123 research outputs found
Subdirectly irreducible sectionally pseudocomplemented semilattices
summary:Sectionally pseudocomplemented semilattices are an extension of relatively pseudocomplemented semilattices—they are meet-semilattices with a greatest element such that every section, i.e., every principal filter, is a pseudocomplemented semilattice. In the paper, we give a simple equational characterization of sectionally pseudocomplemented semilattices and then investigate mainly their congruence kernels which leads to a characterization of subdirectly irreducible sectionally pseudocomplemented semilattices
EGRET Gamma-Ray Blazars: Luminosity Function and Contribution to the Extragalactic Gamma-Ray Background
We describe the properties of the blazars detected by EGRET and summarize the
results on the calculations of the evolution and luminosity function of these
sources.
Of the large number of possible origins of extragalactic diffuse gamma-ray
emission, it has been postulated that active galaxies might be one of the most
likely candidates. However, some of our recent analyses indicate that only 25
percent of the diffuse extragalactic emission measured by SAS-2 and EGRET can
be attributed to unresolved gamma-ray blazars.
Therefore, other sources of diffuse extragalactic gamma-ray emission must
exist.
We present a summary of these results in this article.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in Astroparticle Physic
Normalization of -algebras
summary:We consider algebras determined by all normal identities of -algebras, i.e. algebras of many-valued logics. For such algebras, we present a representation based on a normalization of a sectionally involutioned lattice, i.e. a -lattice, and another one based on a normalization of a lattice-ordered group
Body Burden of Dichlorodiphenyl Dichloroethene (DDE) and Childhood Pulmonary Function
Longitudinal studies have shown that early life exposure to dichlorodiphenyl dichloroethene (DDE) can lead to growth reduction during childhood and adolescence. In addition, DDE exposure has been linked to respiratory tract infections and an increased risk of asthma in children. Our aim was to understand the relationships between DDE exposure and pulmonary function in children, and, particularly, whether associations are mediated by the height of the children. We used data from an environmental epidemiologic study conducted in central Germany in children aged 8-10 years. The pulmonary function (forced vital capacity, FVC, and forced expiratory volume in one second, FEV1) were measured in three consecutive years. Blood DDE levels were measured at 8 and 10 years. We used linear mixed models for repeated measurements and path analyses to assess the association between blood levels of DDE and pulmonary function measurements. All models were adjusted for confounders. Linear mixed approaches and modelling concurrent effects showed no significant associations. The path analytical models demonstrated that DDE measured at eight years had significant, inverse, indirect, and total effects on FVC at ten years (n = 328; −0.18 L per μg/L of DDE) and FEV1 (n = 328; −0.17 L per μg/L of DDE), mediated through effects of DDE on height and weight. The DDE burden reduces pulmonary function through its diminishing effects on height and weight in children. Further studies are required to test these associations in other samples, preferably from a region with ongoing, high DDT application
Measurement of the Integrated Faraday Rotations of BL Lac Objects
We present the results of multi-frequency polarization VLA observations of
radio sources from the complete sample of northern, radio-bright BL Lac objects
compiled by H. Kuhr and G. Schmidt. These were used to determine the integrated
rotation measures of 18 objects, 15 of which had never been measured
previously, which hindered analysis of the intrinsic polarization properties of
objects in the complete sample. These measurements make it possible to correct
the observed orientations of the linear polarizations of these sources for the
effect of Faraday rotation. The most probable origin for Faraday rotation in
these objects is the Galactic interstellar medium. The results presented
complete measurements of the integrated rotation measures for all 34 sources in
the complete sample of BL Lac objects.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
Absolute kinematics of radio source components in the complete S5 polar cap sample. III. First wide-field high-precision astrometry at 15.4 GHz
We report on the first wide-field, high-precision astrometric analysis of the
13 extragalactic radio sources of the complete S5 polar cap sample at 15.4 GHz.
