440 research outputs found
MERLIN observations of Stephan's Quintet
We present MERLIN L-band images of the compact galaxy group, Stephan's
Quintet. The Seyfert 2 galaxy, NGC 7319, the brightest member of the compact
group, is seen to have a triple radio structure typical of many extra-galactic
radio sources which have a flat spectrum core and two steep spectrum lobes with
hot spots. The two lobes are asymmetrically distributed on opposite sides of
the core along the minor axis of the galaxy. Ultraviolet emission revealed in a
high resolution HRC/ACS HST image is strongly aligned with the radio plasma and
we interpret the intense star formation in the core and north lobe as an event
induced by the collision of the north radio jet with over-dense ambient
material. In addition, a re-mapping of archive VLA L-band observations reveals
more extended emission along the major axis of the galaxy which is aligned with
the optical axis. Images formed from the combined MERLIN and archive VLA data
reveal more detailed structure of the two lobes and hot spots.Comment: Completely revised version with new HST data included, to appear in
MNRA
Conformal Black Hole Solutions of Axi-Dilaton Gravity in D-dimensions
Static, spherically symmetric solutions of axi-dilaton gravity in
dimensions is given in the Brans-Dicke frame for arbitrary values of the
Brans-Dicke constant and an axion-dilaton coupling parameter . The
mass and the dilaton and axion charges are determined and a BPS bound is
derived. There exists a one parameter family of black hole solutions in the
scale invariant limit.Comment: 6 PAGES, Rev-tex file, no figures, to appear in Phys-Rev
Matching of analytical and numerical solutions for neutron stars of arbitrary rotation
We demonstrate the results of an attempt to match the two-soliton analytical
solution with the numerically produced solutions of the Einstein field
equations, that describe the spacetime exterior of rotating neutron stars, for
arbitrary rotation. The matching procedure is performed by equating the first
four multipole moments of the analytical solution to the multipole moments of
the numerical one. We then argue that in order to check the effectiveness of
the matching of the analytical with the numerical solution we should compare
the metric components, the radius of the innermost stable circular orbit
(), the rotation frequency and the
epicyclic frequencies . Finally we present some
results of the comparison.Comment: Contribution at the 13th Conference on Recent Developments in Gravity
(NEB XIII), corrected typo in of eq. 5 of the published versio
Phase transition in Schwarzschild-de Sitter spacetime
Using a static massive spherically symmetric scalar field coupled to gravity
in the Schwarzschild-de Sitter (SdS) background, first we consider some
asymptotic solutions near horizon and their local equations of state(E.O.S) on
them. We show that near cosmological and event horizons our scalar field
behaves as a dust. At the next step near two pure de-Sitter or Schwarzschild
horizons we obtain a coupling dependent pressure to energy density ratio. In
the case of a minimally couplling this ratio is -1 which springs to the mind
thermodynamical behavior of dark energy. If having a negative pressure behavior
near these horizons we concluded that the coupling constant must be
>. Therefore we derive a new constraint on the value of our coupling .
These two different behaviors of unique matter in the distinct regions of
spacetime at present era can be interpreted as a phase transition from dark
matter to dark energy in the cosmic scales and construct a unified scenario.Comment: 7 pages,no figures,RevTex, Typos corrected and references adde
CLASS B0827+525: `Dark lens' or binary radio-loud quasar?
We present radio, optical, near-infrared and spectroscopic observations of
the source B0827+525. We consider this source as the best candidate from the
Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey (CLASS) for a `dark lens' system or binary
radio-loud quasar. The system consists of two radio components with somewhat
different spectral indices, separated by 2.815 arcsec. VLBA observations show
that each component has substructure on a scale of a few mas. A deep K-band
exposure with the W.M.Keck-II Telescope reveals emission near both radio
components. The K-band emission of the weaker radio component appears extended,
whereas the emission from the brighter radio component is consistent with a
point source. Hubble Space Telescope F160W-band observations with the NICMOS
instrument confirms this. A redshift of 2.064 is found for the brighter
component, using the LRIS instrument on the W.M.Keck-II Telescope. The
probability that B0827+525 consists of two unrelated compact flat-spectrum
radio sources is ~3%, although the presence of similar substructure in both
component might reduce this.
