1,087 research outputs found
Unveiling Soft Gamma-Ray Repeaters with INTEGRAL
Thanks to INTEGRAL's long exposures of the Galactic Plane, the two brightest
Soft Gamma-Ray Repeaters, SGR 1806-20 and SGR 1900+14, have been monitored and
studied in detail for the first time at hard-X/soft gamma rays.
This has produced a wealth of new scientific results, which we will review
here. Since SGR 1806-20 was particularly active during the last two years, more
than 300 short bursts have been observed with INTEGRAL. and their
characteristics have been studied with unprecedented sensitivity in the 15-200
keV range. A hardness-intensity anticorrelation within the bursts has been
discovered and the overall Number-Intensity distribution of the bursts has been
determined. In addition, a particularly active state, during which ~100 bursts
were emitted in ~10 minutes, has been observed on October 5 2004, indicating
that the source activity was rapidly increasing. This eventually led to the
Giant Flare of December 27th 2004, for which a possible soft gamma-ray (>80
keV) early afterglow has been detected.
The deep observations allowed us to discover the persistent emission in hard
X-rays (20-150 keV) from 1806-20 and 1900+14, the latter being in a quiescent
state, and to directly compare the spectral characteristics of all Magnetars
(two SGRs and three Anomalous X-ray Pulsars) detected with INTEGRAL.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, Presented at the conference "Isolated Neutron
Stars: from the Surface to the Interior", London, UK, 24-28 April 200
On the number of classes of conjugate Hall subgroups in finite simple groups
In this paper we find the number of conjugate -Hall subgroups in all
finite almost simple groups. We also complete the classification of -Hall
subgroups in finite simple groups and correct some mistakes from our previous
paper.Comment: article in press in "Journal of algebra
The prisoner's right to vote and civic responsibility: Reaffirming the social contract?
Copyright © 2009 NAPOThis article considers the issue of the prisoner’s right to vote in the light of recent developments in law and policy. It critically reviews the purported justifications for disenfranchisement and argues that re-enfranchisement should be pursued on the grounds of both principle and policy
Pure Stationary States of Open Quantum Systems
Using Liouville space and superoperator formalism we consider pure stationary
states of open and dissipative quantum systems. We discuss stationary states of
open quantum systems, which coincide with stationary states of closed quantum
systems. Open quantum systems with pure stationary states of linear oscillator
are suggested. We consider stationary states for the Lindblad equation. We
discuss bifurcations of pure stationary states for open quantum systems which
are quantum analogs of classical dynamical bifurcations.Comment: 7p., REVTeX
Newborn Magnetars as sources of Gravitational Radiation: constraints from High Energy observations of Magnetar Candidates
Soft Gamma Repeaters and the Anomalous X-ray Pulsars are believed to contain
slowly spinning "magnetars". The enormous energy liberated in the 2004 Dece 27
giant flare from SGR 1806-20, together with the likely recurrence time of such
events, points to an internal magnetic field strength ~ 10^{16} G. Such strong
fields are expected to be generated by a coherent alpha-Omega dynamo in the
early seconds after the Neutron Star formation, if its spin period is of a few
milliseconds at most. A substantial deformation of the NS is caused by such
fields and a newborn millisecond-spinning magnetar would thus radiate for a few
days a strong gravitational wave signal. Such a signal may be detected with
Advanced LIGO-class detectors up to the distance of the Virgo cluster, where ~
1 magnetar per year are expected to form. Recent X-ray observations reveal that
SNRs around magnetar candidates do not show evidence for a larger energy
content than standard SNRs (Vink & Kuiper 2006). This is at variance with what
would be expected if the spin energy of the young, millisecond NS were radiated
away as electromagnetic radiation andd/or relativistic particle winds and,
thus, transferred quickly to the expanding gas shell. We show here that these
recent findings can be reconciled with the idea of magnetars being formed with
fast spins, if most of their initial spin energy is radiated thorugh GWs. In
particular, we find that this occurs for essentially the same parameter range
that would make such objects detectable by Advanced LIGO-class detectors up to
the Virgo Cluster.Comment: Proceedings of the Conference "Isolated Neutron stars: from the
interior to the surface", Eds. D. Page, R. Turolla, S. Zan
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Recent progress with the DNA repair mutants of Chinese hamster ovary cells
