13 research outputs found
A 9-Month Hubble Space Telescope Near-UV Survey of M87. I. Light and Color Curves of 94 Novae, and a Re-determination of the Nova Rate
M87 has been monitored with a cadence of 5 days over a 9 month-long span
through the near-ultraviolet (NUV:F275W) and optical (F606W) filters of the
Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) of the . This
unprecedented dataset yields the NUV and optical light and color curves of 94
M87 novae, characterizing the outburst and decline properties of the largest
extragalactic nova dataset in the literature (after M31 and M81). We test and
confirm nova modelers' prediction that recurrent novae cannot erupt more
frequently that once every 45 days; show that there are zero rapidly recurring
novae in the central 1/3 of M87 with recurrence times 130 days;
demonstrate that novae closely follow the K-band light of M87 to within a few
arcsec of the galaxy nucleus; show that nova NUV light curves are as
heterogeneous as their optical counterparts, and usually peak 5 to 30 days
after visible light maximum; determine our observations' annual detection
completeness to be 71 - 77\%; and measure the rate Rnova of nova eruptions in
M87 as /yr. The corresponding luminosity-specific classical
nova rate for this galaxy is .
These rates confirm that ground-based observations of extragalactic novae miss
most faint, fast novae and those near the centers of galaxies. An annual M87
nova rate of 300 or more seems inescapable. A luminosity-specific nova rate of
in types of galaxies is
indicated by the data available in 2023.Comment: Accepted/In Press in ApJS; 3 Tables, 108 Figures, 180 page
NuSTAR and Chandra observations of new X-ray transients in the central parsec of the Galaxy
We report NuSTAR and Chandra observations of two X-ray transients, SWIFT
J174540.7290015 (T15) and SWIFT J174540.2290037 (T37), which were
discovered by the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory in 2016 within pc of
Sgr A*. NuSTAR detected bright X-ray outbursts from T15 and T37, likely in the
soft and hard states, with 3-79~keV luminosities of and
erg/s, respectively. No X-ray outbursts have previously been
detected from the two transients and our Chandra ACIS analysis puts an upper
limit of erg/s on their quiescent 2-8 keV
luminosities. No pulsations, significant QPOs, or type I X-ray bursts were
detected in the NuSTAR data. While T15 exhibited no significant red noise, the
T37 power density spectra are well characterized by three Lorentzian
components. The declining variability of T37 above Hz is typical
of black hole (BH) transients in the hard state. NuSTAR spectra of both
transients exhibit a thermal disk blackbody, X-ray reflection with broadened Fe
atomic features, and a continuum component well described by Comptonization
models. Their X-ray reflection spectra are most consistent with high BH spin
() and large disk density ( cm).
Based on the best-fit ionization parameters and disk densities, we found that
X-ray reflection occurred near the inner disk radius, which was derived from
the relativistic broadening and thermal disk component. These X-ray
characteristics suggest the outbursting BH-LMXB scenario for both transients
and yield the first BH spin measurements from X-ray transients in the central
100 pc region.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
The JWST Galactic Center Survey -- A White Paper
The inner hundred parsecs of the Milky Way hosts the nearest supermassive
black hole, largest reservoir of dense gas, greatest stellar density, hundreds
of massive main and post main sequence stars, and the highest volume density of
supernovae in the Galaxy. As the nearest environment in which it is possible to
simultaneously observe many of the extreme processes shaping the Universe, it
is one of the most well-studied regions in astrophysics. Due to its proximity,
we can study the center of our Galaxy on scales down to a few hundred AU, a
hundred times better than in similar Local Group galaxies and thousands of
times better than in the nearest active galaxies. The Galactic Center (GC) is
therefore of outstanding astrophysical interest. However, in spite of intense
observational work over the past decades, there are still fundamental things
unknown about the GC. JWST has the unique capability to provide us with the
necessary, game-changing data. In this White Paper, we advocate for a JWST
NIRCam survey that aims at solving central questions, that we have identified
as a community: i) the 3D structure and kinematics of gas and stars; ii)
ancient star formation and its relation with the overall history of the Milky
Way, as well as recent star formation and its implications for the overall
energetics of our galaxy's nucleus; and iii) the (non-)universality of star
formation and the stellar initial mass function. We advocate for a large-area,
multi-epoch, multi-wavelength NIRCam survey of the inner 100\,pc of the Galaxy
in the form of a Treasury GO JWST Large Program that is open to the community.
