135 research outputs found
Neutral hydrogen cloud distances and the strength of the interstellar magnetc field
If HI clouds exist in pressure equilibrium in an environment where gas pressure is a function of z-distance and if HI cloud density is a function of z-distance, it can be shown that a quantity called the Virial Measure is a function of z-distance. The Virial Measure is that distance at which a cloud would be in gravitational equilibrium if its internal kinetic temperature is indicated by profile linewidth. The Virial Measure is derived from observed cloud parameters and has been calibrated for clouds of known distance so that it can be used to determine the distance to other HI clouds. The magnitude of various terms in the virial equation can thus be derived for several hundred HI clouds. It is demonstrated that the strength of the interstellar magnetic field is a function of z-distance
The Distance to High-Velocity Cloud Complex M
21-cm HI4PI survey data are used to study the anomalous-velocity hydrogen gas
associated with high-velocity cloud Complex M. These high-sensitivity,
high-resolution, high-dynamic-range data show that many of the individual
features, including MI, MIIa, and MIIb, are components of a long, arched
filament that extends from about (l, b) = (105{\deg}, 53{\deg}) to (l, b) =
(196{\deg}, 55{\deg}). Maps at different velocities, results from Gaussian
analysis, and observations of associated high-energy emission make a compelling
case that the MI cloud and the arched filament are physically interacting. If
this is the case, we can use the distance to MI, 150 pc as reported by Schmelz
& Verschuur (2022), to set the distance to Complex M. The estimated mass of
Complex M is then about 120 solar masses and the energy implied using the
observed line-of-sight velocity, -85 km/s, is 8.4 x 10^48 ergs. Integrating
over 4{\pi} steradians, the total energy for a spherically symmetrical
explosion is estimated to be 1.9 x 10^50 ergs, well within the energy budget of
a typical supernova
Supernovae Origin for the Low-Latitude-Intermediate-Velocity Arch and the North-Celestial-Pole Loop
Supernova explosions attributed to the unseen companion in several binary
systems identified by the Third Gaia Data Release (Gaia DR3) may be responsible
for a number of well-known and well-studied features in the radio sky,
including the Low-Latitude-Intermediate-Velocity Arch and the
North-Celestial-Pole Loop. Slices from the Longitude-Latitude-Velocity data
cube of the -21-cm galactic neutral hydrogen HI4PI survey (HI4PI
Collaboration et al. 2016) show multiple signatures of an expanding shell. The
source of this expansion, which includes the Low-Latitude-Intermediate-Velocity
Arch on the approaching side, may be the neutron star candidate in the Gaia DR3
1093757200530267520 binary. If we make the simplifying assumptions that the
expansion of the cavity is uniform and spherically symmetric, then the
explosion took place about 700,000 years ago. The momentum is in reasonable
agreement with recent model estimates for a supernova this old. The HI on the
receding side of this cavity is interacting with the gas approaching us on the
near side of a second cavity. The North-Celestial-Pole Loop appears to be
located at the intersection of these two expanding features. The neutron star
candidate in the Gaia DR3 1144019690966028928 binary may be (in part)
responsible for this cavity. Explosions from other candidates may account for
the observed elongation along the line of sight of this second cavity. We can
use the primary star in these binaries to anchor the distances to the
Low-Latitude-Intermediate-Velocity Arch and North-Celestial-Pole Loop, which
are about 167 and about 220 pc, respectively.Comment: Published in The Astrophysical Journa
Primary Beam Shape Calibration from Mosaicked, Interferometric Observations
Image quality in mosaicked observations from interferometric radio telescopes
is strongly dependent on the accuracy with which the antenna primary beam is
calibrated. The next generation of radio telescope arrays such as the Allen
Telescope Array (ATA) and the Square Kilometer Array (SKA) have key science
goals that involve making large mosaicked observations filled with bright point
sources. We present a new method for calibrating the shape of the telescope's
mean primary beam that uses the multiple redundant observations of these bright
sources in the mosaic. The method has an analytical solution for simple
Gaussian beam shapes but can also be applied to more complex beam shapes
through minimization. One major benefit of this simple, conceptually
clean method is that it makes use of the science data for calibration purposes,
thus saving telescope time and improving accuracy through simultaneous
calibration and observation. We apply the method both to 1.43 GHz data taken
during the ATA Twenty Centimeter Survey (ATATS) and to 3.14 GHz data taken
during the ATA's Pi Gigahertz Sky Survey (PiGSS). We find that the beam's
calculated full width at half maximum (FWHM) values are consistent with the
theoretical values, the values measured by several independent methods, and the
values from the simulation we use to demonstrate the effectiveness of our
method on data from future telescopes such as the expanded ATA and the SKA.
