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astro-ph/0001001
Alex Lazarian
A. Lazarian
Statistics of Turbulence from Spectral-Line Data Cubes
21 pages, 1 figure, review for "Plasma Turbulence and Energetic Particles in Astrophysics", eds.M. Ostrowski & R. Schlickeiser, Cracow (1999)
null
null
null
astro-ph cond-mat.stat-mech physics.ao-ph physics.flu-dyn physics.plasm-ph physics.space-ph
null
Emission in spectral lines can provide unique information on interstellar turbulence. Doppler shifts due to supersonic motions contain information on turbulent velocity field which is otherwise difficult to measure. However, the problem of separation of velocity and density fluctuations is far from being trivial. Using atomic hydrogen (HI) as a test case, I review techniques applicable to emission line studies with the emphasis on those that can provide information on the underlying power spectra of velocity and density. I show that recently developed mathematical machinery is promising for the purpose. Its application to HI shows that in cold neutral hydrogen the velocity fluctuations dominate the small scale structures observed in spectral-line data cubes and this result is very important for the interpretation of observational data, including the identification of clouds. Velocity fluctuations are shown to dominate the formation of small scale structures that can be erroneously identified as diffuse clouds. One may argue that the HI data is consistent with the Goldreich-Shridhar picture of magnetohydrodynamic turbulence, but the cascade from the scales of several kpc that this interpretation involves does not fit well in the current paradigm of energy injection. The issue whether magnetic field does make the turbulence anisotropic is still open, but if this is the case, I show that studies of emission lines can provide a reliable way of determining magnetic field direction. I discuss various techniques for studying interstellar turbulence using emission lines, e.g. spectral correlation functions, genus statistics and principal component analysis.
[ { "created": "Sat, 1 Jan 2000 02:05:30 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2016-08-30
[ [ "Lazarian", "A.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001002
Renxin Xu
G.J. Qiao, R.X. Xu, J.F. Liu, J.L. Han, B. Zhang (CAS-PKU BAC & Astronomy Department, PKU)
On the inverse Compton scattering model of radio pulsars
5 pages, no figures, LaTeX, a proceeding paper for Pacific Rim Conference on Stellar Astrophysics, Aug. 1999, HongKong, China
null
10.1007/978-94-010-0878-5_44
null
astro-ph
null
Some characteristics of the inverse Compton scattering (ICS) model are reviewed. At least the following properties of radio pulsars can be reproduced in the model: core or central emission beam, one or two hollow emission cones, different emission heights of these components, diverse pulse profiles at various frequencies, linear and circular polarization features of core and cones.
[ { "created": "Sat, 1 Jan 2000 11:08:49 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2016-01-27
[ [ "Qiao", "G. J.", "", "CAS-PKU BAC &\n Astronomy Department, PKU" ], [ "Xu", "R. X.", "", "CAS-PKU BAC &\n Astronomy Department, PKU" ], [ "Liu", "J. F.", "", "CAS-PKU BAC &\n Astronomy Department, PKU" ], [ "Han", "J. L.", "", "CAS-PKU BAC &\n Astronomy Department, PKU" ], [ "Zhang", "B.", "", "CAS-PKU BAC &\n Astronomy Department, PKU" ] ]
astro-ph/0001003
Matthias Steinmetz
Julio F. Navarro (University of Victoria) and Matthias Steinmetz (University of Arizona)
Dark Halo and Disk Galaxy Scaling Laws in Hierarchical Universes
submitted to The Astrophysical Journal
Astrophys.J.538:477-488,2000
10.1086/309175
null
astro-ph
null
We use cosmological N-body/gasdynamical simulations that include star formation and feedback to examine the proposal that scaling laws between the total luminosity, rotation speed, and angular momentum of disk galaxies reflect analogous correlations between the structural parameters of their surrounding dark matter halos. The numerical experiments follow the formation of galaxy-sized halos in two Cold Dark Matter dominated universes: the standard Omega=1 CDM scenario and the currently popular LCDM model. We find that the slope and scatter of the I-band Tully-Fisher relation are well reproduced in the simulations, although not, as proposed in recent work, as a result of the cosmological equivalence between halo mass and circular velocity: large systematic variations in the fraction of baryons that collapse to form galaxies and in the ratio between halo and disk circular velocities are observed in our numerical experiments. The Tully-Fisher slope and scatter are recovered in this model as a direct result of the dynamical response of the halo to the assembly of the luminous component of the galaxy. We conclude that models that neglect the self-gravity of the disk and its influence on the detailed structure of the halo cannot be used to derive meaningful estimates of the scatter or slope of the Tully-Fisher relation. Our models fail, however, to match the zero-point of the Tully-Fisher relation, as well as that of the relation linking disk rotation speed and angular momentum. These failures can be traced, respectively, to the excessive central concentration of dark halos formed in the Cold Dark Matter cosmogonies we explore and to the formation of galaxy disks as the final outcome of a sequence of merger events. (abridged)
[ { "created": "Sun, 2 Jan 2000 01:09:29 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 21:59:55 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2012-06-01
[ [ "Navarro", "Julio F.", "", "University of Victoria" ], [ "Steinmetz", "Matthias", "", "University of Arizona" ] ]
astro-ph/0001004
Ruth Dgani
Ruth Dgani
Theory of the Interaction of Planetary Nebulae with the Interstellar Medium
To appear in ``Asymmetrical Planetary Nebulae II: from Origins to Microstructures, '' ASP Conference Series, Vol. 199, 2000; J.H. Kastner, N. Soker & S.A. Rappaport, eds
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
The theory of the interaction of planetary nebulae with the interstellar medium is important for the interpretation of nebular morphologies that deviate from point symmetry. It can be used to probe the interstellar medium and its magnetic field. We emphasize in this review the role of hydrodynamical instabilities in the interaction.
