19,775 research outputs found
XMM-Newton and Swift spectroscopy of the newly discovered very-faint X-ray transient IGR J17494-3030
A growing group of low-mass X-ray binaries are found to be accreting at
very-faint X-ray luminosities of <1E36 erg/s (2-10 keV). Once such system is
the new X-ray transient IGR J17494-3030. We present Swift and XMM-Newton
observations obtained during its 2012 discovery outburst. The Swift
observations trace the peak of the outburst, which reached a luminosity of ~7
E35 (D/8 kpc)^2 erg/s (2-10 keV). The XMM-Newton data were obtained when the
outburst had decayed to an intensity of ~ 8 E34 (D/8 kpc)^2 erg/s. The spectrum
can be described by a power-law with an index of ~1.7 and requires an
additional soft component with a black-body temperature of ~0.37 keV
(contributing ~20% to the total unabsorbed flux in the 0.5-10 keV band). Given
the similarities with high-quality spectra of very-faint neutron star low-mass
X-ray binaries, we suggest that the compact primary in IGR J17494-3030 is a
neutron star. Interestingly, the source intensity decreased rapidly during the
~12 hr XMM-Newton observation, which was accompanied by a decrease in inferred
temperature. We interpret the soft spectral component as arising from the
neutron star surface due to low-level accretion, and propose that the observed
decline in intensity was the result of a decrease in the mass-accretion rate
onto the neutron star.Comment: 3 figures, 2 tables, accepted in MNRAS letter, in pres
Equivariant intersection cohomology of the circle actions
In this paper, we prove that the orbit space B and the Euler class of an
action of the circle S^1 on X determine both the equivariant intersection
cohomology of the pseudomanifold X and its localization. We also construct a
spectral sequence converging to the equivariant intersection cohomology of X
whose third term is described in terms of the intersection cohomology of B.Comment: Final version as accepted in RACSAM. The final publication is
available at springerlink.com; Revista de la Real Academia de Ciencias
Exactas, Fisicas y Naturales. Serie A. Matematicas, 201
An approach to the multidimensional assessment of food security and environmental sustainability: a vulnerability framework for the Mediterranean region
Poster presented at First International Conference on Global Food Security. Noordwijkerhout (The Netherlands), 29 Sep - 2 Oct 201
An X-ray view of the very faint black hole X-ray transient Swift J1357.2-0933 during its 2011 outburst
We report on the X-ray spectral (using XMM-Newton data) and timing behavior
(using XMM-Newton and Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer [RXTE] data) of the very
faint X-ray transient and black hole system Swift J1357.2-0933 during its 2011
outburst. The XMM-Newton X-ray spectrum of this source can be adequately fitted
with a soft thermal component with a temperature of ~0.22 keV (using a disc
model) and a hard, non-thermal component with a photon index of ~1.6 when using
a simple power-law model. In addition, an edge at ~ 0.73 keV is needed likely
due to interstellar absorption. During the first RXTE observation we find a 6
mHz quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO) which is not present during any of the
later RXTE observations or during the XMM-Newton observation which was taken 3
days after the first RXTE observation. The nature of this QPO is not clear but
it could be related to a similar QPO seen in the black hole system H 1743-322
and to the so-called 1 Hz QPO seen in the dipping neutron-star X-ray binaries
(although this later identification is quite speculative). The observed QPO has
similar frequencies as the optical dips seen previously in this source during
its 2011 outburst but we cannot conclusively determine that they are due to the
same underlying physical mechanism. Besides the QPO, we detect strong
band-limited noise in the power-density spectra of the source (as calculated
from both the RXTE and the XMM-Newton data) with characteristic frequencies and
strengths very similar to other black hole X-ray transients when they are at
low X-ray luminosities. We discuss the spectral and timing properties of the
source in the context of the proposed very high inclination of this source. We
conclude that all the phenomena seen from the source cannot, as yet, be
straightforwardly explained neither by an edge-on configuration nor by any
other inclination configuration of the orbit.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in MNRA
An approach to the multidimensional assessment of food security and environmental sustainability: a vulnerability framework for the Mediterranean region
Poster presented at First International Conference on Global Food Security. Noordwijkerhout (The Netherlands), 29 Sep - 2 Oct 201
Intermediate Range Structure in Ion-Conducting Tellurite Glasses
We present ac conductivity spectra of tellurite glasses at several
temperatures. For the first time, we report oscillatory modulations at
frequencies around MHz. This effect is more pronounced the lower the
temperature, and washes out when approaching the glass transition temperature
. We show, by using a minimal model, how this modulation may be attributed
to the fractal structure of the glass at intermediate mesoscopic length scales
- …
