278 research outputs found

    A Comprehensive Study of Short Bursts from SGR 1806-20 and SGR 1900+14 Detected by HETE-2

    Get PDF
    We present the results of temporal and spectral studies of the short burst (less than a few hundred milliseconds) from the soft gamma repeaters (SGRs) 1806-20 and 1900+14 using the HETE-2 samples. In five years from 2001 to 2005, HETE-2 detected 50 bursts which were localized to SGR 1806-20 and 5 bursts which were localized to SGR 1900+14. Especially SGR 1806-20 was active in 2004, and HETE-2 localized 33 bursts in that year. The cumulative number-intensity distribution of SGR 1806-20 in 2004 is well described by a power law model with an index of -1.1+/-0.6. It is consistent with previous studies but burst data taken in other years clearly give a steeper distribution. This may suggest that more energetic bursts could occur more frequently in periods of greater activity. A power law cumulative number-intensity distribution is also known for earthquakes and solar flares. It may imply analogous triggering mechanisms. Although spectral evolution during bursts with a time scale of > 20 ms is not common in the HETE-2 sample, spectral softening due to the very rapid (< a few milliseconds) energy reinjection and cooling may not be excluded. The spectra of all short bursts are well reproduced by a two blackbody function (2BB) with temperatures ~4 and ~11 keV. From the timing analysis of the SGR 1806-20 data, a time lag of 2.2+/-0.4 ms is found between the 30-100 keV and 2-10 keV radiation bands. This may imply (1) a very rapid spectral softening and energy reinjection, (2) diffused (elongated) emission plasma along the magnetic field lines in pseudo equilibrium with multi-temperatures, or (3) a separate (located at < 700 km) emission region of softer component (say, ~4 keV) which could be reprocessed X-rays by higher energy (> 11 keV) photons from an emission region near the stellar surface.Comment: 50 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in PAS

    TESS Data Release Notes: Sector 1, DR1

    Get PDF
    This release note discusses the science data products produced by the Science Processing Operations Center at Ames Research Center from Sector 1 observations made with the TESS spacecraft and cameras as a means to document instrument performance and data characteristics

    TESS Data Release Notes: Sector 3, DR4

    Get PDF
    This release note discusses the science data products produced by the Science Processing Operations Center at Ames Research Center from Sector 3 observations made with the TESS spacecraft and cameras as a means to document instrument performance and data characteristics

    TESS Data Release Notes: Sector 2, DR2

    Get PDF
    This release note discusses the science data products produced by the Science Processing Operations Center at Ames Research Center from Sector 2 observations made with the TESS spacecraft and cameras as a means to document instrument performance and data characteristics

    TESS Data Release Notes: Sector 7, DR9

    Get PDF
    This release note discusses the science data products produced by the Science Processing Operations Center at Ames Research Center from Sector 7 observations made with the TESS spacecraft and cameras as a means to document instrument performance and data characteristics

    TESS Data Release Notes: Sector 5, DR7

    Get PDF
    This release note discusses the science data products produced by the Science Processing Operations Center at Ames Research Center from Sector 5 observations made with the TESS spacecraft and cameras as a means to document instrument performance and data characteristics

    TESS Data Release Notes: Sector 6, DR8

    Get PDF
    This release note discusses the science data products produced by the Science Processing Operations Center at Ames Research Center from Sector 6 observations made with the TESS spacecraft and cameras as a means to document instrument performance and data characteristics

    Mapping our Universe in 3D with MITEoR

    Full text link
    Mapping our universe in 3D by imaging the redshifted 21 cm line from neutral hydrogen has the potential to overtake the cosmic microwave background as our most powerful cosmological probe, because it can map a much larger volume of our Universe, shedding new light on the epoch of reionization, inflation, dark matter, dark energy, and neutrino masses. We report on MITEoR, a pathfinder low-frequency radio interferometer whose goal is to test technologies that greatly reduce the cost of such 3D mapping for a given sensitivity. MITEoR accomplishes this by using massive baseline redundancy both to enable automated precision calibration and to cut the correlator cost scaling from N^2 to NlogN, where N is the number of antennas. The success of MITEoR with its 64 dual-polarization elements bodes well for the more ambitious HERA project, which would incorporate many identical or similar technologies using an order of magnitude more antennas, each with dramatically larger collecting area.Comment: To be published in proceedings of 2013 IEEE International Symposium on Phased Array Systems & Technolog

    An Optically Dark GRB Observed by HETE-2: GRB 051022

    Full text link
    GRB 051022 was detected at 13:07:58 on 22 October 2005 by HETE-2. The location of GRB 051022 was determined immediately by the flight localization system. This burst contains multiple pulses and has a rather long duration of about 190 seconds. The detections of candidate X-ray and radio afterglows were reported, whereas no optical afterglow was found. The optical spectroscopic observations of the host galaxy revealed the redshift z = 0.8. Using the data derived by HETE-2 observation of the prompt emission, we found the absorption N_H = 8.8 -2.9/+3.1 x 10^22 cm^-2 and the visual extinction A_V = 49 -16/+17 mag in the host galaxy. If this is the case, no detection of any optical transient would be quite reasonable. The absorption derived by the Swift XRT observations of the afterglow is fully consistent with those obtained from the early HETE-2 observation of the prompt emission. Our analysis implies an interpretation that the absorbing medium could be outside external shock at R ~ 10^16 cm, which may be a dusty molecular cloud.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ lette
    • …
    corecore