12,929 research outputs found
On the origin of radio core emission in radio-quiet quasars
We present a model for the radio emission from radio-quiet quasar nuclei. We
show that a thermal origin for the high brightness temperature, flat spectrum
point sources (known as radio ``cores'') is possible provided the emitting
region is hot and optically-thin. We hence demonstrate that optically-thin
bremsstrahlung from a slow, dense disk wind can make a significant contribution
to the observed levels of radio core emission. This is a much more satisfactory
explanation, particularly for sources where there is no evidence of a jet, than
a sequence of self-absorbed synchrotron components which collectively conspire
to give a flat spectrum. Furthermore, such core phenomena are already observed
directly via milli-arcsecond radio imaging of the Galactic microquasar SS433
and the active galaxy NGC1068. We contend that radio-emitting disk winds must
be operating at some level in radio-loud quasars and radio galaxies as well
(although in these cases, observations of the radio cores are frequently
contaminated/dominated by synchrotron emission from jet knots). This
interpretation of radio core emission mandates mass accretion rates that are
substantially higher than Eddington. Moreover, acknowledgment of this mass-loss
mechanism as an AGN feedback process has important implications for the input
of energy and hot gas into the inter-galactic medium (IGM) since it is
considerably less directional than that from jets.Comment: to appear in ApJ Letters (4 pages
Dynamics of the Lyman alpha and C IV emitting gas in 3C 273
In this paper we study the variability properties of the Lyman alpha and C IV
emission lines in 3C273 using archival IUE observations. Our data show for the
first time the existence of variability on time scales of several years. We
study the spatial distribution and the velocity field of the emitting gas by
performing detailed analyses on the line variability using correlations, 1D and
2D response functions, and principal component analysis. In both lines we find
evidence for two components, one which has the dynamic properties of gas in
Keplerian motion around a black hole with a mass of the order of 10^9 Mo, and
one which is characterized by high, blue-shifted velocities at large lag. There
is no indication of the presence of optically thick emission medium neither in
the Lya, nor in the Civ response functions. The component characterized by
blue-shifted velocities, which is comparatively much stronger in Civ than in
Lya, is more or less compatible with being the result of gas falling towards
the central black hole with free-fall acceleration. We propose however that the
line emission at high, blue-shifted velocities is better explained in terms of
entrainment of gas clouds by the jet. This gas is therefore probably
collisionally excited as a result of heating due to the intense infrared
radiation from the jet, which would explain the strength of this component in
Civ relative to Lya. This phenomenon might be a signature of disk-jet
interaction.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ. Uses aaste
Evidence for nonlinear diffusive shock acceleration of cosmic-rays in the 2006 outburst of the recurrent nova RS Ophiuchi
Spectroscopic observations of the 2006 outburst of the recurrent nova RS
Ophiuchi at both infrared (IR) and X-ray wavelengths have shown that the blast
wave has decelerated at a higher rate than predicted by the standard
test-particle adiabatic shock-wave model. Here we show that the observed
evolution of the nova remnant can be explained by the diffusive shock
acceleration of particles at the blast wave and the subsequent escape of the
highest energy ions from the shock region. Nonlinear particle acceleration can
also account for the difference of shock velocities deduced from the IR and
X-ray data. The maximum energy that accelerated electrons and protons can have
achieved in few days after outburst is found to be as high as a few TeV. Using
the semi-analytic model of nonlinear diffusive shock acceleration developed by
Berezhko & Ellison, we show that the postshock temperature of the shocked gas
measured with RXTE/PCA and Swift/XRT imply a relatively moderate acceleration
efficiency.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
Outer zone electrons
Spatial and temporal behavior of high energy trapped electrons in outer zone of magnetospher
Systematic Errors in the Estimation of Black Hole Masses by Reverberation Mapping
The mass of the central black hole in many active galactic nuclei has been
estimated on the basis of the assumption that the dynamics of the broad
emission line gas are dominated by the gravity of the black hole. The most
commonly-employed method is to estimate a characteristic size-scale from
reverberation mapping experiments and combine it with a characteristic velocity
taken from the line profiles; the inferred mass is then estimated by . We critically discuss the evidence supporting the assumption of
gravitational dynamics and find that the arguments are still inconclusive. We
then explore the range of possible systematic error if the assumption of
gravitational dynamics is granted. Inclination relative to a flattened system
may cause a systematic underestimate of the central mass by a factor , where is the aspect ratio of the flattening. The coupled
effects of a broad radial emissivity distribution, an unknown angular radiation
pattern of line emission, and sub-optimal sampling in the reverberation
experiment can cause additional systematic errors as large as a factor of 3 or
