89 research outputs found
Evacuation in the Social Force Model is not stationary
An evacuation process is simulated within the Social Force Model. Thousand
pedestrians are leaving a room by one exit. We investigate the stationarity of
the distribution of time lags between instants when two successive pedestrians
cross the exit. The exponential tail of the distribution is shown to gradually
vanish. Taking fluctuations apart, the time lags decrease in time till there
are only about 50 pedestrians in the room, then they start to increase. This
suggests that at the last stage the flow is laminar. In the first stage,
clogging events slow the evacuation down. As they are more likely for larger
crowds, the flow is not stationary. The data are investigated with detrended
fluctuation analysis.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; PACS numbers: 89.75.Fb, 05.40.-a, 05.45.Tp,
89.40.B
A survey of Low Luminosity Compact sources and its implication for evolution of radio-loud AGNs. I. Radio data
We present a new sample of Compact Steep Spectrum (CSS) sources with radio
luminosity below 10^26 W/Hz at 1.4 GHz called the low luminosity compact (LLC)
objects. The sources have been selected from FIRST survey and observed with
MERLIN at L-band and C-band. The main criterion used for selection was
luminosity of the objects and approximately one third of the CSS sources from
the new sample have a value of radio luminosity comparable to FRIs. About 80%
of the sources have been resolved and about 30% of them have weak extended
emission and disturbed structures when compared with the observations of higher
luminosity CSS sources. We studied correlation between radio power and linear
size, and redshift with a larger sample that included also published samples of
compact objects and large scale FRIIs and FRIs. The low luminosity compact
objects occupy the space in radio power versus linear size diagram below the
main evolutionary path of radio objects. We suggest that many of them might be
short-lived objects, and their radio emission may be disrupted several times
before becoming FRIIs. We conclude that there exists a large population of
short-lived low luminosity compact objects unexplored so far and part of them
can be precursors of large scale FRIs.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables, MNRAS in pres
Survey of Planetary Nebulae at 30 GHz with OCRA-p
We report the results of a survey of 442 planetary nebulae at 30 GHz. The
purpose of the survey is to develop a list of planetary nebulae as calibration
sources which could be used for high frequency calibration in future. For 41
PNe with sufficient data, we test the emission mechanisms in order to evaluate
whether or not spinning dust plays an important role in their spectra at 30
GHz.
The 30-GHz data were obtained with a twin-beam differencing radiometer,
OCRA-p, which is in operation on the Torun 32-m telescope. Sources were scanned
both in right ascension and declination. We estimated flux densities at 30 GHz
using a free-free emission model and compared it with our data.
The primary result is a catalogue containing the flux densities of 93
planetary nebulae at 30 GHz. Sources with sufficient data were compared with a
spectral model of free-free emission. The model shows that free-free emission
can generally explain the observed flux densities at 30 GHz thus no other
emission mechanism is needed to account for the high frequency spectra.Comment: 10 pages, 7 Postscript figures, to be published in A&
Double radio peak and non-thermal collimated ejecta in RS Ophiuchi following the 2006 outburst
We report Multi-Element Radio-Linked Interferometer Network, Very Large Array, One-Centimetre Radio Array, Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA), Effelsberg and Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope observations beginning 4.5 days after the discovery of RS Ophiuchi undergoing its 2006 recurrent nova outburst. Observations over the first 9 weeks are included, enabling us to follow spectral development throughout the three phases of the remnant development. We see dramatic brightening on days 4 to 7 at 6 GHz and an accompanying increase in other bands, particularly 1.46 GHz, consistent with transition from the initial ‘free expansion’ phase to the adiabatic expansion phase. This is complete by day 13 when the flux density at 5 GHz is apparently declining from an unexpectedly early maximum (compared with expectations from observations of the 1985 outburst). The flux density recovered to a second peak by approximately day 40, consistent with behaviour observed in 1985. At all times the spectral index is consistent with mixed non-thermal and thermal emission. The spectral indices are consistent with a non-thermal component at lower frequencies on all dates, and the spectral index changes show that the two components are clearly variable. The estimated extent of the emission at 22 GHz on day 59 is consistent with the extended east and west features seen at 1.7 GHz with the VLBA on day 63 being entirely non-thermal. We suggest a two-component model, consisting of a decelerating shell seen in mixed thermal and non-thermal emission plus faster bipolar ejecta generating the non-thermal emission, as seen in contemporaneous VLBA observations. Our estimated ejecta mass of 4 ± 2 × 10−7 M⊙ is consistent with a white dwarf (WD) mass of 1.4 M⊙. It may be that this ejecta mass estimate is a lower limit, in which case a lower WD mass would be consistent with the data
A 20 GHz bright sample for {\delta} > +72{\deg}: I. Catalogue
During 2010-2011, the Medicina 32-m dish hosted the 7-feed 18-26.5 GHz
receiver built for the Sardinia Radio Telescope, with the goal to perform its
commissioning. This opportunity was exploited to carry out a pilot survey at 20
GHz over the area for {\delta} > + 72.3{\deg}. This paper describes all the
phases of the observations, as they were performed using new hardware and
software facilities. The map-making and source extraction procedures are
illustrated. A customised data reduction tool was used during the follow-up
phase, which produced a list of 73 confirmed sources down to a flux density of
115 mJy. The resulting catalogue, here presented, is complete above 200 mJy.
Source counts are in agreement with those provided by the AT20G survey. This
pilot activity paves the way to a larger project, the K-band Northern Wide
Survey (KNoWS), whose final aim is to survey the whole Northern Hemisphere down
to a flux limit of 50 mJy (5{\sigma}).Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures. Accepted by MNRA
The X-ray properties of high-z FRI candidates in the COSMOS field
We report the X-ray analysis of a sample of candidate high-redshift (1<z<2)
FRI sources from the sample of Chiaberge et al. (2009), observed in the Chandra
COSMOS field (C-COSMOS). Our main goals are to study their nuclear properties
by means of unresolved X-ray emission, and to constrain the presence of
clusters surrounding the FRI sources from the diffuse X-ray emission by the
associated hot plasma. Among 19 FRI candidates, 6 have an X-ray unresolved
counterpart in the C-COSMOS catalog. Two additional sources are not present in
the C-COSMOS catalog but are clearly detected in the Chandra images. X-ray
spectral analysis, when possible, or hardness ratio of the stacked emission
from X-ray detected sources, suggest that some of them have significant
intrinsic absorption (N_H~10^22 cm^-2), and high X-ray luminosities with
respect to local FRIs. From the stacking analysis of the 11 non-detected
sources, however, we find evidence for unresolved soft X-ray emission and no
detected hard emission, suggesting an unabsorbed spectrum. Therefore, the X-ray
properties vary significantly from source to source among these FRI candidates.
From the analysis of the stacked images of all 19 FRI candidates we can rule
out the presence of virialized haloes with temperatures larger than 2-3 keV;
however, the upper limit on the average extended emission is still consistent
with the presence of ~1-2 keV hot gas.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, MNRAS accepted; added co-author affiliatio
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