13,879 research outputs found
X-ray and UV observations of V751 Cyg in an optical high state
Aims: The VY Scl system (anti-dwarf nova) V751 Cyg is examined following a
claim of a super-soft spectrum in the optical low state. Methods: A
serendipitous XMM-Newton X-ray observation and, 21 months later, Swift X-ray
and UV observations, have provided the best such data on this source so far.
These optical high-state datasets are used to study the flux and spectral
variability of V751 Cyg. Results: Both the XMM-Newton and Swift data show
evidence for modulation of the X-rays for the first time at the known 3.467 hr
orbital period of V751 Cyg. In two Swift observations, taken ten days apart,
the mean X-ray flux remained unchanged, while the UV source brightened by half
a magnitude. The X-ray spectrum was not super-soft during the optical high
state, but rather due to multi-temperature optically thin emission, with
significant (10^{21-22} cm^-2) absorption, which was higher in the observation
by Swift than that of XMM-Newton. The X-ray flux is harder at orbital minimum,
suggesting that the modulation is related to absorption, perhaps linked to the
azimuthally asymmetric wind absorption seen previously in H-alpha.Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The spectroscopic evolution of the symbiotic-like recurrent nova V407 Cygni during its 2010 outburst. I. The shock and its evolution
On 2010 Mar 10, V407 Cyg was discovered in outburst, eventually reaching V< 8
and detected by Fermi. Using medium and high resolution ground-based optical
spectra, visual and Swift UV photometry, and Swift X-ray spectrophotometry, we
describe the behavior of the high-velocity profile evolution for this nova
during its first three months. The peak of the X-ray emission occurred at about
day 40 with a broad maximum and decline after day 50. The main changes in the
optical spectrum began at around that time. The He II 4686A line first appeared
between days 7 and 14 and initially displayed a broad, symmetric profile that
is characteristic of all species before day 60. Low-excitation lines remained
comparatively narrow, with v(rad,max) of order 200-400 km/s. They were
systematically more symmetric than lines such as [Ca V], [Fe VII], [Fe X], and
He II, all of which showed a sequence of profile changes going from symmetric
to a blue wing similar to that of the low ionization species but with a red
wing extended to as high as 600 km/s . The Na I D doublet developed a broad
component with similar velocity width to the other low-ionization species. The
O VI Raman features were not detected. We interpret these variations as
aspherical expansion of the ejecta within the Mira wind. The blue side is from
the shock penetrating into the wind while the red wing is from the low-density
periphery. The maximum radial velocities obey power laws, v(rad,max) t^{-n}
with n ~ 1/3 for red wing and ~0.8 for the blue. (truncated)Comment: Accepted for publication, A&A (submitted: 9 Oct 2010; accepted: 1 Dec
2010) in press; based on data obtained with Swift, Nordic Optical Telescope,
Ondrejov Observatory. Corrected typo, Fermi?LAT detection was at energies
above 100 MeV (with thanks to C. C. Cheung
Searching for highly obscured AGN in the XMM-Newton serendipitous source catalog
The majority of active galactic nuclei (AGN) are obscured by large amounts of
absorbing material that makes them invisible at many wavelengths. X-rays, given
their penetrating power, provide the most secure way for finding these AGN. The
XMM-Newton serendipitous source catalog is the largest catalog of X-ray sources
ever produced; it contains about half a million detections. These sources are
mostly AGN. We have derived X-ray spectral fits for very many 3XMM-DR4 sources
( 114 000 observations, corresponding to 77 000 unique
sources), which contain more than 50 source photons per detector. Here, we use
a subsample of 1000 AGN in the footprint of the SDSS area (covering
120 deg) with available spectroscopic redshifts. We searched for highly
obscured AGN by applying an automated selection technique based on X-ray
spectral analysis that is capable of efficiently selecting AGN. The selection
is based on the presence of either a) flat rest-frame spectra; b) flat observed
spectra; c) an absorption turnover, indicative of a high rest-frame column