We discuss two scenarios to explain this system: (i) CLASS B0827+525 is a
`dark lens' system or (ii) B0827+525 is a binary radio-loud quasar. B0827+525
has met all criteria that thus far have in 100% of the cases confirmed a source
as an indisputable gravitational lens system. Despite this, no lens galaxy has
been detected with m_F160W<=23 mag. Hence, we might have found the first binary
radio-loud quasar. At this moment, however, we feel that the `dark lens'
hypothesis cannot yet be fully excluded.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures; Accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysics; Full-res. images 1 and 3 can be obtained from L.V.E.
Absence of trapped surfaces and singularities in cylindrical collapse
The gravitational collapse of an infinite cylindrical thin shell of generic
matter in an otherwise empty spacetime is considered. We show that geometries
admitting two hypersurface orthogonal Killing vectors cannot contain trapped
surfaces in the vacuum portion of spacetime causally available to geodesic
timelike observers. At asymptotic future null infinity, however, congruences of
outgoing radial null geodesics become marginally trapped, due to convergence
induced by shear caused by the interaction of a transverse wave component with
the geodesics. The matter shell itself is shown to be always free of trapped
surfaces, for this class of geometries. Finally, two simplified matter models
are analytically examined. For one model, the weak energy condition is shown to
be a necessary condition for collapse to halt; for the second case, it is a
sufficient condition for collapse to be able to halt.Comment: 26 pages, revtex4, 1 eps figure; matches version to appear in Phys.
Rev. D (in press
The Nature of the Optical Light in Seyfert 2 Galaxies with Polarized Continuum
We investigate the nature of the optical continuum and stellar population in
the central kpc of the Seyfert 2s Mrk 348, Mrk 573, NGC 1358 and Mrk 1210 using
long-slit spectra obtained along the radio or extended emission axis. These
galaxies are known to have polarized continuum-including polarized broad lines
in Mrk 348 and Mrk 1210--and previous studies indicate featureless continuum
(FC) contributions in the 20-50% range at 5500 A. Nevertheless, our
measurements of the equivalent widths of absorption lines and continuum ratios
as a function of distance from the nuclei show no dilution of the lines nor
bluening of the spectrum, as expected if a blue FC was present at the nucleus
in the above proportions. We investigate one possibility to account for this
effect: that the stellar population at the nucleus is the same as that from the
surrounding bulge and dominates the nuclear light. A spectral analysis confirms
that this hypothesis works for Mrk 348, NGC 1358 and Mrk 1210, for which we
find stellar contributions at the nucleus larger than 90% at all wavelengths.
We find that a larger stellar population contribution to the nuclear spectra
can play the role of the ``second FC'' source inferred from previous studies.
Stellar population synthesis shows that the nuclear regions of Mrk 348 and Mrk
1210 have important contributions of young to intermediate age stars (0--100
Myr), not present in templates of elliptical galaxies. In the case of Mrk 1210,
this is further confirmed by the detection of a ``Wolf-Rayet feature'' in the
nuclear emission-line spectrum.Comment: ApJ, accepted. Uses aaspp4.sty. [22 pages
Black holes in the Brans-Dicke-Maxwell theory
The black hole solutions in the higher dimensional Brans-Dicke-Maxwell theory
are investigated. We find that the presence of the nontrivial scalar field
depends on the spacetime dimensions (D). When D=4, the solution corresponds to
the Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m black hole with a constant scalar field. In higher
dimensions (D>4), one finds the charged black hole solutions with the
nontrivial scalar field. The thermal properties of the charged black holes are
discussed and the reason why the nontrivial scalar field exists are explained.
Also the solutions for higher dimensional Brans-Dicke theory are given for
comparison.Comment: Revtex, 5 pages, no figures, contents were rewritten and new
references were adde
No Scalar Hair Theorem for a Charged Spherical Black Hole
This paper consolidates noscalar hair theorem for a charged spherically
symmetric black hole in four dimension in general relativity as well as in all
scalar tensor theories, both minimally and nonminimally coupled, when the
effective Newtonian constant of gravity is positive. However, there is an
exception when the matter field itself is coupled to the scalar field, such as
in dilaton gravity.Comment: 13 pages, Latex format, some minor corrections are made, accepted for
publication in Physical Review
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