4,152 research outputs found
Disentangling Confused Stars at the Galactic Center with Long Baseline Infrared Interferometry
We present simulations of Keck Interferometer ASTRA and VLTI GRAVITY
observations of mock star fields in orbit within ~50 milliarcseconds of Sgr A*.
Dual-field phase referencing techniques, as implemented on ASTRA and planned
for GRAVITY, will provide the sensitivity to observe Sgr A* with infrared
interferometers. Our results show an improvement in the confusion noise limit
over current astrometric surveys, opening a window to study stellar sources in
the region. Since the Keck Interferometer has only a single baseline, the
improvement in the confusion limit depends on source position angles. The
GRAVITY instrument will yield a more compact and symmetric PSF, providing an
improvement in confusion noise which will not depend as strongly on position
angle. Our Keck results show the ability to characterize the star field as
containing zero, few, or many bright stellar sources. We are also able to
detect and track a source down to mK~18 through the least confused regions of
our field of view at a precision of ~200 microarcseconds along the baseline
direction. This level of precision improves with source brightness. Our GRAVITY
results show the potential to detect and track multiple sources in the field.
GRAVITY will perform ~10 microarcsecond astrometry on a mK=16.3 source and ~200
microarcsecond astrometry on a mK=18.8 source in six hours of monitoring a
crowded field. Monitoring the orbits of several stars will provide the ability
to distinguish between multiple post-Newtonian orbital effects, including those
due to an extended mass distribution around Sgr A* and to low-order General
Relativistic effects. Early characterizations of the field by ASTRA including
the possibility of a precise source detection, could provide valuable
information for future GRAVITY implementation and observation.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
A formal method for identifying distinct states of variability in time-varying sources: SgrA* as an example
Continuously time variable sources are often characterized by their power
spectral density and flux distribution. These quantities can undergo dramatic
changes over time if the underlying physical processes change. However, some
changes can be subtle and not distinguishable using standard statistical
approaches. Here, we report a methodology that aims to identify distinct but
similar states of time variability. We apply this method to the Galactic
supermassive black hole, where 2.2 um flux is observed from a source associated
with SgrA*, and where two distinct states have recently been suggested. Our
approach is taken from mathematical finance and works with conditional flux
density distributions that depend on the previous flux value. The discrete,
unobserved (hidden) state variable is modeled as a stochastic process and the
transition probabilities are inferred from the flux density time series. Using
the most comprehensive data set to date, in which all Keck and a majority of
the publicly available VLT data have been merged, we show that SgrA* is
sufficiently described by a single intrinsic state. However the observed flux
densities exhibit two states: a noise-dominated and a source-dominated one. Our
methodology reported here will prove extremely useful to assess the effects of
the putative gas cloud G2 that is on its way toward the black hole and might
create a new state of variability.Comment: Submitted to ApJ; 33 pages, 4 figures; comments welcom
A Quantitative and Standardized Robotic Method for the Evaluation of Arm Proprioception After Stroke
Stroke often results in both motor and sensory deficits, which may interact in the manifested functional impairment. Proprioception is known to play important roles in the planning and control of limb posture and movement; however, the impact of proprioceptive deficits on motor function has been difficult to elucidate due in part to the qualitative nature of available clinical tests. We present a quantitative and standardized method for evaluating proprioception in tasks directly relevant to those used to assess motor function. Using a robotic manipulandum that exerted controlled displacements of the hand, stroke participants were evaluated, and compared with a control group, in their ability to detect such displacements in a 2-alternative, forced-choice paradigm. A psychometric function parameterized the decision process underlying the detection of the hand displacements. The shape of this function was determined by a signal detection threshold and by the variability of the response about this threshold. Our automatic procedure differentiates between participants with and without proprioceptive deficits and quantifies functional proprioceptive sensation on a magnitude scale that is meaningful for ongoing studies of degraded motor function in comparable horizontal movements
A near-IR variability study of the Galactic black hole: a red noise source with no detected periodicity
We present the results of near-infrared (2 and 3 microns) monitoring of Sgr
A*-IR with 1 min time sampling using the natural and laser guide star adaptive
optics (LGS AO) system at the Keck II telescope. Sgr A*-IR was observed
continuously for up to three hours on each of seven nights, between 2005 July
and 2007 August. Sgr A*-IR is detected at all times and is continuously
variable, with a median observed 2 micron flux density of 0.192 mJy,
corresponding to 16.3 magnitude at K'. These observations allow us to
investigate Nyquist sampled periods ranging from about 2 minutes to an hour.
