1,972 research outputs found

    Ca II and CH+ interstellar absorption observations in the direction of resolvable binary stars

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    We report the initial results of a study to probe the small-scale structure in diffuse interstellar clouds by observing optical absorption lines of CH+ at 4232 °A and Ca II K at 3933 °A towards both components in resolvable binary systems. The data analysis is still in progress. To date, 70% of the Ca II spectra have been analyzed for the 19 observed systems. For half of these, a difference in the line strength or in the number of calcium components is found. The sightlines have been selected so that the observing method provides a potential probe of the small-scale structure of the interstellar medium in the range 200-4000 AU

    Gamma-Ray Burst 980329 and its X-Ray Afterglow

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    GRB 980329 is the brightest gamma-ray burst detected so far with the Wide Field Cameras aboard BeppoSAX, both in gamma-rays and X-rays. With respect to its fluence (2.6 X 10**-5 erg/s/cm**2 in 50 to 300 keV) it would be in the top 4% of gamma-ray bursts in the 4B catalog (Meegan et al. 1998). The time-averaged burst spectrum from 2 to 20 and 70 to 650 keV can be well described by the empirical model of Band et al. (1993). The resulting photon index above the break energy is exceptionally hard at -1.32 +/- 0.03. An X-ray afterglow was detected with the narrow-field instruments aboard BeppoSAX 7 h after the event within the error box as determined with the Wide Field Cameras. Its peak flux is (1.4 +/- 0.2) X 10**-12 erg/s/cm**2 (2 to 10 keV). The afterglow decayed according to a power law function with an index of -1.35 +/- 0.03. GRB 980329 is characterized by being bright and hard, and lacking strong spectral evolution.Comment: 13 pages with 3 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Let
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