1,320 research outputs found
Thermal Model Calibration for Minor Planets Observed with Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer/Neowise
With the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), we have observed over 157,000 minor planets. Included in these are a number of near-Earth objects, main-belt asteroids, and irregular satellites which have well measured physical properties (via radar studies and in situ imaging) such as diameters. We have used these objects to validate models of thermal emission and reflected sunlight using the WISE measurements, as well as the color corrections derived in Wright et al. for the four WISE bandpasses as a function of effective temperature. We have used 50 objects with diameters measured by radar or in situ imaging to characterize the systematic errors implicit in using the WISE data with a faceted spherical near-Earth asteroid thermal model (NEATM) to compute diameters and albedos. By using the previously measured diameters and H magnitudes with a spherical NEATM model, we compute the predicted fluxes (after applying the color corrections given in Wright et al.) in each of the four WISE bands and compare them to the measured magnitudes. We find minimum systematic flux errors of 5%-10%, and hence minimum relative diameter and albedo errors of ~10% and ~20%, respectively. Additionally, visible albedos for the objects are computed and compared to the albedos at 3.4 μm and 4.6 μm, which contain a combination of reflected sunlight and thermal emission for most minor planets observed by WISE. Finally, we derive a linear relationship between subsolar temperature and effective temperature, which allows the color corrections given in Wright et al. to be used for minor planets by computing only subsolar temperature instead of a faceted thermophysical model. The thermal models derived in this paper are not intended to supplant previous measurements made using radar or spacecraft imaging; rather, we have used them to characterize the errors that should be expected when computing diameters and albedos of minor planets observed by WISE using a spherical NEATM model
Magnetic-Field Amplification in the Thin X-ray Rims of SN1006
Several young supernova remnants (SNRs), including SN1006, emit synchrotron
X-rays in narrow filaments, hereafter thin rims, along their periphery. The
widths of these rims imply 50 to 100 G fields in the region immediately
behind the shock, far larger than expected for the interstellar medium
compressed by unmodified shocks, assuming electron radiative losses limit rim
widths. However, magnetic-field damping could also produce thin rims. Here we
review the literature on rim width calculations, summarizing the case for
magnetic-field amplification. We extend these calculations to include an
arbitrary power-law dependence of the diffusion coefficient on energy, . Loss-limited rim widths should shrink with increasing photon
energy, while magnetic-damping models predict widths almost independent of
photon energy. We use these results to analyze Chandra observations of SN 1006,
in particular the southwest limb. We parameterize the full widths at half
maximum (FWHM) in terms of energy as FWHM . Filament
widths in SN1006 decrease with energy; to , implying
magnetic field amplification by factors of 10 to 50, above the factor of 4
expected in strong unmodified shocks. For SN 1006, the rapid shrinkage rules
out magnetic damping models. It also favors short mean free paths (small
diffusion coefficients) and strong dependence of on energy ().Comment: Accepted by ApJ, 49 pages, 10 figure
The Compact Nucleus of the Deep Silicate Absorption Galaxy NGC 4418
High resolution, Hubble Space Telescope (HST) near-infrared and Keck
mid-infrared images of the heavily extinguished, infrared luminous galaxy NGC
4418 are presented. These data make it possible to observe the imbedded
near-infrared structure on scales of 10-20 pc, and to constrain the size of the
mid-infrared emitting region. The 1.1-2.2 um data of NGC 4418 show no clear
evidence of nuclear star clusters or of a reddened active galactic nucleus.
Instead, the nucleus of the galaxy consists of a ~100-200 pc linear structure
with fainter structures extending radially outward. The near-infrared colors of
the linear feature are consistent with a 10-300 Myr starburst suffering
moderate levels (few magnitudes) of visual extinction. At 7.9-24.5 um, NGC 4418
has estimated size upper limits in the range of 30-80 pc. These dimensions are
consistent with the highest resolution radio observations obtained to date of
NGC 4418, as well as the size of 50-70 pc expected for a blackbody with a
temperature derived from the 25 um, 60 um, and 100 um flux densities of the
galaxy. Further, a spectral energy distribution constructed from the
multi-wavelength mid-infrared observations show the strong silicate absorption
feature at 10 um, consistent with previous mid-infrared observations of NGC
4418. An infrared surface brightness of 2.1x10^13 L_sun kpc^-2 is derived for
NGC 4418. Such a value, though consistent with the surface brightness of warm
ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIGs: L_IR [8-1000 um] >~ 10^12 L_sun) such
as IRAS 05189-2524 and IRAS 08572+3915, is not large enough to distinguish NGC
4418 as a galaxy powered by an Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN), as opposed to a
lower surface brightness starburst.Comment: LaTex, 7 pages, including 2 jpg figures and 3 postscript figures, AJ,
in press (May, 2003
High Resolution Infrared Imaging of the Compact Nuclear Source in NGC4258
We present high resolution imaging of the nucleus of NGC4258 from 1 micron to
18 microns. Our observations reveal that the previously discovered compact
source of emission is unresolved even at the near-infrared resolution of about
0.2 arcsec FWHM which corresponds to about 7 pc at the distance of the galaxy.