Using Monte Carlo simulations, we find that the variability of Sgr A* in this
data set is consistent with models based on correlated noise with power spectra
having frequency dependent power law slopes between 2.0 to 3.0, consistent with
those reported for AGN light curves. Of particular interest are periods of ~20
min, corresponding to a quasi-periodic signal claimed based upon previous
near-infrared observations and interpreted as the orbit of a 'hot spot' at or
near the last stable orbit of a spinning black hole. We find no significant
periodicity at any time scale probed in these new observations for periodic
signals. This study is sensitive to periodic signals with amplitudes greater
than 20% of the maximum amplitude of the underlying red noise component for
light curves with duration greater than ~2 hours at a 98% confidence limit.Comment: 37 pages, 2 tables, 17 figures, accepted by Ap
A Robotic Test of Proprioception within the Hemiparetic Arm Post-stroke
Background: Proprioception plays important roles in planning and control of limb posture and movement. The impact of proprioceptive deficits on motor function post-stroke has been difficult to elucidate due to limitations in current tests of arm proprioception. Common clinical tests only provide ordinal assessment of proprioceptive integrity (eg. intact, impaired or absent). We introduce a standardized, quantitative method for evaluating proprioception within the arm on a continuous, ratio scale. We demonstrate the approach, which is based on signal detection theory of sensory psychophysics, in two tasks used to characterize motor function after stroke.
Methods: Hemiparetic stroke survivors and neurologically intact participants attempted to detect displacement- or force-perturbations robotically applied to their arm in a two-interval, two-alternative forced-choice test. A logistic psychometric function parameterized detection of limb perturbations. The shape of this function is determined by two parameters: one corresponds to a signal detection threshold and the other to variability of responses about that threshold. These two parameters define a space in which proprioceptive sensation post-stroke can be compared to that of neurologically-intact people. We used an auditory tone discrimination task to control for potential comprehension, attention and memory deficits.
Results: All but one stroke survivor demonstrated competence in performing two-alternative discrimination in the auditory training test. For the remaining stroke survivors, those with clinically identified proprioceptive deficits in the hemiparetic arm or hand had higher detection thresholds and exhibited greater response variability than individuals without proprioceptive deficits. We then identified a normative parameter space determined by the threshold and response variability data collected from neurologically intact participants. By plotting displacement detection performance within this normative space, stroke survivors with and without intact proprioception could be discriminated on a continuous scale that was sensitive to small performance variations, e.g. practice effects across days.
Conclusions: The proposed method uses robotic perturbations similar to those used in ongoing studies of motor function post-stroke. The approach is sensitive to small changes in the proprioceptive detection of hand motions. We expect this new robotic assessment will empower future studies to characterize how proprioceptive deficits compromise limb posture and movement control in stroke survivors
Multiple protostellar systems. II. A high resolution near-infrared imaging survey in nearby star-forming regions
(abridged) Our project endeavors to obtain a robust view of multiplicity
among embedded Class I and Flat Spectrum protostars in a wide array of nearby
molecular clouds to disentangle ``universal'' from cloud-dependent processes.
