1,140 research outputs found
The extinction properties of long GRB host galaxies from H and He I recombination lines
In this paper we show how a self-consistent treatment of hydrogen and helium
emission line fluxes of the hosts of long gamma-ray bursts can result in
improved understanding of the dust properties in these galaxies. In particular,
we find that even with modest signal to noise spectroscopy we can differentiate
different values for R_V, the ratio of total to selective extinction. The
inclusion of Paschen and Brackett lines, even at low signal to noise, greatly
increase the accuracy of the derived reddening. This method is often associated
with strong systematic errors, caused by the need for multiple instruments to
cover the wide wavelength range, the requirement to separate stellar hydrogen
absorption from the nebular emission, and because of the dependancy of the
predicted line fluxes on the electron temperature. We show how these three
systematic errors can be negated, by using suitable instrumentation (in
particular X-shooter on the Very Large Telescope) and wide wavelength coverage.
We demonstrate this method using an extensive optical and near-infrared
spectroscopic campaign of the host galaxy of gamma-ray burst 060218 (SN
2006aj), obtained with FORS1, UVES and ISAAC on the VLT, covering a broad
wavelength range with both high and low spectral resolution. We contrast our
findings of this source with X-shooter data of a star forming region in the
host of GRB 100316D, and show the improvement over existing published fluxes of
long GRB hosts.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
The association between parenting behavior and somatization in adolescents explained by physiological responses in adolescents
Introduction: This study adds to the knowledge on somatization in adolescents by exploring its relation with parenting behavior and the mediating/moderating role of physiological responses in adolescents to parenting behavior. Method: Eighteen adolescents with high and 18 adolescents with low somatization scores and their mothers completed a discussion task, from which observed parenting behavior scores were derived. Skin conductance in adolescents was measured before and during the discussion. Results: For adolescents with high levels of physiological responses, unadaptive parenting was related to a higher chance of high somatization scores. For low physiologically responsive adolescents, the relation between parenting behavior and somatization was not significant. Conclusion: Parenting behavior is not univocally related to somatization in adolescents, but the association depends on physiological responses in adolescents. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Broadband modelling of short gamma-ray bursts with energy injection from magnetar spin-down and its implications for radio detectability
The magnetar model has been proposed to explain the apparent energy injection
in the X-ray light curves of short gamma-ray bursts (SGRBs), but its
implications across the full broadband spectrum are not well explored. We
investigate the broadband modelling of four SGRBs with evidence for energy
injection in their X-ray light curves, applying a physically motivated model in
which a newly formed magnetar injects energy into a forward shock as it loses
angular momentum along open field lines. By performing an order of magnitude
search for the underlying physical parameters in the blast wave, we constrain
the characteristic break frequencies of the synchrotron spectrum against their
manifestations in the available multi-wavelength observations for each burst.
The application of the magnetar energy injection profile restricts the
successful matches to a limited family of models that are self-consistent
within the magnetic dipole spin-down framework.We produce synthetic light
curves that describe how the radio signatures of these SGRBs ought to have
looked given the restrictions imposed by the available data, and discuss the
detectability of these signatures with present-day and near-future radio
telescopes. Our results show that both the Atacama Large Millimetre Array and
the upgraded Very Large Array are now sensitive enough to detect the radio
signature within two weeks of trigger in most SGRBs, assuming our sample is
representative of the population as a whole. We also find that the upcoming
Square Kilometre Array will be sensitive to depths greater than those of our
lower limit predictions.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
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Victim careers and 'career victims'? [In: Farrell, G. and Pease, K., eds., Repeat victimisation, Crime Prevention Studies, vol. 12]
Whereas there is a mature body of work examining criminal careers that has been established over the course of several decades, the study of victim careers is in its infancy. While there has been recent growth in the study of repeat victimization, the natural extension of this work into studies of the life course remains to be undertaken. The present paper suggests why the study of victimization over the life course may prove important for criminological theory and practice, and explores ways in which it might be taken forward. A rich vein of criminological enquiry remains to be exploited that promises to inform theories of criminal victimization as well as crime prevention practice. The paper also proposes the utilization of an accelerated longitudinal design to enhance the study of victim careers. Such designs are rich in promise but typically extremely expensive to conduct. In theory, a study of victim careers using such a design may be possible from extant data sources, which would make it cost-effective. However, even if the design proposed herein did not reach its full potential, theory and practice may be greatly informed through the pursuit of a research agenda that incorporates longitudinal studies of victim careers
Optical variability of the accretion disk around the intermediate mass black hole ESO 243-49 HLX-1 during the 2012 outburst
We present dedicated quasi-simultaneous X-ray (Swift) and optical (Very Large
Telescope (VLT), V- and R-band) observations of the intermediate mass black
hole candidate ESO 243-49 HLX-1 before and during the 2012 outburst. We show
that the V-band magnitudes vary with time, thus proving that a portion of the
observed emission originates in the accretion disk. Using the first quiescent
optical observations of HLX-1, we show that the stellar population surrounding
HLX-1 is fainter than V~25.1 and R~24.2. We show that the optical emission may
increase before the X-ray emission consistent with the scenario proposed by
Lasota et al. (2011) in which the regular outbursts could be related to the
passage at periastron of a star circling the intermediate mass black hole in an
eccentric orbit, which triggers mass transfer into a quasi-permanent accretion
disk around the black hole. Further, if there is indeed a delay in the X-ray
emission we estimate the mass-transfer delivery radius to be ~1e11 cm.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
The extinction properties of long GRB host galaxies from H and He I recombination lines
In this paper we show how a self-consistent treatment of hydrogen and helium
emission line fluxes of the hosts of long gamma-ray bursts can result in
improved understanding of the dust properties in these galaxies. In particular,
we find that even with modest signal to noise spectroscopy we can differentiate
different values for R_V, the ratio of total to selective extinction. The
inclusion of Paschen and Brackett lines, even at low signal to noise, greatly
increase the accuracy of the derived reddening. This method is often associated
with strong systematic errors, caused by the need for multiple instruments to
cover the wide wavelength range, the requirement to separate stellar hydrogen
absorption from the nebular emission, and because of the dependancy of the
predicted line fluxes on the electron temperature. We show how these three
systematic errors can be negated, by using suitable instrumentation (in
particular X-shooter on the Very Large Telescope) and wide wavelength coverage.
We demonstrate this method using an extensive optical and near-infrared
spectroscopic campaign of the host galaxy of gamma-ray burst 060218 (SN
2006aj), obtained with FORS1, UVES and ISAAC on the VLT, covering a broad
wavelength range with both high and low spectral resolution. We contrast our
findings of this source with X-shooter data of a star forming region in the
host of GRB 100316D, and show the improvement over existing published fluxes of
long GRB hosts.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
Kleine kinderen, kleine zorgen? Ondersteuningsbehoeften van ouders met zuigelingen in relatie tot ouder-, kind- en gezinskenmerken
status: publishe
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