2,593 research outputs found
A search for 183-GHz emission from water in late-type stars
A search was made for 183 GHz line emission from water vapor in the direction of twelve Mira and two semiregular variables. Upper limits to the emission are in the range of 2000 to 5000 Jy. It is estimated that thermal emission from the inner regions of late type stellar envelopes will be on the order of ten Jy. Maser emission, according to one model, would be an order of magnitude stronger. From the limited set sampled, the possibility of very strong maser emission at 183 GHz cannot yet be ruled out
183 GHz water line variation: An energetic outburst in orion KL
Observations of the 3(13)-2(20) transition of water vapor in the direction of Ori MC1 in 1980 February show a 50% flux increase and an apparent additional red shift of approximately 2 km/s relative to the line observed in 1977 December. From a detailed examination of the amplitude and frequency calibration, it appears unlikely that the effect is due to systematic error. The increase is attributed to the appearance of a new component at a velocity of 12 km/s with respect to the local standard of rest. The new component also has broad wings. Increased emission from a region in the high-velocity core of Ori MC1 can be due either to additional far-IR radiation to pump the 1983 GHz transition or to a change in the physical conditions in the gas. Statistical equilibrium calculations using the large-velocity-gradient formalism were carried out to develop a model for the emission. The calculations support a model in which the gas in the region of enhanced emission is hotter than the dust. The temporal coincidence between the 183 GHZ increase and the 22 GH1 water maser outburst suggests a common, impulsive cause, which has heated the gas in a part of the HV source, enhancing the emission in both transitions
Thirteen-color narrow-band photometry of one thousand bright stars
Thirteen-color narrow-band photometry of one thousand bright star
Hard X-ray timing and spectral characteristics of the energetic pulsar PSR J0205+6449 in supernova remnant 3C58
PSR J0205+6449 is a young rotation-powered pulsar in SNR 3C 58. It is one of
only three young (<10,000 year old) pulsars which are so far detected in the
radio and the classical X-ray bands, as well as at hard X-rays above 20 keV and
at high-energy (>100 MeV) -rays. The other two young pulsars are the
Crab and PSR B1509-58. Our aim is to derive the timing and spectral
characteristics of PSR J0205+6449 over the broad X-ray band from ~0.5 to ~270
keV. We used all publicly available RXTE observations of PSR J0205+6449 to
first generate accurate ephemerides over the period September 30, 2000 - March
18, 2006. Next, phase-folding procedures yielded pulse profiles using data from
RXTE PCA and HEXTE, and XMM-Newton EPIC PN. While our timing solutions are
consistent with earlier results, our work shows sharper structures in the PCA
X-ray profile. The X-ray pulse profile consists of two sharp pulses, separated
in phase by 0.488(2), which can be described with 2 asymmetric Lorentzians,
each with the rising wing steeper than the trailing wing, and
full-width-half-maximum 1.41(5) ms and 2.35(22) ms, respectively. We find an
indication for a flux increase by a factor ~2, about 3.5 sigma above the
time-averaged value, for the second, weaker pulse during a two-week interval,
while its pulse shape did not change. The spectrum of the pulsed X-ray emission
is of non-thermal origin, exhibiting a power-law shape with photon index Gamma
= 1.03(2) over the energy band ~0.5 to ~270 keV. In the energy band covered
with the PCA (~3-30 keV) the spectra of the two pulses have the same photon
index, namely, 1.04(3) and 1.10(8), respectively.Comment: 10 pages; 7 figures (2 in color), resubmitted to A&A, including
referee comment
Discovery of luminous pulsed hard X-ray emission from anomalous X-ray pulsars 1RXS J1708-4009, 4U 0142+61 and 1E 2259+586 by INTEGRAL and RXTE
We report on the discovery of hard spectral tails for energies above 10 keV
in the total and pulsed spectra of anomalous X-ray pulsars 1RXS J1708-4009, 4U
0142+61 and 1E 2259+586 using RXTE PCA (2-60 keV) and HEXTE (15-250 keV) data
and INTEGRAL IBIS ISGRI (20-300 keV) data. Improved spectral information on 1E
1841-045 is presented. The pulsed and total spectra measured above 10 keV have
power-law shapes and there is so far no significant evidence for spectral
breaks or bends up to ~150 keV. The pulsed spectra are exceptionally hard with
indices measured for 4 AXPs approximately in the range -1.0 -- 1.0. We also
reanalyzed archival CGRO COMPTEL (0.75-30 MeV) data to search for signatures
from our set of AXPs. No detections can be claimed, but the obtained
upper-limits in the MeV band indicate that for 1RXS J1708-4009, 4U 0142+61 and
1E 1841-045 strong breaks must occur somewhere between 150 and 750 keV.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 19 pages; 4 Tables; 15 Figures (6
color
Large magnetic circular dichroism in resonant inelastic x-ray scattering at the Mn L-edge of Mn-Zn ferrite
We report resonant inelastic x-ray scattering (RIXS) excited by circularly
polarized x-rays on Mn-Zn ferrite at the Mn L2,3-resonances. We demonstrate
that crystal field excitations, as expected for localized systems, dominate the
RIXS spectra and thus their dichroic asymmetry cannot be interpreted in terms
of spin-resolved partial density of states, which has been the standard
approach for RIXS dichroism. We observe large dichroic RIXS at the L2-resonance
which we attribute to the absence of metallic core hole screening in the
insulating Mn-ferrite. On the other hand, reduced L3-RIXS dichroism is
interpreted as an effect of longer scattering time that enables spin-lattice
core hole relaxation via magnons and phonons occurring on a femtosecond time
scale.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures,
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevB.74.17240
INTEGRAL timing and localization performance
In this letter we report on the accuracy of the attitude, misalignment, orbit
and time correlation which are used to perform scientific analyses of the
INTEGRAL data. The boresight attitude during science pointings has an accuracy
of 3 arcsec. At the center of the field, the misalignments have been calibrated
leading to a location accuracy of 4 to 40 arcsec for the different instruments.
The spacecraft position is known within 10 meters. The relative timing between
instruments could be reconstructed within 10 microsec and the absolute timing
within 40 microsec.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in A+A letters, INTEGRAL
special issu
Hadron production in heavy relativistic systems
We investigate particle production in heavy-ion collisions at RHIC energies
as function of incident energy, and centrality in a three-sources Relativistic
Diffusion Model. Pseudorapidity distributions of produced charged hadrons in Au
+ Au and Cu + Cu collisions at sqrt(s_NN) = 19.6 GeV, 62.4 GeV, 130 GeV and 200
GeV show an almost equilibrated midrapidity source that tends to increase in
size towards higher incident energy, and more central collisions. It may
indicate quark-gluon plasma formation prior to hadronization.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
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