16,754 research outputs found
Identification of the infrared non-thermal emission in Blazars
Blazars constitute the most interesting and enigmatic class of extragalactic
gamma-ray sources dominated by non-thermal emission. In this Letter, we show
how the WISE infrared data make possible to identify a distinct region of the
[3.4]-[4.6]-[12] micron color-color diagram where the sources dominated by the
the thermal radiation are separated from those dominated by non-thermal
emission, in particular the blazar population. This infrared non-thermal region
delineated as the WISE Blazar Strip (WBS), it is a powerful new diagnostic tool
when the full WISE survey data is released. The WBS can be used to extract new
blazar candidates, to identify those of uncertain type and also to search for
the counterparts of unidentified gamma-ray sources. We show one example of the
value of the use of the WBS identifying the TeV source VER J 0648+152, recently
discovered by VERITAS.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, Astrophysical Journal publishe
Child of Steel
[Excerpt] After several months of thinking about what is happening to the working class, particularly the steel industry and the whole system of labor, this poem came to me.
I drive by Homestead Mill every morning to get to my job and to get home I drive past the J&L Steel Mill. Occasionally, I drive through Braddock to the house and street where most of my life was spent.
These are some of the contributing factors which also helped to crystallize this poem
Infrared Colors of the gamma-ray detected blazars
Blazars constitute the most enigmatic class of extragalactic gamma-ray
sources, and their observational features have been ascribed to a relativistic
jet closely aligned to the line of sight. They are generally divided in two
main classes: the BL Lac objects (BL Lacs) and the Flat Spectrum Radio Quasars
(FSRQs). In the case of BL Lacs the double bumped spectral energy distribution
(SED) is generally described by the Synchrotron Self Compton (SSC) emission,
while for the FSRQs it is interpreted as due to External Compton (EC) emission.
Recently, we showed that in the [3.4]-[4.6]-[12] micron color- color diagram
the blazar population covers a distinct region (i.e., the WISE blazar Strip,
WBS), clearly separated from the other extragalactic sources that are dominated
by thermal emission. In this paper we investigate the relation between the
infrared and gamma-ray emission for a subset of confirmed blazars from the
literature, associated with Fermi sources, for which WISE archival observations
are available. This sample is a proper subset of the sample of sources used
previously, and the availability of Fermi data is critical to constrain the
models on the emission mechanisms for the blazars. We found that the selected
blazars also lie on the WISE blazar Strip covering a narrower region of the
infrared color-color planes than the overall blazars population. We then found
an evident correlation between the IR and gamma-ray spectral indices expected
in the SSC and EC frameworks. Finally, we determined the ratio between their
gamma-ray and infrared fluxes, a surrogate of the ratio of powers between the
inverse Compton and the synchrotron SED components, and used such parameter to
test different emitting scenarios blazars.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figure, accepted for publication in ApJ, to appear in
2012 March 20 editio
Hierarchical community structure in complex (social) networks
The investigation of community structure in networks is a task of great
importance in many disciplines, namely physics, sociology, biology and computer
science where systems are often represented as graphs. One of the challenges is
to find local communities from a local viewpoint in a graph without global
information in order to reproduce the subjective hierarchical vision for each
vertex. In this paper we present the improvement of an information dynamics
algorithm in which the label propagation of nodes is based on the Markovian
flow of information in the network under cognitive-inspired constraints
\cite{Massaro2012}. In this framework we have introduced two more complex
heuristics that allow the algorithm to detect the multi-resolution hierarchical
community structure of networks from a source vertex or communities adopting
fixed values of model's parameters. Experimental results show that the proposed
methods are efficient and well-behaved in both real-world and synthetic
networks
R. F. testing of the third generation defense communication satellite
The approach taken to test a completed DSCS communications satellite on a system level is described. Areas to be described are measuring RF isolation of separate communications subsystems and a test method which insures that one RF subsystem does not interfere with another. In addition, the method of complying with MIL-STD-1541 in the area of demonstrating safety of electroexplosive devices in an RF field is discussed
X-ray and TeV emissions from High Frequency Peaked BL Lacs
The majority of the extragalactic sources yet detected at TeV photon energies
belong to the class of "high frequency peaked BL Lacs" (HBLs) that exhibit a
spectral energy distribution with a lower peak in the X-ray band. Such spectra
are well described in terms of a log-parabolic shape with a considerable
curvature, and widely interpreted as synchrotron emission from
ultrarelativistic electrons outflowing in a relativistic jet; these are
expected to radiate also in gamma-rays by the inverse Compton process. Recently
we have compared the X-ray spectral parameter distributions of TeV detected
HBLs (TBLs) with those undetected (UBLs), and found that the distributions of
the peak energies E_p are similarly symmetric around a value of a few keVs for
both subclasses, while the X-ray spectra are broader for TBLs than for UBLs.
Here we propose an acceleration scenario to interpret both the E_p and the
spectral curvature distributions in terms of a coherent and a stochastic
acceleration mechanisms, respectively. We show how the curvature parameter b<
0.3 - 0.7 of the synchrotron X rays, that depends only on the latter
acceleration component, can be related to the inverse Compton luminosity in
gamma-rays, so introducing a link between the X-ray and the TeV observations of
HBLs.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Astrophysical Journal publishe
The WISE gamma-ray strip parametrization: the nature of the gamma-ray Active Galactic Nuclei of Uncertain type
Despite the large number of discoveries made recently by Fermi, the origins
of the so called unidentified gamma-ray sources remain unknown. The large
number of these sources suggests that among them there could be a population
that significantly contributes to the isotropic gamma-ray background and is
therefore crucial to understand their nature. The first step toward a complete
comprehension of the unidentified gamma-ray source population is to identify
those that can be associated with blazars, the most numerous class of
extragalactic sources in the gamma-ray sky. Recently, we discovered that
blazars can be recognized and separated from other extragalactic sources using
the infrared (IR) WISE satellite colors. The blazar population delineates a
remarkable and distinctive region of the IR color-color space, the WISE blazar
strip. In particular, the subregion delineated by the gamma-ray emitting
blazars is even narrower and we named it as the WISE Gamma-ray Strip (WGS). In
this paper we parametrize the WGS on the basis of a single parameter s that we
then use to determine if gamma-ray Active Galactic Nuclei of the uncertain type
(AGUs) detected by Fermi are consistent with the WGS and so can be considered
blazar candidates. We find that 54 AGUs out of a set 60 analyzed have IR colors
consistent with the WGS; only 6 AGUs are outliers. This result implies that a
very high percentage (i.e., in this sample about 90%) of the AGUs detected by
Fermi are indeed blazar candidates.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures, Astrophysical Journal in pres
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