1,663 research outputs found
Observational evidence for buffeting induced kink waves in solar magnetic elements
The role of diffuse photospheric magnetic elements in the energy budget of
the upper layers of the Sun's atmosphere has been the recent subject of many
studies. This was made possible by the availability of high temporal and
spatial resolution observations of the solar photosphere, allowing large
numbers of magnetic elements to be tracked to study their dynamics. In this
work we exploit a long temporal series of seeing-free magnetograms of the solar
photosphere to study the effect of the turbulent convection in the excitation
of kink oscillations in magnetic elements. We make use of the empirical mode
decomposition technique (EMD) in order to study the transverse oscillations of
several magnetic flux tubes. This technique permits the analysis of
non-stationary time series like those associated to the horizontal velocities
of these flux tubes which are continuously advected and dispersed by granular
flows.
Our primary findings reveal the excitation of low frequency modes of kink
oscillations, which are sub-harmonics of a fundamental mode with a minute periodicity. These results constitute a strong case for
observational proof of the excitation of kink waves by the buffeting of the
convection cells in the solar photosphere, and are discussed in light of their
possible role in the energy budget of the upper Sun's atmosphere.Comment: A&A accepte
Photometry and polarimetry of the nucleus of comet 2P/Encke
Broadband imaging photometry, and broadband and narrowband linear polarimetry
was measured for the nucleus of 2P/Encke over the phase-angle range 4 - 28 deg.
An analysis of the point spread function of the comet reveals only weak coma
activity, corresponding to a dust production of the order of 0.05 kg/s. The
nucleus displays a color independent photometric phase function of almost
linear slope. The absolute R filter magnitude at zero phase angle is 15.05 +/-
0.05, and corresponds to an equivalent radius for the nucleus of 2.43 +/- 0.06
km (for an adopted albedo of 0.047). The nucleus color V - R is 0.47 +/- 0.07,
suggesting a spectral slope of 11 +/- 8 %/100nm. The phase function of linear
polarimetry in the V and R filters shows a widely color independent linear
increase with phase angle (0.12 +/- 0.02%/deg). We find discrepancies in the
photometric and polarimetric parameters between 2P/Encke and other minor bodies
in the solar system, which may indicate significant differences in the surface
material properties and light-scattering behavior of the bodies.
The linear polarimetric phase function of 2P/Encke presented here is the
first ever measured for a cometary nucleus, and its analysis encourages future
studies of cometary nuclei in order to characterize the light-scattering
behavior of comets on firm empirical grounds and provide suitable input to a
comprehensive modeling of the light scattering by cometary surfaces.Comment: Accepted by A&
Magnetic field fluctuation features at Swarm's altitude: a fractal approach
The ESA Swarm mission provides a qualitatively new level of observational geomagnetic data, \textbf{which allows us to study the spatial features of magnetic field fluctuations}, capturing their essential characteristics and at the same time establishing a correlation with the dynamics of the systems responsible for the fluctuations. Our study aims to characterize changes in the scaling properties of the geomagnetic field's spatial fluctuations by evaluating the local Hurst exponent, and to construct maps of this index \textbf{at the Swarm's altitude ( km)}. Since a signal with a larger Hurst exponent is more regular and less erratic than a signal with a smaller one, the maps permit us to localize spatial structures characterized by different scaling properties. This study is an example of the potential of Swarm data to give new insights into ionosphere-magnetosphere coupling; at the same time, it develops new applications where changes in statistical parameters can be used as a local indicator of overall magnetospheric-ionospheric coupling conditions
Polarimetry and photometry of the peculiar main-belt object 7968 = 133P/Elst-Pizarro
133P/Elst-Pizarro is an object that has been described as either an active
asteroid or a cometary object in the main asteroid belt. Here we present a
photometric and polarimetric study of this object in an attempt to infer
additional information about its origin.
