31,572 research outputs found

    Akn 564: an unusual component in the X-ray spectra of NLSy1 galaxies

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    We present an ASCA observation of the NLSy1 Ark 564. The X-ray light curve shows rapid variability, but no evidence for energy-dependence to these variations, within the 0.6 -- 10 keV bandpass. A strong (EW ~ 70 eV) spectral feature is observed close to 1 keV. A similar feature has been observed in TON S180 (another NLSy1) but has not been observed in broad-line Seyfert galaxies. The feature energy suggests a large contribution from Fe L-shell lines but its intensity is difficult to explain in terms of emission and/or absorption from photoionized gas. Models based on gas in thermal equilibrium with kT ~1 keV provide an alternative parameterization of the soft spectrum. The latter may be interpreted as the hot intercloud medium, undergoing rapid cooling and producing strong Fe L-shell recombination lines. In all cases the physical conditions are rather different from those observed in broad-line Seyferts. The hard X-ray spectrum shows a broad and asymmetric Fe Kalpha line of large equivalent width (~550 eV) which can be explained by a neutral disk viewed at ~ 60 degrees to the line-of-sight, contrary to the hypothesis that NLSy1s are viewed pole-on. The large EW of this line, the strong 1 keV emission and the strong optical Fe emission lines all suggest an extreme Fe abundance in this and perhaps other NLSy1s.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures. LaTeX with encapsulated postscript. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa

    A kinetic model describing the processivity of Myosin-V

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    The precise details of how myosin-V coordinates the biochemical reactions and mechanical motions of its two head elements to engineer effective processive molecular motion along actin filaments remain unresolved. We compare a quantitative kinetic model of the myosin-V walk, consisting of five basic states augmented by two further states to allow for futile hydrolysis and detachments, with experimental results for run lengths, velocities, and dwell times and their dependence on bulk nucleotide concentrations and external loads in both directions. The model reveals how myosin-V can use the internal strain in the molecule to synchronize the motion of the head elements. Estimates for the rate constants in the reaction cycle and the internal strain energy are obtained by a computational comparison scheme involving an extensive exploration of the large parameter space. This scheme exploits the fact that we have obtained analytic results for our reaction network, e.g., for the velocity but also the run length, diffusion constant, and fraction of backward steps. The agreement with experiment is often reasonable but some open problems are highlighted, in particular the inability of such a general model to reproduce the reported dependence of run length on ADP concentration. The novel way that our approach explores parameter space means that any confirmed discrepancies should give new insights into the reaction network model

    The History of Borough Road School/College from its Origins in 1798 until its merger with Maria Grey College to form West London Institute of Higher Education in 1976

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    This book is distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 3.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is noncommercial.The historical development of the Borough Road School for the children of poor parents led to the need to train its teachers. This work was the inspiration of Joseph Lancaster. The text is divided into two major sections. The first section deals with the development of his ideas and implementation. The second section examines the historical development of Borough Road College by decade with emphasis on changes in educational ideas and legislation across two centuries

    Evidence for Orbital Motion of Material Close to the Central Black Hole of Mrk 766

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    Time-resolved X-ray spectroscopy has been obtained for the narrow line Seyfert galaxy Mrk766 from XMM-Newton observations. We present analysis in the energy-time plane of EPIC pn data in the 4-8 keV band with energy resolution R~50. A component of Fe Ka emission detected in the maps shows a variation of photon energy with time that appears both to be statistically significant and to be consistent with sinusoidal variation. We investigate the interpretation that there exists a component of line emission from matter in a Keplerian orbit around a supermassive black hole. The orbit has a period ~165 ks and a line-of-sight velocity ~13,500 km/s. This yields a lower limit for the central mass of M > 4.9x10^5 solar masses within a radius of 3.6 x 10^13 cm (2.4 A.U.). The orbit parameters are consistent with higher black hole masses, but the lack of any substantial gravitational redshift of the orbit implies an upper limit to the black hole mass of 4.5x10^7 solar masses.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures (some colour). Accepted for publication in A&A. Only minor changes since V1 (including reordering of Figs 1a & b

    ASCA observations of type-2 Seyfert galaxies: II. The Importance of X-ray Scattering and Reflection

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    We discuss the importance of X-ray scattering and Compton reflection in type-2 Seyfert galaxies, based upon the analysis of ASCA observations of 25 such sources. Consideration of the iron Kalpha, [O III] line and X-ray variability suggest that NGC 1068, NGC 4945, NGC 2992, Mrk 3, Mrk 463E and Mrk 273 are dominated by reprocessed X-rays. We examine the properties of these sources in more detail. We find that the iron Kalpha complex contains significant contributions from neutral and high-ionization species of iron. Compton reflection, hot gas and starburst emission all appear to make significant contributions to the observed X-ray spectra. Mrk 3 is the only source in this subsample which does not have a significant starburst contamination. The ASCA spectrum below 3 keV is dominated by hot scattering gas with U_X ~ 5, N_H ~ 4 x 10^23 cm^-2. This material is more highly ionized than the zone of material comprising the warm absorber seen in Seyfert~1 galaxies, but may contain a contribution from shock-heated gas associated with the jet. Estimates of the X-ray scattering fraction cover 0.25 - 5%. The spectrum above 3 keV appears to be dominated by a Compton reflection component although there is evidence that the primary continuum component becomes visible close to 10 keV.Comment: 27 pages, 6 figures. LaTeX with encapsulated postscript. To appear in the Astrophysical Journal. Also available via http://lheawww.gsfc.nasa.gov/~george/papers/gnt_s2p2/abstract.htm
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