298 research outputs found
A Propaganda Film Subverting Ethnic Hierarchy?: "Suicide Squad at the Watchtower" and Colonial Korea
In the film Suicide Squad at the Watchtower (1943), the appearance of a Korean female physician carries with it the potential to subvert the film’s representation of the colonial ethnic hierarchy. The film’s director, Ch’oe In-gyu, had in his earlier film Homeless Angels presented the edifying message that a Korean female orphan could aspire to become a physician. This message was also incorporated into Suicide Squad at the Watchtower. In these two films the story of a Korean woman who studies to become a physician (or at least desires to become one) unfolds through the same actress, Kim Sin-jae. The suggestion that a Korean could achieve a social position equal to or even higher than a Japanese introduced the possibility of subverting the colonial ethnic hierarchy. But while the screenplay for the film had explicitly portrayed the female physician, the film version suppressed the representation, making it less evident. Nevertheless, it is possible to see Suicide Squad at the Watchtower’s enlightened message as an element with the potential to upset the ruling colonial order
Suzaku investigation into the nature of the nearest ultraluminous X-ray source, M33 X-8
The X-ray spectrum of the nearest ultraluminous X-ray source, M33 X-8,
obtained by Suzaku during 2010 January 11 -- 13, was closely analyzed to
examine its nature. It is, by far, the only data with the highest signal
statistic in 0.4 -- 10 keV range. Despite being able to reproduce the X-ray
spectrum, Comptonization of the disk photons failed to give a physically
meaningful solution. A modified version of the multi-color disk model, in which
the dependence of the disk temperature on the radius is described as r^(-p)
with p being a free parameter, can also approximate the spectrum. From this
model, the innermost disk temperature and bolometric luminosity were obtained
as T_in = 2.00-0.05+0.06 keV and L_disk = 1.36 x 10^39 (cos i)^(-1) ergs/s,
respectively, where i is the disk inclination. A small temperature gradient of
p = 0.535-0.005+0.004, together with the high disk temperature, is regarded as
the signatures of the slim accretion disk model, suggesting that M33 X-8 was
accreting at high mass accretion rate. With a correction factor for the slim
disk taken into account, the innermost disk radius, R_in =81.9-6.5+5.9 (cos
i)^(-0.5) km, corresponds to the black hole mass of M \sim 10 M_sun (cos
i)^(-0.5). Accordingly, the bolometric disk luminosity is estimated to be about
80 (cos i)^(-0.5)% of the Eddington limit. A numerically calculated slim disk
spectrum was found to reach a similar result. Thus, the extremely
super-Eddington luminosity is not required to explain the nature of M33 X-8.
This conclusion is utilized to argue for the existence of intermediate mass
black holes with M > 100 M_sun radiating at the sub/trans-Eddington luminosity,
among ultraluminous X-ray sources with L_disk > 10^(40) ergs/s.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, PASJ accepte
Discovery of a bright transient ultraluminous X-ray source Suzaku J1305-4931 in NGC 4945
This paper reports the discovery of a bright X-ray transient source, Suzaku
J1305-4913, in the south-west arm of the nearby Seyfert II galaxy NGC 4945. It
was detected at a 0.5 -- 10 keV flux of erg cm
s during the Suzaku observation conducted on 2006 January 15 -- 17, but
was undetectable in a shorter observation on 2005 August 22 --23, with an upper
limit of erg cm s (90% confidence level).
At a distance of 3.7 Mpc, the bolometric luminosity of the source becomes
erg s, where and is the disk inclination. Therefore, the source is
classified into so-called ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs). The time-averaged
X-ray spectrum of the source is described by a multi-color disk model, with the
innermost accretion disk temperature of
keV. During the 2006 January observation, it varied by a factor of 2 in
intensity, following a clear correlation of .
It is inferred that the innermost disk radius stayed constant at
km, suggesting the presence of a
standard accretion disk. Relating with the last stable orbit
around a non-rotating black hole yields a rather low black hole mass, solar masses, which would imply that the source is shining at a
luminosity of times the Eddington limit. These results
can be better interpreted by invoking sub-Eddington emission from a rapidly
spinning black hole with a mass of 20 -- 130 solar masses.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, Accepted for PASJ 2nd Suzaku special issu
Spin-spiral structures in free-standing Fe(110) monolayers
科研費報告書収録論文(課題番号:16310081/研究代表者:白井正文/ナノ磁性材料におけるスピン構造とそのダイナミクスに関する理論研究
Spectral transitions of an ultraluminous X-ray source, NGC 2403 Source 3
Suzaku observation of an ultraluminous X-ray source, NGC 2403 Source 3,
performed on 2006 March 16--17, is reported. The Suzaku XIS spectrum of Source
3 was described with a multi-color black-body-like emission from an optically
thick accretion disk. The innermost temperature and radius of the accretion
disk was measured to be keV and km, respectively, where with being the disk inclination. The bolometric
luminosity of the source was estimated to be ergs s. Archival Chandra and XMM-Newton data of the source were
analyzed for long-term spectral variations. In almost all observations, the
source showed multi-color black-body-like X-ray spectra with parameters similar
to those in the Suzaku observation. In only one Chandra observation, however,
Source 3 was found to exhibit a power-law-like spectrum, with a photon index of
, when it was fainter by about than in the
Suzaku observation. The spectral behavior is naturally explained in terms of a
transition between the slim disk state and the "very high" states, both found
in Galactic black hole binaries when their luminosity approach the Eddington
limit. These results are utilized to argue that ultraluminous X-ray sources
generally have significantly higher black-hole masses than ordinary
stellar-mass black holes.Comment: Accepted for PASJ 3nd Suzaku special issu
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