We have used near-infrared adaptive optics observations at the VLT through the
H, Ks and L' filters to search for tight companions to 45 Class I and Flat
Spectrum protostars located in 4 different molecular clouds (Taurus-Auriga,
Ophiuchus, Serpens and L1641 in Orion). We complemented these observations with
published high-resolution surveys of 13 additional objects in Taurus and
Ophiuchus. We found multiplicity rates of 32+/-6% and 47+/-8% over the 45-1400
AU and 14-1400 AU separation ranges, respectively. These rates are in excellent
agreement with those previously found among T Tauri stars in Taurus and
Ophiuchus, and represent an excess of a factor ~1.7 over the multiplicity rate
of solar-type field stars. We found no non-hierarchical triple systems, nor any
quadruple or higher-order systems. No significant cloud-to-cloud difference has
been found, except for the fact that all companions to low-mass Orion
protostars are found within 100 AU of their primaries whereas companions found
in other clouds span the whole range probed here. Based on this survey, we
conclude that core fragmentation always yields a high initial multiplicity
rate, even in giant molecular clouds such as the Orion cloud or in clustered
stellar populations as in Serpens, in contrast with predictions of numerical
simulations. The lower multiplicity rate observed in clustered Class II and
Class III populations can be accounted for by a universal set of properties for
young systems and subsequent ejections through close encounters with unrelated
cluster members.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
The Arm Motion (AMD) Detection Test
Stroke can lead to sensory deficits that impair functional control of arm movements. Here we describe a simple test of arm motion detection (AMD) that provides an objective, quantitative measure of movement perception related proprioceptive capabilities in the arm. Seven stroke survivors and thirteen neurologically intact control subjects performed the AMD test. In a series of ten trials that took less than 15 minutes to complete, participants used a two-button user interface to adjust the magnitude of hand displacements produced by a horizontal planar robot until the motions were just perceptible (i.e. on the threshold of detection). The standard deviation of movement detection threshold was plotted against the mean and a normative range was determined from the data collected with control subjects. Within this normative space, subjects with and without intact proprioception could be discriminated on a ratio scale that is meaningful for ongoing studies of degraded motor function. Thus, the AMD test provides a relatively fast, objective and quantitative measure of upper extremity proprioception of limb movement (i.e. kinesthesia)
Submovements During Reaching Movements after Stroke
Neurological deficits after cerebrovascular accidents very frequently disrupt the kinematics of voluntary movements with the consequent impact in daily life activities. Robotic methodologies enable the quantitative characterization of specific control deficits needed to understand the basis of functional impairments and to design effective rehabilitation therapies. In a group of right handed chronic stroke survivors (SS) with right side hemiparesis, intact proprioception, and differing levels of motor impairment, we used a robotic manipulandum to study right arm function during discrete point-to-point reaching movements and reciprocal out-and-back movements to visual targets. We compared these movements with those of neurologically intact individuals (NI). We analyzed the presence of secondary submovements in the initial (i.e. outward) trajectory portion of the two tasks and found that the SS with severe impairment (F
Tidal Capture by a Black Hole and Flares in Galactic Centres
We present the telltale signature of the tidal capture and disruption of an
object by a massive black hole in a galactic centre. As a result of the
interaction with the black hole's strong gravitational field, the object's
light curve can flare-up with characteristic time of the order of 100 sec
\times (M_{bh} / 10^6 M_{Solar}). Our simulations show that general relativity
plays a crucial role in the late stages of the encounter in two ways: (i) due
to the precession of perihelion, tidal disruption is more severe, and (ii)
light bending and aberration of light produce and enhance flares seen by a
distant observer. We present our results for the case of a tidally disrupted
Solar-type star. We also discuss the two strongest flares that have been
observed at the Galactic centre. Although the first was observed in X-rays and
the second in infra-red, they have almost identical light curves and we find it
interesting that it is possible to fit the infra-red flare with a rather simple
model of the tidally disrupted comet-like or planetary object. We discuss the
model and possible scenarios how such an event can occur.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figur
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