7,212 research outputs found
Analysis of X-ray and EUV spectra of solar active regions
Data acquired by two flights of an array of six Bragg crystal spectrometers on an Aerobee rocket to obtain high spatial and spectral resolution observations of various coronal features at soft X-ray wavelengths (9-23A) were analyzed. The various aspects of the analysis of the X-ray data are described. These observations were coordinated with observations from the experiments on the Apollo Telescope Mount and the various data sets were related to one another. The Appendices contain the published results, abstracts of papers, computer code descriptions and preprints of papers, all produced as a result of this research project
Rapid soft X-ray fluctuations in solar flares observed with the X-ray polychromator
Three flares observed by the Soft X-Ray Polychromator on the Solar Maximum Mission were studied. Flare light curves from the Flat Crystal Spectrometer and Bent Crystal Spectrometer were examined for rapid signal variations. Each flare was characterized by an initial fast (less than 1 min) burst, observed by the Hard X-Ray Burst Spectrometer (HXRBS), followed by softer gradual X-ray emission lasting several minutes. From an autocorrelation function analysis, evidence was found for quasi-periodic fluctuations with rise and decay times of 10 s in the Ca XIX and Fe XXV light curves. These variations were of small amplitude (less than 20%), often coincided with hard X-ray emissions, and were prominent during the onset of the gradual phase after the initial hard X-ray burst. It is speculated that these fluctuations were caused by repeated energy injections in a coronal loop that had already been heated and filled with dense plasma associated with the initial hard X-ray burst
TEXES Observations of M Supergiants: Dynamics and Thermodynamics of Wind Acceleration
We have detected [Fe II] 17.94 um and 24.52 um emission from a sample of M
supergiants using TEXES on the IRTF. These low opacity emission lines are
resolved at R = 50, 000 and provide new diagnostics of the dynamics and
thermodynamics of the stellar wind acceleration zone. The [Fe II] lines, from
the first excited term, are sensitive to the warm plasma where energy is
deposited into the extended atmosphere to form the chromosphere and wind
outflow. These diagnostics complement previous KAO and ISO observations which
were sensitive to the cooler and more extended circumstellar envelopes. The
turbulent velocities, Vturb is about 12 to 13 km/s, observed in the [Fe II]
forbidden lines are found to be a common property of our sample, and are less
than that derived from the hotter chromospheric C II] 2325 Angstrom lines
observed in alpha Ori, where Vturb is about 17 to 19 km/s. For the first time,
we have dynamically resolved the motions of the dominant cool atmospheric
component discovered in alpha Ori from multi-wavelength radio interferometry by
Lim et al. (1998). Surprisingly, the emission centroids are quite Gaussian and
at rest with respect to the M supergiants. These constraints combined with
model calculations of the infrared emission line fluxes for alpha Ori imply
that the warm material has a low outflow velocity and is located close to the
star. We have also detected narrow [Fe I] 24.04 um emission that confirms that
Fe II is the dominant ionization state in alpha Ori's extended atmosphere.Comment: 79 pages including 10 figures and 2 appendices. Accepted by Ap
Diffuse continuum gamma rays from the Galaxy
A new study of the diffuse Galactic gamma-ray continuum radiation is
presented, using a cosmic-ray propagation model which includes nucleons,
antiprotons, electrons, positrons, and synchrotron radiation. Our treatment of
the inverse Compton (IC) scattering includes the effect of anisotropic
scattering in the Galactic interstellar radiation field (ISRF) and a new
evaluation of the ISRF itself. Models based on locally measured electron and
nucleon spectra and synchrotron constraints are consistent with gamma-ray
measurements in the 30-500 MeV range, but outside this range excesses are
apparent. A harder nucleon spectrum is considered but fitting to gamma rays
causes it to violate limits from positrons and antiprotons. A harder
interstellar electron spectrum allows the gamma-ray spectrum to be fitted above
1 GeV as well, and this can be further improved when combined with a modified
nucleon spectrum which still respects the limits imposed by antiprotons and
positrons. A large electron/IC halo is proposed which reproduces well the
high-latitude variation of gamma-ray emission. The halo contribution of
Galactic emission to the high-latitude gamma-ray intensity is large, with
implications for the study of the diffuse extragalactic component and
signatures of dark matter. The constraints provided by the radio synchrotron
