3,731 research outputs found

    Soft X-ray Emission from the Spiral Galaxy NGC 1313

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    The nearby barred spiral galaxy NGC 1313 has been observed with the PSPC instr- ument on board the ROSAT X-ray satellite. Ten individual sources are found. Three sources (X-1, X-2 and X-3 [SN~1978K]) are very bright (~10^40 erg/s) and are unusual in that analogous objects do not exist in our Galaxy. We present an X-ray image of NGC~1313 and \xray spectra for the three bright sources. The emission from the nuclear region (R ~< 2 kpc) is dominated by source X-1, which is located ~1 kpc north of the photometric (and dynamical) center of NGC~1313. Optical, far-infrared and radio images do not indicate the presence of an active galactic nucleus at that position; however, the compact nature of the \xray source (X-1) suggests that it is an accretion-powered object with central mass M >~ 10^3 Msun. Additional emission (L_X ~ 10^39 erg/s) in the nuclear region extends out to ~2.6 kpc and roughly follows the spiral arms. This emission is from 4 sources with luminosity of several x 10^38 erg/s, two of which are consistent with emission from population I sources (e.g., supernova remnants, and hot interstellar gas which has been heated by supernova remnants). The other two sources could be emission from population II sources (e.g., low-mass \xray binaries). The bright sources X-2 and SN~1978K are positioned in the southern disk of NGC~1313. X-2 is variable and has no optical counterpart brighter than 20.8 mag (V-band). It is likely that it is an accretion-powered object in NGC~1313. The type-II supernova SN~1978K (Ryder \etal 1993) has become extra- ordinarily luminous in X-rays ∼\sim13 years after optical maximum.Comment: to appear in 10 Jun 1995 ApJ, 30 pgs uuencoded compressed postscript, 25 pgs of figures available upon request from colbert, whole preprint available upon request from Sandy Shrader ([email protected]), hopefully fixed unknown problem with postscript fil

    BATSE Gamma-Ray Burst Line Search: IV. Line Candidates from the Visual Search

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    We evaluate the significance of the line candidates identified by a visual search of burst spectra from BATSE's Spectroscopy Detectors. None of the candidates satisfy our detection criteria: an F-test probability less than 10^-4 for a feature in one detector and consistency among the detectors which viewed the burst. Most of the candidates are not very significant, and are likely to be fluctuations. Because of the expectation of finding absorption lines, the search was biased towards absorption features. We do not have a quantitative measure of the completeness of the search which would enable a comparison with previous missions. Therefore a more objective computerized search has begun.Comment: 18 pages AASTEX 4.0; 4 POSTSCRIPT figures on request from [email protected]

    The ultraluminous X-ray source NGC 1313 X-2 - Its optical counterpart and environment

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    NGC 1313 X-2 is one of the brightest ultraluminous X-ray sources in the sky, at both X-ray and optical wavelengths; therefore, quite a few studies of available ESO VLT and HST data have appeared in the literature. Here, we present our analysis of VLT/FORS1 and HST/ACS photometric data, confirming the identification of the B ~ 23 mag blue optical counterpart. We show that the system is part of a poor cluster with an age of 20 Myr, leading to an upper mass limit of some 12 M_sun for the mass donor. We attribute the different results with respect to earlier studies to the use of isochrones in the F435W and F555W HST/ACS photometric system that appear to be incompatible with the corresponding Johnson B and V isochrones. The counterpart exhibits significant photometric variability of about 0.2 mag amplitude, both between the two HST observations and during the one month of monitoring with the VLT. This includes variability within one night and suggests that the light is dominated by the accretion disk in the system and not by the mass donor.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic

    Dark matter: A spin one half fermion field with mass dimension one?

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    We report an unexpected theoretical discovery of a spin one half matter field with mass dimension one. It is based on a complete set of eigenspinors of the charge conjugation operator. Due to its unusual properties with respect to charge conjugation and parity it belongs to a non standard Wigner class. Consequently, the theory exhibits non-locality with (CPT)^2 = - I. Its dominant interaction with known forms of matter is via Higgs, and with gravity. This aspect leads us to contemplate it as a first-principle candidate for dark matter.Comment: 5 pages, RevTex, v2: slightly extended discussion, new refs. and note adde

    Classical Physics and Quantum Loops

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    The standard picture of the loop expansion associates a factor of h-bar with each loop, suggesting that the tree diagrams are to be associated with classical physics, while loop effects are quantum mechanical in nature. We discuss examples wherein classical effects arise from loop contributions and display the relationship between the classical terms and the long range effects of massless particles.Comment: 15 pages, 3 figure

    The general-covariant and gauge-invariant theory of quantum particles in classical backgrounds

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    A new approach to the concept of particles and their production in quantum field theory is developed. A local operator describing the current of particle density is constructed for scalar and spinor fields in arbitrary gravitational and electromagnetic backgrounds. This enables one to describe particles in a local, general-covariant and gauge-invariant way. However, the current depends on the choice of a 2-point function. There is a choice that leads to the local non-conservation of the current in a gravitational or an electromagnetic background, which describes local particle production consistent with the usual global description based on the Bogoliubov transformation. The most natural choice based on the Green function calculated using the Schwinger-DeWitt method leads to the local conservation of the current, provided that interactions with quantum fields are absent. Interactions with quantum fields lead to the local non-conservation of the current which describes local particle production consistent with the usual global description based on the interaction picture.Comment: 34 pages, revised, to appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.

    Massive HI clouds with no optical counterparts as high-density regions of intragroup HI rings and arcs

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    We present a new scenario in which massive intragroup HI clouds are the high-density parts of large HI rings/arcs formed by dynamical interaction between galaxy groups and gas-rich, low surface brightness (LSB) galaxies with extended gas disks. Our hydrodynamical simulations demonstrate that the group tidal field is very efficient at stripping the outer HI gas of the disk if the gaseous disk of the LSB galaxy extends 2−52 - 5 times further than the stellar disk. We find that a massive, extended `leading stream' orbiting the group's center can form out of the stripped outer HI envelope, while the severely shrunk LSB galaxy, whose stellar disk remains unaffected, continues on its path. The result is a relatively isolated, massive HI cloud with a ring- or arc-like shape, a very inhomogeneous density distribution (NHI∼1.0×1017−1.1×1020N_{\rm HI} \sim 1.0 \times 10^{17} - 1.1 \times 10^{20} atoms cm−2^{-2}), and, initially, no stellar content. Only the high density peaks of the simulated intragroup HI ring/arc can be detected in many current HI observations. These will appear as relatively isolated `HI islands' near the group center. We also find that star formation can occur within the ring/arc, if the total gas mass within the intragroup ring/arc is very large (∼\sim 4 ×\times 10910^9 M⊙{\rm M}_{\odot}). We discuss these results in terms of existing observations of intragroup gas (e.g., the Leo Ring and HIPASS J0731--69) and intergalactic HII regions.Comment: 5 pages with 4 figures, accepted MNRA
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