1,391 research outputs found
A Systematic Study of X-Ray Flares from Low-Mass Young Stellar Objects in the Rho Ophiuchi Star-Forming Region with Chandra
We report on the results of a systematic study of X-ray flares from low-mass
young stellar objects, using Chandra observations of the main region of the Rho
Oph. From 195 X-ray sources, including class I-III sources and some young brown
dwarfs, we detected a total of 71 X-ray flares. Most of the flares have the
typical profile of solar and stellar flares, fast rise and slow decay. We
derived the time-averaged temperature (kT), luminosity (L_X), rise and decay
timescales (tau_r and tau_d) of the flares, finding that (1) class I-II sources
tend to have a high kT, (2) the distribution of L_X during flares is nearly the
same for all classes, and (3) positive and negative log-linear correlations are
found between tau_r and tau_d, and kT and tau_r. In order to explain these
relations, we used the framework of magnetic reconnection model to formulate
the observational parameters as a function of the half-length of the
reconnected magnetic loop (L) and magnetic field strength (B). The estimated L
is comparable to the typical stellar radius of these objects (10^{10-11} cm),
which indicates that the observed flares are triggered by solar-type loops,
rather than larger ones (10^{12} cm) connecting the star with its inner
accretion disk. The higher kT observed for class I sources may be explained by
a higher magnetic field strength (about 500 G) than for class II-III sources
(200-300 G).Comment: 33 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ, the complete
version of tables are available at
ftp://ftp-cr.scphys.kyoto-u.ac.jp/pub/crmember/kensuke/PASJ_RhoOph/KI_all.tar
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Supermassive Black Hole Mass Regulated by Host Galaxy Morphology
We investigated the relationship between supermassive black hole (SMBH) mass
and host starburst luminosity in Seyfert galaxies and Palomar-Green QSOs,
focusing on the host galaxy morphology. Host starburst luminosity was derived
from the 11.3 micron polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon luminosity. We found that
the SMBH masses of elliptical-dominated host galaxies are more massive than
those of disk-dominated host galaxies statistically. We also found that the
SMBH masses of disk-dominated host galaxies seem to be suppressed even under
increasing starburst luminosity. These findings imply that final SMBH mass is
strongly regulated by host galaxy morphology. This can be understood by
considering the radiation drag model as the SMBH growth mechanism, taking into
account the radiation efficiency of the host galaxy.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure; accepted for publication in MNRA
Exploring the active galactic nucleus and starburst content of local ultraluminous infrared galaxies through 5-8 micron spectroscopy
We present a 5-8 micron analysis of the Spitzer-IRS spectra of 71
ultraluminous infrared galaxies (ULIRGs) with redshift z < 0.15, devoted to the
study of the role of active galactic nuclei (AGN) and starbursts (SB) as the
power source of the extreme infrared emission. Around 5 micron an AGN is much
brighter (by a factor 30) than a starburst of equal bolometric luminosity. This
allows us to detect the presence of even faint accretion-driven cores inside
ULIRGs: signatures of AGN activity are found in 70 per cent of our sample
(50/71 sources). Through a simple analytical model we are also able to obtain a
quantitative estimate of the AGN/SB contribution to the overall energy output
of each source. Although the main fraction of ULIRG luminosity is confirmed to
arise from star formation events, the AGN contribution is non-negligible (23
per cent) and is shown to increase with luminosity. The existence of a rather
heterogeneous pattern in the composition and geometrical structure of the dust
among ULIRGs is newly supported by the comparison between individual absorption
features and continuum extinction.Comment: 56 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Discovery of New Dwarf Galaxy near The Isolated Spiral Galaxy NGC 6503
We report the discovery of a new dwarf galaxy (NGC6503-d1) during the Subaru
extended ultraviolet (XUV) disk survey. It is a likely companion of the spiral
galaxy NGC6503. The resolved images, in B, V, R, i, and Halpha, show an
irregular appearance due to bright stars with underlying, smooth and unresolved
stellar emission. It is classified as the transition type (dIrr/dSph). Its
structural properties are similar to those of the dwarfs in the Local Group,
with a V absolute magnitude ~ -10.5, half-light radius ~400 pc, and central
surface brightness ~25.2. Despite the low stellar surface brightness
environment, one HII region was detected, though its Halpha luminosity is low,
indicating an absence of any appreciable O-stars at the current epoch. The
presence of multiple stellar populations is indicated by the color-magnitude
diagram of ~300 bright resolved stars and the total colors of the dwarf, with
the majority of its total stellar mass ~4x10^6 Msun in an old stellar
population.Comment: Published in ApJL (ApJ, 802, L24). 7 pages, 4 figure
XMM-Newton observations of the sigma Ori cluster. II. Spatial and spectral analysis of the full EPIC field
We present the results of an XMM-Newton observation of the young (~2-4 Myr)
cluster around the hot star sigma Orionis. In a previous paper we presented the
analysis of the RGS spectrum of the central hot star; here we discuss the
results of the analysis of the full EPIC field. We have detected 175 X-ray
sources, 88 of which have been identified with cluster members, including very
low-mass stars down to the substellar limit. We detected eleven new possible
candidate members from the 2MASS catalogue. We find that late-type stars have a
median log L_X/L_bol ~ -3.3, i.e. very close to the saturation limit. We
detected significant variability in ~40% of late-type members or candidates,
including 10 flaring sources; rotational modulation is detected in one K-type
star and possibly in another 3 or 4 stars. Spectral analysis of the brightest
sources shows typical quiescent temperatures in the range T_1 ~ 0.3-0.8 keV and
T_2 ~ 1-3 keV, with subsolar abundances Z ~ 0.1-0.3 Z_sun, similar to what is
found in other star-forming regions and associations. We find no significant
difference in the spectral properties of classical and weak-lined T Tauri
stars, although classical T Tauri stars tend to be less X-ray luminous than
weak-lined T Tauri stars.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, 6 tables. Accepted by A&
VarySysDB: a human genetic polymorphism database based on all H-InvDB transcripts
Creation of a vast variety of proteins is accomplished by genetic variation and a variety of alternative splicing transcripts. Currently, however, the abundant available data on genetic variation and the transcriptome are stored independently and in a dispersed fashion. In order to provide a research resource regarding the effects of human genetic polymorphism on various transcripts, we developed VarySysDB, a genetic polymorphism database based on 187 156 extensively annotated matured mRNA transcripts from 36 073 loci provided by H-InvDB. VarySysDB offers information encompassing published human genetic polymorphisms for each of these transcripts separately. This allows comparisons of effects derived from a polymorphism on different transcripts. The published information we analyzed includes single nucleotide polymorphisms and deletionâinsertion polymorphisms from dbSNP, copy number variations from Database of Genomic Variants, short tandem repeats and single amino acid repeats from H-InvDB and linkage disequilibrium regions from D-HaploDB. The information can be searched and retrieved by features, functions and effects of polymorphisms, as well as by keywords. VarySysDB combines two kinds of viewers, GBrowse and Sequence View, to facilitate understanding of the positional relationship among polymorphisms, genome, transcripts, loci and functional domains. We expect that VarySysDB will yield useful information on polymorphisms affecting gene expression and phenotypes. VarySysDB is available at http://h-invitational.jp/varygene/
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