.
Ten different techniques are used, which are organized in an automatic
periodicity-search pipeline, in order to search for evidence of periodic
emission in gamma rays. Understanding the processes behind this puzzling
phenomenon will provide a better view about the astrophysical nature of these
extragalactic sources. However, the observation of temporal patterns in
gamma-ray light curves of AGN is still challenging. Despite the fact that there
have been efforts on characterizing the temporal emission of some individual
sources, a systematic search for periodicities by means of a full likelihood
analysis applied to large samples of sources was missing. Our analysis finds 11
AGN, of which 9 are identified for the first time, showing periodicity at more
than 4sigma in at least four algorithms. These findings will help in solving
questions related to the astrophysical origin of this periodic behavior.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables. Accepted by Ap
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