209 research outputs found
The simultaneous spectrum of Sgr A* from 20cm to 1mm and the nature of the mm-excess
We report results from a multiwavelength campaign to measure the simultaneous
spectrum of the super-massive black hole candidate Sgr A* in the Galactic
Center from cm to mm-wavelengths using the VLA, BIMA, the Nobeyama 45m, and the
IRAM 30m telescopes. The observations confirm that the previously detected
mm-excess is an intrinsic feature of the spectrum of Sgr A*. The excess can be
interpreted as due to the presence of an ultra-compact component of
relativistic plasma with a size of a few Schwarzschild radii near the black
hole. If so, Sgr A* might offer the unique possibility to image the putative
black hole against the background of this component with future mm-VLBI
experiments.Comment: Apj, in press, (AAS, emulateapj) LaTex, 6 pages, preprint also
available at
http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/mpivlb/falcke/publications.html#campaig
The line-of-sight distribution of the gas in the inner 60 pc of the Galaxy
2MASS K_S band data of the inner 60 pc of the Galaxy are used to reconstruct
the line-of-sight distances of the giant molecular clouds located in this
region. Using the 2MASS H band image of the same region, two different
populations of point sources are identified according to their flux ratio in
the two bands. The population of blue point sources forms a homogeneous
foreground that has to be subtracted before analyzing the K_S band image. The
reconstruction is made using two basic assumptions: (i) an axis-symmetric
stellar distribution in the region of interest and
(ii) optically thick clouds with an area filling factor of ~1 that block all
light of stars located behind them. Due to the reconstruction method, the
relative distance between the different cloud complexes is a robust result,
whereas it is not excluded that the absolute distance with respect to Sgr A* of
structures located more than 10 pc in front of Sgr A* are understimated by up
to a factor of 2. It is shown that all structures observed in the 1.2 mm
continuum and in the CS(2-1) line are present in absorption. We place the 50 km
s^-1 cloud complex close to, but in front of, Sgr A*. The 20 km s^-1 cloud
complex is located in front of the 50 km s^-1 cloud complex and has a large LOS
distance gradient along the direction of the galactic longitude. The bulk of
the Circumnuclear Disk is not seen in absorption. This leads to an upper limit
of the cloud sizes within the Circumnuclear Disk of ~0.06 pc.Comment: 12 pages with 17 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
The Variability of Sagittarius A* at Centimeter Wavelengths
We present the results of a 3.3-year project to monitor the flux density of
Sagittarius A* at 2.0, 1.3, and 0.7 cm with the VLA. The fully calibrated light
curves for Sgr A* at all three wavelengths are presented. Typical errors in the
flux density are 6.1%, 6.2%, and 9.2% at 2.0, 1.3, and 0.7 cm, respectively.
There is preliminary evidence for a bimodal distribution of flux densities,
which may indicate the existence of two distinct states of accretion onto the
supermassive black hole. At 1.3 and 0.7 cm, there is a tail in the distribution
towards high flux densities. Significant variability is detected at all three
wavelengths, with the largest amplitude variations occurring at 0.7 cm. The rms
deviation of the flux density of Sgr A* is 0.13, 0.16, and 0.21 Jy at 2.0, 1.3,
and 0.7 cm, respectively. During much of this monitoring campaign, Sgr A*
appeared to be relatively quiescent compared to results from previous
campaigns. At no point during the monitoring campaign did the flux density of
Sgr A* more than double its mean value. The mean spectral index of Sgr A* is
alpha=0.20+/-0.01, with a standard deviation of 0.14. The spectral index
appears to depend linearly on the observed flux density at 0.7 cm with a
steeper index observed during outbursts. This correlation is consistent with
the expectation for outbursts that are self-absorbed at wavelengths of 0.7 cm
or longer and inconsistent with the effects of simple models for interstellar
scintillation. Much of the variability of Sgr A*, including possible time lags
between flux density changes at the different wavelengths, appears to occur on
time scales less than the time resolution of our observations (8 days). Future
observations should focus on the evolution of the flux density on these time
scales.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A
Rouse Chains with Excluded Volume Interactions: Linear Viscoelasticity
Linear viscoelastic properties for a dilute polymer solution are predicted by
modeling the solution as a suspension of non-interacting bead-spring chains.