Repair deficient mutants of Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells are being used to identify human genes that correct the repair defects and to study mechanisms of DNA repair and mutagenesis. Five independent tertiary DNA transformants were obtained from the EM9 mutant. In these clones a human DNA sequence was identified that correlated with the resistance of the cells to CldUrd. After Eco RI digestion, Southern transfer, and hybridization of transformant DNAs with the BLUR-8 Alu family sequence, a common fragment of 25 to 30 kb was present. 37 refs., 4 figs., 3 tabs
The socialist blues? Citizenship, class and civil society
This article seeks to explore the relationship between the British labour movement, the Left and the Labour party. It does so through the intellectual prism of debates around citizenship and civil society. In this respect, I seek to recover a critical politics around questions of class from the New Left who were always critical of more mainstream ideas of citizenship. However, I also point to the limitations of those who have argued that meaningful forms of citizenship can no longer be connected to political parties and only occurs outside of state organizations. Political parties continue to need intellectual narratives to legitimate their role in society and to connect with the broader civil order.The Labour Party in this respect has seemingly broken with ‘New Labour’ and is searching for a new narrative. The rise of an intellectual grouping around ‘Blue Labour’ has made considerable headway recently and I seek to take a critical view of some of their ideas and ethical frameworks. Here I argue that changing class formations and a more pluralistic society potentially ask difficult questions of those who seek to revive the labour movement in troubled times
Self-similar factor approximants for evolution equations and boundary-value problems
The method of self-similar factor approximants is shown to be very convenient
for solving different evolution equations and boundary-value problems typical
of physical applications. The method is general and simple, being a
straightforward two-step procedure. First, the solution to an equation is
represented as an asymptotic series in powers of a variable. Second, the series
are summed by means of the self-similar factor approximants. The obtained
expressions provide highly accurate approximate solutions to the considered
equations. In some cases, it is even possible to reconstruct exact solutions
for the whole region of variables, starting from asymptotic series for small
variables. This can become possible even when the solution is a transcendental
function. The method is shown to be more simple and accurate than different
variants of perturbation theory with respect to small parameters, being
applicable even when these parameters are large. The generality and accuracy of
the method are illustrated by a number of evolution equations as well as
boundary value problems.Comment: Latex file, 27 pages, 2 figures, 5 table
RHESSI Results -- Time For a Rethink?
Hard X-rays and gamma-rays are the most direct signatures of energetic
electrons and ions in the sun's atmosphere which is optically thin at these
energies and their radiation involves no coherent processes. Being collisional
they are complementary to gyro-radiation in probing atmospheric density as
opposed to magnetic field and the electrons are primarily 10--100 keV in
energy, complementing the (>100 keV) electrons likely responsible for microwave
bursts.
The pioneering results of the Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager
(RHESSI) are raising the first new major questions concerning solar energetic
particles in many years. Some highlights of these results are discussed --
primarily around RHESSI topics on which the authors have had direct research
involvement -- particularly when they are raising the need for re-thinking of
entrenched ideas. Results and issues are broadly divided into discoveries in
the spatial, temporal and spectral domains, with the main emphasis on flare
hard X-rays/fast electrons but touching also on gamma-rays/ions, non-flare
emissions, and the relationship to radio bursts.Comment: Proceedings CESRA Workshop 2004: "The High Energy Solar Corona:
Waves, Eruptions, Particles", Lecture Notes in Physics, 2006 (accepted
Furthering alternative cultures of valuation in higher education research
The value of higher education is often implicit or assumed in educational research. The underlying and antecedent premises that shape and influence debates about value remain unchallenged which perpetuates the dominant, but limiting, terms of the debate and fosters reductionism. I proceed on the premise that analyses of value are not self–supporting or self-referential but are embedded within prevailing cultures of valuation. I contend that challenging, and providing alternatives to, dominant narratives of higher education requires an appreciation of those cultures. I therefore highlight some of the existing cultures of valuation and their influence. I then propose Sayer’s concept of lay normativity as a culture of valuation and discuss how it translates into the practices of research into higher education, specifically the practice of analysis. I animate the discussion by detecting the presence of lay normativity in the evaluative space of the capability approach
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