We describe new algorithms developed to enable the use of differenced phase
delays in wide-field astrometric observations and discuss the impact of using
differenced phase delays on the precision of the wide-field astrometric
analysis. From this global fit, we obtained estimates of the relative source
positions with precisions ranging from 14 to 200 as at 15.4 GHz, depending
on the angular separation of the sources (from 1.6 to 20.8
degrees). These precisions are 10 times higher than the achievable
precisions using the phase-reference mapping technique.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figure
EVN observations of low-luminosity flat-spectrum AGNs
We present and discuss the results of VLBI (EVN) observations of three
low-luminosity (P(5 GHz)<10^25 W/Hz) Broad Emission Line AGNs carefully
selected from a sample of flat spectrum radio sources (CLASS). Based on the
total and the extended radio power at 5 GHz and at 1.4 GHz respectively, these
objects should be technically classified as radio-quiet AGN and thus the origin
of their radio emission is not clearly understood. The VLBI observations
presented in this paper have revealed compact radio cores which imply a lower
limit on the brightness temperature of about 3X10^8 K. This result rules out a
thermal origin for the radio emission and strongly suggests an emission
mechanism similar to that observed in more powerful radio-loud AGNs. Since, by
definition, the three objects show a flat (or inverted) radio spectrum between
1.4 GHz and 8.4 GHz, the observed radio emission could be relativistically
beamed. Multi-epoch VLBI observations can confirm this possibility in two years
time.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
Water vapour at high redshift: Arecibo monitoring of the megamaser in MG J0414+0534
The study of water masers at cosmological distances would allow us to
investigate the parsec-scale environment around powerful radio sources, to
probe the physical conditions of the molecular gas in the inner parsecs of
quasars, and to estimate their nuclear engine masses in the early universe. To
derive this information, the nature of the maser source, jet or disk-maser,
needs to be assessed through a detailed investigation of the observational
characteristics of the line emission. We monitored the maser line in the lensed
quasar MGJ0414+0534 at z = 2.64 with the 300-m Arecibo telescope for ~15 months
to detect possible additional maser components and to measure a potential
velocity drift of the lines. In addition, we follow the maser and continuum
emissions to reveal significant variations in their flux density and to
determine correlation or time-lag, if any, between them. The main maser line
profile is complex and can be resolved into a number of broad features with
line widths of 30-160 km/s. A new maser component was tentatively detected in
October 2008 that is redshifted by 470 km/s w.r.t the systemic velocity of the
quasar. The line width of the main maser feature increased by a factor of two
between the Effelsberg and EVLA observations reported by Impellizzeri et al.
(2008) and the first epoch of the Arecibo monitoring campaign. After correcting
for the lens magnification, we find that the total H2O isotropic luminosity of
the maser in MGJ0414+0534 is now ~30,000 Lsun, making this source the most
luminous ever discovered.[Abridged]Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
On the coherence loss in phase-referenced VLBI observations
Context: Phase referencing is a standard calibration technique in radio
interferometry, particularly suited for the detection of weak sources close to
the sensitivity limits of the interferometers. However, effects from a changing
atmosphere and inaccuracies in the correlator model may affect the
phase-referenced images, leading to wrong estimates of source flux densities
and positions. A systematic observational study of signal decoherence in phase
referencing, and its effects in the image plane, has not been performed yet.
Aims: We systematically studied how the signal coherence in
Very-Long-Baseline-Interferometry (VLBI) observations is affected by a
phase-reference calibration at different frequencies and for different
calibrator-to-target separations. The results obtained should be of interest
for a correct interpretation of many phase-referenced observations with VLBI.
Methods: We observed a set of 13 strong sources (the S5 polar cap sample) at
8.4 and 15 GHz in phase-reference mode, with 32 different calibrator/target
combinations spanning angular separations between 1.5 and 20.5 degrees. We
obtained phase-referenced images and studied how the dynamic range and peak
flux density depend on observing frequency and source separation.
Results: We obtained dynamic ranges and peak flux densities of the
phase-referenced images as a function of frequency and separation from the
calibrator. We compared our results with models and phenomenological equations
previously reported.
Conclusions: The dynamic range of the phase-referenced images is strongly
limited by the atmosphere at all frequencies and for all source separations.
The limiting dynamic range is inversely proportional to the sine of the
calibrator-to-target separation. We also find that the peak flux densities,
relative to those obtained with the self-calibrated images, decrease with
source separation.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to A&A on 5.02.2010; accepted on
11.03.2010
A Multi-Epoch VLBI Survey of the Kinematics of CJF Sources; Part I: Model-Fit Parameters and Maps
Context: This is the first of a series of papers presenting VLBI observations
of the 293 Caltech-Jodrell Bank Flat-Spectrum (hereafter CJF) sources and their
analysis. Aims: One of the major goals of the CJF is to make a statistical
study of the apparent velocities of the sources. Methods: We have conducted
global VLBI and VLBA observations at 5 GHz since 1990, accumulating thirteen
separate observing campaigns. Results: We present here an overview of the
observations, give details of the data reduction and present the source
parameters resulting from a model-fitting procedure. For every source at every
observing epoch, an image is shown, built up by restoring the model-fitted
components, convolved with the clean beam, into the residual image, which was
made by Fourier transforming the visibility data after first subtracting the
model-fitted components in the uv-plane. Overplotted we show symbols to
represent the model components. Conclusions: We have produced VLBI images of
all but 5 of the 293 sources in the complete CJF sample at several epochs and
investigated the kinematics of 266 AGN.Comment: Figure 1 and Table 2 are only available in electronic form at the CDS
and soon at http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/sbritzen/cjf.htm
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