1,617 research outputs found
The Megamaser Cosmology Project: I. VLBI observations of UGC 3789
The Megamaser Cosmology Project (MCP) seeks to measure the Hubble Constant
(Ho) in order to improve the extragalactic distance scale and constrain the
nature of dark energy. We are searching for sources of water maser emission
from AGN with sub-pc accretion disks, as in NGC 4258, and following up these
discoveries with Very Long Baseline Interferometric (VLBI) imaging and spectral
monitoring. Here we present a VLBI map of the water masers toward UGC 3789, a
galaxy well into the Hubble Flow. We have observed masers moving at rotational
speeds up to 800 km/s at radii as small as 0.08 pc. Our map reveals masers in a
nearly edge-on disk in Keplerian rotation about a 10^7 Msun supermassive black
hole. When combined with centripetal accelerations, obtained by observing
spectral drifts of maser features (to be presented in Paper II), the UGC 3789
masers may provide an accurate determination of Ho, independent of luminosities
and metallicity and extinction corrections.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, 4 table
Pulse Profiles, Accretion Column Dips and a Flare in GX 1+4 During a Faint State
The Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) spacecraft observed the X-ray pulsar
GX 1+4 for a period of 34 hours on July 19/20 1996. The source faded from an
intensity of ~20 mCrab to a minimum of <~0.7 mCrab and then partially recovered
towards the end of the observation. This extended minimum lasted ~40,000
seconds. Phase folded light curves at a barycentric rotation period of
124.36568 +/- 0.00020 seconds show that near the center of the extended minimum
the source stopped pulsing in the traditional sense but retained a weak dip
feature at the rotation period. Away from the extended minimum the dips are
progressively narrower at higher energies and may be interpreted as
obscurations or eclipses of the hot spot by the accretion column. The pulse
profile changed from leading-edge bright before the extended minimum to
trailing-edge bright after it. Data from the Burst and Transient Source
Experiment (BATSE) show that a torque reversal occurred <10 days after our
observation. Our data indicate that the observed rotation departs from a
constant period with a Pdot/P value of ~-1.5% per year at a 4.5 sigma
significance. We infer that we may have serendipitously obtained data, with
high sensitivity and temporal resolution about the time of an accretion disk
spin reversal. We also observed a rapid flare which had some precursor
activity, close to the center of the extended minimum.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journal (tentatively scheduled for vol. 529 #1, 20 Jan 2000
Towards Proper Motions in the Local Group
Key and still largely missing parameters for measuring the mass content and
distribution of the Local Group are the proper motion vectors of its member
galaxies. The problem when trying to derive the gravitational potential of the
Local Group is that usually only radial velocities are known, and hence
statistical approaches have to be used. The expected proper motions for
galaxies within the Local Group, ranging from 20 to 100 as/yr, are
detectable with VLBI using the phase-referencing technique. We present
phase-referencing observations of bright masers in IC~10 and M33 with respect
to background quasars. We observed the HO masers in IC10 three times over a
period of two months to check the accuracy of the relative positions. The
relative positions were obtained by modeling the interferometer phase data for
the maser sources referenced to the background quasars. The model allowed for a
relative position shift for the source and a single vertical atmospheric delay
error in the correlator model for each antenna. The rms of the relative
positions for the three observations is only 0.01 mas, which is approximately
the expected position error due to thermal noise. Also, we present a method to
measure the geometric distance to M33. This will allow re-calibration of the
extragalactic distance scale based on Cepheids. The method is to measure the
relative proper motions of two HO maser sources on opposite sides of M33.
The measured angular rotation rate, coupled with other measurements of the
inclination and rotation speed of the galaxy, yields a direct distance
measurement.Comment: 4 pages, Proceedings of the 6th European VLBI Network Symposium, Ros,
E., Porcas, R.W., Zensus, J.A. (eds.), MPIfR, Bonn, Germany (2002); Also
availabe http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/abrunthaler/brunthal01.p
VLBI Imaging of Water Maser Emission from the Nuclear Torus of NGC 1068
We have made the first VLBI synthesis images of the H2O maser emission
associated with the central engine of the Seyfert galaxy NGC 1068. Emission
extends about +/-300 km/s from the systemic velocity. Images with
submilliarcsecond angular resolution show that the red-shifted emission lies
along an arc to the northwest of the systemic emission. (The blue-shifted
emission has not yet been imaged with VLBI.) Based on the maser velocities and
the relative orientation of the known radio jet, we propose that the maser
emission arises on the surface of a nearly edge-on torus, where physical
conditions are conducive to maser action. The visible part of the torus is
axially thick, with comparable height and radius. The velocity field indicates
sub-Keplerian differential rotation around a central mass of about 1e7 Msun
that lies within a cylindrical radius of about 0.65 pc. The estimated
luminosity of the central engine is about 0.5 of the Eddington limit. There is
no detectable compact radio continuum emission near the proposed center of the
torus (T_B< 5e6 K on size scales of about 0.1 pc), so that the observed
flat-spectrum core cannot be direct self-absorbed synchrotron radiation.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. To appear in ApJ Part 2. Also available at
http://www.physics.ucsb.edu/~vlbiweb
No library required: the free and easy backwaters of online content sharing
Twentieth-century libraries were funded to provide content to their communities legally, easily and free. In the twenty-first century, new online competitors supply home consumers, legally and illegally, with what libraries traditionally were best at providing to library users - free and easy content. This paper suggests that library staff arguing for the value of contemporary libraries should be aware of the quality, methods and material of "hidden competitors". Some "hidden competitors" discussed include "blackmarket" journal article sharing, BitTorrenting sites, online textbook-sharing sites, self-distributing artists, programs to strip Digital Rights Management from ebooks, Amazon's ebook distribution and fan fiction. Possible future models for both "hidden competitors" and libraries - and implications of these - are suggested
Spectral variation in the X-ray pulsar GX 1+4 during a low-flux episode
The X-ray pulsar GX 1+4 was observed with the RXTE satellite for a total of
51ks between 1996 July 19 - 21. During this period the flux decreased smoothly
from an initial mean level of ~ 6 X 10^36 erg/s to a minimum of ~ 4 X 10^35
erg/s (2-60 keV, assuming a source distance of 10 kpc) before partially
recovering towards the initial level at the end of the observation.
BATSE pulse timing measurements indicate that a torque reversal took place
approximately 10 d after this observation. Both the mean pulse profile and the
photon spectrum varied significantly. The observed variation in the source may
provide important clues as to the mechanism of torque reversals.
The single best-fitting spectral model was based on a component originating
from thermal photons with kT ~ 1 keV Comptonised by a plasma of temperature kT
\~ 7 keV. Both the flux modulation with phase during the brightest interval and
the evolution of the mean spectra over the course of the observation are
consistent with variations in this model component; with, in addition, a
doubling of the column density nH contributing to the mean spectral change.
A strong flare of duration 50 s was observed during the interval of minimum
flux, with the peak flux ~ 20 times the mean level. Although beaming effects
are likely to mask the true variation in Mdot thought to give rise to the
flare, the timing of a modest increase in flux prior to the flare is consistent
with dual episodes of accretion resulting from successive orbits of a locally
dense patch of matter in the accretion disc.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, submitted to MNRA
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