spectral index do not allow all of the <30 MeV gamma-ray emission to be
explained in terms of a steep electron spectrum unless this takes the form of a
sharp upturn below 200 MeV. This leads us to prefer a source population as the
origin of the excess low-energy gamma rays.Comment: Final version accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
(vol. 537, July 10, 2000 issue); Many Updates; 20 pages including 49
ps-figures, uses emulateapj.sty. More details can be found at
http://www.gamma.mpe-garching.mpg.de/~aws/aws.htm
Density Matrix Renormalization Group Study of the Spin 1/2 Heisenberg Ladder with Antiferromagnetic Legs and Ferromagnetic Rungs
The ground state and low lying excitation of the spin 1/2 Heisenberg ladder
with antiferromagnetic leg () and ferromagnetic rung () interaction is studied by means of the density matrix renormalization
group method. It is found that the state remains in the Haldane phase even for
small suggesting the continuous transition to the gapless
phase at . The critical behavior for small is studied by
the finite size scaling analysis. The result is consistent with the recent
field theoretical prediction.Comment: 11 pages, revtex, figures upon reques
Balloon-borne radiometer measurement of Northern Hemisphere mid-latitude stratospheric HNO3 profiles spanning 12 years
Low-resolution atmospheric thermal emission spectra collected by balloon-borne radiometers over the time span of 1990–2002 are used to retrieve vertical profiles of HNO3, CFC-11 and CFC-12 volume mixing ratios between approximately 10 and 35 km altitude. All of the data analyzed have been collected from launches from a Northern Hemisphere mid-latitude site, during late summer, when stratospheric dynamic variability is at a minimum. The retrieval technique incorporates detailed forward modeling of the instrument and the radiative properties of the atmosphere, and obtains a best fit between modeled and measured spectra through a combination of onion-peeling and global optimization steps. The retrieved HNO3 profiles are consistent over the 12-year period, and are consistent with recent measurements by the Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment-Fourier transform spectrometer satellite instrument. This suggests that, to within the errors of the 1990 measurements, there has been no significant change in the HNO3 summer mid-latitude profile
First limits on the 3-200 keV X-ray spectrum of the quiet Sun using RHESSI
We present the first results using the Reuven Ramaty High-Energy Solar
Spectroscopic Imager, RHESSI, to observe solar X-ray emission not associated
with active regions, sunspots or flares (the quiet Sun). Using a newly
developed chopping technique (fan-beam modulation) during seven periods of
offpointing between June 2005 to October 2006, we obtained upper limits over
3-200 keV for the quietest times when the GOES12 1-8A flux fell below
Wm. These values are smaller than previous limits in the 17-120 keV
range and extend them to both lower and higher energies. The limit in 3-6 keV
is consistent with a coronal temperature MK. For quiet Sun periods
when the GOES12 1-8A background flux was between Wm and
Wm, the RHESSI 3-6 keV flux correlates to this as a power-law,
with an index of . The power-law correlation for microflares has
a steeper index of . We also discuss the possibility of
observing quiet Sun X-rays due to solar axions and use the RHESSI quiet Sun
limits to estimate the axion-to-photon coupling constant for two different
axion emission scenarios.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Accepted by ApJ letter
INTEGRAL/SPI γ -ray line spectroscopy : Response and background characteristics
© 2018 ESO. Reproduced with permission from Astronomy & Astrophysics. Content in the UH Research Archive is made available for personal research, educational, and non-commercial purposes only. Unless otherwise stated, all content is protected by copyright, and in the absence of an open license, permissions for further re-use should be sought from the publisher, the author, or other copyright holder.Context. The space based γ-ray observatory INTEGRAL of the European Space Agency (ESA) includes the spectrometer instrument "SPI". This is a coded mask telescope featuring a 19-element Germanium detector array for high-resolution γ-ray spectroscopy, encapsulated in a scintillation detector assembly that provides a veto for background from charged particles. In space, cosmic rays irradiate spacecraft and instruments, which, in spite of the vetoing detectors, results in a large instrumental background from activation of those materials, and leads to deterioration of the charge collection properties of the Ge detectors.Aim. We aim to determine the measurement characteristics of our detectors and their evolution with time, that is, their spectral response and instrumental background. These