328 research outputs found
TeV gamma-ray emission from accreting binary pulsars
The high-mass X-ray binary SMC X-1 has been observed during the interval 1986-1989 at a threshold γ-ray energy of 0.4 TeV using the University of Durham Mark III air Cerenkov telescope at Narrabri. The Cerenkov arrival time series recorded during these observations have been tested for periodicity at the contemporary pulse period of the SMC X-1 X-ray pulsar. This period analysis was performed using a new technique - introduced in the present work - which is designed for TeV γ-ray source candidates in binary systems and which simultaneously seeks evidence for pulsed TeV γ-ray emission and information on the location of the emission site within the binary. Results are also presented from the period analysis of data accumulated at Narrabri during observations of the low-mass X-ray binaries X0021.8-7221 (in the globular cluster 47 Tucanae) and GX 1+4. X-ray binaries as a class of TeV γ-ray source are considered and their properties compared. Previous models which invoke the interaction of beams of high-energy particles with material within the environment of a binary system are discussed. One of these models is adapted in the present work in order to propose a simple explanation of the narrow TeV 7-ray orbital light curve observed for the high-mass binary Centaurus X-3. The new model accounts for the γ-ray emission from Cen X-3 in terms of the collisions of ultrarelativistic protons with an accretion wake trailing the X-ray pulsar. This model, which incorporates the steering of charged particles in the magnetosphere of the massive primary star, is also applied to the Vela X-1 binary in order to investigate claims that TeV γ-ray outbursts observed during X-ray eclipse arise at particle collisions with the limb of the supergiant companion
Radiative Transfer Models of a Possible Planet in the AB Aurigae Disk
Recent coronagraphic imaging of the AB Aurigae disk has revealed a region of
low polarized scattered light suggestive of perturbations from a planet at a
radius of ~100 AU. We model this darkened region using our fully
non-plane-parallel radiative-transfer code combined with a simple hydrostatic
equilibirum approximation to self-consistently solve for the structure of the
disk surface as seen in scattered light. By comparing the observations to our
models, we find that the observations are consistent with the absence of a
planet, with an upper limit of 1 Jupiter mass.Comment: Accepted to ApJ Letter
Mannings Emporium Ballylickey Brunch Menu 2017
Manning’s Emporium has been in the Manning family since 1948. It has grown from a simple shop selling the produce from the family farm, to what it is today – a bustling food store, cafe and tapas bar specialising in local and artisan produce. We are delighted to now offer the best of Manning\u27s Emporium in our hampers. These hampers have been carefully selected to reflect the quality of product we stock on our shelves and serve from our kitchen. Feel free to get in touch if you need any further information.https://arrow.tudublin.ie/menus21c/1384/thumbnail.jp
Mannings Emporium Ballylickey Tapas Menu 2017
Manning’s Emporium has been in the Manning family since 1948. It has grown from a simple shop selling the produce from the family farm, to what it is today – a bustling food store, cafe and tapas bar specialising in local and artisan produce. We are delighted to now offer the best of Manning\u27s Emporium in our hampers. These hampers have been carefully selected to reflect the quality of product we stock on our shelves and serve from our kitchen. Feel free to get in touch if you need any further information.https://arrow.tudublin.ie/menus21c/1385/thumbnail.jp
Comparative Analysis of State-Funded Rental Assistance Voucher Programs in Connecticut, Hawaii, Massachusetts, and New Jersey
The decline in support for public housing investment in the U.S. prompted the federal government to pivot towards tenant-based rental subsidies by establishing the Housing Choice Voucher (HCV) program, a revised version of Section 8, in 1998 (Edson, 2011). Through the HCV program, administered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) through Public Housing Authorities (PHAs), low-income households can receive rental subsidies without being locked into a neighborhood or rental unit, allowing for increased socio-economic mobility. Despite the federal government\u27s rental assistance through the HCV program, limited funding and strict eligibility requirements make it challenging to meet the demand of all residents seeking rental assistance throughout the country. A recent report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition (NLIHC) states that the U.S. has a shortage of 7.3 million available rental homes that are affordable, estimating that 34 in 100 housing units are accessible to low-income families. To support federal efforts to increase housing affordability, state and local governments have moved towards developing state-funded rental assistance programs that meet the state-specific needs of low-income households that have yet to receive federal rental assistance.