density; or d) an Fe K line with an equivalent width > 500 eV. We found
81 highly obscured candidate sources. Subsequent detailed manual spectral fits
revealed that 28 of them are heavily absorbed by column densities higher than
10 cm. Of these 28 AGN, 15 are candidate Compton-thick AGN on the
basis of either a high column density, consistent within the 90% confidence
level with N 10 cm, or a large equivalent width
(>500 eV) of the Fe K line. Another six are associated with
near-Compton-thick AGN with column densities of 510
cm. A combination of selection criteria a) and c) for low-quality
spectra, and a) and d) for medium- to high-quality spectra, pinpoint highly
absorbed AGN with an efficiency of 80%.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Galactic emission at 19 GHz
We cross-correlate a 19 GHz full sky Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) survey
with other maps to quantify the foreground contribution. Correlations are
detected with the Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE) 240, 140 and
100 micron maps at high latitudes (|b|>30degrees), and marginal correlations
are detected with the Haslam 408 MHz and the Reich & Reich 1420 MHz synchrotron
maps. The former agree well with extrapolations from higher frequencies probed
by the COBE DMR and Saskatoon experiments and are consistent with both
free-free and rotating dust grain emission.Comment: 4 pages, with 4 figures included. Accepted for publication in ApJL.
Color figure and links at http://www.sns.ias.edu/~angelica/foreground.html#19
or from [email protected]
Bremsstrahlung neutrinos from electron-electron scattering in a relativistic degenerate electron plasma
We present a calculation of neutrino pair bremsstrahlung due to
electron-electron scattering in a relativistic degenerate plasma of electrons.
Proper treatment of the in-medium photon propagator, i.e., inclusion of Debye
screening of the longitudinal part and Landau damping of the transverse part,
leads to a neutrino emissivity which is several orders of magnitude larger than
when Debye screening is imposed for the tranverse part. Our results show that
this in-medium process can compete with other sources of neutrino radiation and
can, in some cases, even be the dominant neutrino emission mechanism. We also
discuss the natural extension to quark-quark bremsstrahlung in gapped and
ungapped quark matter.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Use of human airway smooth muscle in vitro and ex vivo to investigate drugs for the treatment of chronic obstructive respiratory disorders
Isolated airway smooth muscle has been extensively investigated since 1840 to understand the pharmacology of airway diseases. There has often been poor predictability from murine experiments to drugs evaluated in patients with asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). However, the use of isolated human airways represents a sensible strategy to optimise the development of innovative molecules for the treatment of respiratory diseases. This review aims to provide updated evidence on the current uses of isolated human airways in validated in vitro methods to investigate drugs in development for the treatment of chronic obstructive respiratory disorders. This review also provides historical notes on the pioneering pharmacological research on isolated human airway tissues, the key differences between human and animal airways, as well as the pivotal differences between human medium bronchi and small airways. Experiments carried out with isolated human bronchial tissues in vitro and ex vivo replicate many of the main anatomical, pathophysiological, mechanical and immunological characteristics of patients with asthma or COPD. In vitro models of asthma and COPD using isolated human airways can provide information that is directly translatable into humans with obstructive lung diseases. Regardless of the technique used to investigate drugs for the treatment of chronic obstructive respiratory disorders (i.e., isolated organ bath systems, videomicroscopy and wire myography), the most limiting factors to produce high-quality and repeatable data remain closely tied to the manual skills of the researcher conducting experiments and the availability of suitable tissue
THERMAL RADIATION FROM MAGNETIZED NEUTRON STARS: A look at the Surface of a Neutron Star.
