2,599 research outputs found
The Local Leo Cold Cloud and New Limits on a Local Hot Bubble
We present a multi-wavelength study of the local Leo cold cloud (LLCC), a
very nearby, very cold cloud in the interstellar medium. Through stellar
absorption studies we find that the LLCC is between 11.3 pc and 24.3 pc away,
making it the closest known cold neutral medium cloud and well within the
boundaries of the local cavity. Observations of the cloud in the 21-cm HI line
reveal that the LLCC is very cold, with temperatures ranging from 15 K to 30 K,
and is best fit with a model composed of two colliding components. The cloud
has associated 100 micron thermal dust emission, pointing to a somewhat low
dust-to-gas ratio of 48 x 10^-22 MJy sr^-1 cm^2. We find that the LLCC is too
far away to be generated by the collision among the nearby complex of local
interstellar clouds, but that the small relative velocities indicate that the
LLCC is somehow related to these clouds. We use the LLCC to conduct a shadowing
experiment in 1/4 keV X-rays, allowing us to differentiate between different
possible origins for the observed soft X-ray background. We find that a local
hot bubble model alone cannot account for the low-latitude soft X-ray
background, but that isotropic emission from solar wind charge exchange does
reproduce our data. In a combined local hot bubble and solar wind charge
exchange scenario, we rule out emission from a local hot bubble with an 1/4 keV
emissivity greater than 1.1 Snowdens / pc at 3 sigma, 4 times lower than
previous estimates. This result dramatically changes our perspective on our
local interstellar medium.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal. Vector figure version available at
http://www.astro.columbia.edu/~jpeek
Measurement of optical to electrical and electrical to optical delays with ps-level uncertainty
We present a new measurement principle to determine the absolute time delay
of a waveform from an optical reference plane to an electrical reference plane
and vice versa. We demonstrate a method based on this principle with 2 ps
uncertainty. This method can be used to perform accurate time delay
determinations of optical transceivers used in fibre-optic time-dissemination
equipment. As a result the time scales in optical and electrical domain can be
related to each other with the same uncertainty. We expect this method to break
new grounds in high-accuracy time transfer and absolute calibration of
time-transfer equipment
Physical Properties of Complex C Halo Clouds
Observations from the Galactic Arecibo L-Band Feed Array HI (GALFA-HI) Survey
of the tail of Complex C are presented and the halo clouds associated with this
complex cataloged. The properties of the Complex C clouds are compared to
clouds cataloged at the tail of the Magellanic Stream to provide insight into
the origin and destruction mechanism of Complex C. Magellanic Stream and
Complex C clouds show similarities in their mass distributions (slope = -0.7
and -0.6, respectively) and have a common linewidth of 20 - 30 km/s (indicative
of a warm component), which may indicate a common origin and/or physical
process breaking down the clouds. The clouds cataloged at the tail of Complex C
extend over a mass range of 10^1.1 to 10^4.8 solar masses, sizes of 10^1.2 to
10^2.6 pc, and have a median volume density of 0.065 cm^(-3) and median
pressure of (P/k) = 580 K cm^{-3}. We do not see a prominent two-phase
structure in Complex C, possibly due to its low metallicity and inefficient
cooling compared to other halo clouds. From assuming the Complex C clouds are
in pressure equilibrium with a hot halo medium, we find a median halo density
of 5.8 x 10^(-4) cm^(-3), which given a constant distance of 10 kpc, is at a
z-height of ~3 kpc. Using the same argument for the Stream results in a median
halo density of 8.4 x 10^(-5) x (60kpc/d) cm^(-3). These densities are
consistent with previous observational constraints and cosmological
simulations. We also assess the derived cloud and halo properties with three
dimensional grid simulations of halo HI clouds and find the temperature is
generally consistent within a factor of 1.5 and the volume densities, pressures
and halo densities are consistent within a factor of 3.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ. 54 pages, including 6 tables and 16
figure
Electronic stability of silicon front-end hybrids
No description supplie
A Cold Nearby Cloud Inside the Local Bubble
The high-latitude Galactic H I cloud toward the extragalactic radio source 3C
225 is characterized by very narrow 21 cm emission and absorption indicative of
a very low H I spin temperature of about 20 K. Through high-resolution optical
spectroscopy, we report the detection of strong, very narrow Na I absorption
corresponding to this cloud toward a number of nearby stars. Assuming that the
turbulent H I and Na I motions are similar, we derive a cloud temperature of 20
(+6, -8) K (in complete agreement with the 21 cm results) and a line-of-sight
turbulent velocity of 0.37+/-0.08 km/s from a comparison of the H I and Na I
absorption linewidths. We also place a firm upper limit of 45 pc on the
distance of the cloud, which situates it well inside the Local Bubble in this
direction and makes it the nearest-known cold diffuse cloud discovered to date.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
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