297 research outputs found
BVR_cI_c light curves of GRB970508 optical remnant and colors of underlying host galaxy
Optical observations of the GRB 970508 optical remnant were continued with
the 6-m telescope of SAO RAS in standard BVRcIc bands in Oct.-Dec.1997 and in
Jan. 1998. The results of the photometry of GRB970508 remnant and of three
nearby galaxies are presented. The BVRcIc light curves of the GRB970508 remnant
may be described by a power law plus a constant F(t)=F_0(t-t_0)^{\alpha}+C. In
In parameters determination of the faint host galaxy we used the results of our
BVRcIc photometry of May-August, 1997, the data of recent observations Keck-II
and WHT telescopes and also the data of Rc and B bands photometry obtained by
other authors based on our secondary standards. The level-off from the initial
power-law decline seen in the first months after the burst observed in all
bands. The effect is the most strong in Ic band. The best \chi^2-fits for Fo,
\alpha, C parameters of the data in each of 4 bands point to the presence of a
faint constant source with Ic=24.13\pm0.28, Rc = 25.55\pm0.19, V=25.80\pm 0.14,
B=26.68\pm 0.14. The average \alpha of light curve power law is -1.23\pm0.04.
The optical remnant has the power law F_\nu \nu^\beta spectrum with spectral
slope = -1.10\pm0.08 and does not change after optical curve maximum. BVRcIc
spectrum together with an absolute magnitude of the constant component
M_B_rest=-17.5\pm0.3 and the limit of the linear size of underlying host galaxy
d<1.1 kpc, calculated for z=0.835,H_0=75km s^-1 Mpc^-1, q_0=0.5, correspond to
a host galaxy, such as a starburst dwarf, red starburst dwarf, irregular dwarf,
HII galaxy, or blue compact dwarf galaxy. All these types of dwarf galaxies
show evidence of starburst or post starburst activity. Galaxy G2 has a spectrum
similar to one of the host GRB galaxy and lies at the projected distance of ~20
kpc from GRB.Comment: 8 pages, Postscript figures, Latex(aa.cls, psfig), accepted to
Astronomy and Astrophysic
Current Saturation in Nonmetallic Field Emitters
It has been known for a long time that traditional semiconductor (e.g.
intrinsic and doped Si and Ge or binary SiC and GaN) field emitters
significantly deviate from Fowler-Nordheim (FN) law and saturate when a large
current, on the order of microamperes or more, is attempted to be drawn from
them. Many experiments established that the field emission current from
carbonic materials, such as carbon nanotubes, amorphous carbon and
polycrystalline diamond films, also deviate from FN law and saturate. These
findings suggested that the saturation and departure from FN law is a broad and
general phenomenon that applies to the class of nonmetallic field emitters. In
this letter, we report a universal formula that describes the current
saturation effect in nonmetallic field emitters. The formula accounts for
material's bulk properties and field emitter geometry.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 1 tabl
Field Electron Emission Induced Glow Discharge in Nanodiamond Vacuum Diode
The present letter extends the prior findings on self-induced heating of
solid state field emission devices. It was found that a vacuum diode (base
pressure Torr), that makes use of graphite-rich polycrystalline
diamond as cathode material, can switch from diode regime to resistor regime,
to glow discharge plasma regime without any external perturbation, i.e. all
transitions are self-induced. Combined results of in situ field emission
microscopy and ex situ electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy suggested
that the nanodiamond cathode of the diode heated to about 3000 K which caused
self-induced material evaporation, ionization and eventually micro-plasma
formation. Our results confirm that field emission, commonly called cold
emission, is a very complex phenomenon that can cause severe thermal load.
Thermal load and material runaway could be the major factors causing vacuum
diode deterioration, i.e. progressive increase in turn-on field, decrease in
field enhancement factor, and eventual failure.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Large-Scale Fluctuations in the Number Density of Galaxies in Independent Surveys of Deep Fields
New arguments supporting the reality of large-scale fluctuations in the
density of the visible matter in deep galaxy surveys are presented. A
statistical analysis of the radial distributions of galaxies in the COSMOS and
HDF-N deep fields is presented. Independent spectral and photometric surveys
exist for each field, carried out in different wavelength ranges and using
different observing methods. Catalogs of photometric redshifts in the optical
(COSMOS-Zphot) and infrared (UltraVISTA) were used for the COSMOS field in the
redshift interval , as well as the zCOSMOS (10kZ) spectroscopic
survey and the XMM-COSMOS and ALHAMBRA-F4 photometric redshift surveys. The
HDFN-Zphot and ALHAMBRA-F5 catalogs of photometric redshifts were used for the
HDF-N field. The Pearson correlation coefficient for the fluctuations in the
numbers of galaxies obtained for independent surveys of the same deep field
reaches . The presence of this positive correlation supports
the reality of fluctuations in the density of visible matter with sizes of up
to 1 000 Mpc and amplitudes of up to 20% at redshifts . The absence
of correlations between the fluctuations in different fields (the correlation
coefficient between COSMOS and HDF-N is ) testifies to the
independence of structures visible in different directions on the celestial
sphere. This also indicates an absence of any influence from universal
systematic errors (such as "spectral voids"), which could imitate the detection
of correlated structures.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figure
Single Crystal Diamond Refractive Lens for Focusing of X-rays in Two Dimensions
We report the fabrication and performance evaluation of single crystal
diamond refractive x-ray lenses with a paraboloid of rotation form factor for
focusing x-rays in two dimensions simultaneously. The lenses were manufactured
using a femtosecond laser micromachining process and tested using x-ray
synchrotron radiation. Such lenses were stacked together to form a standard