With the FORS1 instrument of the ESO VLT, we have performed during the 2007
apparition of 133P/Elst-Pizarro quasi-simultaneous photometry and polarimetry
of its nucleus at nine epochs in the phase angle range 0 - 20 deg. For each
observing epoch, we also combined all available frames to obtain a deep image
of the object, to seek signatures of weak cometary activity. Polarimetric data
were analysed by means of a novel physical interference modelling.
The object brightness was found to be highly variable over timescales <1h, a
result fully consistent with previous studies. Using the albedo-polarization
relationships for asteroids and our photometric results, we found for our
target an albedo of about 0.06-0.07 and a mean radius of about 1.6 km.
Throughout the observing epochs, our deep imaging of the comet detects a tail
and an anti-tail. Their temporal variations are consistent with an activity
profile starting around mid May 2007 of minimum duration of four months. Our
images show marginal evidence of a coma around the nucleus. The overall light
scattering behaviour (photometry and polarimetry) resembles most closely that
of F-type asteroids.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic
On the nonstationarity of the decadal periodicities of the length of day
The Earth's rotation rate is not constant, but changes on all observable timescales, from subdaily to decadal and longer. These variations are usually discussed in terms of variations in the length of the day (LoD) and are caused by processes acting within the interior, at the surface and outside of the Earth. Here, we investigate the presence of long-standing decadal variations in yearly LoD data covering the period from 1832 to 2009 by applying the Hilbert–Huang transform (HHT). The HHT has been slightly modified here to take into account the uncertainty of LoD values that has changed greatly in time due to the use of different LoD measurement techniques. The LoD time series has been completely decomposed into five intrinsic mode functions (IMF) and a residual trend. The estimation of instantaneous frequencies and related amplitudes of the obtained IMFs has allowed us to compute the Hilbert spectrum that has been used as the starting point for studying and discussing the stationarity of typical LoD timescale stationarity. The obtained results while showing the presence of multiple periodicities also indicate the absence of really stationary periodicities. Therefore, rather than considering the processes taking place in the Earth's core as the result of a superposition of oscillations (i.e. stationary mechanisms) occurring on a discrete number of different timescales, it would be better to think of a superposition of fluctuations that are intermittent in both frequency and amplitude
on the nonstationarity of the decadal periodicities of the length of day
Abstract. The Earth's rotation rate is not constant, but changes on all observable timescales, from subdaily to decadal and longer. These variations are usually discussed in terms of variations in the length of the day (LoD) and are caused by processes acting within the interior, at the surface and outside of the Earth. Here, we investigate the presence of long-standing decadal variations in yearly LoD data covering the period from 1832 to 2009 by applying the Hilbert–Huang transform (HHT). The HHT has been slightly modified here to take into account the uncertainty of LoD values that has changed greatly in time due to the use of different LoD measurement techniques. The LoD time series has been completely decomposed into five intrinsic mode functions (IMF) and a residual trend. The estimation of instantaneous frequencies and related amplitudes of the obtained IMFs has allowed us to compute the Hilbert spectrum that has been used as the starting point for studying and discussing the stationarity of typical LoD timescale stationarity. The obtained results while showing the presence of multiple periodicities also indicate the absence of really stationary periodicities. Therefore, rather than considering the processes taking place in the Earth's core as the result of a superposition of oscillations (i.e. stationary mechanisms) occurring on a discrete number of different timescales, it would be better to think of a superposition of fluctuations that are intermittent in both frequency and amplitude
On the multi-scale nature of large geomagnetic storms: an empirical mode decomposition analysis
Abstract. Complexity and multi-scale are very common properties of several geomagnetic time series. On the other hand, it is amply demonstrated that scaling properties of geomagnetic time series show significant changes depending on the geomagnetic activity level. Here, we study the multi-scale features of some large geomagnetic storms by applying the empirical mode decomposition technique. This method, which is alternative to traditional data analysis and is designed specifically for analyzing nonlinear and nonstationary data, is applied to long time series of Sym-H index relative to periods including large geomagnetic disturbances. The spectral and scaling features of the intrinsic mode functions (IMFs) into which Sym-H time series can be decomposed, as well as those of the Sym-H time series itself, are studied considering different geomagnetic activity levels. The results suggest an increase of dynamical complexity and multi-scale properties for intermediate geomagnetic activity levels
The Swift X-ray Telescope Cluster Survey II. X-ray spectral analysis
(Abridged) We present a spectral analysis of a new, flux-limited sample of 72
X-ray selected clusters of galaxies identified with the X-ray Telescope (XRT)
on board the Swift satellite down to a flux limit of ~10-14 erg/s/cm2 (SWXCS,
Tundo et al. 2012). We carry out a detailed X-ray spectral analysis with the
twofold aim of measuring redshifts and characterizing the properties of the
Intra-Cluster Medium (ICM). Optical counterparts and spectroscopic or
photometric redshifts are obtained with a cross-correlation with NED.