Surface thermal emission has been detected by ROSAT from four nearby young
neutron stars. Assuming black body emission, the significant pulsations of the
observed light curves can be interpreted as due to large surface temperature
differences produced by the effect of the crustal magnetic field on the flow of
heat from the hot interior toward the cooler surface. However, the energy
dependence of the modulation observed in Geminga is incompatible with blackbody
emission: this effect will give us a strong constraint on models of the neutron
star surface.Comment: 10 pages. tar-compressed and uuencoded postcript file. talk given at
the `Jubilee Gamow Seminar', St. Petersburg, Sept. 1994
Cooling of the Cassiopeia A neutron star and the effect of diffusive nuclear burning
The study of how neutron stars cool over time can provide invaluable insights
into fundamental physics such as the nuclear equation of state and
superconductivity and superfluidity. A critical relation in neutron star
cooling is the one between observed surface temperature and interior
temperature. This relation is determined by the composition of the neutron star
envelope and can be influenced by the process of diffusive nuclear burning
(DNB). We calculate models of envelopes that include DNB and find that DNB can
lead to a rapidly changing envelope composition which can be relevant for
understanding the long-term cooling behavior of neutron stars. We also report
on analysis of the latest temperature measurements of the young neutron star in
the Cassiopeia A supernova remnant. The 13 Chandra observations over 18 years
show that the neutron star's temperature is decreasing at a rate of 2-3 percent
per decade, and this rapid cooling can be explained by the presence of a proton
superconductor and neutron superfluid in the core of the star.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures; to appear in the AIP Conference Proceedings of
the Xiamen-CUSTIPEN Workshop on the EOS of Dense Neutron-Rich Matter in the
Era of Gravitational Wave Astronomy (January 3-7, 2019, Xiamen, China
Prospects of Detecting Baryon and Quark Superfluidity from Cooling Neutron Stars
Baryon and quark superfluidity in the cooling of neutron stars are
investigated. Observations could constrain combinations of the neutron or
Lambda-hyperon pairing gaps and the star's mass. However, in a hybrid star with
a mixed phase of hadrons and quarks, quark gaps larger than a few tenths of an
MeV render quark matter virtually invisible for cooling. If the quark gap is
smaller, quark superfluidity could be important, but its effects will be nearly
impossible to distinguish from those of other baryonic constituents.Comment: 4 pages, 3 ps figures, uses RevTex(aps,prl). Submitted to Phys. Rev.
Let
The XMM-Newton serendipitous survey. VII. The third XMM-Newton serendipitous source catalogue
Thanks to the large collecting area (3 x ~1500 cm at 1.5 keV) and wide
field of view (30' across in full field mode) of the X-ray cameras on board the
European Space Agency X-ray observatory XMM-Newton, each individual pointing
can result in the detection of hundreds of X-ray sources, most of which are
newly discovered. Recently, many improvements in the XMM-Newton data reduction
algorithms have been made. These include enhanced source characterisation and
reduced spurious source detections, refined astrometric precision, greater net
sensitivity and the extraction of spectra and time series for fainter sources,
with better signal-to-noise. Further, almost 50\% more observations are in the
public domain compared to 2XMMi-DR3, allowing the XMM-Newton Survey Science
Centre (XMM-SSC) to produce a much larger and better quality X-ray source
catalogue. The XMM-SSC has developed a pipeline to reduce the XMM-Newton data
automatically and using improved calibration a new catalogue version has been
produced from XMM-Newton data made public by 2013 Dec. 31 (13 years of data).
Manual screening ensures the highest data quality. This catalogue is known as
3XMM. In the latest release, 3XMM-DR5, there are 565962 X-ray detections
comprising 396910 unique X-ray sources. For the 133000 brightest sources,
spectra and lightcurves are provided. For all detections, the positions on the
sky, a measure of the quality of the detection, and an evaluation of the X-ray
variability is provided, along with the fluxes and count rates in 7 X-ray
energy bands, the total 0.2-12 keV band counts, and four hardness ratios. To
identify the detections, a cross correlation with 228 catalogues is also
provided for each X-ray detection. 3XMM-DR5 is the largest X-ray source
catalogue ever produced. Thanks to the large array of data products, it is an
excellent resource in which to find new and extreme objects.Comment: 23 pages, version accepted for publication in A&
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