1,588 research outputs found
The broad band spectral properties of galactic X-ray binary pulsars
BeppoSAX observed several galactic binary X-ray pulsars during the Science
Verification Phase and in the first year of the regular program. The complex
emission spectra of these sources are an ideal target for the BeppoSAX
instrumentation, that can measure the emission spectra in an unprecedented
broad energy band. Using this capability of BeppoSAX a detailed observational
work can be done on the galactic X-ray pulsars. In particular the 0.1-200 keV
energy band allows the shape of the continuum emission to be tightly
constrained. A better determination of the underlying continuum allows an
easier detection of features superimposed onto it, both at low energy (Fe K and
L, Ne lines) and at high energies (cyclotron features). We report on the
spectral properties of a sample of X-ray pulsars observed with BeppoSAX
comparing the obtained results. Some ideas of common properties are also
discussed and compared with our present understanding of the emission
mechanisms and processes.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures. Uses espcrc2.sty (included).To appear in
Proceedings of "The Active X-ray Sky: Results from BeppoSAX and Rossi-XTE
Ab initio calculation of the 4He(e,e'd)d reaction
The two-body knock-out reaction 4He(e,e'd)d is calculated at various momentum
transfers. The full four-nucleon dynamics is taken into account microscopically
both in the initial and the final states. As NN interaction the central
MT-I/III potential is used. The calculation shows a strong reduction of the
coincidence cross section due to the final state interaction. Nonetheless the
theoretical results exhibit a considerable overestimation of the experimental
cross section at lower momentum transfer. Comparisons with other, less
complete, calculations suggest that consideration of a more realistic ground
state might not be sufficient for a good agreement with experiment, rather a
more realistic final state interaction could play an essential role.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
BeppoSAX observations of the X-ray binary pulsar 4U1626-67
We report on observations of the low-mass X-ray binary 4U1626-67 performed
during the BeppoSAX Science Verification Phase. We present the broad-band
0.1-100 keV pulse averaged spectrum, that is well fit by a two-component
function: a 0.27 +/- 0.02 keV blackbody and an absorbed power law with a photon
index of 0.89 +/- 0.02. A very deep and narrow absorption feature at 38 keV,
attributable to electron cyclotron resonance, is clearly visible in the
broad-band spectrum. It corresponds to a neutron star magnetic field strength
of 3.3 x 10^{12} G. The 4U1626-67 pulse profiles show a dramatic dependance on
energy: the transition between the low energy (E<10 keV) "bi-horned" shape to
the high-energy (E>10 keV) sinusoidal profile is clearly visible in our data.
The modulation index shows a monotonic increase with energy.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Uses espcrc2.sty (included). To appear in
Proceedings of "The Active X-ray Sky: Results from BeppoSAX and Rossi-XTE
The broad band spectral properties of binary X-ray pulsars
The X-ray telescopes on board BeppoSAX are an optimal set of instruments to
observe bright galactic binary pulsars. These sources emit very hard and quite
complex X-ray spectra that can be accurately measured with BeppoSAX between 0.1
and 200 keV. A prototype of this complexity, the source Her X-1, shows at least
seven different components in its spectrum. A broad band measure is therefore
of paramount importance to have a thorough insight into the physics of the
emitting region. Moreover the detection of cyclotron features, when present,
allows a direct and highly significant measure of the magnetic field intensity
in the emission region. In this paper we briefly report the results obtained
with BeppoSAX on this class of sources, with emphasis on the detection and on
the measured properties of the cyclotron lines.Comment: 10 Latex pages, 4 figures, uses psfig.sty. Accepted for publication
in Advances in Space Research, in Proceedings of 32nd Scientific Assembly of
COSPAR - Symposium E1.1: "Broad-Band X-ray Spectroscopy of Cosmic Sources
Monitoring of crop water consumption changing based on remotely sensed data and techniques in North Sinai, Egypt
This paper aims to approximate and verify crop water use based on satellite results. Land Surface Temperature (LST) and Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) were used as the critical parameters derived from NOAA/AVHRR and landsat8 satellite data. Reference evapotranspiration (ETo) was determined using FAO-Penman-Monteith (FPM) agrometeorological data as a standard process. Based on data from remote sensing, the ETo was calculated based on the Hargreaves (Har) process. ETo-FPM has been used to calibrate ETo-Har under the same conditions for five years (2002-2006). Landsat8 data was obtained on 25 June 2013 and 28 June 2014 and used to estimate the crop coefficient (Kc) based on satellite data (Kc-Sat). The LST was used to predict the maximum, minimum, and mean Tair (oC) levels in June 2013 and 2014. ETo was calculated using the expected maximum, minimum, and mean Tair according to the Har method and was used with Kc-Sat to estimate ETc-Har. ETo-FPM is used to measure ETc-FPM with Kc-Sat. LST and NDVI have been used to measure the Water Deficiency Index (WDI). WDI incorporated ETc to measure the actual evapotranspiration of the crop (ETa). ETa-FPM was used for the evaluation of ETa-Har. The relationship between ETa-FPM and ETa-Har was high, where R2 was 0.99 in 2013 and 2014. ETa determined by Hargreaves based on remotely sensed data was overestimated at about 0.8 (mm/day) compared to the FPM process
BeppoSAX observation of the X-ray binary pulsar Vela X-1
We report on the spectral (pulse averaged) and timing analysis of the ~ 20
ksec observation of the X-ray binary pulsar Vela X-1 performed during the
BeppoSAX Science Verification Phase. The source was observed in two different
intensity states: the low state is probably due to an erratic intensity dip and
shows a decrease of a factor ~ 2 in intensity, and a factor 10 in Nh. We have
not been able to fit the 2-100 keV continuum spectrum with the standard (for an
X--ray pulsar) power law modified by a high energy cutoff because of the
flattening of the spectrum in ~ 10-30 keV. The timing analysis confirms
previous results: the pulse profile changes from a five-peak structure for
energies less than 15 keV, to a simpler two-peak shape at higher energies. The
Fourier analysis shows a very complex harmonic component: up to 23 harmonics
are clearly visible in the power spectrum, with a dominant first harmonic for
low energy data, and a second one as the more prominent for energies greater
than 15 keV. The aperiodic component in the Vela X-1 power spectrum presents a
knee at about 1 Hz. The pulse period, corrected for binary motion, is 283.206
+/- 0.001 sec.Comment: 5 pages, 4 PostScript figure, uses aipproc.sty, to appear in
Proceedings of Fourth Compton Symposiu
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