2,874 research outputs found
Towards a new full-sky list of radial velocity standard stars
The calibration of the Radial Velocity Spectrometer (RVS) onboard the ESA
Gaia satellite (to be launched in 2012) requires a list of standard stars with
a radial velocity (RV) known with an accuracy of at least 300 m/s. The IAU
Commission 30 lists of RV standard stars are too bright and not dense enough.
We describe the selection criteria due to the RVS constraints for building an
adequate full-sky list of at least 1000 RV standards from catalogues already
published in the literature. A preliminary list of 1420 candidate standard
stars is built and its properties are shown. An important re-observation
programme has been set up in order to ensure within it the selection of objects
with a good stability until the end of the Gaia mission (around 2018). The
present list of candidate standards is available at CDS and usable for many
other projects.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, in press, 8 pages, 8 figure
The catalog of radial velocity standard stars for the Gaia RVS: status and progress of the observations
A new full-sky catalog of Radial Velocity standard stars is being built for
the determination of the Radial Velocity Zero Point of the RVS on board of
Gaia. After a careful selection of 1420 candidates matching well defined
criteria, we are now observing all of them to verify that they are stable
enough over several years to be qualified as reference stars. We present the
status of this long-term observing programme on three spectrographs : SOPHIE,
NARVAL and CORALIE, complemented by the ELODIE and HARPS archives. Because each
instrument has its own zero-point, we observe intensively IAU RV standards and
asteroids to homogenize the radial velocity measurements. We can already
estimate that ~8% of the candidates have to be rejected because of variations
larger than the requested level of 300 m/s.Comment: Proceedings of SF2A2010, S. Boissier, M. Heydari-Malayeri, R. Samadi
and D. Valls-Gabaud (eds), 3 pages, 2 figure
MARL-iDR: Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning for Incentive-based Residential Demand Response
This paper presents a decentralized Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning (MARL)
approach to an incentive-based Demand Response (DR) program, which aims to
maintain the capacity limits of the electricity grid and prevent grid
congestion by financially incentivizing residential consumers to reduce their
energy consumption. The proposed approach addresses the key challenge of
coordinating heterogeneous preferences and requirements from multiple
participants while preserving their privacy and minimizing financial costs for
the aggregator. The participant agents use a novel Disjunctively Constrained
Knapsack Problem optimization to curtail or shift the requested household
appliances based on the selected demand reduction. Through case studies with
electricity data from households, the proposed approach effectively
reduced energy consumption's Peak-to-Average ratio (PAR) by % compared
to the original PAR while fully preserving participant privacy. This approach
has the potential to significantly improve the efficiency and reliability of
the electricity grid, making it an important contribution to the management of
renewable energy resources and the growing electricity demand.Comment: 8 pages, IEEE Belgrade PowerTech, 202
Normal families and fixed points of iterates
Let F be a family of holomorphic functions and let K be a constant less than
4. Suppose that for all f in F the second iterate of f does not have fixed
points for which the modulus of the multiplier is greater than K. We show that
then F is normal. This is deduced from a result about the multipliers of
iterated polynomials.Comment: 5 page
Is B1422+231 a Golden Lens?
B1422+231 is a quadruply-imaged QSO with an exceptionally large lensing
contribution from group galaxies other than the main lensing galaxy. We detect
diffuse X-rays from the galaxy group in archival Chandra observations; the
inferred temperature is consistent with the published velocity dispersion. We
then explore the range of possible mass maps that would be consistent with the
observed image positions, radio fluxes, and ellipticities. Under plausible but
not very restrictive assumptions about the lensing galaxy, predicted time
delays involving the faint fourth image are fairly well constrained around 7/h
days.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, to appear in the June/03 issue of A
VSOP observation of the quasar PKS 2215+020: a new laboratory for core-jet physics at z=3.572
We report results of a VSOP (VLBI Space Observatory Programme) observation of
a high redshift quasar PKS 2215+020 (z=3.572). The ~1 milliarcsecond resolution
image of the quasar reveals a prominent `core-jet' structure on linear scales
from 5/h to 300/h pc ($H_0=100*h km/(s*Mpc). The brightness temperatures and
sizes of bright features identified in the jet are consistent with emission
from relativistic shocks dominated by adiabatic energy losses. The jet is
powered by the central black hole with estimated mass of ~4*10^9 solar masses.
