5,055 research outputs found
Probing the Pulsar Wind Nebula of PSR B0355+54
We present XMM-Newton and Chandra X-ray observations of the middle-aged radio
pulsar PSR B0355+54. Our X-ray observations reveal emission not only from the
pulsar itself, but also from a compact diffuse component extending ~50'' in the
opposite direction to the pulsar's proper motion. There is also evidence for
the presence of fainter diffuse emission extending ~5' from the point source.
The compact diffuse feature is well-fitted with a power-law, the index of which
is consistent with the values found for other pulsar wind nebulae. The
morphology of the diffuse component is similar to the ram-pressure confined
pulsar wind nebulae detected for other sources. The X-ray emission from the
pulsar itself is described well by a thermal plus power-law fit, with the
thermal emission most likely originating in a hot polar cap.Comment: 9 pages (uses emulateapj.cls), 8 figures, 2 tables, accepted for
publication in Ap
Nonlinear Effects in the Cosmic Microwave Background
Major advances in the observation and theory of cosmic microwave background
anisotropies have opened up a new era in cosmology. This has encouraged the
hope that the fundamental parameters of cosmology will be determined to high
accuracy in the near future. However, this optimism should not obscure the
ongoing need for theoretical developments that go beyond the highly successful
but simplified standard model. Such developments include improvements in
observational modelling (e.g. foregrounds, non-Gaussian features), extensions
and alternatives to the simplest inflationary paradigm (e.g. non-adiabatic
effects, defects), and investigation of nonlinear effects. In addition to well
known nonlinear effects such as the Rees-Sciama and Ostriker-Vishniac effects,
further nonlinear effects have recently been identified. These include a
Rees-Sciama-type tensor effect, time-delay effects of scalar and tensor
lensing, nonlinear Thomson scattering effects and a nonlinear shear effect.
Some of the nonlinear effects and their potential implications are discussed.Comment: Invited contribution to Relativistic Cosmology Symposium (celebrating
the 60th year of GFR Ellis); to appear Gen. Rel. Gra
Double Lobed Radio Quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We have combined a sample of 44984 quasars, selected from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 3, with the FIRST radio survey. Using a novel
technique where the optical quasar position is matched to the complete radio
environment within 450", we are able to characterize the radio morphological
make-up of what is essentially an optically selected quasar sample, regardless
of whether the quasar (nucleus) itself has been detected in the radio. About
10% of the quasar population have radio cores brighter than 0.75 mJy at 1.4
GHz, and 1.7% have double lobed FR2-like radio morphologies. About 75% of the
FR2 sources have a radio core (> 0.75 mJy). A significant fraction (~40%) of
the FR2 quasars are bent by more than 10 degrees, indicating either
interactions of the radio plasma with the ICM or IGM. We found no evidence for
correlations with redshift among our FR2 quasars: radio lobe flux densities and
radio source diameters of the quasars have similar distributions at low (mean
0.77) and high (mean 2.09) redshifts. Using a smaller high reliability FR2
sample of 422 quasars and two comparison samples of radio-quiet and non-FR2
radio-loud quasars, matched in their redshift distributions, we constructed
composite optical spectra from the SDSS spectroscopic data. Based on these
spectra we can conclude that the FR2 quasars have stronger high-ionization
emission lines compared to both the radio quiet and non-FR2 radio loud sources.
This is consistent with the notion that the emission lines are brightened by
ongoing shock ionization of ambient gas in the quasar host as the radio source
expands.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures - some of which have been reduced in quality /
size. Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journa
Immunological Control of Polyoma Virus Oncogenesis in Mice
Adult CBA mice thymectomized, treated with antilymphocytic globulin (ALG) and inoculated with human leprosy organisms were accidentally infected with polyoma virus and all developed tumours. After cessation of ALG administration, some animals were given spleen cells from syngeneic donors immunized with polyoma virus; none developed tumours. Similar results were obtained in mice deliberately infected with polyoma virus but not with leprosy organisms. Passive transfer of antibody before but not after virus inoculation prevented tumour formation in immunosuppressed recipients. Virus infection in thymectomized, lethally irradiated and bone marrow reconstituted mice resulted in only a very low incidence of tumours. These results emphasize the role of immunological surveillance in preventing polyoma tumour formation under natural conditions
The Case Against Cosmology
It is argued that some of the recent claims for cosmology are grossly
overblown. Cosmology rests on a very small database: it suffers from many
fundamental difficulties as a science (if it is a science at all) whilst
observations of distant phenomena are difficult to make and harder to
interpret. It is suggested that cosmological inferences should be tentatively
made and sceptically received.Comment: 9 pages, no figure
The Extraordinary Mid-infrared Spectrum of the Blue Compact Dwarf Galaxy SBS0335-052
SBS0335-052 is a blue compact dwarf galaxy (BCD) with one of the lowest known
metallicities, ZZ_{\sun}/41, making it a local example of how
primordial starburst galaxies and their precursors might appear. A spectrum
obtained with the Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) on the Spitzer Space Telescope
clearly shows silicate absorption features, emission lines of [SIV] and
[NeIII], and puts strong upper limits on the PAH emission features. The
observed low resolution spectrum (R~90) extends from 5.3 to 35microns and peaks
at ~28microns. The spectrum is compared to IRS observations of the prototypical
starburst nucleus NGC7714. SBS0335-052 is quite unlike normal starburst
galaxies, which show strong PAH bands, low ionization emission lines, and a
continuum peak near 80microns. The continuum difference for m
