246 research outputs found
COMPTEL observations of the blazars 3C 454.3 and CTA 102
We have analyzed the two blazars of 3C 454.3 and CTA 102 using all available COMPTEL data from 1991 to 1999. In the 10â30 MeV band, emission from the general direction of the sources is found at the 4Ï-level, being consistent with contributions from both sources. Below 10 MeV only 3C 454.3 is significantly detected, with the strongest evidence (5.6 Ï) in the 3â10 MeV band. Significant flux variability is not observed for both sources, while a low emission is seen most of the years in the 3â10 MeV light curve for 3C 454.3. Its time-averaged MeV spectrum suggests a power maximum between 3 to 10 MeV
COMPTEL observations of the Virgo blazars 3C 273 and 3C 279
We report the main MeV properties (detections, light curves, spectra) of the Virgo blazars 3C 273 and 3C 279 which were derived from a consistent analysis of all COMPTEL Virgo observations between 1991 and 1997
Bayesian multiscale deconvolution applied to gamma-ray spectroscopy
A common task in gamma-ray astronomy is to extract spectral information, such as model constraints and incident photon spectrum estimates, given the measured energy deposited in a detector and the detector response. This is the classic problem of spectral âdeconvolutionâ or spectral inversion. The methods of forward folding (i.e., parameter fitting) and maximum entropy âdeconvolutionâ (i.e., estimating independent input photon rates for each individual energy bin) have been used successfully for gamma-ray solar flares (e.g., Rank, 1997; Share and Murphy, 1995). These methods have worked well under certain conditions but there are situations were they donât apply. These are: 1) when no reasonable model (e.g., fewer parameters than data bins) is yet known, for forward folding; 2) when one expects a mixture of broad and narrow features (e.g., solar flares), for the maximum entropy method; and 3) low count rates and low signal-to-noise, for both. Low count rates are a problem because these methods (as they have been implemented) assume Gaussian statistics but Poisson are applicable. Background subtraction techniques often lead to negative count rates. For Poisson data the Maximum Likelihood Estimator (MLE) with a Poisson likelihood is appropriate. Without a regularization term, trying to estimate the âtrueâ individual input photon rates per bin can be an ill-posed problem, even without including both broad and narrow features in the spectrum (i.e., amultiscale approach). One way to implement this regularization is through the use of a suitable Bayesian prior. Nowak and Kolaczyk (1999) have developed a fast, robust, technique using a Bayesian multiscale framework that addresses these problems with added algorithmic advantages. We outline this new approach and demonstrate its use with time resolved solar flare gamma-ray spectroscopy
Extended Îłâray emission in solar flares
During the solar flare events on 11 and 15 June 1991, COMPTEL measured extended emission in the neutron capture line for about 5 hours after the impulsive phase. The time profiles can be described by a double exponential decay with decay constants on the order of 10 min for the fast and 200 min for the slow component. Within the statistical uncertainty both flares show the same longâterm behaviour. The spectrum during the extended phase is significantly harder than during the impulsive phase and pions are not produced in significant numbers before the beginning of the extended emission. Our results with the measurements of others allow us to rule out longâterm trapping of particles in nonâturbulent loops to explain the extended emission of these two flares and our data favour models based on continued acceleration
Energetic proton spectra in the 11 June 1991 solar flare
We have studied a subset of the 11 June 1991 solar flare Îł-ray data that we believe arise from soft proton or ion spectra. Using data from the COMPTEL instrument on the Compton Observatory we discuss the gamma-ray intensities at 2.223 MeV, 4â7 MeV, and 8â30 MeV in terms of the parent proton spectrum responsible for the emission
COMPTEL Observations of the Gamma-Ray Blazar PKS 1622-297
We report results of observations and analyses on the gamma-ray blazar PKS
1622-297, with emphasis on the COMPTEL data (0.75 - 30 MeV) collected between
April 1991 and November 1997. PKS 1622-297 was detected as a source of
gamma-rays by the EGRET experiment aboard CGRO in 1995 during a gamma-ray
outburst at energies above 100 MeV lasting for five weeks.
In this time period the blazar was significantly (~ 5.9 sigma) detected by
COMPTEL at 10-30 MeV. At lower COMPTEL energies the detection is marginal,
resulting in a hard MeV spectrum.
The combined COMPTEL/EGRET energy spectrum shows a break at MeV energies. The
broad-band spectrum (radio - gamma-rays) shows that the gamma-ray emission
dominates the overall power output. On top of the 5-week gamma-ray outburst,
EGRET detected a huge flare lasting for > 1 day. Enhanced MeV emission (10 - 30
MeV) is found near the time of this flare, suggesting a possible time delay
with respect to the emission above 100 MeV. Outside the 5-week flaring period
in 1995, we do not detect MeV emission from PKS 1622-297.Comment: 10 pages including 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Activation in the COMPTEL double-scattering gamma-ray telescope
Abstract-The COMPTEL gamma-ray telescope has been operating in low Earth orbit for six years, since the launch of the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory in April 1991. Comparisons of data for different orbits and epochs show evidence of activation on time scales from minutes (27Mg, q,2=9.5 min) to years C2Na, q&.58 yr). The activation is correlated with both the orbital altitude and solar cosmic-ray modulation. Because it requires coincident measurements in two different detectors, COMPTEL is most susceptible to instrumental background events in which two or more photons are produced simultaneously
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