3,010 research outputs found
Localized Control of Curie Temperature in Perovskite Oxide Film by Capping-layer- induced Octahedral Distortion
With reduced dimensionality, it is often easier to modify the properties of
ultra-thin films than their bulk counterparts. Strain engineering, usually
achieved by choosing appropriate substrates, has been proven effective in
controlling the properties of perovskite oxide films. An emerging alternative
route for developing new multifunctional perovskite is by modification of the
oxygen octahedral structure. Here we report the control of structural oxygen
octahedral rotation in ultra-thin perovskite SrRuO3 films by the deposition of
a SrTiO3 capping layer, which can be lithographically patterned to achieve
local control. Using a scanning Sagnac magnetic microscope, we show increase in
the Curie temperature of SrRuO3 due to the suppression octahedral rotations
revealed by the synchrotron x-ray diffraction. This capping-layer-based
technique may open new possibilities for developing functional oxide materials.Comment: Main-text 5 pages, SI 6 pages. To appear in Physical Review Letter
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
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
A Project Based Approach to Statistics and Data Science
In an increasingly data-driven world, facility with statistics is more
important than ever for our students. At institutions without a statistician,
it often falls to the mathematics faculty to teach statistics courses. This
paper presents a model that a mathematician asked to teach statistics can
follow. This model entails connecting with faculty from numerous departments on
campus to develop a list of topics, building a repository of real-world
datasets from these faculty, and creating projects where students interface
with these datasets to write lab reports aimed at consumers of statistics in
other disciplines. The end result is students who are well prepared for
interdisciplinary research, who are accustomed to coping with the
idiosyncrasies of real data, and who have sharpened their technical writing and
speaking skills
The Short Rotation Period of Nereid
We determine the period, p = 11.52 \pm 0.14 h, and a light curve peak-to-peak
amplitude, a = 0.029 \pm 0.003 magnitudes, of the Neptunian irregular satellite
Nereid. If the light curve variation is due to albedo variations across the
surface, rather than solely to the shape of Nereid variations, the rotation
period would be a factor of two shorter. In either case, such a rotation period
and light curve amplitude, together with Nereid's orbital period, p=360.14
days, imply that Nereid is almost certainly in a regular rotation state, rather
than the chaotic rotation state suggested by Schaefer and Schaefer (1988,2000)
and Dobrovolskis (1995).
Assuming that Nereid is perfectly spherical, the albedo variation is 3%
across the observed surface. Assuming a uniform geometric albedo, the observed
cross sectional area varies by 3%. We caution that the lightcurve found in this
paper only sets limits on the combination of albedo and physical irregularity
and that we cannot determine the orientation of Nereid's spin axis from our
data.Comment: Accepted by ApJ Letters, 11 pages (incl. 1 figure
INTEGRAL observation of 3EG J1736-2908
The possible identification by INTEGRAL of the EGRET source 3EG J1736-2908
with the active galactic nucleus GRS 1734-292 is discussed. The latter was
discovered in 1990 and later identified with a Seyfert 1 galaxy. At the time of
the compilation of the 3rd EGRET Catalog, it was not considered as a possible
counterpart of the source 3EG J1736-2908, which remained unidentified. A
detailed multiwavelength study of the EGRET error circle is presented, by
including archival radio, soft- and hard-X observations, suggesting that GRS
1734-292 could be a likely counterpart of 3EG J1736-2908, even though this
poses very interesting questions about the production mechanisms of gamma-rays
with energies greater than 100 MeV.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication on A&A Main Journa
The host galaxy of the z=2.4 radio-loud AGN MRC 0406-244 as seen by HST
We present multicolour Hubble Space Telescope images of the powerful z=2.4
radio galaxy MRC 0406-244 and model its complex morphology with several
components including a host galaxy, a point source, and extended nebular and
continuum emission. We suggest that the main progenitor of this radio galaxy
was a normal, albeit massive (M ~10^{11} solar masses), star-forming galaxy.
The optical stellar disc of the host galaxy is smooth and well described by a
S\'ersic profile, which argues against a recent major merger, however there is
also a point-source component which may be the remnant of a minor merger. The
half-light radius of the optical disc is constrained to lie in the range 3.5 to
8.2kpc, which is of similar size to coeval star forming galaxies.
Biconical shells of nebular emission and UV-bright continuum extend out from
the host galaxy along the radio jet axis, which is also the minor axis of the
host galaxy. The origin of the continuum emission is uncertain, but it is most
likely to be young stars or dust-scattered light from the AGN, and it is
possible that stars are forming from this material at a rate of
200^{+1420}_{-110} solar masses per year.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
BeppoSAX measurements of the bright gamma-ray burst 010222
We analyze the BeppoSAX measurements of the prompt and afterglow emission of
the gamma-ray burst GRB010222. Among 45 GRBs detected with the Wide Field
Cameras on BeppoSAX, the 40-700 keV fluence of (9.3+/-0.3)E-5 erg cm-2 is only
surpassed by GRB990123. In terms of the isotropic 20-2000 keV energy output of
7.8E53 erg, it ranks third of all GRBs with measured distances. Since this
burst is so bright, the data provide complete and valuable coverage up to 65 hr
after the event, except for a gap between 3.5 and 8.0 hr. The 2-10 keV flux
history shows clear signs of a break which is consistent with a break seen in
the optical, and provides supporting evidence for the achromatic nature of the
break. An explanation for the break in the context of a collimated expansion is
not straightforward. Rather, a model is favored whereby the fireball is braked
to the non-relativistic regime quickly (within a fraction of day) by a dense
1E6 cm-3 circumburst medium. This implies that, after a mild beaming
correction, GRB010222 may be the most energetic burst observed thus far. The
X-ray decay index after the break is 1.33+/-0.04, the spectral index
0.97+/-0.05. The decay is, with unprecedented accuracy, identical to that
observed in the optical.Comment: Accepted on June 6 for publication in ApJ part I. Publication due in
October 2001. Accepted version has only minor modification
- …