implies a substantial reduction in the mass of cold dust. If the spectrum of
this very low metallicity galaxy is representative of star forming galaxies at
higher redshifts, it may be difficult to distinguish them from AGNs which also
show relatively featureless flat spectra in the mid-IR.Comment: Accepted in ApJ Sup. Spitzer Special Issue, 4 pages, 2 figure
The Spectral Signature of Dust Scattering and Polarization in the Near IR to Far UV. I. Optical Depth and Geometry Effects
Spectropolarimetry from the near IR to the far UV of light scattered by dust
provides a valuable diagnostic of the dust composition, grain size distribution
and spatial distribution. To facilitate the use of this diagnostic, we present
detailed calculations of the intensity and polarization spectral signature of
light scattered by optically thin and optically thick dust in various
geometries. The polarized light radiative transfer calculations are carried out
using the adding-doubling method for a plane-parallel slab, and are extended to
an optically thick sphere by integrating over its surface. The calculations are
for the Mathis, Rumple & Nordsieck Galactic dust model, and cover the range
from 1 to 500 \AA. We find that the wavelength dependence of the
scattered light intensity provides a sensitive probe of the optical depth of
the scattering medium, while the polarization wavelength dependence provides a
probe of the grain scattering properties, which is practically independent of
optical depth. We provide a detailed set of predictions, including polarization
maps, which can be used to probe the properties of dust through imaging
spectropolarimetry in the near IR to far UV of various Galactic and
extragalactic objects. In a following paper we use the codes developed here to
provide predictions for the dependence of the intensity and polarization on
grain size distribution and composition.Comment: 29 pages + 21 figures, accepted for the Astrophysical Journal
Supplement February 2000 issue. Some revision, mostly in the introduction and
the conclusions, and a couple of correction
Magnetic properties of photospheric regions having very low magnetic flux
The magnetic properties of the quiet Sun are investigated using a novel
inversion code, FATIMA, based on the Principal Component Analysis of the
observed Stokes profiles. The stability and relatively low noise sensitivity of
this inversion procedure allows for the systematic inversion of large data sets
with very weak polarization signal. Its application to quiet Sun observations
of network and internetwork regions reveals that a significant fraction of the
quiet Sun contains kilogauss fields (usually with very small filling factors)
and confirms that the pixels with weak polarization account for most of the
magnetic flux. Mixed polarities in the resolution element are also found to
occur more likely as the polarization weakens.Comment: To apapear in ApJ. 39 pages, 12 figures (2 of them are color figures
Yet Another Model of Gamma-Ray Bursts
Sari and Piran have demonstrated that the time structure of gamma-ray bursts
must reflect the time structure of their energy release. A model which
satisfies this condition uses the electrodynamic emission of energy by the
magnetized rotating ring of dense matter left by neutron star coalescence; GRB
are essentially fast, high field, differentially rotating pulsars. The energy
densities are large enough that the power appears as an outflowing equilibrium
pair plasma, which produces the burst by baryon entrainment and subsequent
internal shocks. I estimate the magnetic field and characteristic time scale
for its rearrangement, which determines the observed time structure of the
burst. There may be quasi-periodic oscillations at the rotational frequencies,
which are predicted to range up to 5770 Hz (in a local frame). This model is
one of a general class of electrodynamic accretion models which includes the
Blandford and Lovelace model of AGN, and which can also be applied to black
hole X-ray sources of stellar mass. The apparent efficiency of nonthermal
particle acceleration is predicted to be 10--50%, but higher values are
possible if the underlying accretion flow is super-Eddington. Applications to
high energy gamma-ray observations of AGN are briefly discussed.Comment: 21pp, latex, uses aaspp4.st
Evidence for an axion-like particle from PKS 1222+216?
The surprising discovery by MAGIC of an intense, rapidly varying emission in
the energy range 70 - 400 GeV from the flat spectrum radio quasar PKS 1222+216
represents a challenge for all interpretative scenarios. Indeed, in order to
avoid absorption of \gamma rays in the dense ultraviolet radiation field of the
broad line region (BLR), one is forced to invoke some unconventional
astrophysical picture, like for instance the existence of a very compact (r\sim
10^{14} cm) emitting blob at a large distance (R \sim10^{18} cm) from the jet
base. We offer the investigation of a scenario based on the standard blazar
model for PKS 1222+216 where \gamma rays are produced close to the central
engine, but we add the new assumption that inside the source photons can
oscillate into axion-like particles (ALPs), which are a generic prediction of
several extensions of the Standard Model of elementary particle interactions.
As a result, a considerable fraction of very-high-energy photons can escape
absorption from the BLR through the mechanism of photon-ALP oscillations much
in the same way as they largely avoid absorption from extragalactic background
light when propagating over cosmic distances in the presence of large-scale
magnetic fields in the nG range. In addition we show that the above MAGIC
observations and the simultaneous Fermi/LAT observations in the energy range
0.3 - 3 GeV can both be explained by a standard spectral energy distribution
for experimentally allowed values of the model parameters. In particular, we
need a very light ALP just like in the case of photon-ALP oscillations in
cosmic space. Moreover, we find it quite tantalizing that the most favorable
value of the photon-ALP coupling happens to be the same in both situations.
Although our ALPs cannot contribute to the cold dark matter, they are a viable
candidate for the quintessential dark energy. [abridged]Comment: 32 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Physical Review
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