651 research outputs found
ASCA observations of massive medium-distant clusters of galaxies. II
We have selected seven medium-distant clusters of galaxies (z ~ 0.1 - 0.3)
for multi-wavelength observations with the goal of investigating their
dynamical state. Following Paper I (Pierre et al. 1999) which reported the ASCA
results about two of them, we present here the analysis of the ASCA
observations of the other five clusters; RXJ1023.8-2715 (A3444),
RXJ1031.6-2607, RXJ1050.5-0236 (A1111), RXJ1203.2-2131(A1451), and
RXJ1314.5-2517. Except for RXJ1031.6, whose X-ray emission turned out to be
dominated by an AGN, the ASCA spectra are well fitted by a one-temperature thin
thermal plasma model. We compare the temperature-luminosity relation of our
clusters with that of nearby ones (z<0.1). Two clusters, RXJ1050.5 and
RXJ1023.8, show larger luminosities than the bulk of clusters at similar
temperatures, which suggests the presence of a cooling flow. The temperature
vs. iron-abundance relationship of our sample is consistent with that of nearby
clusters.Comment: 9 pages, 20 figures, A&AS in pres
X-ray Constraints on Accretion and Starburst Processes in Galactic Nuclei I. Spectral Results
The results of a 0.4-10.0 keV ASCA spectral analysis of a sample of
low-luminosity AGN (LLAGN; M51, NGC 3147, NGC 4258), low-ionization nuclear
emission line regions (LINERs; NGC 3079, NGC 3310, NGC 3998, NGC 4579, NGC
4594) and starburst galaxies (M82, NGC 253, NGC 3628 and NGC 6946) are
presented. In spite of the heterogeneous optical classifications of these
galaxies, the X-ray spectra are fit well by a ``canonical'' model consisting of
an optically-thin Raymond-Smith plasma ``soft'' component with T ~ 7 x 10^6 K
and a ``hard'' component that can be modeled by either a power-law with a
photon index ~ 1.7 or a thermal bremsstrahlung with T ~ 6 x 10^7 K. The
soft-component 0.4-10 keV instrinsic luminosities tend to be on the order
10^39-40 ergs/s while the hard-component luminosities tend to be on the order
of 10^40-41 ergs/s. The detection of line emission is discussed. An analysis of
the short-term variability properties was given in Ptak et al. (1998) and
detailed interpretation of these results will be given in Paper II. (abridged)Comment: Accepted for Jan. 99 issue of ApJS. 35 pages with embedded postscript
figures. 8 large tables included externally as postscript file
Spectrum of Relativistic and Subrelativistic Cosmic Rays in the 100 pc Central Region
From the rate of hydrogen ionization and the gamma ray flux, we derived the
spectrum of relativistic and subrelativistic cosmic rays (CRs) nearby and
inside the molecular cloud Sgr B2 near the Galactic Center (GC). We studied two
cases of CR propagation in molecular clouds: free propagation and scattering of
particles by magnetic fluctuations excited by the neutral gas turbulence. We
showed that in the latter case CR propagation inside the cloud can be described
as diffusion with the coefficient cm s. For
the case of hydrogen ionization by subrelativistic protons, we showed that
their spectrum outside the cloud is quite hard with the spectral index
. The energy density of subrelativistic protons ( eV cm)
is one order of magnitude higher than that of relativistic CRs. These protons
generate the 6.4 keV emission from Sgr B2, which was about 30\% of the flux
observed by Suzaku in 2013. Future observations for the period after 2013 may
discover the background flux generated by subrelativistic CRs in Sgr B2.
Alternatively hydrogen ionization of the molecular gas in Sgr B2 may be caused
by high energy electrons. We showed that the spectrum of electron
bremsstrahlung is harder than the observed continuum from Sgr B2, and in
principle this X-ray component provided by electrons could be seen from the
INTEGRAL data as a stationary high energy excess above the observed spectrum
.Comment: 42 pages, 6 figures, accepted by Ap
An X-ray Mini-survey of Nearby Edge-on Starburst Galaxies II. The Question of Metal Abundance
(abbreviated) We have undertaken an X-ray survey of a far-infrared flux
limited sample of seven nearby edge-on starburst galaxies. Here, we examine the
two X-ray-brightest sample members NGC 253 and M 82 in a self-consistent
manner, taking account of the spatial distribution of the X-ray emission in
choosing our spectral models. There is significant X-ray absorption in the disk
of NGC 253. When this is accounted for we find that multi-temperature thermal
plasma models with significant underlying soft X-ray absorption are more
consistent with the imaging data than single-temperature models with highly
subsolar abundances or models with minimal absorption and non-equilibrium
thermal ionization conditions. Our models do not require absolute abundances
that are inconsistent with solar values or unusually supersolar ratios of the
alpha-burning elements with respect to Fe (as claimed previously). We conclude
that with current data, the technique of measuring abundances in starburst
galaxies via X-ray spectral modeling is highly uncertain.
