17,966 research outputs found
Measuring the Expansion of the Universe Through Changes in the CMB Photosphere
The expansion of the universe may be observed in ``realtime'' by measuring
changes in the patterns of the anisotropy in the CMB. As the universe ages, the
surface of decoupling--or the CMB photosphere--moves away from us and samples a
different gravitational landscape. The response of the CMB to this new
landscape results in a different pattern than we observe today. The largest
change occurs at l~900. We show that with an array of detectors that we may
envision having in a couple of decades, one can in principle measure the change
in the anisotropy with two high precision measurements separated by a century.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Ap
Single-level resonance parameters fit nuclear cross-sections
Least squares analyses of experimental differential cross-section data for the U-235 nucleus have yielded single level Breit-Wigner resonance parameters that fit, simultaneously, three nuclear cross sections of capture, fission, and total
Method for Aspect-Based Sentiment Annotation Using Rhetorical Analysis
This paper fills a gap in aspect-based sentiment analysis and aims to present
a new method for preparing and analysing texts concerning opinion and
generating user-friendly descriptive reports in natural language. We present a
comprehensive set of techniques derived from Rhetorical Structure Theory and
sentiment analysis to extract aspects from textual opinions and then build an
abstractive summary of a set of opinions. Moreover, we propose aspect-aspect
graphs to evaluate the importance of aspects and to filter out unimportant ones
from the summary. Additionally, the paper presents a prototype solution of data
flow with interesting and valuable results. The proposed method's results
proved the high accuracy of aspect detection when applied to the gold standard
dataset
Further constraints on neutron star crustal properties in the low-mass X-ray binary 1RXS J180408.9342058
We report on two new quiescent {\it XMM-Newton} observations (in addition to
the earlier {\it Swift}/XRT and {\it XMM-Newton} coverage) of the cooling
neutron star crust in the low-mass X-ray binary 1RXS J180408.9342058. Its
crust was heated during the 4.5 month accretion outburst of the source.
From our quiescent observations, fitting the spectra with a neutron star
atmosphere model, we found that the crust had cooled from 100 eV to
73 eV from 8 days to 479 days after the end of its outburst.
However, during the most recent observation, taken 860 days after the end
of the outburst, we found that the crust appeared not to have cooled further.
This suggested that the crust had returned to thermal equilibrium with the
neutron star core. We model the quiescent thermal evolution with the
theoretical crustal cooling code NSCool and find that the source requires a
shallow heat source, in addition to the standard deep crustal heating
processes, contributing 0.9 MeV per accreted nucleon during outburst to
explain its observed temperature decay. Our high quality {\it XMM-Newton} data
required an additional hard component to adequately fit the spectra. This
slightly complicates our interpretation of the quiescent data of 1RXS
J180408.9342058. The origin of this component is not fully understood.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRA
A window into the neutron star: Modelling the cooling of accretion heated neutron star crusts
In accreting neutron star X-ray transients, the neutron star crust can be
substantially heated out of thermal equilibrium with the core during an
accretion outburst. The observed subsequent cooling in quiescence (when
accretion has halted) offers a unique opportunity to study the structure and
thermal properties of the crust. Initially crust cooling modelling studies
focussed on transient X-ray binaries with prolonged accretion outbursts (> 1
year) such that the crust would be significantly heated for the cooling to be
detectable. Here we present the results of applying a theoretical model to the
observed cooling curve after a short accretion outburst of only ~10 weeks. In
our study we use the 2010 outburst of the transiently accreting 11 Hz X-ray
pulsar in the globular cluster Terzan 5. Observationally it was found that the
crust in this source was still hot more than 4 years after the end of its short
accretion outburst. From our modelling we found that such a long-lived hot
crust implies some unusual crustal properties such as a very low thermal
conductivity (> 10 times lower than determined for the other crust cooling
sources). In addition, we present our preliminary results of the modelling of
the ongoing cooling of the neutron star in MXB 1659-298. This transient X-ray
source went back into quiescence in March 2017 after an accretion phase of ~1.8
years. We compare our predictions for the cooling curve after this outburst
with the cooling curve of the same source obtained after its previous outburst
which ended in 2001.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of "IAUS 337: Pulsar
Astrophysics - The Next 50 Years" eds: P. Weltevrede, B.B.P. Perera, L. Levin
Preston & S. Sanida
Seven-Year Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) Observations: Sky Maps, Systematic Errors, and Basic Results
(Abridged) New full sky temperature and polarization maps based on seven
years of data from WMAP are presented. The new results are consistent with
previous results, but have improved due to reduced noise from the additional
integration time, improved knowledge of the instrument performance, and
improved data analysis procedures. The improvements are described in detail.
The seven year data set is well fit by a minimal six-parameter flat Lambda-CDM
model. The parameters for this model, using the WMAP data in conjunction with
baryon acoustic oscillation data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and priors
on H_0 from Hubble Space Telescope observations, are: Omega_bh^2 = 0.02260
+-0.00053, Omega_ch^2 = 0.1123 +-0.0035, Omega_Lambda = 0.728 +0.015 -0.016,
n_s = 0.963 +-0.012, tau = 0.087 +-0.014 and sigma_8 = 0.809 +-0.024 (68 % CL
uncertainties). The temperature power spectrum signal-to-noise ratio per
multipole is greater that unity for multipoles < 919, allowing a robust
measurement of the third acoustic peak. This measurement results in improved
constraints on the matter density, Omega_mh^2 = 0.1334 +0.0056 -0.0055, and the
epoch of matter- radiation equality, z_eq = 3196 +134 -133, using WMAP data
alone. The new WMAP data, when combined with smaller angular scale microwave
background anisotropy data, results in a 3 sigma detection of the abundance of
primordial Helium, Y_He = 0.326 +-0.075.The power-law index of the primordial
power spectrum is now determined to be n_s = 0.963 +-0.012, excluding the
Harrison-Zel'dovich-Peebles spectrum by >3 sigma. These new WMAP measurements
provide important tests of Big Bang cosmology.Comment: 42 pages, 9 figures, Submitted to Astrophysical Journal Supplement
Serie
Testing Gravity in the Outer Solar System: Results from Trans-Neptunian Objects
The inverse square law of gravity is poorly probed by experimental tests at
distances of ~ 10 AUs. Recent analysis of the trajectory of the Pioneer 10 and
11 spacecraft have shown an unmodeled acceleration directed toward the Sun
which was not explained by any obvious spacecraft systematics, and occurred
when at distances greater than 20 AUs from the Sun. If this acceleration
represents a departure from Newtonian gravity or is indicative of an additional
mass distribution in the outer solar system, it should be detectable in the
orbits of Trans-Neptunian Objects (TNOs). To place limits on deviations from
Newtonian gravity, we have selected a well observed sample of TNOs found
orbiting between 20 and 100 AU from the Sun. By examining their orbits with
modified orbital fitting software, we place tight limits on the perturbations
of gravity that could exist in this region of the solar system.Comment: 20 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables, uses AASTex v5.x macro
- …