[ { "created": "Sun, 2 Jan 2000 01:22:49 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Dgani", "Ruth", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001005
Sergei B. Popov
S.B. Popov and M.E. Prokhorov (Sternberg Astronomical Institute)
Restrictions on parameters of power-law magnetic field decay for accreting isolated neutron stars
8 pages including 3 PostScript figures
null
10.1080/10556790108221135
null
astro-ph
null
In this short note we discuss the influence of power-law magnetic field decay on the evolution of old accreting isolated neutron stars. We show, that, contrary to exponential field decay (Popov & Prokhorov 2000), no additional restrictions can be made for the parameters of power-law decay from the statistics of isolated neutron star candidates in ROSAT observations. We also briefly discuss the fate of old magnetars with and without field decay, and describe parameters of old accreting magnetars.
[ { "created": "Sun, 2 Jan 2000 10:34:46 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Popov", "S. B.", "", "Sternberg Astronomical Institute" ], [ "Prokhorov", "M. E.", "", "Sternberg Astronomical Institute" ] ]
astro-ph/0001006
Shiv Kumar Sethi
Shiv K. Sethi, S. G. Bhargavi, Jochen Greiner
On the Clustering of GRBs on the Sky
5 pages, Latex with aipproc.sty, incl. 1 ps-Fig., Proc. of the 5th Huntsville Gamma Ray Burst Symposium, Oct. 1999, ed. R.M. Kippen, AIP
null
10.1063/1.1361517
null
astro-ph
null
The two-point correlation of the 4th (current) BATSE catalog (2494 objects) is calculated. It is shown to be consistent with zero at nearly all angular scales of interest. Assuming that GRBs trace the large scale structure in the universe we calculate the angular correlation function for the standard CDM (sCDM) model. It is shown to be $\le 10^{-4}$ at $\theta \simeq 5^\circ$ if the BATSE catalog is assumed to be a volume-limited sample up to $z \simeq 1$. Combined with the error analysis on the BATSE catalog this suggests that nearly $10^5$ GRBs will be needed to make a positive detection of the two-point angular correlation function at this angular scale.
