958 research outputs found
Optical spectroscopy of microquasar candidates at low galactic latitudes
We report optical spectroscopic observations of a sample of 6 low-galactic
latitude microquasar candidates selected by cross-identification of X-ray and
radio point source catalogs for |b|<5 degrees. Two objects resulted to be of
clear extragalactic origin, as an obvious cosmologic redshift has been measured
from their emission lines. For the rest, none exhibits a clear stellar-like
spectrum as would be expected for genuine Galactic microquasars. Their
featureless spectra are consistent with being extragalactic in origin although
two of them could be also highly reddened stars. The apparent non-confirmation
of our candidates suggests that the population of persistent microquasar
systems in the Galaxy is more rare than previously believed. If none of them is
galactic, the upper limit to the space density of new Cygnus X-3-like
microquasars within 15 kpc would be 1.1\times10^{-12} per cubic pc. A similar
upper limit for new LS 5039-like systems within 4 kpc is estimated to be
5.6\times10^{-11} per cubic pc.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures. Published in A&A, see
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=2004A%26A...413..309
Periodic morphological changes in the radio structure of the gamma-ray binary LS 5039
Gamma-ray binaries allow us to study physical processes such as particle
acceleration up to TeV energies and VHE gamma-ray emission and absorption with
changing geometrical configurations on a periodic basis. These sources produce
outflows of radio-emitting particles whose structure can be imaged with VLBI.
LS 5039 is a gamma-ray binary that has shown variable VLBI structures in the
past. We aim to characterise the radio morphological changes of LS 5039 and
discriminate if they are either repeatable or erratic. We observed LS 5039 with
the VLBA at 5 GHz during five consecutive days to cover the 3.9-day orbit and
an extra day to disentangle between orbital or secular variability. We also
compiled the available high-resolution radio observations of the source to
study its morphological variability at different orbital phases. We used a
simple model to interpret the obtained images. The new observations show that
the morphology of LS 5039 up to projected distances of 10 milliarcseconds
changes in 24 h. The observed radio morphological changes display a periodic
orbital modulation. Multifrequency and multiepoch VLBI observations confirm
that the morphological periodicity is stable on timescales of years. Using a
simple model we show that the observed behaviour is compatible with the
presence of a young non-accreting pulsar with an outflow behind it. The
morphology is reproduced for inclinations of the orbit of 60-75 deg. For masses
of the companion star in the range 20-50 Msun, this range of inclinations
implies a mass of the compact object of 1.3-2.7 Msun. The periodic orbital
modulation of the radio morphology of LS 5039 suggests that all gamma-ray
binaries are expected to show a similar behaviour. The changes in the radio
structure of LS 5039 are compatible with the presence of a young non-accreting
neutron star, which suggests that the known gamma-ray binaries contain young
pulsars.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Supporting process reuse in PROMENADE
Process reuse (the ability to construct new processes by assembling already built ones) and process harvesting (the ability to build generic processes
that may be further reused, from existing ones) are two crucial issues in
process technology. Both activities involve defining a set of mechanisms,
like abstraction, adaptation, composition, etc. which are appropriate to
achieve their goals. In this report, we define a general framework to
process reuse and harvesting that proposes a complete set of mechanisms to
deal with both activities. This general framework is particularized to the
context of a process modelling language to model software processes, called
PROMENADE. A definition of the identified reuse and harvesting mecha-nisms
is proposed in the context of PROMENADE. Finally, two process reuse case
studies which composes various reuse mechanisms are presented.Postprint (published version
Physical properties of the gamma-ray binary LS 5039 through low and high frequency radio observations
We have studied in detail the 0.15-15 GHz radio spectrum of the gamma-ray
binary LS 5039 to look for a possible turnover and absorption mechanisms at low
frequencies, and to constrain the physical properties of its emission. We have
analysed two archival VLA monitorings, all the available archival GMRT data and
a coordinated quasi-simultaneous observational campaign conducted in 2013 with
GMRT and WSRT. The data show that the radio emission of LS 5039 is persistent
on day, week and year timescales, with a variability at all
frequencies, and no signature of orbital modulation. The obtained spectra
reveal a power-law shape with a curvature below 5 GHz and a turnover at
GHz, which can be reproduced by a one-zone model with synchrotron
self-absorption plus Razin effect. We obtain a coherent picture for a size of
the emitting region of , setting a magnetic field of
, an electron density of and a mass-loss rate of . These values imply a significant mixing of the stellar wind with the
relativistic plasma outflow from the compact companion. At particular epochs
the Razin effect is negligible, implying changes in the injection and the
electron density or magnetic field. The Razin effect is reported for first time
in a gamma-ray binary, giving further support to the young non-accreting pulsar
scenario.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The dust-enshrouded microquasar candidate AX J1639.0-4642 = IGR J16393-4643
We present a multiwavelength study of the field containing the unidentified
X-ray source AX J1639.0-4642, discovered with the ASCA observatory and recently
detected with the IBIS telescope, onboard the INTEGRAL satellite, dubbed IGR
J16393-4643. The huge hydrogen column density towards the source, the hard
spectral index in the 0.7-10 keV band and its flux variability suggest that the
source is a High Mass X-ray Binary (HMXB) enshrouded by dust. Our search
reveals the presence of a non-thermal radio counterpart within the X-ray error
box. After a study of the broadband emission from X-rays to the radio domain,
we propose that AX J1639.0-4642 is a dust-enshrouded Microquasar (MQ)
candidate. In addition, the X-ray source is well within the 95% location
contour of the unidentified gamma-ray source 3EG J1639-4702. The main
properties of AX J1639.0-4642/3EG J1639-4702 are consistent with those of two
other MQs previously proposed to display high-energy gamma-ray emission.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A. Title and
discussion on the possible NIR counterpart have been modifie
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