10,107 research outputs found
Optical Identification of ROSAT sources in M 67: activity in an old cluster
We present optical identification and high-resolution spectroscopy of ROSAT
sources in the field of the old open cluster M 67. For the first time it is
possible to analyze coronal and chromospheric activity of active stars in a
solar-age cluster, and to compare it with field stars. ROSAT observed the high
X-ray luminosity tail of the cluster sources. In agreement with what expected
from studies of field stars, most of the detected X-ray sources are binaries,
preferably with short periods and eccentric orbits. In addition, several of the
M 67 ROSAT sources have peculiar locations in the cluster colour-magnitude
diagram. This is most likely due to rather complex evolutionary histories,
involving the presence of mass transfer or large mass losses. The X-ray
luminosity of the sources does not scale with the stellar parameters in an
obvious way. In particular, no relationship is found between coronal emission
and stellar magnitude or binary period. The Ca II K chromospheric flux from
most of the counterparts is in excess to that of single stars in the cluster by
one order of magnitude. The X-ray luminosity of the sources in the old M 67 is
one order of magnitude lower than the most active active binaries in the field,
but comparable to that of the much younger binaries in the Hyades.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication by Astronomy &
Astrophysic
On multivariate quantiles under partial orders
This paper focuses on generalizing quantiles from the ordering point of view.
We propose the concept of partial quantiles, which are based on a given partial
order. We establish that partial quantiles are equivariant under
order-preserving transformations of the data, robust to outliers, characterize
the probability distribution if the partial order is sufficiently rich,
generalize the concept of efficient frontier, and can measure dispersion from
the partial order perspective. We also study several statistical aspects of
partial quantiles. We provide estimators, associated rates of convergence, and
asymptotic distributions that hold uniformly over a continuum of quantile
indices. Furthermore, we provide procedures that can restore monotonicity
properties that might have been disturbed by estimation error, establish
computational complexity bounds, and point out a concentration of measure
phenomenon (the latter under independence and the componentwise natural order).
Finally, we illustrate the concepts by discussing several theoretical examples
and simulations. Empirical applications to compare intake nutrients within
diets, to evaluate the performance of investment funds, and to study the impact
of policies on tobacco awareness are also presented to illustrate the concepts
and their use.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/10-AOS863 the Annals of
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org/aos/) by the Institute of Mathematical
Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
A Disk--Jet interaction model for the X--Ray Variability in Microquasars
We propose a simple dynamical model that may account for the observed
spectral and temporal properties of GRS 1915+105 and XTE J1550-5634. The model
is based on the assumption that a fraction of the radiation emitted by a hot
spot lying on the accreting disk is dynamically Comptonized by the relativistic
jet that typically accompanies the microquasar phenomenon. We show that
scattering by the jet produces a detectable modulation of the observed flux. In
particular, we found that the phase lag between hard and soft photons depends
on the radial position of the hot spot and, if the angle between the jet and
the line of sight is sufficiently large, the lags of the fundamental and its
harmonics may be either positive or negative.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Part
A continuous Flaring- to Normal-branch transition in Sco X-1
We report the first resolved rapid transition from a Flaring Branch
Oscillation to a Normal Branch Oscillation in the RXTE data of the Z source Sco
X-1. The transition took place on a time scale of ~100 seconds and was clearly
associated to the Normal Branch-Flaring Branch vertex in the color-color
diagram. We discuss the results in the context of the possible association of
the Normal Branch Oscillation with other oscillations known both in
Neutron-Star and Black-Hole systems, concentrating on the similarities with the
narrow 4-6 Hz oscillations observed at high flux in Black-Hole Candidates.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Playing Quantum Physics Jeopardy with zero-energy eigenstates
We describe an example of an exact, quantitative Jeopardy-type quantum
mechanics problem. This problem type is based on the conditions in
one-dimensional quantum systems that allow an energy eigenstate for the
infinite square well to have zero curvature and zero energy when suitable Dirac
delta functions are added. This condition and its solution are not often
discussed in quantum mechanics texts and have interesting pedagogical
consequences.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, requires graphicx and epsfig packages. Additional
information, including individual files containing the Worksheet and a
Worksheet template, are available at
http://webphysics.davidson.edu/mjb/jeopardy
Quasi-Periodic Oscillations and energy spectra from the two brightest Ultra-Luminous X-ray sources in M82
Ultra-Luminous X-ray sources are thought to be accreting black holes that
might host Intermediate Mass Black Holes (IMBH), proposed to exist by
theoretical studies, even though a firm detection (as a class) is still
missing. The brightest ULX in M82 (M82 X-1) is probably one of the best