[ { "created": "Sun, 2 Jan 2000 17:19:00 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Sethi", "Shiv K.", "" ], [ "Bhargavi", "S. G.", "" ], [ "Greiner", "Jochen", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001007
Kim Eunhyeuk
Eunhyeuk Kim (1), Myung Gyoon Lee, (1), and Doug Geisler (2) ((1) Seoul National University, Korea (2) Universidad de Concepcion, Chile)
Wide Field CCD Surface Photometry of the Giant Elliptical Galaxy NGC 4472 in the Virgo Cluster
8 pages(mnrasLaTeX), 8 Postscript figures, Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 2000)
null
10.1046/j.1365-8711.2000.03356.x
SNU-ASTRO-00-001
astro-ph
null
We present deep wide field (16'.4 x 16'.4) Washington CT1 CCD surface photometry of the giant elliptical galaxy NGC 4472, the brightest member in the Virgo cluster. Our data cover a wider field than any previous CCD photometry as well as going deeper. Surface brightness profiles of NGC 4472 are not well fit by a single King model, but they can be fit approximately by two King models: with separate models for the inner and outer regions. Surface brightness profiles for the outer region can also be fit approximately by a deVaucouleurs law. There is clearly a negative color gradient within 3' of NGC 4472, in the sense that the color gets bluer with increasing radius. The slope of the color gradient for this region is derived to be $\Delta \mu (C-T_1)$ = -0.08 mag arcsec$^{-2}$ for $\Delta \log r =1$, which corresponds to a metallicity gradient of $\Delta$ [Fe/H] $= -0.2$ dex. However, the surface color gets redder slowly with increasing radius beyond 3'. A comparison of the structural parameters of NGC 4472 in C and T1 images has shown that there is little difference in the ellipse shapes between isochromes and isophotes. In addition, photometric and structural parameters of NGC 4472 have been determined.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 05:18:47 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Kim", "Eunhyeuk", "" ], [ "Lee", "Myung Gyoon", "" ], [ "Geisler", "Doug", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001008
Sylvio Klose
Sylvio Klose
Gamma-Ray Bursts in the 1990's - a Multi-wavelengths Scientific Adventure
22 pages, Latex; added references for section 2.1
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
In 1997 the first optical afterglow of a cosmic Gamma-Ray Burst was discovered, and substantial progress has been achieved since then. Here we present a short review of some recent developments in this field, with emphasis on observational aspects of the GRB phenomenon.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 10:01:25 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Thu, 10 Feb 2000 13:57:33 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2016-08-30
[ [ "Klose", "Sylvio", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001009
Aya Kubota
Kazuo Makishima (1), Aya Kubota (1), Tsunefumi Mizuno (1), Tomohisa Ohnishi(1), Makoto Tashiro(1), Yoichi Aruga(2), Kazumi Asai(2), Tadayasu Dotani(2), Kazuhisa Mitsuda(2), Yoshihiro Ueda(2), Shin'ichiro Uno(2), Kazutaka Yamaoka(2), Ken Ebisawa(3), Yoshiki Kohmura(4) and Kyoko Okada(4) ((1)University of Tokyo, (2) Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, (3)NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, (4)Harima Institute)
The Nature of Ultra-Luminous Compact X-Ray Sources in Nearby Spiral Galaxies
submitted to ApJ, December 1999
Astrophys.J.535:632,2000
10.1086/308868
RESCEU 48/99
astro-ph
null
Studies were made of ASCA spectra of seven ultra-luminous compact X-ray sources (ULXs) in nearby spiral galaxies; M33 X-8 (Takano et al. 1994), M81 X-6 (Fabbiano 1988b; Kohmura et al. 1994; Uno 1997), IC 342 Source 1 (Okada et al. 1998), Dwingeloo 1 X-1 (Reynolds et al. 1997), NGC 1313 Source B (Fabbiano & Trinchieri 1987; Petre et al. 1994), and two sources in NGC 4565 (Mizuno et al. 1999). With the 0.5--10 keV luminosities in the range 10^{39-40} ergs/s, they are thought to represent a class of enigmatic X-ray sources often found in spiral galaxies. For some of them, the ASCA data are newly processed, or the published spectra are reanalyzed. For others, the published results are quoted. The ASCA spectra of all these seven sources have been described successfully with so called multi-color disk blackbody (MCD) emission arising from optically-thick standard accretion disks around black holes. Except the case of M33 X-8, the spectra do not exhibit hard tails. For the source luminosities not to exceed the Eddington limits, the black holes are inferred to have rather high masses, up to ~100 solar masses. However, the observed innermost disk temperatures of these objects, Tin = 1.1--1.8 keV, are too high to be compatible with the required high black-hole masses, as long as the standard accretion disks around Schwarzschild black holes are assumed. Similarly high disk temperatures are also observed from two Galactic transients with superluminal motions, GRO 1655-40 and GRS 1915+105. The issue of unusually high disk temperature may be explained by the black hole rotation, which makes the disk get closer to the black hole, and hence hotter.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 10:06:13 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2011-05-10
