647 research outputs found
Millimeter interferometer observations of the magnetar 4U 0142+61
The Anomalous X‐ray Pulsar 4U 0142+61 is the only neutron star where it is believed that one of the long searched‐for ‘fallback’ disks has been detected in the mid‐IR by Wang et al. [1] using Spitzer. Such a disk originates from material falling back to the NS after the supernova. We search for cold circumstellar material in the 90 GHz continuum using the Plateau de Bure Interferometer. No millimeter flux is detected at the position of 4U 0142+61, the upper flux limit is 150 μJy corresponding to the 3σ noise rms level. The re‐processed Spitzer MIPS 24μm data presented previously by Wang et al. [2] show some indication of flux enhancement at the position of the neutron star, albeit below the 3σ statistical significance limit. At far infrared wavelengths the source flux densities are probably below the Herschel confusion limits
Text Summarization Techniques: A Brief Survey
In recent years, there has been a explosion in the amount of text data from a
variety of sources. This volume of text is an invaluable source of information
and knowledge which needs to be effectively summarized to be useful. In this
review, the main approaches to automatic text summarization are described. We
review the different processes for summarization and describe the effectiveness
and shortcomings of the different methods.Comment: Some of references format have update
A Multi-Wavelength Study of the Nature of Type 1.8/1.9 Seyfert Galaxies
We focus on determining the underlying physical cause of a Seyfert galaxy's
appearance as type a 1.8 or 1.9. Are these "intermediate" Seyfert types typical
Seyfert 1 nuclei with reddened broad-line regions? Or are they objects with
intrinsically weak continua and broad emission lines? We compare measurements
of the optical reddening of the narrow and broad-line regions with each other
and with the X-ray column derived from XMM-Newton 0.5-10 keV spectra to
determine the presence and location of dust in the line of sight. We also
searched the literature to see if the objects showed evidence for broad-line
variability, and determined if the changes were consistent with a change in
reddening or a change in the intrinsic ionizing continuum flux. We find that 10
of 19 objects previously classified as Seyfert 1.8/1.9s received this
designation due to their low continuum flux. In four objects the classification
was due to BLR reddening, either by the torus or dust structures in the
vicinity of the NLR; in the remaining five objects there is not sufficient
evidence to favor one scenario over the other. These findings imply that, in
general, samples of 1.8/1.9s are not suitable for use in studies of the gas and
dust in the central torus.Comment: 85 pages, accepted by Ap
Evidence for a Long-Standing Top-Heavy IMF in the Central Parsec of the Galaxy
We classify 329 late-type giants within 1 parsec of Sgr A*, using the
adaptive optics integral field spectrometer SINFONI on the VLT. These
observations represent the deepest spectroscopic data set so far obtained for
the Galactic Center, reaching a 50% completeness threshold at the approximate
magnitude of the helium-burning red clump (Ks ~ 15.5 mag.). Combining our
spectroscopic results with NaCo H and Ks photometry, we construct an observed
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram, which we quantitatively compare to theoretical
distributions of various star formation histories of the inner Galaxy, using a
chi-squared analysis. Our best-fit model corresponds to continuous star
formation over the last 12 Gyr with a top-heavy initial mass function (IMF).
The similarity of this IMF to the IMF observed for the most recent epoch of
star formation is intriguing and perhaps suggests a connection between recent
star formation and the stars formed throughout the history of the Galactic
Center.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, Accepted to ApJ: 15 July 200
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