Comparisons with VLA and ROSAT observations indicate a possible presence of an
extended radio/X-ray halo surrounding 2215+020.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, aastex macros; accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journal, V.546, N.2 *(January 10 2001
An X-ray and Optical Investigation of the Environments Around Nearby Radio Galaxies
Investigations of the cluster environment of radio sources have not shown a
correlation between radio power and degree of clustering. However, it has been
demonstrated that extended X-ray luminosity and galaxy clustering do exhibit a
positive correlation. This study investigates a complete sample of 25 nearby (z
less than 0.06) radio galaxies which are not cataloged members of Abell
clusters. The environment of these radio galaxies is studied in both the X-ray
and the optical by means of the ROSAT All-Sky Survey (RASS), ROSAT pointed
observations, and the Palomar optical Digitized Sky Survey (DSS). X-ray
luminosities and extents are determined from the RASS, and the DSS is used to
quantify the degree of clustering via the spatial two-point correlation
coefficient, Bgg. Of the 25 sources, 20 are greater than sigma detections in
the X-ray and 11 possessed Bgg's significantly in excess of that expected for
an isolated galaxy. Adding the criterion that the X-ray emission be resolved,
10 of the radio galaxies do appear to reside in poor clusters with extended
X-ray emission suggestive of the presence of an intracluster medium. Eight of
these galaxies also possess high spatial correlation coefficients. Taken
together, these data suggest that the radio galaxies reside in a low richness
extension of the Abell clusters. The unresolved X-ray emission from the other
galaxies is most likely associated with AGN phenomena. Furthermore, although
the sample size is small, it appears that the environments of FR I and FR II
sources differ. FR I's tend to be more frequently associated with extended
X-ray emission (10 of 18), whereas FR II's are typically point sources or
non-detections in the X-ray (none of the 7 sources exhibit extended X-ray
emission).Comment: 28 page postscript file including figures and tables, plus one
landscape table and 5 GIF figure
Infrared spectroscopy of phytochrome and model pigments
Fourier-transform infrared difference spectra between the red-absorbing and far-red-absorbing forms of oat phytochrome have been measured in H2O and 2H2O. The difference spectra are compared with infrared spectra of model compounds, i.e. the (5Z,10Z,15Z)- and (5Z,10Z,15E)-isomers of 2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18-octaethyl-bilindion (Et8-bilindion), 2,3-dihydro-2,3,7,8,12,13,17,18-octaethyl-bilindion (H2Et8-bilindion), and protonated H2Et8-bilindion in various solvents. The spectra of the model compounds show that only for the protonated forms can clear differences between the two isomers be detected. Since considerable differences are present between the spectra of Et8-bilindion and H2Et8-bilindion, it is concluded that only the latter compound can serve as a model system of phytochrome. The 2H2O effect on the difference spectrum of phytochrome supports the view that the chromophore in red-absorbing phytochrome is protonated and suggests, in addition, that it is also protonated in far-red-absorbing phytochrome. The spectra show that protonated carboxyl groups are influenced. The small amplitudes in the difference spectra exclude major changes of protein secondary structure
A Very Radio-Loud Narrow-Line Seyfert 1: PKS 2004-447
We have discovered a very radio-loud Narrow-Line Seyfert 1 candidate: PKS
2004-447. This Seyfert is consistent with the formal definition for NLS1s,
although it does not have quite the same spectral features as some typical
members of this subclass. Only ROSAT survey data is available at X-ray
wavelengths, so it has not been possible to compare this source with other
NLS1s at these wavelengths. A full comparison of this source with other members
of the subclass will improve our physical understanding of NLS1s. In addition,
using standard calculations, we estimate the central black hole to have a mass
of . This does not agree with predictions in the
literature, that radio-loud AGN host very massive black holes.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, minor typos
change
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