candidates to host an IMBH. In this work we analyzed the data of the recent
release of observations obtained from M82 X-1 taken by XMM-Newton. We performed
a study of the timing and spectral properties of the source. We report on the
detection of (46+-2) mHz Quasi-Periodic Oscillations (QPOs) in the power
density spectra of two observations. A comparison of the frequency of these
high-frequency QPOs with previous detections supports the 1:2:3 frequency
distribution as suggested in other studies. We discuss the implications if the
(46+-2) mHz QPO detected in M82 X-1 is the fundamental harmonic, in analogy
with the High-Frequency QPOs observed in black hole binaries. For one of the
observations we have detected for the first time a QPO at 8 mHz (albeit at a
low significance), that coincides with a hardening of the spectrum. We suggest
that the QPO is a milli-hertz QPO originating from the close-by transient ULX
M82 X-2, with analogies to the Low-Frequency QPOs observed in black hole
binaries.Comment: 9 pages (with 4 figures and 4 tables). Accepted for publication in
MNRAS (26/09/13
A Unified Description of the Timing Features of Accreting X-ray Binaries
We study an empirical model for a unified description of the power spectra of
accreting neutron stars and black holes. This description is based on a
superposition of multiple Lorentzians and offers the advantage that all QPO and
noise components are dealt with in the same way, without the need of deciding
in advance the nature of each component. This approach also allows us to
compare frequencies of features with high and low coherences in a consistent
manner and greatly facilitates comparison of power spectra across a wide range
of source types and states. We apply the model to six sources, the
low-luminosity X-ray bursters 1E 1724-3045, SLX 1735-269 and GS 1826-24, the
high-latitude transient XTE J1118+480, the bright system Cir X-1, and the Z
source GX 17+2. We find that it provides a good description of the observed
spectra, without the need for a scale-free (1/f) component. We update
previously reported correlations between characteristic frequencies of timing
features in the light of this new approach and discuss similarities between
different types of systems which may point towards similar underlying physics.Comment: 13 pages, to appear in The Astrophysical Journa
Weighing the black holes in ultraluminous X-ray sources through timing
We describe a new method to estimate the mass of black holes in Ultraluminous
X-ray Sources (ULXs). The method is based on the recently discovered
``variability plane'', populated by Galactic stellar-mass black-hole candidates
(BHCs) and supermassive active galactic nuclei (AGNs), in the parameter space
defined by the black-hole mass, accretion rate and characteristic frequency. We
apply this method to the two ULXs from which low-frequency quasi-periodic
oscillations have been discovered, M82 X-1 and NGC 5408 X-1. For both sources
we obtain a black-hole mass in the range 100~1300 Msun, thus providing evidence
for these two sources to host an intermediate-mass black hole.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, Accepted by MNRA
On the macroion virial contribution to the osmotic pressure in charge-stabilized colloidal suspensions
Our interest goes to the different virial contributions to the equation of
state of charged colloidal suspensions. Neglect of surface effects in the
computation of the colloidal virial term leads to spurious and paradoxical
results. This pitfall is one of the several facets of the danger of a naive
implementation of the so called One Component Model, where the micro-ionic
degrees of freedom are integrated out to only keep in the description the
mesoscopic (colloidal) degrees of freedom. On the other hand, due incorporation
of wall induced forces dissolves the paradox brought forth in the naive
approach, provides a consistent description, and confirms that for salt-free
systems, the colloidal contribution to the pressure is dominated by the
micro-ionic one. Much emphasis is put on the no salt case but the situation
with added electrolyte is also discussed
The 2009 outburst of H~1743-322 as observed by RXTE
We analyze the RXTE observations of the 2009 outburst of H~1743-322, as well
as the observations of the previous five outbursts for comparison. The
hardness-intensity diagram (HID) shows a complete counter-clockwise q-track for
the 2009 outburst and, interestingly, the track falls in} between a huge one in
2003, with a complete transition to high/soft state, and that of} the failed
outburst in 2008. It leaves the low/hard state but does not reach the leftmost
edge of the overall HID. While the lowest hardness (6--19 keV/3--6 keV) values}
in the HID is about 0.3--0.4 for the 2009 outburst, similar to the ``failed
state transition" seen in the persistent black hole XRB Cyg X-1, the timing
analysis shows that a transition to the high soft state occurred. During the
low/hard state of the 2009 outburst, the inner radius of the accretion disk is
found to be closer to the central black hole and have an anti-correlation with
the disk temperature. These results may be understood as the reprocessing} of
the hot corona on the disk's} soft X-rays, which can lead to an underestimation
of the inner radius of the accretion disk. In the luminosity diagram of the
corona versus the disk, the tracks of the outbursts} in 2003 and 2009 cross the
line which represents a roughly equal contribution to the entire emission from
the thermal and the non-thermal components;} the track of the 2008 outburst has
the turn-over falling} on this line. This may be indicative of an emission
balance between the corona and the disk, which prevents the state transition
from going further than the low/hard state.Comment: accepted by A&
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