incur systematic variations in the SPI signal from celestial photons, hence their determination from a broad empirical database enables a reduction of underlying systematics in data analysis. For this, we explore compromises balancing temporal and spectral resolution within statistical limitations. Our goal is to enable modelling of background applicable to spectroscopic studies of the sky, accounting separately for changes of the spectral response and of instrumental background.Methods. We use 13.5 years of INTEGRAL/SPI data, which consist of spectra for each detector and for each pointing of the satellite. Spectral fits to each such spectrum, with independent but coherent treatment of continuum and line backgrounds, provides us with details about separated background components. From the strongest background lines, we first determine how the spectral response changes with time. Applying symmetry and long-term stability tests, we eliminate degeneracies and reduce statistical fluctuations of background parameters, with the aim of providing a self-consistent description of the spectral response for each individual detector. Accounting for this, we then determine how the instrumental background components change in intensities and other characteristics, most-importantly their relative distribution among detectors.Results. Spectral resolution of Ge detectors in space degrades with time, up to 15% within half a year, consistently for all detectors, and across the SPI energy range. Semi-annual annealing operations recover these losses, yet there is a small long-term degradation. The intensity of instrumental background varies anti-correlated to solar activity, in general. There are significant differences among different lines and with respect to continuum. Background lines are found to have a characteristic, well-defined and long-term consistent intensity ratio among detectors. We use this to categorise lines in groups of similar behaviour. The dataset of spectral-response and background parameters as fitted across the INTEGRAL mission allows studies of SPI spectral response and background behaviour in a broad perspective, and efficiently supports precision modelling of instrumental background.Peer reviewedFinal Published versio
Propagation of cosmic-ray nucleons in the Galaxy
We describe a method for the numerical computation of the propagation of
primary and secondary nucleons, primary electrons, and secondary positrons and
electrons. Fragmentation and energy losses are computed using realistic
distributions for the interstellar gas and radiation fields, and diffusive
reacceleration is also incorporated. The models are adjusted to agree with the
observed cosmic-ray B/C and 10Be/9Be ratios. Models with diffusion and
convection do not account well for the observed energy dependence of B/C, while
models with reacceleration reproduce this easily. The height of the halo
propagation region is determined, using recent 10Be/9Be measurements, as >4 kpc
for diffusion/convection models and 4-12 kpc for reacceleration models. For
convection models we set an upper limit on the velocity gradient of dV/dz < 7
km/s/kpc. The radial distribution of cosmic-ray sources required is broader
than current estimates of the SNR distribution for all halo sizes. Full details
of the numerical method used to solve the cosmic-ray propagation equation are
given.Comment: 15 pages including 23 ps-figures and 3 tables, latex2e, uses
emulateapj.sty (ver. of 11 May 1998, enclosed), apjfonts.sty, timesfonts.sty.
To be published in ApJ 1998, v.509 (December 10 issue). More details can be
found at http://www.gamma.mpe-garching.mpg.de/~aws/aws.html Some references
are correcte
Diffuse Gamma Rays: Galactic and Extragalactic Diffuse Emission
"Diffuse" gamma rays consist of several components: truly diffuse emission
from the interstellar medium, the extragalactic background, whose origin is not
firmly established yet, and the contribution from unresolved and faint Galactic
point sources. One approach to unravel these components is to study the diffuse
emission from the interstellar medium, which traces the interactions of high
energy particles with interstellar gas and radiation fields. Because of its
origin such emission is potentially able to reveal much about the sources and
propagation of cosmic rays. The extragalactic background, if reliably
determined, can be used in cosmological and blazar studies. Studying the
derived "average" spectrum of faint Galactic sources may be able to give a clue
to the nature of the emitting objects.Comment: 32 pages, 28 figures, kapproc.cls. Chapter to the book "Cosmic
Gamma-Ray Sources," to be published by Kluwer ASSL Series, Edited by K. S.
Cheng and G. E. Romero. More details can be found at
http://www.gamma.mpe-garching.mpg.de/~aws/aws.htm
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