88 research outputs found
Zeeman observations of W Sgr
A new precise method for measuring magnetic fields on Zeeman plates of the southern Cepheid 'W Sgr' is reviewed. Ten plates over the 7.6(d) period of pulsation show two extrema in the measured values of the effective magnetic field. The method has a precision of + or - 0.4 microns in the Zeeman shift corresponding to + or - 50 Gauss (g). A negative spike of -220 g occurred at the time of arrival of the compressional wave of pulsation at the stellar surface. A positive field of +270 g occurred at the phase of most rapid contraction near the temperature minimum of the pulsation cycle
Catalog Matching with Astrometric Correction and its Application to the Hubble Legacy Archive
Object cross-identification in multiple observations is often complicated by
the uncertainties in their astrometric calibration. Due to the lack of standard
reference objects, an image with a small field of view can have significantly
larger errors in its absolute positioning than the relative precision of the
detected sources within. We present a new general solution for the relative
astrometry that quickly refines the World Coordinate System of overlapping
fields. The efficiency is obtained through the use of infinitesimal 3-D
rotations on the celestial sphere, which do not involve trigonometric
functions. They also enable an analytic solution to an important step in making
the astrometric corrections. In cases with many overlapping images, the correct
identification of detections that match together across different images is
difficult to determine. We describe a new greedy Bayesian approach for
selecting the best object matches across a large number of overlapping images.
The methods are developed and demonstrated on the Hubble Legacy Archive, one of
the most challenging data sets today. We describe a novel catalog compiled from
many Hubble Space Telescope observations, where the detections are combined
into a searchable collection of matches that link the individual detections.
The matches provide descriptions of astronomical objects involving multiple
wavelengths and epochs. High relative positional accuracy of objects is
achieved across the Hubble images, often sub-pixel precision in the order of
just a few milli-arcseconds. The result is a reliable set of high-quality
associations that are publicly available online.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
LOTIS Search for Early Time Optical Afterglows: GRB 971227
We report on the very early time search for an optical afterglow from GRB
971227 with the Livermore Optical Transient Imaging System (LOTIS). LOTIS began
imaging the `Original' BATSE error box of GRB 971227 approximately 14 s after
the onset of gamma-ray emission. Continuous monitoring of the position
throughout the evening yielded a total of 499 images (10 s integration).
Analysis of these images revealed no steady optical afterglow brighter than
R=12.3 +- 0.2 in any single image. Coaddition of different combinations of the
LOTIS images also failed to uncover transient optical emission. In particular,
assuming a constant early time flux, no optical afterglow brighter than R=14.2
+- 0.2 was present within the first 1200 s and no optical afterglow brighter
than R=15.0 +- 0.2 was present in the first 6.0 h.
Follow up observations by other groups revealed a likely X-ray afterglow and
a possible optical afterglow. Although subsequent deeper observations could not
confirm a fading source, we show that these transients are not inconsistent
with our present knowledge of the characteristics of GRB afterglows. We also
demonstrate that with the upgraded thermoelectrically cooled CCDs, LOTIS is
capable of either detecting very early time optical afterglow or placing
stringent constraints on the relationship between the gamma-ray emission and
the longer wavelength afterglow in relativistic blast wave models.Comment: 17 pages, 3 eps figures, revisions based on reviewers comment
Pictor A (PKS 0518-45) - From Nucleus to Lobes
We present radio and optical imaging and kinematic data for the radio galaxy
Pictor A, including HST continuum and [OIII], emission-line images (at a
resolution of 25 - 100 mas) and ground-based imaging and spectroscopy (at a
resolution of ~ 1.5". The radio data include 3 cm Australia Telescope images of
the core, at a resolution comparable to that of the optical, ground-based
images, and a VLBI image of a jet in the compact core (at a resolution of 2 -
25 mas), which seems to align with a continuum ``jet'' found in the HST images.
The core radio jet, the HST optical continuum ``jet'', and the NW H-alpha
filaments all appear to point toward the optical-synchrotron hot-spot in the NW
lobe of this object and are associated with a disrupted velocity field in the
extended ionized gas. The ground-based spectra which cover this trajectory also
yield line ratios for the ionized gas which have anomalously low [NII] (6564),
suggesting either a complex, clumpy structure in the gas with a higher
cloud-covering factor at larger radii and with denser clouds than is found in
the nuclear regions of most NLRG and Seyfert 2 galaxies, or some other,
unmodeled, mechanism for the emergent spectrum from this region. The H-alpha
emission-line filaments to the N appear to be associated with a 3 cm radio
continuum knot which lies in a gap in the filaments ~ 4" from the nucleus.
Altogether, the data in this paper provide good circumstantial evidence for
non-disruptive redirection of a radio jet by interstellar gas clouds in the
host galaxy.Comment: 19 pages, 6 ps.gz fig pages, to appear in the Ap.J. Supp
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