We describe how this survey will derive the physical and kinematic properties
of ~10,000,000 stars, how this will solve the key unknowns and provide a
valuable resource for the community with long-lasting legacy value.Comment: This White Paper will be updated when required (e.g. new authors
joining, editing of content). Most recent update: 24 Oct 202
Combined VERITAS and NuSTAR observations of the gamma-ray binary HESS J0632+057
HESS J0632+057 is a gamma-ray binary composed of a compact object and a Be star, with an orbital period of about 315 days. The actual nature of its non-thermal emission, spanning from radio to very-high-energy (VHE, >100 GeV) gamma-rays, is currently unknown. In this contribution we will present the results of a set of simultaneous observations performed by the NuSTAR X-ray telescope and the VERITAS observatory. The combination of hard X-rays (3-30 keV) and VHE gamma-rays (0.1-5 TeV) provide valuable information for the understanding of the radiative processes occurring in the system. The spectral energy distributions (SED) derived from the observations are used to probe the pulsar scenario, in which the system is powered by a rapidly rotating neutron star. The non-thermal emission is produced by the particles accelerated at the shock formed by the collision of the pulsar and stellar winds. As a results of the model fitting, we constrain the relation between the pulsar spin-down luminosity and the magnetization of the pulsar wind
Publisher Correction: Observation and origin of non-thermal hard X-rays from Jupiter
In the version of this article initially published, the current reference 27 was omitted in the Methods, âX-ray observations and data reductionâ paragraph. Further, the title and captions for Extended Data Figs. 1 and 2 were swapped. The errors have been corrected in the HTML and PDF versions of the article. 27. Giorgini, J. D. et al. JPLâs On-Line Solar System Data Service. AAS 28, 1158 (1996)
Observation and origin of non-thermal hard X-rays from Jupiter
Electrons accelerated on Earth by a rich variety of wave scattering or
stochastic processes generate hard non-thermal X-ray bremsstrahlung up to >~ 1
MeV and power Earth's various types of aurorae. Although Jupiter's magnetic
field is an order of magnitude larger than Earth's, space-based telescopes have
previously detected X-rays only up to ~7 keV. On the basis of theoretical
models of the Jovian auroral X-ray production, X-ray emission in the ~2-7 keV
band has been interpreted as thermal (arising from electrons characterized by a
Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution) bremsstrahlung. Here we report the observation
of hard X-rays in the 8-20 keV band from the Jovian aurorae, obtained with the
NuSTAR X-ray observatory. The X-rays fit to a flat power-law model with slope
0.60+/-0.22 - a spectral signature of non-thermal, hard X-ray bremsstrahlung.
We determine the electron flux and spectral shape in the keV to MeV energy
range using coeval in situ measurements by the Juno spacecraft's JADE and JEDI
instruments. Jovian electron spectra of the form we observe have previously
been interpreted to arise in stochastic acceleration, rather than coherent
acceleration by electric fields. We reproduce the X-ray spectral shape and
approximate flux observed by NuSTAR, and explain the non-detection of hard
X-rays by Ulysses, by simulating the non-thermal population of electrons
undergoing precipitating electron energy loss, secondary electron generation
and bremsstrahlung emission in a model Jovian atmosphere. The results highlight
the similarities between the processes generating hard X-ray auroras on Earth
and Jupiter, which may be occurring on Saturn, too.Comment: 39 pages, 6 figures, 2 tables. Published in Nature Astronomy
(https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-021-01594-8
The High Energy X-ray Probe (HEX-P): resolving the nature of Sgr A* flares, compact object binaries and diffuse X-ray emission in the Galactic Center and beyond
International audienceHEX-P is a probe-class mission concept that will combine high spatial resolution X-ray imaging ( FWHM) and broad spectral coverage (0.2-80 keV) with an effective area far superior to current facilities' (including XMM-Newton and NuSTAR). These capabilities will enable revolutionary new insights into a variety of important astrophysical problems. We present scientific objectives and simulations of HEX-P observations of the Galactic Center (GC) and Bulge. We demonstrate the unique and powerful capabilities of the HEX-P observatory for studying both X-ray point sources and diffuse X-ray emission. HEX-P will be uniquely equipped to explore a variety of major topics in Galactic astrophysics, allowing us to (1) investigate broad-band properties of X-ray flares emitted from the supermassive black hole (BH) at Sgr A* and probe the associated particle acceleration and emission mechanisms; (2) identify hard X-ray sources detected by NuSTAR and determine X-ray point source populations in different regions and luminosity ranges; (3) determine the distribution of compact object binaries in the nuclear star cluster and the composition of the Galactic Ridge X-ray emission; (4) identify X-ray transients and measure fundamental parameters such as BH spin; (5) find hidden pulsars in the GC; (6) search for BH-OB binaries and hard X-ray flares from young stellar objects in young massive clusters; (7) measure white dwarf (WD) masses of magnetic CVs to deepen our understanding of CV evolution and the origin of WD magnetic fields; (8) explore primary particle accelerators in the GC in synergy with future TeV and neutrino observatories; (9) map out cosmic-ray distributions by observing non-thermal X-ray filaments; (10) explore past X-ray outbursts from Sgr A* through X-ray reflection components from giant molecular clouds
The High Energy X-ray Probe (HEX-P): resolving the nature of Sgr A* flares, compact object binaries and diffuse X-ray emission in the Galactic Center and beyond
International audienceHEX-P is a probe-class mission concept that will combine high spatial resolution X-ray imaging ( FWHM) and broad spectral coverage (0.2-80 keV) with an effective area far superior to current facilities' (including XMM-Newton and NuSTAR). These capabilities will enable revolutionary new insights into a variety of important astrophysical problems. We present scientific objectives and simulations of HEX-P observations of the Galactic Center (GC) and Bulge. We demonstrate the unique and powerful capabilities of the HEX-P observatory for studying both X-ray point sources and diffuse X-ray emission. HEX-P will be uniquely equipped to explore a variety of major topics in Galactic astrophysics, allowing us to (1) investigate broad-band properties of X-ray flares emitted from the supermassive black hole (BH) at Sgr A* and probe the associated particle acceleration and emission mechanisms; (2) identify hard X-ray sources detected by NuSTAR and determine X-ray point source populations in different regions and luminosity ranges; (3) determine the distribution of compact object binaries in the nuclear star cluster and the composition of the Galactic Ridge X-ray emission; (4) identify X-ray transients and measure fundamental parameters such as BH spin; (5) find hidden pulsars in the GC; (6) search for BH-OB binaries and hard X-ray flares from young stellar objects in young massive clusters; (7) measure white dwarf (WD) masses of magnetic CVs to deepen our understanding of CV evolution and the origin of WD magnetic fields; (8) explore primary particle accelerators in the GC in synergy with future TeV and neutrino observatories; (9) map out cosmic-ray distributions by observing non-thermal X-ray filaments; (10) explore past X-ray outbursts from Sgr A* through X-ray reflection components from giant molecular clouds