1,700 research outputs found
The X-ray nebula of the filled center supernova remnant 3C58 and its interaction with the environment
An \xmm observation of the plerionic supernova remnant 3C58 has allowed us to
study the X-ray nebula with unprecedented detail. A spatially resolved spectral
analysis with a resolution of 8\arcsec has yielded a precise determination of
the relation between the spectral index and the distance from the center. We do
not see any evidence for bright thermal emission from the central core. In
contrast with previous ASCA and {\em Einstein} results, we derive an upper
limit to the black-body 0.5-10 keV luminosity and emitting area of \ergsec and cm, respectively, ruling out
emission from the hot surface of the putative neutron star and also excluding
the "outer-gap" model for hot polar caps. We have performed for the first time
a spectral analysis of the outer regions of the X-ray nebula, where most of the
emission is still non-thermal, but where the addition of a soft (kT=0.2-0.3
keV) optically thin plasma component is required to fit the spectrum at
keV. This component provides 6% of the whole remnant observed flux in the
0.5-10.0 keV band. We show that a Sedov interpretation is incompatible with the
SN1181-3C58 association, unless there is a strong deviation from electron-ion
energy equipartition, and that an origin of this thermal emission in terms of
the expansion of the nebula into the ejecta core nicely fits all the radio and
X-ray observations.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
An XMM-Newton view of the serendipitous sources in the PKS0312-770 field
We describe an XMM-Newton observation of the PKS0312-770 field, which facilitates the spectral analysis of serendipitous sources previously detected by CHANDRA. The combination of larger effective area and longer exposure duration allows a significant increase in detected photons, and a lower limit in source detection sensitivity. In particular the hard X-ray normal galaxy unveiled by Fiore et al (2000) is most likely explained as a moderately absorbed (N_H ~ 1e22 cm^-2) AGN. We detect 52 sources (45 previously unreported) at a limiting flux of ~2e-15 cgs in the 0.5-2keV band. The LogN-LogS curve is consistent with that derived from by XMM-Newton observations of the Lockman Hole field. The flux determinations allow to check for any inconsistency between the calibrations of the two observatories, which is discussed
Safety in Numbers: A strategy for cycling?
Jennifer Bonham, Stuart Cathcart, John Petkov and Peter Lum
In-orbit Vignetting Calibrations of XMM-Newton Telescopes
We describe measurements of the mirror vignetting in the XMM-Newton
Observatory made in-orbit, using observations of SNR G21.5-09 and SNR
3C58 with the EPIC imaging cameras. The instrument features that complicate
these measurements are briefly described. We show the spatial and energy
dependences of measured vignetting, outlining assumptions made in deriving the
eventual agreement between simulation and measurement. Alternate methods to
confirm these are described, including an assessment of source elongation with
off-axis angle, the surface brightness distribution of the diffuse X-ray
background, and the consistency of Coma cluster emission at different position
angles. A synthesis of these measurements leads to a change in the XMM
calibration data base, for the optical axis of two of the three telescopes, by
in excess of 1 arcminute. This has a small but measureable effect on the
assumed spectral responses of the cameras for on-axis targets.Comment: Accepted by Experimental Astronomy. 26 pages, 18 figure
Forward-Backward Differential Equations: Approximation of Small Solutions
Com o apoio RAADRI.In the context of physics, economic dynamics, nance, optimal control, biology and other applied sciences, many mathematical models contain mixed type functional differential equations (MTFDEs), equations with both delayed and advanced arguments. Knowing from the analysis of delay di erential equations (DDEs) that the evaluation of small solutions (that decay faster than any exponential) often leads to computational problems (degeneracy), we investigate this subject in the case of MTFDEs. Some computations have been carried out and are presented here, concerning the linear nonautonomous case. We continue this work and extend the investigation to other problems
X-ray Spectroscopy of the Cluster of Galaxies Abell 1795 with XMM-Newton
The initial results from XMM-Newton observations of the rich cluster of
galaxies Abell 1795 are presented. The spatially-resolved X-ray spectra taken
by the European Photon Imaging Cameras (EPIC) show a temperature drop at a
radius of kpc from the cluster center, indicating that the ICM is
cooling. Both the EPIC and the Reflection Grating Spectrometers (RGS) spectra
extracted from the cluster center can be described by an isothermal model with
a temperature of keV. The volume emission measure of any cool
component ( keV) is less than a few % of the hot component at the cluster
center. A strong OVIII Lyman-alpha line was detected with the RGS from the
cluster core. The O abundance and its ratio to Fe at the cluster center is
0.2--0.5 and 0.5--1.5 times the solar value, respectively.Comment: Accepted: A&A Letters, 2001, 6 page
