56,227 research outputs found
A modified R1 X R1 method for helioseismic rotation inversions
We present an efficient method for two dimensional inversions for the solar
rotation rate using the Subtractive Optimally Localized Averages (SOLA) method
and a modification of the R1 X R1 technique proposed by Sekii (1993). The SOLA
method is based on explicit construction of averaging kernels similar to the
Backus-Gilbert method. The versatility and reliability of the SOLA method in
reproducing a target form for the averaging kernel, in combination with the
idea of the R1 X R1 decomposition, results in a computationally very efficient
inversion algorithm. This is particularly important for full 2-D inversions of
helioseismic data in which the number of modes runs into at least tens of
thousands.Comment: 12 pages, Plain TeX + epsf.tex + mn.te
Neutrino Fluxes from Active Galaxies: a Model-Independent Analysis
There are tantalizing hints that jets, powered by supermassive black holes at
the center of active galaxies, are true cosmic proton accelerators. They
produce photons of TeV energy, possible higher, and may be the enigmatic source
of the highest energy cosmic rays. Photoproduction of neutral pions by
accelerated protons on UV light is the source of the highest energy photons, in
which most of the bolometric luminosity of the galaxy may be emitted. The case
that proton beams power active galaxies is, however, far from conclusive.
Neutrinos from the decay of charged pions represent an uncontrovertible
signature for the proton induced cascades. We show that their flux can be
estimated by model-independent methods, based on dimensional analysis and
textbook particle physics. Our calculations also demonstrate why different
models for the proton blazar yield very similar results for the neutrino flux,
consistent with the ones obtained here.Comment: Latex 2.09 with epsf.sty. 12 pages, 2 postscript figures. Compressed
postscript version of paper with figures also available soon at
http://phenom.physics.wisc.edu/pub/preprints/1997/madph-97-982.ps.Z or at
ftp://phenom.physics.wisc.edu/pub/preprints/1997/madph-97-982.ps.
Range safety signal propagation through the SRM exhaust plume of the space shuttle
Theoretical predictions of plume interference for the space shuttle range safety system by solid rocket booster exhaust plumes are reported. The signal propagation was calculated using a split operator technique based upon the Fresnel-Kirchoff integral, using fast Fourier transforms to evaluate the convolution and treating the plume as a series of absorbing and phase-changing screens. Talanov's lens transformation was applied to reduce aliasing problems caused by ray divergence
Reaction cross-section predictions for nucleon induced reactions
A microscopic calculation of the optical potential for nucleon-nucleus
scattering has been performed by explicitly coupling the elastic channel to all
the particle-hole (p-h) excitation states in the target and to all relevant
pickup channels. These p-h states may be regarded as doorway states through
which the flux flows to more complicated configurations, and to long-lived
compound nucleus resonances. We calculated the reaction cross sections for the
nucleon induced reactions on the targets Ca, Ni, Zr and
Sm using the QRPA description of target excitations, coupling to all
inelastic open channels, and coupling to all transfer channels corresponding to
the formation of a deuteron. The results of such calculations were compared to
predictions of a well-established optical potential and with experimental data,
reaching very good agreement. The inclusion of couplings to pickup channels
were an important contribution to the absorption. For the first time,
calculations of excitations account for all of the observed reaction
cross-sections, at least for incident energies above 10 MeV.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to INPC 2010 Conference Proceeding
1E 1547.0-5408: a radio-emitting magnetar with a rotation period of 2 seconds
The variable X-ray source 1E 1547.0-5408 was identified by Gelfand & Gaensler
(2007) as a likely magnetar in G327.24-0.13, an apparent supernova remnant. No
X-ray pulsations have been detected from it. Using the Parkes radio telescope,
we discovered pulsations with period P = 2.069 s. Using the Australia Telescope
Compact Array, we localized these to 1E 1547.0-5408. We measure dP/dt =
(2.318+-0.005)e-11, which for a magnetic dipole rotating in vacuo gives a
surface field strength of 2.2e14 G, a characteristic age of 1.4 kyr, and a
spin-down luminosity of 1.0e35 ergs/s. Together with its X-ray characteristics,
these rotational parameters of 1E 1547.0-5408 prove that it is a magnetar, only
the second known to emit radio waves. The distance is ~9 kpc, derived from the
dispersion measure of 830 pc/cc. The pulse profile at a frequency of 1.4 GHz is
extremely broad and asymmetric due to multipath propagation in the ISM, as a
result of which only approximately 75% of the total flux at 1.4 GHz is pulsed.
At higher frequencies the profile is more symmetric and has FWHM = 0.12P.
Unlike in normal radio pulsars, but in common with the other known
radio-emitting magnetar, XTE J1810-197, the spectrum over 1.4-6.6 GHz is flat
or rising, and we observe large, sudden changes in the pulse shape. In a
contemporaneous Swift X-ray observation, 1E 1547.0-5408 was detected with
record high flux, f_X(1-8 keV) ~ 5e-12 ergs/cm^2/s, 16 times the historic
minimum. The pulsar was undetected in archival radio observations from 1998,
implying a flux < 0.2 times the present level. Together with the transient
behavior of XTE J1810-197, these results suggest that radio emission is
triggered by X-ray outbursts of usually quiescent magnetars.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
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