4,222 research outputs found

    Low-energy gamma rays from Cygnus X-1

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    The Cyg X-1 was observed by the balloonborne telescope OPALE, in June 1976. The high energy spectrum of the source, which was in its superlow state, was seen to extend well beyond 1 MeV. The observed low energy gamma ray component of Cyg X-1 is compared with the predictions of recent models involving accretion onto a stellar black hole, and including a possible contribution from the pair annihilation 511 keV gamma ray line

    Contact Moishezon threefolds with second Betti number one

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    We prove that the only contact Moishezon threefold having second Betti number equal to one is the projective space.Comment: 5 pages. v2: exposition improved as suggested by the referee. To appear in Archiv der Mat

    Compton telescope with coded aperture mask: Imaging with the INTEGRAL/IBIS Compton mode

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    Compton telescopes provide a good sensitivity over a wide field of view in the difficult energy range running from a few hundred keV to several MeV. Their angular resolution is, however, poor and strongly energy dependent. We present a novel experimental design associating a coded mask and a Compton detection unit to overcome these pitfalls. It maintains the Compton performance while improving the angular resolution by at least an order of magnitude in the field of view subtended by the mask. This improvement is obtained only at the expense of the efficiency that is reduced by a factor of two. In addition, the background corrections benefit from the coded mask technique, i.e. a simultaneous measurement of the source and background. This design is implemented and tested using the IBIS telescope on board the INTEGRAL satellite to construct images with a 12' resolution over a 29 degrees x 29 degrees field of view in the energy range from 200 keV to a few MeV. The details of the analysis method and the resulting telescope performance, particularly in terms of sensitivity, are presented

    Maximum solutions of normalized Ricci flows on 4-manifolds

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    We consider maximum solution g(t)g(t), t[0,+)t\in [0, +\infty), to the normalized Ricci flow. Among other things, we prove that, if (M,ω)(M, \omega) is a smooth compact symplectic 4-manifold such that b2+(M)>1b_2^+(M)>1 and let g(t),t[0,)g(t),t\in[0,\infty), be a solution to (1.3) on MM whose Ricci curvature satisfies that Ric(g(t))3|\text{Ric}(g(t))|\leq 3 and additionally χ(M)=3τ(M)>0\chi(M)=3 \tau (M)>0, then there exists an mNm\in \mathbb{N}, and a sequence of points {xj,kM}\{x_{j,k}\in M\}, j=1,...,mj=1, ..., m, satisfying that, by passing to a subsequence, (M,g(tk+t),x1,k,...,xm,k)dGH(j=1mNj,g,x1,,...,,xm,),(M, g(t_{k}+t), x_{1,k},..., x_{m,k}) \stackrel{d_{GH}}\longrightarrow (\coprod_{j=1}^m N_j, g_{\infty}, x_{1,\infty}, ...,, x_{m,\infty}), t[0,)t\in [0, \infty), in the mm-pointed Gromov-Hausdorff sense for any sequence tkt_{k}\longrightarrow \infty, where (Nj,g)(N_{j}, g_{\infty}), j=1,...,mj=1,..., m, are complete complex hyperbolic orbifolds of complex dimension 2 with at most finitely many isolated orbifold points. Moreover, the convergence is CC^{\infty} in the non-singular part of 1mNj\coprod_1^m N_{j} and Volg0(M)=j=1mVolg(Nj)\text{Vol}_{g_{0}}(M)=\sum_{j=1}^{m}\text{Vol}_{g_{\infty}}(N_{j}), where χ(M)\chi(M) (resp. τ(M)\tau(M)) is the Euler characteristic (resp. signature) of MM.Comment: 23 page

    EGRET Observations of the Diffuse Gamma-Ray Emission in Orion: Analysis Through Cycle 6

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    We present a study of the high-energy diffuse emission observed toward Orion by the Energetic Gamma-Ray Experiment Telescope (EGRET) on the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory. The total exposure by EGRET in this region has increased by more than a factor of two since a previous study. A simple model for the diffuse emission adequately fits the data; no significant point sources are detected in the region studied (l=195l = 195^\circ to 220220^\circ and b=25to10b = -25^\circ to -10^\circ) in either the composite dataset or in two separate groups of EGRET viewing periods considered. The gamma-ray emissivity in Orion is found to be (1.65±0.11)×1026ssr1(1.65 \pm 0.11) \times 10^{-26} {s sr}^{-1} for E > 100 MeV, and the differential emissivity is well-described as a combination of contributions from cosmic-ray electrons and protons with approximately the local density. The molecular mass calibrating ratio is N(H2)/WCO=(1.35±0.15)×1020cm2(Kkm/s)1N(H_2)/W_{CO} = (1.35 \pm 0.15) \times 10^{20} cm^{-2} (K km/s)^{-1}.Comment: 16 pages, including 5 figures. 3 Tables as three separate files. Latex document, needs AASTEX style files. Accepted for publication in Ap

    The final COS-B database: In-flight calibration of instrumental parameters

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    A method for the determination of temporal variation of sensitivity is designed to find a set of parameters which lead to maximum consistency between the intensities derived from different observation periods. This method is briefly described and the resulting sensitivity and background variations presented

    INTEGRAL discovery of a bright highly obscured galactic X-ray binary source IGR J16318-4848

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    INTEGRAL regularly scans the Galactic plane to search for new objects and in particular for absorbed sources with the bulk of their emission above 10-20 keV. The first new INTEGRAL source was discovered on 2003 January 29, 0.5 degree from the Galactic plane and was further observed in the X-rays with XMM-Newton. This source, IGR J16318-4848, is intrinsically strongly absorbed by cold matter and displays exceptionally strong fluorescence emission lines. The likely infrared/optical counterpart indicates that IGR J16318-4848 is probably a High Mass X-Ray Binary neutron star or black hole enshrouded in a Compton thick environment. Strongly absorbed sources, not detected in previous surveys, could contribute significantly to the Galactic hard X-ray background between 10 and 200 keV.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures (fig 1 quality lowered), accepted for publication in A&A letters (INTEGRAL special issue

    Gamma-rays from Type Ia supernova SN2014J

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    The whole set of INTEGRAL observations of type Ia supernova SN2014J, covering the period 19-162 days after the explosion has being analyzed. For spectral fitting the data are split into "early" and "late" periods covering days 19-35 and 50-162, respectively, optimized for 56^{56}Ni and 56^{56}Co lines. As expected for the early period much of the gamma-ray signal is confined to energies below \sim200 keV, while for the late period it is most strong above 400 keV. In particular, in the late period 56^{56}Co lines at 847 and 1248 keV are detected at 4.7 and 4.3 σ\sigma respectively. The lightcurves in several representative energy bands are calculated for the entire period. The resulting spectra and lightcurves are compared with a subset of models. We confirm our previous finding that the gamma-ray data are broadly consistent with the expectations for canonical 1D models, such as delayed detonation or deflagration models for a near-Chandrasekhar mass WD. Late optical spectra (day 136 after the explosion) show rather symmetric Co and Fe lines profiles, suggesting that unless the viewing angle is special, the distribution of radioactive elements is symmetric in the ejecta.Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures, accepted by Ap
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