These results are preliminary, and can be expanded upon by fitting more complex
beam shapes. We also investigate, by way of a simulation, the dependence of the
accuracy of the telescope's FWHM on antenna number. We find that the
uncertainty returned by our fitting method is inversely proportional to the
number of antennas in the array.Comment: Accepted by PASP. 8 pages, 8 figure
A Cold Nearby Cloud Inside the Local Bubble
The high-latitude Galactic H I cloud toward the extragalactic radio source 3C
225 is characterized by very narrow 21 cm emission and absorption indicative of
a very low H I spin temperature of about 20 K. Through high-resolution optical
spectroscopy, we report the detection of strong, very narrow Na I absorption
corresponding to this cloud toward a number of nearby stars. Assuming that the
turbulent H I and Na I motions are similar, we derive a cloud temperature of 20
(+6, -8) K (in complete agreement with the 21 cm results) and a line-of-sight
turbulent velocity of 0.37+/-0.08 km/s from a comparison of the H I and Na I
absorption linewidths. We also place a firm upper limit of 45 pc on the
distance of the cloud, which situates it well inside the Local Bubble in this
direction and makes it the nearest-known cold diffuse cloud discovered to date.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Sky maps without anisotropies in the cosmic microwave background are a better fit to WMAP's uncalibrated time ordered data than the official sky maps
The purpose of this reanalysis of the WMAP uncalibrated time ordered data
(TOD) was two fold. The first was to reassess the reliability of the detection
of the anisotropies in the official WMAP sky maps of the cosmic microwave
background (CMB). The second was to assess the performance of a proposed
criterion in avoiding systematic error in detecting a signal of interest. The
criterion was implemented by testing the null hypothesis that the uncalibrated
TOD was consistent with no anisotropies when WMAP's hourly calibration
parameters were allowed to vary. It was shown independently for all 20 WMAP
channels that sky maps with no anisotropies were a better fit to the TOD than
those from the official analysis. The recently launched Planck satellite should
help sort out this perplexing result.Comment: 11 pages with 1 figure and 2 tables. Extensively rewritten to explain
the research bette
On the Exchange of Kinetic and Magnetic Energy Between Clouds and the Interstellar Medium
We investigate, through 2D MHD numerical simulations, the interaction of a
uniform magnetic field oblique to a moving interstellar cloud. In particular we
explore the transformation of cloud kinetic energy into magnetic energy as a
result of field line stretching. Some previous simulations have emphasized the
possible dynamical importance of a ``magnetic shield'' formed around clouds
when the magnetic field is perpendicular to the cloud motion (Jones et al.
1996, Miniati et al. 1998). It was not clear, however, how dependent those
findings were to the assumed field configuration and cloud properties. To
expand our understanding of this effect, we examine several new cases by varing
the magnetic field orientation angle with respect to the cloud motion (\theta),
the cloud-background density contrast, and the cloud Mach number.
We show that in 2D and with \theta large enough, the magnetic field tension
can become dominant in the dynamics of the motion of high density contrast, low
Mach number clouds. In such cases a significant fraction of cloud kinetic
energy can be transformed into magnetic energy with the magnetic pressure at
the cloud nose exceeding the ram pressure of the impinging flow. We derive a
characteristic timescale for this process of energy ``conversion''. We find
also that unless the cloud motion is highly aligned to the magnetic field,
reconnection through tearing mode instabilities in the cloud wake limit the
formation of a strong flux rope feature following the cloud. Finally we attempt
to interpret some observational properties of the magnetic field in view of our
results.Comment: 24 pages in aaspp4 Latex and 7 figures. Accepted for publication in
The Astrophysical Journa
Interstellar Filaments and the Statistics of Galactic HI
This paper presents a statistical explanation of filament formation in the
galactic atomic hydrogen. Recently developed technique allows to determine the
3D spectrum of random HI density. We claim that even in the absence of
dynamical factors the Gaussian field corresponding to the measured values of
the spectrum of HI density should exhibit filamentary structure, the existence
of which has long been claimed.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures (bitmapped). Original figures available from
ftp://ftp.cita.utoronto.ca/ftp/cita/pogosyan/cita-96-17 (1.1MB
A Super-Alfvenic Model of Dark Clouds
Supersonic random motions are observed in dark clouds and are traditionally
interpreted as Alfven waves, but the possibility that these motions are
super-Alfvenic has not been ruled out. In this work we report the results of
numerical experiments in two opposite regimes; M_a ~ 1 and M_a >> 1, where M_a
is the initial Alfvenic Mach number --the ratio of the rms velocity to the
Alfven speed. Our results show that models with M_a >> 1 are consistent with
the observed properties of molecular clouds that we have tested --statistics of
extinction measurements, Zeeman splitting measurements of magnetic field
strength, line width versus integrated antenna temperature of molecular
emission line spectra, statistical B-n relation, and scatter in that relation--
while models with M_a ~ 1 have properties that are in conflict with the
observations. We find that both the density and the magnetic field in molecular
clouds may be very intermittent. The statistical distributions of magnetic
field and gas density are related by a power law, with an index that decreases
with time in experiments with decaying turbulence. After about one dynamical
time it stabilizes at B ~ n^{0.4}. Magnetically dominated cores form early in
the evolution, while later on the intermittency in the density field wins out,
and also cores with weak field can be generated, by mass accretion along
magnetic field lines.Comment: 10 figures, 2 tables include
A neutron star candidate in the long-period binary 56 UMa
56 UMa is a wide binary system that contains a chemically peculiar red giant
and a faint companion. Due to its surface chemical abundances, the red giant
was classified as a barium (Ba) star. This implies that the companion has to be
a white dwarf, since Ba stars form when mass is transferred to them from an
s-process rich Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) star. However, in the case of 56
UMa, the companion might be too massive to be the progeny of an AGB star that
efficiently produced s-process elements such as barium. In this Letter, we
revisit the orbital parameters of the system and perform a full spectral
analysis with the goal of investigating the Ba-star classification of the giant
and unravelling the nature of its faint companion. We combined radial-velocity
and astrometric data to refine the orbital parameters of the system, including
the orbital inclination and the companion mass. Then, we re-determined the
stellar parameters of the giant and its chemical abundances using
high-resolution HERMES spectra. Finally, we investigated the morphology of the
interstellar gas in the vicinity of the system. The faint component in 56 UMa
has a mass of M, which, together with the mixed s+r
abundance profile of the red giant, confirms that the giant is not a standard
barium star. Additionally, the clear identification of a cavity surrounding 56
UMa could indicate that a supernova explosion occurred about 10 5 years ago in
the system, suggesting that the faint companion might be a neutron star.
However, finding an evolutionary scenario that explains all the observables is
not trivial, so we discuss different possible configurations of the system and
their respective merits.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
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