compound refractive lens (CRL). Due to the superior physical properties of the
material, diamond CRLs are enabling and indispensable wavefront-preserving
primary focusing optics for x-ray free-electron lasers and the next-generation
synchrotron storage rings. They can be used for highly efficient refocusing of
the extremely bright x-ray sources for secondary optical schemes with limited
aperture such as nanofocusing Fresnel zone plates and multilayer Laue lenses.Comment: CRL testing results were adde
High Quantum Efficiency Ultrananocrystalline Diamond Photocathode: Negative Electron Affinity Meets -doping
We report results of quantum efficiency (QE) measurements carried out on a
150 nm thick nitrogen-incorporated ultrananocrystalline diamond terminated with
hydrogen; abbreviated as (N)UNCD:H. (N)UNCD:H demonstrated a QE of
10 (0.1%) at 254 nm. Moreover, (N)UNCD:H was sensitive in
visible light with a QE of 510 at 405 nm and
510 at 436 nm. After growth and prior to QE measurements,
samples were exposed to air for about 2 hours for transfer and loading. Such
design takes advantage of a key combination: 1) H-termination inducing negative
electron affinity (NEA) on the (N)UNCD and stabilizies its surface against air
exposure; and 2) N-incorporation inducing -type conductivity in
intrinsically insulating UNCD.Comment: 3 pages; 3 figure
A crucial test of the phantom closed cosmological model
We suggest a crucial direct-observational test for measuring distinction
between the standard CDM model and recently proposed phantom dark
energy positive curvature cosmological model. The test is based on the
fundamental distance--flux--redshift relation for general Friedmann models. It
does not depend on the CMBR data, on the large-scale structure growth models,
and also on the value of the Hubble constant . Our crucial test can be
performed by future gamma-ray burst observations with THESEUS space mission and
by using gravitational-wave standard siren observations with modern advanced
LIGO--Virgo and also forthcoming LISA detectors.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, MNRAS accepted 18.09.202
Study of Faint Galaxies in the Field of GRB 021004
We present an analysis of BVRcIc observations of the field sized around 4' x
4' centered at the host galaxy of the gamma-ray burst GRB 021004 with the 6-m
BTA telescope of the Special Astrophysical Observatory of the Russian Academy
of Sciences. We measured the magnitudes and constructed the color diagrams for
311 galaxies detected in the field (S/N > 3). The differential and integral
counts of galaxies up to the limit, corresponding to 28.5 (B), 28.0 (V), 27.0
(Rc), 26.5 (Ic) were computed. We compiled the galaxy catalog, consisting of
183 objects, for which the photometric redshifts up to the limiting magnitudes
26.0 (B), 25.5 (V), 25.0 (Rc), 24.5 (Ic) were determined using the HyperZ code.
We then examined the radial distribution of galaxies based on the z estimates.
We have built the curves expected in the case of a uniform distribution of
galaxies in space, and obtained the estimates for the size and contrast of the
possible super-large-scale structures, which are accessible with the
observations of this type.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, to be published in Astrophysical
Bulletin 65, 311-325 (2010
Properties of the host galaxy of the gamma-ray burst 970508 and local star-forming galaxies
Late-time observations of GRB970508 with the SAO-RAS 6-m telescope in
July-August 1998 show that the optical transient (OT) varies very little since
November 1997.
Here we report the light-curves behaviour up to 470 days from the
GRB occurence with independent power-law fits.
After ~=200 days the power-law decay has ceased and the OT contamination to
the host galaxy flux is already less than the observational errors of the
brightness estimates.
Spectral energy distribution for the host galaxy alone (without OT) and
comparison of its broad-band spectrum to the average continuum spectra of
different Hubble types galaxies are shown.
The best fits to the BVR_cI_c spectral energy distribution of the GRB host
with local starburst galaxies are found for the blue compact S0 dwarf galaxy
NGC1510, the Scd starburst HII galaxy NGC7793 and the blue compact galaxy Mrk
1267.
Position of the host galaxy in the M_B vs. log(D_25) diagram for local
late-type LEDA galaxies allows us to attribute GRB970508 host galaxy to the
blue compact galaxies.Comment: 8 pages, Latex, 6 PS figures, requires aa.cls, accepted for
publication on Astronomy and Astrophysic
High resolution SIMS depth profiling of nanolayers
We report results of high-resolution TOF SIMS (time of flight secondary ion
mass spectrometry) depth profiling experiments on a nanolayered structure, a
stack of 16 alternating MgO and ZnO ~5.5 nm layers grown on a Si substrate by
atomic layer deposition. The measurements were performed using a newly
developed approach implementing a low energy direct current normally incident
Ar+ ion beam for sample material removal by sputtering (250 eV and 500 eV
energy), in combination with a pulsed 5 keV Ar+ ion beam at 60{\deg} incidence
for TOF SIMS analysis. By this optimized arrangement, a noticeably improved
version of known dual-beam (DB) approach to TOF SIMS depth profiling is
introduced, which can be called gentleDB. We apply the
mixing-roughness-information model to detailed analysis of experimental
results. It reveals that the gentleDB approach allows ultimate depth resolution
by confining the ion beam mixing length to about 2 monolayers. This corresponds
to the escape depth of secondary ions, the fundamental depth resolution
limitation in SIMS. Other parameters deduced from the measured depth profiles
indicate that a single layer thickness equals to 6 nm so that "flat" layer
thickness d is of 3 nm and interfacial roughness {\sigma} is of 1.5 nm thus
yielding d+2\bullet{\sigma}=6 nm. In essence, we have demonstrated that the
gentleDB TOF SIMS depth profiling with noble gas ion beams is capable of
revealing structural features of a stack of nanolayers, resolving its original
surface and estimating the roughness of interlayer interfaces, which is
difficult to obtain by traditional approaches.Comment: 7 pages and 4 figure
- …