3,664 research outputs found
High-energy emission from the stellar wind collisions in gamma-2 Velorum
The binary system gamma-2 Velorum (WC8+O7.5) contains the nearest known
Wolf-Rayet star to the Sun, at a distance of 258 pc. Its strong
radio emission shows evidence for a partially absorbed nonthermal component,
which has been interpreted as synchrotron emission from electrons accelerated
in the colliding wind region. Inverse Compton cooling of these electrons in the
intense UV radiation field from the O-type companion star could produce a
significant hard X-ray and gamma-ray emission, whose flux depends on the ratio
of the energy densities of magnetic to seed photon fields. The Vela region was
observed with the INTEGRAL satellite in 2003, as part of the Core Programme. No
signals from gamma-2 Vel are detected in the images obtained with the
IBIS/ISGRI coded aperture instrument in the energy ranges 20-40 and 40-80 keV.
From the derived 3 upper limits, we show that the average magnetic
field near the region of stellar wind collision should be relatively high,
greater than about 1 G. The high-energy emission of gamma-2 Vel might be
detected with the forthcoming GLAST experiment.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. To appear in the Proceedings of the 5th INTEGRAL
Workshop: "The INTEGRAL Universe", February 16-20, 2004, Munich, German
Registration of the First Thermonuclear X-ray Burst from AX J1754.2-2754
During the analysis of the INTEGRAL observatory archival data we found a
powerful X-ray burst, registered by JEM-X and IBIS/ISGRI telescopes on April
16, 2005 from a weak and poorly known source AX J1754.2-2754. Analysis of the
burst profiles and spectrum shows, that it was a type I burst, which result
from thermonuclear explosion on the surface of nutron star. It means that we
can consider AX J1754.2-2754 as an X-ray burster. Certain features of burst
profile at its initial stage witness of a radiation presure driven strong
expansion and a corresponding cooling of the nutron star photosphere. Assuming,
that the luminosity of the source at this phase was close to the Eddington
limit, we estimated the distance to the burst source d=6.6+/-0.3 kpc (for
hidrogen atmosphere of the neutron star) and d=9.2+/-0.4 kpc (for helium
atmosphere).Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure
Einstein metrics and the number of smooth structures on a four-manifold
We prove that for every natural number k there are simply connected
topological four-manifolds which have at leat k distinct smooth structures
supporting Einstein metrics, and also have infinitely many distinct smooth
structures not supporting Einstein metrics. Moreover, all these smooth
structures become diffeomorphic after connected sum with only one copy of the
complex projective plane. We prove that manifolds with these properties cover a
large geographical area.Comment: 23 page
Improved spectral stability in spin transfer nano-oscillators: single vortex versus coupled vortices dynamics
We perform a comparative study of spin transfer induced excitation of the
gyrotropic motion of a vortex core with either uniform or vortex spin
polarizers. The microwave output voltage associated with the vortex dynamics,
detected in both cases, displays a strong reduction of phase fluctuations in
the case of the vortex polarizer, with a decrease of the peak linewidth by one
order of magnitude down to 200kHz at zero field. A thorough study of rf
emission features for the different accessible vortex configurations shows that
this improvement is related to the excitation of coupled vortex dynamics by
spin transfer torques
Blowing up generalized Kahler 4-manifolds
We show that the blow-up of a generalized Kahler 4-manifold in a
nondegenerate complex point admits a generalized Kahler metric. As with the
blow-up of complex surfaces, this metric may be chosen to coincide with the
original outside a tubular neighbourhood of the exceptional divisor. To
accomplish this, we develop a blow-up operation for bi-Hermitian manifolds.Comment: 16 page
SPI Measurements of the Diffuse Galactic Hard X-ray Continuum
INTEGRAL Spectrometer SPI data from the first year of the Galactic Centre
Deep Exposure has been analysed for the diffuse continuum from the Galactic
ridge. A new catalogue of sources from the INTEGRAL Imager IBIS has been used
to account for their contribution to the celestial signal. Apparently diffuse
emission is detected at a level ~10% of the total source flux. A comparison of
the spectrum of diffuse emission with that from an analysis of IBIS data alone
shows that they are consistent. The question of the contribution of unresolved
sources to this ridge emission is still open.Comment: Proceedings of the 5th INTEGRAL Workshop, Munich 16-20 February 2004.
ESA SP-552. Reference to Terrier et al. (2004) updated to include astro-ph
versio
INTEGRAL/IBIS search for e-e+ annihilation radiation from the Galactic Center Region
Electron-positron annihilation radiation from the Galactic Center region has
been detected since the seventies, but its astrophysical origin is still a
topic of a scientific debate. We have analyzed data of the gamma-ray imager
IBIS/ISGRI onboard of ESA's INTEGRAL platform in the ee line.
During the first year of the missions Galactic Center Deep Exposure no evidence
for point sources at 511 keV has been found in the ISGRI data; the
upper limit for resolved single point sources is estimated to be .Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures; Cospar 2004. To be published in: Advances in
Space Researc
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