The present model, unlike the Rouse model, can describe the solution's
rheological behavior even when the solvent quality is good, since excluded
volume effects are explicitly taken into account through a narrow Gaussian
repulsive potential between pairs of beads in a bead-spring chain. The use of
the narrow Gaussian potential, which tends to the more commonly used
delta-function repulsive potential in the limit of a width parameter "d" going
to zero, enables the performance of Brownian dynamics simulations. The
simulations results, which describe the exact behavior of the model, indicate
that for chains of arbitrary but finite length, a delta-function potential
leads to equilibrium and zero shear rate properties which are identical to the
predictions of the Rouse model. On the other hand, a non-zero value of "d"
gives rise to a prediction of swelling at equilibrium, and an increase in zero
shear rate properties relative to their Rouse model values. The use of a
delta-function potential appears to be justified in the limit of infinite chain
length. The exact simulation results are compared with those obtained with an
approximate solution which is based on the assumption that the non-equilibrium
configurational distribution function is Gaussian. The Gaussian approximation
is shown to be exact to first order in the strength of excluded volume
interaction, and is found to be accurate above a threshold value of "d", for
given values of chain length and strength of excluded volume interaction.Comment: Revised version. Long chain limit analysis has been deleted. An
improved and corrected examination of the long chain limit will appear as a
separate posting. 32 pages, 9 postscript figures, LaTe
A deep submillimetre survey of the Galactic Centre
We present first results from a submillimetre continuum survey of the
Galactic Centre `Central Molecular Zone' (CMZ), made with SCUBA on the James
Clerk Maxwell Telescope. SCUBA's scan-map mode has allowed us to make extremely
wide-field maps of thermal dust emission with unprecedented speed and
sensitivity. We also discuss some issues related to the elimination of
artefacts in scan-map data. Our simultaneous 850/450 micron maps have a total
size of approximately 2.8 x 0.5 degrees (400 x 75 pc) elongated along the
galactic plane. They cover the Sgr A region-including Sgr A*, the circumnuclear
disc, and the +20 km/s and +50 km/s clouds; the area around the Pistol; Sgr
B2-the brightest feature on the map; and at their Galactic Western and Eastern
edges the Sgr C and Sgr D regions. There are many striking features such as
filaments and shell-like structures, as well as point sources such as Sgr A*
itself. The total mass in the Central Molecular Zone is greater than that
revealed in previous optically-thin molecular line maps by a factor of ~3, and
new details are revealed on scales down to 0.33 pc across this 400 pc wide
region.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, (figures now smaller, in paper body), accepted
by ApJ
Design and Development of a Bioreactor System for Mechanical Stimulation of Musculoskeletal Tissue
We report on the development of a bioreactor system for mechanical stimulation of musculoskeletal tissues. The ultimate object is to improve the quality of medical treatment following injuries of the enthesis tissue. To this end, the tissue formation process through the effect of mechanical stimulation is investigated. A six-well system was designed, 3D printed and tested. An integrated actuator creates strain by applying a force. A contactless position sensor monitors the travels. An electronic circuit controls the bioreactor using a microcontroller. An IoT platform connects the microcontroller to a smartphone, enabling the user to alter variables, trigger actions and monitor the system. The system was stabilised by implementing two PID controllers and safety measures. The results show that the bioreactor design is suited to execute mechanical stimulation and to investigate the tissue formation and regeneration process. The bioreactor reported here can now be implemented in tissue engineering applications including tissue specimen.</p
Advection-Dominated Accretion Model of Sagittarius A*: Evidence for a Black Hole at the Galactic Center
Sgr A* at the Galactic Center is a puzzling source. It has a mass
M=(2.5+/-0.4) x 10^6 solar masses which makes it an excellent black hole
candidate. Observations of stellar winds and other gas flows in its vicinity
suggest a mass accretion rate approximately few x 10^{-6} solar masses per
year. However, such an accretion rate would imply a luminosity > 10^{40} erg/s
if the radiative efficiency is the usual 10 percent, whereas observations
indicate a bolometric luminosity <10^{37} erg/s. The spectrum of Sgr A* is
unusual, with emission extending over many decades of wavelength. We present a
model of Sgr A* which is based on a two-temperature optically-thin
advection-dominated accretion flow. The model is consistent with the estimated
mass and accretion rate, and fits the observed fluxes in the cm/mm and X-ray
bands as well as upper limits in the sub-mm and infrared bands; the fit is less
good in the radio below 86 GHz and in gamma-rays above 100 MeV. The very low
luminosity of Sgr A* is explained naturally in the model by means of advection.
Most of the viscously dissipated energy is advected into the central mass by
the accreting gas, and therefore the radiative efficiency is extremely low,
approximately 5 x 10^{-6}. A critical element of the model is the presence of
an event horizon at the center which swallows the advected energy. The success
of the model could thus be viewed as confirmation that Sgr A* is a black hole.Comment: 41 pages (Latex) including 6 Figures and 2 Tables. Final Revised
Version changes to text, tables and figures. ApJ, 492, in pres
The Dynamics of Molecular Material Within 15 pcs of the Galactic Center
We report the results of a 5-field mosaic of the central 15pc of the Galaxy
in the (1,1) and (2,2) lines of NH3. Two narrow filaments or streamers are seen
running parallel to the Galactic plane. The southern streamer appears to carry
gas directly toward the nuclear region from the 20 km/s cloud. The eastern
streamer, which we will denote the molecular ridge, appears to be the denser
part of the 50 km/s cloud which lies immediately east of the Sgr A East complex
and extends in the south towards the 20 km/s cloud. This ridge of gas carries
the kinematical signatures of interactions with Sgr A East as well as a SNR
which lies south of the Galactic center. The bulk motion of the gas, the
enhanced line widths, and the heating of the molecular material all suggest an
active evolutionary phase for the gas immediately adjacent to the nucleus.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, to appear in The Astrophysical Journa
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