1,404 research outputs found
Hadronic model for radio-to-TeV gamma-ray emission from PSR B1259-63
We discuss the implications of the recent X-ray and TeV gamma-ray
observations of the PSR B1259-63 system (a young rotation powered pulsar
orbiting a Be star) for the theoretical models of interaction of pulsar and
stellar winds. We show that previously considered models in which the pulsar
wind is purely electron loaded have problems to account for the observed
behaviour of the system in the TeV and X-ray bands. We develop a model in which
the broad band (radio, X-ray and high energy gamma-ray) emission from the
binary system is produced in result of collisions of GeV-TeV energy protons
accelerated by the pulsar wind and interacting with the stellar disk. In this
model the high energy gamma-rays are produced in the decays of secondary
neutral pions, while radio and X-ray emission are synchrotron and inverse
Compton emission produced by low-energy (< 100 MeV) electrons from the decays
of secondary charged pi mesons. This model can explain not only the observed
energy spectra, but also the correlations between TeV, X-ray and radio emission
components.Comment: Proceeding of "The multi messenger approach to high energy gamma ray
sources", Barcelona, June 200
A Search for Hard X-Ray Emission from Globular Clusters - Constraints from BATSE
We have monitored a sample of 27 nearby globular clusters in the hard X-ray
band (20-120 keV) for approximately 1400 days using the BATSE instrument on
board the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory. Globular clusters may contain a large
number of compact objects (e.g., pulsars or X-ray binaries containing neutron
stars) which can produce hard X-ray emission. Our search provides a sensitive
(~50 mCrab) monitor for hard X-ray transient events on time scales of >1 day
and a means for observing persistent hard X-ray emission. We have discovered no
transient events from any of the clusters and no persistent emission. Our
observations include a sensitive search of four nearby clusters containing dim
X-ray sources: 47 Tucanae, NGC 5139, NGC 6397, and NGC 6752. The non-detection
in these clusters implies a lower limit for the recurrence time of transients
of 2 to 6 years for events with luminosities >10^36 erg s^-1 (20-120 keV) and
~20 years if the sources in these clusters are taken collectively. This
suggests that the dim X-ray sources in these clusters are not transients
similar to Aql~X-1. We also place upper limits on the persistent emission in
the range 2-10*10^34 erg s^-1 (2 sigma, 20-120 keV) for these four clusters.
For 47 Tuc the upper limit is more sensitive than previous measurements by a
factor of 3. We find a model dependent upper limit of 19 isolated millisecond
pulsars (MSPs) producing gamma-rays in 47 Tuc, compared to the 11 observed
radio MSPs in this cluster.Comment: 20 pages; accepted, ApJ; uu encoded tar file; 7 figure
Responding to Some Challenges Posed by the Re-identification of Anonymized Personal Data
In this paper, we examine a cluster of ethical controversies generated by the re-identification of anonymized personal data in the context of big data analytics, with particular attention to the implications for personal privacy. Our paper is organized into two main parts. Part One examines some ethical problems involving re-identification of personally identifiable information (PII) in large data sets. Part Two begins with a brief description of Moor and Weckert’s Dynamic Ethics (DE) and Nissenbaum’s Contextual Integrity (CI) Frameworks. We then investigate whether these frameworks, used together, can provide us with a more robust scheme for analyzing privacy concerns that arise in the re-identification process (as well as within the larger context of big data analytics). This paper does not specifically address re-identification-related privacy concerns that arise in the context of the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Instead, we examine those issues in a separate work
Monte-Carlo simulations of thermal/nonthermal radiation from a neutron-star magnetospheric accretion shell
We discuss the space-and-time-dependent Monte Carlo code we have developed to
simulate the relativistic radiation output from compact astrophysical objects,
coupled to a Fokker-Planck code to determine the self-consistent lepton
populations. We have applied this code to model the emission from a magnetized
neutron star accretion shell near the Alfven radius, reprocessing the radiation
from the neutron sar surface. We explore the parameter space defined by the
accretion rate, stellar surface field and the level of wave turbulence in the
shell. Our results are relevant to the emission from atoll sources, soft-X-ray
transient X-ray binaries containing weakly magnetized neutron stars, and to
recently suggested models of accretion-powered emission from anomalous X-ray
pulsars.Comment: 24 pages, including 7 figures; uses epsf.sty. final version, accepted
for publication in ApJ. Extended introduction and discussio
The Supernova Remnant W44: confirmations and challenges for cosmic-ray acceleration
The middle-aged supernova remnant (SNR) W44 has recently attracted attention
because of its relevance regarding the origin of Galactic cosmic-rays. The
gamma-ray missions AGILE and Fermi have established, for the first time for a
SNR, the spectral continuum below 200 MeV which can be attributed to neutral
pion emission. Confirming the hadronic origin of the gamma-ray emission near
100 MeV is then of the greatest importance. Our paper is focused on a global
re-assessment of all available data and models of particle acceleration in W44,
with the goal of determining on a firm ground the hadronic and leptonic
contributions to the overall spectrum. We also present new gamma-ray and CO
NANTEN2 data on W44, and compare them with recently published AGILE and Fermi
data. Our analysis strengthens previous studies and observations of the W44
complex environment and provides new information for a more detailed modeling.
In particular, we determine that the average gas density of the regions
emitting 100 MeV - 10 GeV gamma-rays is relatively high (n= 250 - 300 cm^-3).
The hadronic interpretation of the gamma-ray spectrum of W44 is viable, and
supported by strong evidence. It implies a relatively large value for the
average magnetic field (B > 10^2 microG) in the SNR surroundings, sign of field
amplification by shock-driven turbulence. Our new analysis establishes that the
spectral index of the proton energy distribution function is p1 = 2.2 +/- 0.1
at low energies and p2 = 3.2 +/- 0.1 at high energies. We critically discuss
hadronic versus leptonic-only models of emission taking into account
simultaneously radio and gamma-ray data. We find that the leptonic models are
disfavored by the combination of radio and gamma-ray data. Having determined
the hadronic nature of the gamma-ray emission on firm ground, a number of
theoretical challenges remains to be addressed.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, accepted by A&
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