1,636 research outputs found
Calcium-Rich Gap Transients: Tidal Detonations of White Dwarfs?
We hypothesize that at least some of the recently discovered class of
calcium-rich gap transients are tidal detonation events of white dwarfs (WDs)
by black holes (BHs) or possibly neutron stars. We show that the properties of
the calcium-rich gap transients agree well with the predictions of the tidal
detonation model. Under the predictions of this model, we use a follow-up X-ray
observation of one of these transients, SN 2012hn, to place weak upper limits
on the detonator mass of this system that include all intermediate-mass BHs
(IMBHs). As these transients are preferentially in the stellar haloes of
galaxies, we discuss the possibility that these transients are tidal
detonations of WDs caused by random flyby encounters with IMBHs in dwarf
galaxies or globular clusters. This possibility has been already suggested in
the literature but without connection to the calcium-rich gap transients. In
order for the random flyby cross-section to be high enough, these events would
have to be occurring inside these dense stellar associations. However, there is
a lack of evidence for IMBHs in these systems, and recent observations have
ruled out all but the very faintest dwarf galaxies and globular clusters for a
few of these transients. Another possibility is that these are tidal
detonations caused by three-body interactions, where a WD is perturbed toward
the detonator in isolated multiple star systems. We highlight a number of ways
this could occur, even in lower-mass systems with stellar-mass BHs or neutron
stars. Finally, we outline several new observational tests of this scenario,
which are feasible with current instrumentation.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in MNRA
A Survey for H2O Megamasers III. Monitoring Water Vapor Masers in Active Galaxies
We present single-dish monitoring of the spectra of 13 extragalactic water
megamasers taken over a period of 9 years and a single epoch of sensitive
spectra for 7 others. Our data include the first K-band science observations
taken with the new 100 m Green Bank Telescope (GBT). In the context of a
circumnuclear, molecular disk model, our results suggest that either (a) the
maser lines seen are systemic features subject to a much smaller acceleration
than present in NGC 4258, presumably because the gas is farther from the
nuclear black hole, or (b) we are detecting ``satellite'' lines for which the
acceleration is in the plane of the sky.
We also report a search for water vapor masers towards the nuclei of 58
highly inclined, nearby galaxies.Comment: accepted by ApJ
Inelastic semiclassical Coulomb scattering
We present a semiclassical S-matrix study of inelastic collinear
electron-hydrogen scattering. A simple way to extract all necessary information
from the deflection function alone without having to compute the stability
matrix is described. This includes the determination of the relevant Maslov
indices. Results of singlet and triplet cross sections for excitation and
ionization are reported. The different levels of approximation -- classical,
semiclassical, and uniform semiclassical -- are compared among each other and
to the full quantum result.Comment: 9 figure
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