[ [ "Makishima", "Kazuo", "" ], [ "Kubota", "Aya", "" ], [ "Mizuno", "Tsunefumi", "" ], [ "Ohnishi", "Tomohisa", "" ], [ "Tashiro", "Makoto", "" ], [ "Aruga", "Yoichi", "" ], [ "Asai", "Kazumi", "" ], [ "Dotani", "Tadayasu", "" ], [ "Mitsuda", "Kazuhisa", "" ], [ "Ueda", "Yoshihiro", "" ], [ "Uno", "Shin'ichiro", "" ], [ "Yamaoka", "Kazutaka", "" ], [ "Ebisawa", "Ken", "" ], [ "Kohmura", "Yoshiki", "" ], [ "Okada", "Kyoko", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001010
Ferrara Andrea
A. Ferrara, B. Ciardi, S. Marri, and P. Todini
Feedback Processes in the Early Universe
8 pages, EslabStyle.cls, LaTeX, 7 figures
Invited Review at the 33rd ESLAB Symp. "Star Formation from the Small to the Large Scale", ed. F. Favata et al
null
OAA-001
astro-ph
null
Feedback effects due to massive stars and supernovae in the first objects are shown to strongly regulate both galaxy formation/evolution and the reionization process. Here we review the most important ones in some detail. We discuss how Type II supernovae can be used as tracers of the first objects and detected with NGST, for which we predict supernova number counts including the effects of gravitational lensing. Preliminary results on the formation of dust in the ejecta of supernovae of primordial composition are also presented. We finally turn to the consideration of the process of inhomogeneous reionization due to primordial stellar sources by means of high resolution numerical simulations, allowing for a self-consistent treatment of the above feedback processes. These simulations allow us to draw conclusions on the evolution and epoch of reionization and about the fate of reionizing objects. We conclude that a large fraction (~ 99%) of collapsed objects must be dark at redshift around eight.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 10:17:25 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Ferrara", "A.", "" ], [ "Ciardi", "B.", "" ], [ "Marri", "S.", "" ], [ "Todini", "P.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001011
Giangiacomo Gandolfi
G. Gandolfi, M. Feroci, E. Costa, L. Piro (IAS/CNR), M.J.S. Smith, J.M. Muller (SRON), A. Coletta, G. Celidonio, L. Di Ciolo, A. Paolino, G. Tarei, G. Tassone (TELESPAZIO) and F. Frontera(ITESRE/CNR)
What can BeppoSAX tell us about short GRBs: An update from the Subsecond GRB Project
Proc. 5th Huntsville GRB Symposium
null
10.1063/1.1361500
null
astro-ph
null
We present some statistical considerations on the BeppoSAX hunt for subsecond GRBs at the Scientific Operation Center. Archive analysis of a BATSE/SAX sub-sample of bursts indicates that the GRB Monitor is sensitive to short (< 2 sec) events, that are in fact about 22% of the total. The non-detection of corresponding prompt X-ray counterparts to short bursts in the Wide Field Cameras, in about 3 years of operations, is discussed: with present data no implications on the X-to-gamma-ray spectra of short vs long GRBs may be inferred. Finally, the status of searching procedures at SOC is reviewed.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 11:32:23 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Gandolfi", "G.", "", "IAS/CNR" ], [ "Feroci", "M.", "", "IAS/CNR" ], [ "Costa", "E.", "", "IAS/CNR" ], [ "Piro", "L.", "", "IAS/CNR" ], [ "Smith", "M. J. S.", "", "SRON" ], [ "Muller", "J. M.", "", "SRON" ], [ "Coletta", "A.", "", "TELESPAZIO" ], [ "Celidonio", "G.", "", "TELESPAZIO" ], [ "Di Ciolo", "L.", "", "TELESPAZIO" ], [ "Paolino", "A.", "", "TELESPAZIO" ], [ "Tarei", "G.", "", "TELESPAZIO" ], [ "Tassone", "G.", "", "TELESPAZIO" ], [ "Frontera", "F.", "", "ITESRE/CNR" ] ]
astro-ph/0001012
Joanna Mikolajewska
Joanna Mikolajewska
Observed Properties of Mass Loss in Symbiotic Binaries
To appear in ``Asymmetrical Planetary Nebulae II: from Origins to Microstructures'', ASP Conference Series, Vol. 199, 2000; J.H. Kastner, N. Soker, & S.A. Rappaport, eds
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
Both the red giants and the Mira variables in symbiotic systems have systematically higher mass-loss rates than do typical galactic giants and Miras, which suggests that only very evolved giants, and so those with highest mass-loss rates, can support symbiotic behaviour in widely separated binary systems. They often show a flattened mass-loss geometry due to an intrinsically inhomogeneous mass loss and/or tidal interactions between the binary components. The main body of a symbiotic nebula is thus formed from material lost in the giant wind, while the hot component is responsible for its ionization and excitation. In addition, the fast wind and/or jet ejection from the hot component, whenever occur, give rise to the complex, often bipolar, shape of symbiotic nebulae. Observations of resolved nebulae also suggest that the binary geometry and nebular structure are aligned but the bipolar outflow may be not orthogonal to the orbital plane in all cases.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 14:38:11 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Mikolajewska", "Joanna", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001013