Additional photometric redshifts are computed with a dedicated follow-up
program with the TNG and a cross-correlation with the SDSS. We also detect the
iron emission lines in 35% of the sample, and hence obtain a robust measure of
the X-ray redshift zX. We use zX whenever the optical redshift is not
available. Finally, for all the sources with measured redshift,
background-subtracted spectra are fitted with a mekal model. We perform
extensive spectral simulations to derive an empirical formula to account for
fitting bias. The bias-corrected values are then used to investigate the
scaling properties of the X-ray observables. Overall, we are able to
characterize the ICM of 46 sources. The sample is mostly constituted by
clusters with temperatures between 3 and 10 keV, plus 14 low-mass clusters and
groups with temperatures below 3 keV. The redshift distribution peaks around
z~0.25 and extends up to z~1, with 60% of the sample at 0.1<z<0.4. We derive
the Luminosity-Temperature relation for these 46 sources, finding good
agreement with previous studies. The quality of the SWXCS sample is comparable
to other samples available in the literature and obtained with much larger
X-ray telescopes. Our results have interesting implications for the design of
future X-ray survey telescopes, characterised by good-quality PSF over the
entire field of view and low background.Comment: 27 pages, 15 figures; minor typos corrected. To be published in A&A,
Volume 567, July 2014. Websites of the SWXCS project:
http://www.arcetri.astro.it/SWXCS/ and http://swxcs.ustc.edu.cn
A new photometric technique for the joint selection of star-forming and passive galaxies at 1.4<z<2.5
A simple two color selection based on B-, z-, and K- band photometry is
proposed for culling galaxies at 1.4<z<2.5 in K-selected samples and
classifying them as star-forming or passive systems. The method is calibrated
on the highly complete spectroscopic redshift database of the K20 survey,
verified with simulations and tested on other datasets. Requiring
BzK=(z-K)-(B-z)>-0.2 (AB) allows to select actively star-forming galaxies at
z>1.4, independently on their dust reddening. Instead, objects with BzK<-0.2
and (z-K)>2.5 (AB) colors include passively evolving galaxies at z>1.4, often
with spheroidal morphologies. Simple recipes to estimate the reddening, SFRs
and masses of BzK-selected galaxies are derived, and calibrated on K<20
galaxies. Based on their UV (reddening-corrected), X-ray and radio
luminosities, the BzK-selected star-forming galaxies with K<20 turn out to have
average SFR ~ 200 Msun yr^-1, and median reddening E(B-V)~0.4. Besides missing
the passively evolving galaxies, the UV selection appears to miss some relevant
fraction of the z~2 star-forming galaxies with K<20, and hence of the
(obscured) star-formation rate density at this redshift. The high SFRs and
masses add to other existing evidence that these z=2 star-forming galaxies may
be among the precursors of z=0 early-type galaxies. Theoretical models cannot
reproduce simultaneously the space density of both passively evolving and
highly star-forming galaxies at z=2. In view of Spitzer Space Telescope
observations, an analogous technique based on the RJL photometry is proposed to
complement the BzK selection and to identify massive galaxies at 2.5<z<4.0.
These color criteria should help in completing the census of the stellar mass
and of the star-formation rate density at high redshift (abridged).Comment: 19 pages, 17 figures, to appear on ApJ (20 December 2004 issue
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