234 research outputs found

    A study of the discrepant QSO X-ray luminosity function from the HEAO-2 data archive

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    An in-progress investigation aimed at characterizing the X-ray luminosity of very faint QSOs is described. More than 100 faint, previously uncataloged QSOs which lie in areas imaged in X rays at very high sensitivity were discovered

    Optical pulsations in HZ Herculis. 5. Pulse-resolved spectrophotometry

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    Digital spectra of HZ Herculis were obtained with 10 A resolution in the 3,600 - 6,000 A region, synchronously dividing the 1.24-s optical pulsation period into eight 155-ms phase bins. The optical pulses are detected in the data, but their fractional amplitude is only 0.08 percent, a factor of 4 less than typically observed. The separate spectra of each one-eighth of the pulse are identical to within the statistics of the observation. If the X-ray to optical pulse reprocessing mechanism concentrates the optical pulsations into discrete spectral line features, data require the pulses to be distributed among more than four such lines

    A study of the discrepant QSO X-ray luminosity function from the HEAO-2 data archive

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    Sensitive X-ray information for approximately 90 previously uncataloged Quasi-Stellar Objects (QSOs) in the redshift range 1.8 is less than or equal to z which is less than or equal to 3. Even with the longest esixting Einstein Observatory X-ray exposures, only 25% of these objects are positively detected in X-rays. The data were used to investigate the ensemble X-ray properties of high redshift QSOs, and the QSO population in general

    Limits on intergalactic helium from the 3C 273 X-ray spectrum

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    An X-ray spectrum of the quasi-stellar object 3C 273 in the interval 0.25 to 10 KeV was obtained by sounding rocket observations. The best-fit power law spectrum has photon index n= 1.3 with no photoelectric absorption. An upper limit on the X-ray optical depth to 3C 273 was calculated from the data, permitting upper limits to be set on the absolute abundance of helium in the intergalactic medium

    Infrared properties of serendipitous X-ray quasars

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    Near infrared measurements were obtained of 30 quasars originally found serendipitously as X-ray sources in fields of other objects. The observations show that the infrared characteristics of these quasars do not differ significantly from those of quasars selected by other criteria. Because this X-ray selected sample is subject to different selection biases than previous radio and optical surveys, this conclusion is useful in validating previous inferences regarding the infrared colors of 'typical' quasars

    A pulsing X-ray source in Circinus

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    Spectrum of pulsing X ray source observed in Circinu

    Analytical Studies on the Structure and Emission of the SS433 Jets

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    We study the structure and emission of the SS 433 jets in the X-ray emitting region and in the inner and hotter portion inside the X-ray emitting region. In order to consider the jet structure from the inner to outer regions we develop the hybrid model combining the conical beam and the model beam whose cross section grows with the distance more slowly. We find that the jet beams in the inner and hotter portion are of two-temperature and emit a large amount of high energy gamma photons. Our analyses suggest the thick absorbing envelope to exist in the SS 433 system. Based on our results, we discuss the possible acceleration mechanism for the SS 433 jets.Comment: 15 pages. Accepted for publication by Publ. Astron. Soc. Japa

    Infrared Candidates for the Intense Galactic X-ray Source GX 17+2

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    We present new astrometric solutions and infrared Hubble Space Telescope observations of GX 17+2 (X1813-140), one of the brightest X-ray sources on the celestial sphere. Despite 30 years of intensive study, and the existence of a strong radio counterpart with a sub-arcsecond position, the object remains optically unidentified. The observed X-ray characteristics strongly suggest that it is a so-called "Z-source," the rare but important category that includes Sco X-1 and Cyg X-2. Use of the USNO-A2.0 catalog enables us to measure the position of optical and infrared objects near the radio source to sub-arcsecond precision within the International Celestial Reference Frame, for direct comparison with the radio position, which we also recompute using modern calibrators. With high confidence we eliminate the V~17.5 star NP Ser, often listed as the probable optical counterpart of the X-ray source, as a candidate. Our HST NICMOS observations show two faint objects within our 0.5" radius 90% confidence error circle. Even the brighter of the two, Star A, is far fainter than expected (H~19.8), given multiple estimates of the extinction in this field and our previous understanding of Z sources, but it becomes the best candidate for the counterpart of GX 17+2. The probability of a chance coincidence of an unrelated faint object on the radio position is high. However, if the true counterpart is not Star A, it is fainter still, and our conclusion that the optical counterpart is surprisingly underluminous is but strengthened.Comment: 15 pages including 3 figures and 3 tables. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa

    Twenty Years of Timing SS433

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    We present observations of the optical ``moving lines'' in spectra of the Galactic relativistic jet source SS433 spread over a twenty year baseline from 1979 to 1999. The red/blue-shifts of the lines reveal the apparent precession of the jet axis in SS433, and we present a new determination of the precession parameters based on these data. We investigate the amplitude and nature of time- and phase-dependent deviations from the kinematic model for the jet precession, including an upper limit on any precessional period derivative of P˙<5×105\dot P < 5 \times 10^{-5}. We also dicuss the implications of these results for the origins of the relativistic jets in SS433.Comment: 21 pages, including 9 figures. To appear in the Astrophysical Journa

    ROSAT HRI observations of the globular clusters M13 and M92

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    We report on 40 kiloseconds of ROSAT HRI observations of the globular cluster M92 (NGC 6341) and 20 kiloseconds of observations of the globular cluster M13 (NGC 6205). We find that the low-luminosity (10^{32.5} erg/sec at 7.5 kpc) source previously observed near the core of M92 with the ROSAT PSPC remains unresolved at HRI resolution; we can identify it with M92 with 99 per cent confidence. In M13 we find that the source seen with the ROSAT PSPC lies within the core and is possibly associated with the cluster (96 per cent confidence). We find probabilities of 99.8 per cent (M92) and 98 per cent (M13) for the presence of additional unresolved emission within these globular clusters. We interpret these results in light of current theories regarding the low-luminosity sources
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