92,967 research outputs found
Observation of a charmonium-like enhancement in the gamma gamma --> omega J/psi process
We report the results of a search for a charmonium-like state produced in the
process gamma gamma --> omega J/psi in the 3.9-4.2 GeV/c^2 mass region. We
observe a significant enhancement, which is well-described by a resonant shape
with mass M = (3915 +/- 3 +/- 2) MeV/c^2 and total width Gamma = (17 +/- 10 +/-
3) MeV. This enhancement may be related to one or more of the three
charmonium-like states so far reported in the 3.90-3.95 GeV/c^2 mass region.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Observations of Galactic Gamma-Ray Sources with H.E.S.S
H.E.S.S. results from the first three years of nominal operation are
presented. Among the many exciting measurements that have been made, most
gamma-ray sources are of Galactic origin. I will concentrate here on an
overview of Galactic observations and summarise and discuss observations of
selected objects of the different source types.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, based on a talk presented at the workshop
'Energy Budget in the High Energy Universe', Kashiwa, Japan 22 - 24 February
200
Studying the Kinematics of Faint Stellar Populations with the Planetary Nebula Spectrograph
Galaxies are faint enough when one observes just their light distributions,
but in studying their full dynamical structure the stars are spread over the
six dimensions of phase space rather than just the three spatial dimensions,
making their densities very low indeed. This low signal is unfortunate, as
stellar dynamics hold important clues to these systems' life histories, and the
issue is compounded by the fact that the most interesting information comes
from the faintest outer parts of galaxies, where dynamical timescales (and
hence memories of past history) are longest.
To extract this information, we have constructed a special-purpose
instrument, the Planetary Nebula Spectrograph, which observes planetary nebulae
as kinematic tracers of the stellar population, and allows one to study the
stellar dynamics of galaxies down to extremely low surface brightnesses. Here,
we present results from this instrument that illustrate how it can uncover the
nature of low surface-brightness features such as thick disks by studying their
kinematics, and trace faint kinematic populations that are photometrically
undetectable.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. To be published in "Hunting for the Dark: The
Hidden Side of Galaxy Formation", eds. V.P. Debattista & C.C. Popescu, AIP
Conf. Se
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