more in either direction.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, AASLaTeX, accepted by Ap
High-Fidelity Z-Measurement Error Correction of Optical Qubits
We demonstrate a quantum error correction scheme that protects against
accidental measurement, using an encoding where the logical state of a single
qubit is encoded into two physical qubits using a non-deterministic photonic
CNOT gate. For the single qubit input states |0>, |1>, |0>+|1>, |0>-|1>,
|0>+i|1>, and |0>-i|1> our encoder produces the appropriate 2-qubit encoded
state with an average fidelity of 0.88(3) and the single qubit decoded states
have an average fidelity of 0.93(5) with the original state. We are able to
decode the 2-qubit state (up to a bit flip) by performing a measurement on one
of the qubits in the logical basis; we find that the 64 1-qubit decoded states
arising from 16 real and imaginary single qubit superposition inputs have an
average fidelity of 0.96(3).Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, comments welcom
Modeling Variable Emission Lines in AGNs: Method and Application to NGC 5548
We present a new scheme for modeling the broad line region in active galactic
nuclei (AGNs). It involves photoionization calculations of a large number of
clouds, in several pre-determined geometries, and a comparison of the
calculated line intensities with observed emission line light curves. Fitting
several observed light curves simultaneously provides strong constraints on
model parameters such as the run of density and column density across the
nucleus, the shape of the ionizing continuum, and the radial distribution of
the emission line clouds. When applying the model to the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC
5548, we were able to reconstruct the light curves of four ultraviolet
emission-lines, in time and in absolute flux. This has not been achieved by any
previous work. We argue that the Balmer lines light curves, and possibly also
the MgII2798 light curve, cannot be tested in this scheme because of the
limitations of present-day photoionization codes. Our fit procedure can be used
to rule out models where the particle density scales as r^{-2}, where r is the
distance from the central source. The best models are those where the density
scales as r^{-1} or r^{-1.5}. We can place a lower limit on the column density
at a distance of 1 ld, of N_{col}(r=1) >~ 10^{23} cm^{-2} and limit the
particle density to be in the range of 10^{12.5}>N(r=1)>10^{11} cm^{-3}. We
have also tested the idea that the spectral energy distribution (SED) of the
ionizing continuum is changing with continuum luminosity. None of the
variable-shape SED tried resulted in real improvement over a constant SED case
although models with harder continuum during phases of higher luminosity seem
to fit better the observed spectrum. Reddening and/or different composition
seem to play a minor role, at least to the extent tested in this work.Comment: 12 pages, including 9 embedded EPS figures, accepted for publication
in Ap
Spectral Properties From Lyman-alpha to H-alpha For An Essentially Complete Sample of Quasars I: Data
We have obtained quasi-simultaneous ultraviolet-optical spectra for 22 out of
23 quasars in the complete PG-X-ray sample with redshift, z<0.4, and M_B<-23.
The spectra cover rest-frame wavelengths from at least Lyman-alpha to H-alpha.
Here we provide a detailed description of the data, including careful
spectrophotometry and redshift determination. We also present direct
measurements of the continua, strong emission lines and features, including
Lyman-alpha, SiIV+OIV], CIV, CIII], SiIII], MgII, H-beta, [OIII],
He5876+NaI5890,5896, H-alpha, and blended iron emission in the UV and optical.
The widths, asymmetries and velocity shifts of profiles of strong emission
lines show that CIV and Lyman-alpha are very different from H-beta and H-alpha.
This suggests that the motion of the broad line region is related to the
ionization structure, but the data appears not agree with the radially
stratified ionization structure supported by reverberation mapping studies, and
therefore suggest that outflows contribute additional velocity components to
the broad emission line profiles.Comment: 42 pages, 10 figures, 13 tables. Accepted by AJ. Supplemental figures
not included. Full version available at
http://physics.uwyo.edu/~shang/pgxpaper/ShangPaper.pd
Changing social contracts in climate-change adaptation
Risks from extreme weather events are mediated through
state, civil society and individual action
1
,
2
. We propose evolving
social contracts as a primary mechanism by which adaptation
to climate change proceeds. We use a natural experiment
of policy and social contexts of the UK and Ireland affected
by the same meteorological event and resultant flooding in
November 2009. We analyse data from policy documents and
from household surveys of 356 residents in western Ireland and
northwest England. We find significant differences between
perceptions of individual responsibility for protection across
the jurisdictions and between perceptions of future risk from
populations directly affected by flooding events. These explain
differences in stated willingness to take individual adaptive
actions when state support retrenches. We therefore show
that expectations for state protection are critical in mediating
impacts and promoting longer-term adaptation. We argue
that making social contracts explicit may smooth pathways to
effective and legitimate adaptation
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