This report will discuss a comparative analysis of Connecticut’s Rental Assistance Program (CT RAP) and similar programs in Hawaii, Massachusetts and New Jersey to identify best practices for administering rental subsidy programs. Each program will be evaluated based on their efficiency and accessibility to their target demographics. Eligibility criteria, management of applications and waitlists, disbursement of funds, assistance and outreach models, evaluating, monitoring and reporting practices will be discussed to identify best practices amongst each state’s approach. Comparisons and methods highlighted will inform policy recommendations for improving upon CT RAP and state-wide efforts for assisting low-income residents
Candidate Main-Sequence Stars with Debris Disks: A New Sample of Vega-like Sources
Vega-like sources are main-sequence stars that exhibit IR fluxes in excess of expectations for stellar photospheres, most likely due to reradiation of stellar emission intercepted by orbiting dust grains. We have identified a large sample of main-sequence stars with possible excess IR radiation by cross-correlating the Michigan Catalog of Two-dimensional Spectral Types for the HD Stars with the IRAS Faint Source Survey Catalog. Some 60 of these Vega-like sources were not found during previous surveys of the IRAS database, the majority of which employed the lower sensitivity Point Source Catalog. Here, we provide details of our search strategy, together with a preliminary examination of the full sample of Vega-like sources
An Extinction Study of the Taurus Dark Cloud Complex
We present a study of the detailed distribution of extinction in a region of
the Taurus dark cloud complex. Our study uses new BVR images of the region,
spectral classification data for 95 stars, and IRAS Sky Survey Atlas (ISSA) 60
and 100 micron images. We study the extinction of the region in four different
ways, and we present the first inter-comparison of all these methods, which
are: 1) using the color excess of background stars for which spectral types are
known; 2) using the ISSA 60 and 100 micron images; 3) using star counts; and 4)
using an optical (V and R) version of the average color excess method used by
Lada et al. (1994). We find that all four methods give generally similar
results, with important exceptions. To study the structure in the dust
distribution, we compare the ISSA extinction and the extinction measured for
individual stars. From the comparison, we conclude that in the relatively low
extinction regions studied, with 0.9 < A_V < 3.0 mag (away from filamentary
dark clouds and IRAS cores), there are no fluctuations in the dust column
density greater than 45% (at the 99.7% confidence level), on scales smaller
than 0.2 pc. We also report the discovery of a previously unknown stellar
cluster behind the Taurus dark cloud near R.A 4h19m00s, Dec. 27:30:00 (B1950)Comment: 49 pages (which include 6 pages of tables and 6 pages of figures
LSST Science Data Quality Analysis Subsystem Design
The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) will have a Science Data Quality Analysis (SDQA) subsystem for vetting its unprecedented volume of astronomical image data. The SDQA subsystem inhabits three basic realms: image processing, graphical-user-interface (GUI) tools, and alarms/reporting. During pipeline image processing, SDQA data are computed for the images and astronomical sources extracted from the images, and utilized to grade the images and sources. Alarms are automatically sent, if necessary, to initiate swift response to problems found. Both SDQA data and machine-determined grades are stored in a database. At the end of a data-processing interval, e.g., nightly processing or data-release reprocessing, automatic SDQA reports are generated from SDQA data and grades queried from the database. The SDQA reports summarize the science data quality and provide feedback to telescope, camera, facility, observation-scheduling and data-processing personnel. During operations, GUI tools facilitate visualization of image and SDQA data in a variety of ways that allow a small SDQA-operations team of humans to quickly and easily perform manual SDQA on a substantial fraction of LSST data products, and possibly reassign SDQA grades as a result of the visual inspection
Radiation thermo-chemical models of protoplanetary disks II. Line diagnostics
Methods. We use the recently developed disk code ProDiMo to calculate the
physico-chemical structure of protoplanetary disks and apply the Monte-Carlo
line radiative transfer code RATRAN to predict observable line profiles and
fluxes. We consider a series of Herbig Ae type disk models ranging from 10^-6
M_Sun to 2.2 10^-2 M_Sun (between 0.5 and 700 AU) to discuss the dependency of
the line fluxes and ratios on disk mass for otherwise fixed disk parameters.
Results. We find the [CII] 157.7 mum line to originate in LTE from the surface
layers of the disk, where Tg > Td . The total emission is dominated by surface
area and hence depends strongly on disk outer radius. The [OI] lines can be
very bright (> 10^-16 W/m^2) and form in slightly deeper and closer regions
under non-LTE conditions. The high-excitation [OI] 145.5 mum line, which has a
larger critical density, decreases more rapidly with disk mass than the 63.2
mum line. Therefore, the [OI] 63.2 mum/145.5 mum ratio is a promising disk mass
indicator, especially as it is independent of disk outer radius for Rout > 200
AU. CO is abundant only in deeper layers A_V >~ 0.05. For too low disk masses
(M_disk <~10^-4 M_Sun) the dust starts to become transparent, and CO is almost
completely photo-dissociated. For masses larger than that the lines are an
excellent independent tracer of disk outer radius and can break the outer
radius degeneracy in the [OI] 63.2 mum/[CII]157.7 mum line ratio. Conclusions.
The far-IR fine-structure lines of [CII] and [OI] observable with Herschel
provide a promising tool to measure the disk gas mass, although they are mainly
generated in the atomic surface layers. In spatially unresolved observations,
none of these lines carry much information about the inner, possibly hot
regions < 30 AU.Comment: accepted for publication in A&
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