Influence of a carbon over-coat on the X-ray reflectance of XEUS mirrors
We describe measurements of the X-ray reflectance in the range 2 to 10 keV of
samples representative of coated silicon wafers that are proposed for the
fabrication of the XEUS (X-ray Evolving Universe Spectrometer) mission. We
compare the reflectance of silicon samples coated with bare Pt, with that for
samples with an additional 10nm thick carbon over-coating. We demonstrate a
significant improvement in reflectance in the energy range ~1 to 4 keV, and at
a grazing incidence angle of 10 mrad (0.57 degrees). We consider the resulting
effective area that could be attained with an optimized design of the XEUS
telescope. Typically an improvement of 10 to 60 % in effective area, depending
on photon energy, can be achieved using the carbon overcoat.Comment: 7 pages, 5 separate figures Accepted Optics Communication
An XMM and Chandra view of massive clusters of galaxies to z=1
The X-ray properties of a sample of high redshift (z>0.6), massive clusters
observed with XMM-Newton and Chandra are described, including two exceptional
systems. One, at z=0.89, has an X-ray temperature of T=11.5 (+1.1, -0.9) keV
(the highest temperature of any cluster known at z>0.6), an estimated mass of
(1.4+/-0.2)x10^15 solar masses and appears relaxed. The other, at z=0.83, has
at least three sub-clumps, probably in the process of merging, and may also
show signs of faint filamentary structure at large radii,observed in X-rays. In
general there is a mix of X-ray morphologies, from those clusters which appear
relaxed and containing little substructure to some highly non-virialized and
probably merging systems. The X-ray gas metallicities and gas mass fractions of
the relaxed systems are similar to those of low redshift clusters of the same
temperature, suggesting that the gas was in place, and containing its metals,
by z=0.8. The evolution of the mass-temperature relation may be consistent with
no evolution or with the ``late formation'' assumption. The effect of point
source contamination in the ROSAT survey from which these clusters were
selected is estimated, and the implications for the ROSAT X-ray luminosity
function discussed.Comment: 9 pages, in Carnegie Observatories Astrophysics Series, Vol. 3:
Clusters of Galaxies: Probes of Cosmological Structure and Galaxy Evolution,
ed. J. S. Mulchaey, A. Dressler, and A. Oemler. See
http://www.ociw.edu/ociw/symposia/series/symposium3/proceedings.html for a
full-resolution versio
UV observations of the galaxy cluster Abell 1795 with the optical monitor on XMM-Newton
We present the results of an analysis of broad band UV observations of the
central regions of Abell 1795 observed with the optical monitor on XMM-Newton.
As have been found with other UV observations of the central regions of
clusters of galaxies, we find evidence for star formation. However, we also
find evidence for absorption in the cD galaxy on a more extended scale than has
been seen with optical imaging. We also report the first UV observation of part
of the filamentary structure seen in H, X-rays and very deep U band
imaging. The part of the filament we see is very blue with UV colours
consistent with a very early (O/B) stellar population. This is the first direct
evidence of a dominant population of early type stars at the centre of Abell
1795 and implies very recent star formation at the centre of this clusterComment: 6 pages, 3 figures accepted by A&A Letter
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Delivering evidence-based interventions for type 1 diabetes in the virtual world - A review of UK practice during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.
Funder: Abbott Diabetes CareFunder: SanofiFunder: Novo NordiskFunder: MedtronicAIMS: This review considers the impact of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic on access to interventions for those living with type 1 diabetes and discusses the solutions which have been considered and actioned to ensure ongoing access care. METHODS: We performed a focussed review of the published literature, and the guidelines for changes that have been effected during the pandemic. We also drew from expert recommendations and information about local practice changes for areas where formal data have not been published. RESULTS: Evidence based interventions which support the achievement of improved glucose levels and/or reduction in hypoglycaemia include group structured education to support self-management, insulin pump therapy and continuous glucose monitoring. The SARS-CoV-2 pandemic had impacted the ability of diabetes services to deliver these intervention. Multiple adaptations have been put in place - transition to online delivery of education and care, and usage of diabetes technology. CONCLUSIONS: Although various adaptations have been made during the pandemic that have positively influenced uptake of services, there are many areas of delivery that need immediate improvement in the UK. We recommend a proactive approach in recognising the digital divide and inequity in distribution of these changes and we recommend introducing measures to reduce them
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