This is consistent with the source of emission being the region in the
neighborhood of the purported 3.5*10^7 M_sun black hole. After correcting for
about 18 mags of visual extinction, the infrared data are consistent with a
F_nu \propto nu^(-1.4+/-0.1) spectrum from 1.1 micron to 18 micron, implying a
non-thermal origin. Based on this spectrum, the total extinction corrected
infrared luminosity (1-20 micron) of the central source is 2*10^8 L_sun. We
argue that the infrared spectrum and luminosity of the central source obviates
the need for a substantial contribution from a standard, thin accretion disk at
these wavelengths and calculate the accretion rate through an advection
dominated accretion flow to be Mdot \sim 10^(-3) M_sun/yr. The agreement
between these observations and the theoretical spectral energy distribution for
advection dominated flows provides evidence for the existence of an advection
dominated flow in this low luminosity AGN.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, Appearing in Mar 2000 ApJ vol. 53
A Mid-Infrared Study of the Class 0 Cluster in LDN 1448
We present ground-based mid-infrared observations of Class 0 protostars in
LDN 1448. Of the five known protostars in this cloud, we detected two, L1448N:A
and L1448C, at 12.5, 17.9, 20.8, and 24.5 microns, and a third, L1448 IRS 2, at
24.5 microns. We present high-resolution images of the detected sources, and
photometry or upper limits for all five Class 0 sources in this cloud. With
these data, we are able to augment existing spectral energy distributions
(SEDs) for all five objects and place them on an evolutionary status diagram.Comment: Accepted by the Astronomical Journal; 26 pages, 9 figure
Radial Distribution of Dust Grains Around HR 4796A
We present high-dynamic-range images of circumstellar dust around HR 4796A
that were obtained with MIRLIN at the Keck II telescope at lambda = 7.9, 10.3,
12.5 and 24.5 um. We also present a new continuum measurement at 350 um
obtained at the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory. Emission is resolved in Keck
images at 12.5 and 24.5 um with PSF FWHM's of 0.37" and 0.55", respectively,
and confirms the presence of an outer ring centered at 70 AU. Unresolved excess
infrared emission is also detected at the stellar position and must originate
well within 13 AU of the star. A model of dust emission fit to flux densities
at 12.5, 20.8, and 24.5 um indicates dust grains are located 4(+3/-2) AU from
the star with effective size, 28+/-6 um, and an associated temperature of
260+/-40 K.
We simulate all extant data with a simple model of exozodiacal dust and an
outer exo-Kuiper ring. A two-component outer ring is necessary to fit both Keck
thermal infrared and HST scattered-light images. Bayesian parameter estimates
yield a total cross-sectional area of 0.055 AU^2 for grains roughly 4 AU from
the star and an outer-dust disk composed of a narrow large-grain ring embedded
within a wider ring of smaller grains. The narrow ring is 14+/-1 AU wide with
inner radius 66+/-1 AU and total cross-sectional area 245 AU^2. The outer ring
is 80+/-15 AU wide with inner radius 45+/-5 AU and total cross-sectional area
90 AU^2. Dust grains in the narrow ring are about 10 times larger and have
lower albedos than those in the wider ring. These properties are consistent
with a picture in which radiation pressure dominates the dispersal of an
exo-Kuiper belt.Comment: Accepted by Astrophysical Journal (Part1) on September 9, 2004. 13
pages, 10 figures, 2 table
High Resolution Mid-Infrared Imaging of Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies
Observations of ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) with an achieved
resolution approaching the diffraction limit in the mid-infrared from 8 - 25
m using the Keck Telescopes are reported. We find extremely compact
structures, with spatial scales of (diameter) in six of the seven
ULIRGs observed. These compact sources emit between 30% and 100% of the
mid-infrared energy from these galaxies. We have utilized the compact
mid-infrared structures as a diagnostic of whether an AGN or a compact (100 --
300 pc) starburst is the primary power source in these ULIRGs. In Markarian
231, the upper limit on the diameter of the 12.5 m source, 0.13, shows
that the size of the infrared source must increase with increasing wavelength,
consistent with AGN models. In IRAS 05189-2524 and IRAS 08572+3915 there is
strong evidence that the source size increases with increasing wavelength. This
suggests heating by a central source rather than an extended luminosity source,
consistent with the optical classification as an AGN. The compact mid-infrared
sources seen in the other galaxies cannot be used to distinguish the ultimate
luminosity source. If these ULIRGs are powered by compact starbursts, the star
formation rates seen in the central few hundred parsecs far exceed the global
rates seen in nearby starburst galaxies, and approach the surface brightness of
individual clusters in nearby starburst galaxies.Comment: 33pages, 6 tables, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in A
Lifetime of 19Ne*(4.03 MeV)
The Doppler-shift attenuation method was applied to measure the lifetime of
the 4.03 MeV state in 19Ne. Utilizing a 3He-implanted Au foil as a target, the
state was populated using the 20Ne(3He,alpha)19Ne reaction in inverse
kinematics at a 20Ne beam energy of 34 MeV. De-excitation gamma rays were
detected in coincidence with alpha particles. At the 1 sigma level, the
lifetime was determined to be 11 +4, -3 fs and at the 95.45% confidence level
the lifetime is 11 +8, -7 fs.Comment: 6 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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