261,957 research outputs found

    MHD Waves and Coronal Seismology: an overview of recent results

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    Recent observations have revealed that MHD waves and oscillations are ubiquitous in the solar atmosphere, with a wide range of periods. We give a brief review of some aspects of MHD waves and coronal seismology which have recently been the focus of intense debate or are newly emerging. In particular, we focus on four topics: (i) the current controversy surrounding propagating intensity perturbations along coronal loops, (ii) the interpretation of propagating transverse loop oscillations, (iii) the ongoing search for coronal (torsional) Alfven waves and (iv) the rapidly developing topic of quasi-periodic pulsations (QPP) in solar flares

    Transient X-ray Sources in the Magellanic-type Galaxy NGC 4449

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    We report the identification of seven transient X-ray sources in the nearby Magellanic-type galaxy NGC 4449 using the archival multi-epoch X-ray observations conducted with {\it Chandra}, {\it XMM-Newton} and {\it Swift} telescopes over year 2001--2013. Among them, two sources are classified as supersoft X-ray sources (SSSs) because of their soft X-ray color and rest of the sources are X-ray binaries (XRBs). Transient SSSs spectra can be fitted with a blackbody of effective temperature ∼80−105\sim 80-105 eV and luminosities were ≃1037−1038 erg s−1\simeq 10^{37} - 10^{38} {\rm~erg\ s}^{-1} in 0.3--8 keV. These properties are consistent with the widely accepted model for SSSs, an accreting white dwarf with the steady nuclear burning on its surface, while the SSS emission has also been observed in many post-nova systems. Detailed analysis of one sufficiently bright SSS revealed the strong short-term variability, possibly showing a 2.3 hour periodic modulation, and long-term variability, detectable over 23 years with different X-ray telescopes before year 2003. The X-ray properties of four other transients are consistent with neutron star or black hole binaries in their hard state, while the remaining source is most likely an XRB with a quasi-soft X-ray spectrum. Analysis of archival {\it Hubble Space Telescope} image data was also conducted, and multiple massive stars were found as possible counterparts. We conclude that the X-ray transient properties in NGC 4449 are similar to those in other Magellanic-type galaxies.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 10 Pages, 4 Tables, 3 Figure

    X-ray outbursts from a new transient in NGC 55

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    We report the outbursts from a newly discovered X-ray transient in the Magellanic-type, SB(s)m galaxy NGC 55. The transient source, XMMU J001446.81-391123.48, was undetectable in the 2001 \xmm{} and 2004 \chandra{} observations, but detected in a 2010 \xmm{} observation at a significance level of 9σ9\sigma in the 0.3--8 keV energy band. The \xmm{} spectrum is consistent with a power law with photon index Γ=3.17−0.20+0.22\Gamma = 3.17^{+0.22}_{-0.20}, but is better fit with a kTin=0.70±0.06kT_{in} = 0.70\pm0.06\,keV disk blackbody. The luminosity was ∼1038\sim 10^{38}\,erg\,s−1^{-1}, and the source displayed strong short-term X-ray variability. These results, combined with the hardness ratios of its emission, strongly suggest an X-ray binary nature for the source. The follow-up studies with \swift{} XRT observations revealed that the source exhibited recurrent outbursts with period about a month. The XRT spectra can be described by a power law (Γ∼2.5\Gamma\sim 2.5--2.9) or a disk blackbody (kTin∼0.8kT_{in}\sim 0.8--1.0\,keV), and the luminosity was in a range of 1038^{38}--1039^{39}\,erg\,s−1^{-1}, with no evidence showing any significant changes of the spectral parameters in the observations. Based on the X-ray spectral and temporal properties, we conclude that XMMU J001446.81-391123.48 is a new transient X-ray binary in NGC 55, which possibly contains a black hole primary.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; Matched with accepted version; 6 Pages, 5 Figures, 2 Table

    Effects of Cluster Particle Correlations on Local Parity Violation Observables

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    We investigate effects of cluster particle correlations on two- and three-particle azimuth correlator observables sensitive to local strong parity violation. We use two-particle angular correlation measurements as input and estimate the magnitudes of the effects with straightforward assumptions. We found that the measurements of the azimuth correlator observables by the STAR experiment can be entirely accounted for by cluster particle correlations together with a reasonable range of cluster anisotropy in non-peripheral collisions. Our result suggests that new physics, such as local strong parity violation, may not be required to explain the correlator data.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, published versio
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