Based on the point-like nature of much of the X-ray emission in the PSPC
hard-band image of NGC 253, we suggest that a significant fraction of the
``extended'' X-ray emission in the 3-10 keV band seen along the disk of the
galaxy with ASCA and BeppoSAX (Cappi et al.) is comprised of discrete sources
in the disk, as opposed to purely diffuse, hot gas. This could explain the low
Fe abundances of ~1/4 solar derived for pure thermal models.Comment: (accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
Peculiar Chemical Abundances in the Starburst Galaxy M82 and Hypernova Nucleosynthesis
X-ray observations have shown that the chemical abundance in the starburst
galaxy M82 is quite rich in Si and S compared with oxygen. Such an abundance
pattern cannot be explained with any combination of conventional Type I and II
supernova yields. Also the energy to heavy element mass ratio of the observed
hot plasma is much higher than the value resulted from normal supernovae. We
calculate explosive nucleosynthesis in core-collapse hypernovae and show that
the abundance pattern and the large ratio between the energy and the heavy
element mass can be explained with the hypernova nucleosynthesis. Such
hypernova explosions are expected to occur for stars more massive than >~ 20-25
Msun, and likely dominating the starburst, because the age after the starburst
in M82 is estimated to be as short as ~ 10^6 - 10^7 yr. We also investigate
pair-instability supernovae (~ 150-300 Msun) and conclude that the energy to
heavy element mass ratio in these supernovae is too small to explain the
observation.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, To appear in the Astrophysical Journal 578, 200
3-(4-Methoxyphenyl)-6-(phenylsulfonyl)perhydro-1,3-thiazolo[3′,4′:1,2]pyrrolo[4,5-c]pyrrole
In the title compound, C21H24N2O3S2, the three five-membered rings adopt envelope conformations. The dihedral angle between the two aromatic rings is 68.4 (1)°. C—H⋯O interactions link the molecules into a chain and the chains are cross-linked via C—H⋯π interactions involving the methoxyphenyl ring
A deep X-ray observation of M82 with XMM-Newton
We report on the analysis of a deep (100 ks) observation of the starburst
galaxy M82 with the EPIC and RGS instruments on board the X-ray telescope
XMM-Newton. The broad-band (0.5-10 keV) emission is due to at least three
spectral components: i) continuum emission from point sources; ii) thermal
plasma emission from hot gas; iii) charge exchange emission from neutral metals
(Mg and Si). The plasma emission has a double-peaked differential emission
measure, with the peaks at ~0.5 keV and ~7 keV. Spatially resolved spectroscopy
has shown that the chemical absolute abundances are not uniformly distributed
in the outflow, but are larger in the outskirts and smaller close to the galaxy
centre. The abundance ratios also show spatial variations. The X-ray derived
Oxygen abundance is lower than that measured in the atmospheres of red
supergiant stars, leading to the hypothesis that a significant fraction of
Oxygen ions have already cooled off and no longer emit at energies > ~0.5 keV.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 20 pages, 15 figures, LaTeX2
Discovery of X-ray emission rom the distant lensing cluster of galaxies CL2236-04 at z = 0.552
X-ray emission from the distant lensing cluster CL2236-04 at = 0.552 was
discovered by ASCA and ROSAT/HRI observations. If the spherical symmetric mass
distribution model of the cluster is assumed, the lensing estimate of the
cluster mass is a factor of two higher than that obtained from X-ray
observations as reported for many distant clusters. However, the elliptical and
clumpy lens model proposed by Kneib et al.(1993) is surprisingly consistent
with the X-ray observations assuming that the X-ray emitting hot gas is
isothermal and in a hydrostatic equilibrium state. The existence of the cooling
flow in the central region of the cluster is indicated by the short central
cooling time and the excess flux detected by ROSAT/HRI compared to the ASCA
flux. However, it is shown that even if the AXJ2239-0429 has a cooling flow in
the central region, the temperature measured by ASCA which is the mean
emission-weighted cluster temperature in this case, should not be cooler than
and different from the virial temperature of the cluster. Therefore, we
conclude that the effect of the clumpiness and non-zero ellipticity in the mass
distribution of the cluster are essential to explain the observed feature of
the giant luminous arc, and there is no discrepancy between strong lensing and
X-ray estimation of the mass of the cluster in this cluster.Comment: 18 pages, including 4 postscripts figs, LaTex. To appear in Part 1 of
The Astrophysical Journa
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