9,350 research outputs found
X-ray Spectroscopy of QSOs with Broad Ultraviolet Absorption Lines
For the population of QSOs with broad ultraviolet absorption lines, we are
just beginning to accumulate X-ray observations with enough counts for spectral
analysis at CCD resolution. From a sample of eight QSOs [including four Broad
Absorption Line (BAL) QSOs and three mini-BAL QSOs] with ASCA or Chandra
spectra with more than 200 counts, general patterns are emerging. Their
power-law X-ray continua are typical of normal QSOs with Gamma~2.0, and the
signatures of a significant column density [N_H~(0.1-4)x10^{23} cm^{-2}] of
intrinsic, absorbing gas are clear. Correcting the X-ray spectra for intrinsic
absorption recovers a normal ultraviolet-to-X-ray flux ratio, indicating that
the spectral energy distributions of this population are not inherently
anomalous. In addition, a large fraction of our sample shows significant
evidence for complexity in the absorption. The subset of BAL QSOs with broad
MgII absorption apparently suffers from Compton-thick absorption completely
obscuring the direct continuum in the 2-10 keV X-ray band, complicating any
measurement of their intrinsic X-ray spectral shapes.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, uses AASTeX. Accepted to the Astrophysical
Journa
Cigarette smoking in adolescents with asthma in Jordan: Impact of peer-led education in high schools
Background: Peer-led smoking prevention programs focus on teaching adolescentsespecially those with asthma- who are affected most by cigarettes, refusal skills to lower their intention to smoke. The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of a peer-led asthma education program on students who were smokers in terms of self-efficacy to resist smoking, asthma knowledge and asthma-related quality of life
Fatigue life estimates for helicopter loading spectra
Helicopter loading histories applied to notch metal samples are used as examples, and their fatigue lives are calculated by using a simplified version of the local strain approach. This simplified method has the advantage that it requires knowing the loading history in only the reduced form of ranges and means and number of cycles from the rain-flow cycle counting method. The calculated lives compare favorably with test data
X-raying the Winds of Luminous Active Galaxies
We briefly describe some recent observational results, mainly at X-ray
wavelengths, on the winds of luminous active galactic nuclei (AGNs). These
winds likely play a significant role in galaxy feedback. Topics covered include
(1) Relations between X-ray and UV absorption in Broad Absorption Line (BAL)
and mini-BAL quasars; (2) X-ray absorption in radio-loud BAL quasars; and (3)
Evidence for relativistic iron K BALs in the X-ray spectra of a few bright
quasars. We also mention some key outstanding problems and prospects for future
advances; e.g., with the International X-ray Observatory (IXO).Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, to appear in proceedings of the conference "The
Monster's Fiery Breath: Feedback in Galaxies, Groups, and Clusters", June
2009, Madison, Wisconsi
Ultraviolet/X-ray variability and the extended X-ray emission of the radio-loud broad absorption line quasar PG 1004+130
We present the results of recent Chandra, XMM-Newton, and Hubble Space
Telescope observations of the radio-loud (RL), broad absorption line (BAL)
quasar PG 1004+130. We compare our new observations to archival X-ray and UV
data, creating the most comprehensive, high signal-to-noise, multi-epoch,
spectral monitoring campaign of a RL BAL quasar to date. We probe for
variability of the X-ray absorption, the UV BAL, and the X-ray jet, on
month-year timescales. The X-ray absorber has a low column density of
cm when it is assumed to be fully
covering the X-ray emitting region, and its properties do not vary
significantly between the 4 observations. This suggests the observed absorption
is not related to the typical "shielding gas" commonly invoked in BAL quasar
models, but is likely due to material further from the central black hole. In
contrast, the CIV BAL shows strong variability. The equivalent width (EW) in
2014 is EW=11.240.56 \AA, showing a fractional increase of =1.160.11 from the 2003 observation, 3183 days earlier
in the rest-frame. This places PG 1004+130 among the most highly variable BAL
quasars. By combining Chandra observations we create an exposure 2.5 times
deeper than studied previously, with which to investigate the nature of the
X-ray jet and extended diffuse X-ray emission. An X-ray knot, likely with a
synchrotron origin, is detected in the radio jet ~8 arcsec (30 kpc) from the
central X-ray source with a spatial extent of ~4 arcsec (15 kpc). No similar
X-ray counterpart to the counterjet is detected. Asymmetric, non-thermal
diffuse X-ray emission, likely due to inverse Compton scattering of Cosmic
Microwave Background photons, is also detected.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap
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