Thomas Michael Tauris
T.M. Tauris, E.P.J. van den Heuvel, G.J. Savonije
Formation of Millisecond Pulsars with Heavy White Dwarf Companions - Extreme Mass Transfer on Sub-Thermal Timescales
Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters
null
10.1086/312496
null
astro-ph
null
We have performed detailed numerical calculations of the non-conservative evolution of close X-ray binary systems with intermediate-mass (2.0-6.0 M_sun) donor stars and a 1.3 M_sun accreting neutron star. We calculated the thermal response of the donor star to mass loss, in order to determine its stability and follow the evolution of the mass transfer. Under the assumption of the "isotropic re-emission model" we demonstrate that in many cases it is possible for the binary to prevent a spiral-in and survive a highly super-Eddington mass-transfer phase (1 << M_dot/M_Edd < 10^5) on a sub-thermal timescale, if the convective envelope of the donor star is not too deep. These systems thus provide a new formation channel for binary millisecond pulsars with heavy CO white dwarfs and relatively short orbital periods (3-50 days). However, we conclude that to produce a binary pulsar with a O-Ne-Mg white dwarf or P_orb ~1 day (e.g. PSR B0655+64) the above scenario does not work, and a spiral-in phase is still considered the most plausible scenario for the formation of such a system.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 15:42:00 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Tauris", "T. M.", "" ], [ "Heuvel", "E. P. J. van den", "" ], [ "Savonije", "G. J.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001014
Thomas Michael Tauris
T.M. Tauris, G.J. Savonije
Spin-Orbit Couplings in X-ray Binaries
6 pages, to appear in the proceedings of the NATO ASI "The Neutron Star - Black Hole Connection"
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We discuss the influence of tidal spin-orbit interactions on the orbital dynamics of close intermediate-mass X-ray binaries. In particular we consider here a process in which spin angular momentum of a contracting RLO donor star, in a synchronous orbit, is converted into orbital angular momentum and thus helps to stabilize the mass transfer by widening the orbit. Binaries which would otherwise suffer from dynamically unstable mass transfer (leading to the formation of a common envelope and spiral-in evolution) are thus shown to survive a phase of extreme mass transfer on a sub-thermal timescale. Furthermore, we discuss the orbital evolution prior to RLO in X-ray binaries with low-mass donors, caused by the competing effects of wind mass loss and tidal effects due to expansion of the (sub)giant.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 15:52:07 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Tauris", "T. M.", "" ], [ "Savonije", "G. J.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001015
Thomas Michael Tauris
T.M. Tauris, E.P.J. van den Heuvel
New Direct Observational Evidence for Kicks in SNe
2 pages, to appear in the proceedings of the IAU Colloq. 177 "Pulsar Astronomy - 2000 and beyond"
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We present an updated list of direct strong evidence in favour of kicks being imparted to newborn neutron stars. In particular we discuss the new cases of evidence resulting from recent observations of the X-ray binary Circinus X-1 and the newly discovered binary radio pulsar PSR J1141-6545. We conclude that the assumption that neutron stars receive a kick velocity at their formation is unavoidable (van den Heuvel & van Paradijs 1997).
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 15:57:14 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Tauris", "T. M.", "" ], [ "Heuvel", "E. P. J. van den", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001016
Martin Zwaan
M. A. Zwaan and F. H. Briggs (Kapteyn Astronomical Institute, Groningen)
The Space Density of Primordial Gas Clouds near Galaxies and Groups and their Relation to Galactic HVCs
Accepted for publication in ApJL. 7 pages, 2 figures
null
10.1086/312488
null
astro-ph
null
The Arecibo HI Strip Survey probed the halos of ~300 cataloged galaxies and the environments of ~14 groups with sensitivity to neutral hydrogen masses > 10^7 M_sun. The survey detected no objects with properties resembling the High Velocity Clouds (HVCs) associated with the Milky Way or Local Group. If the HVCs were typically M_HI=10^{7.5} M_sun objects distributed throughout groups and galaxy halos at distances of 1 Mpc, the survey should have made ~70 HVC detections in groups and ~250 detections around galaxies. The null detection implies that HVCs are deployed at typical distances of <200 kpc from the galaxies or group barycenters. If the clouds are in virial equilibrium, their average dark matter fraction must be 98% or higher.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 16:53:45 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Zwaan", "M. A.", "", "Kapteyn Astronomical Institute,\n Groningen" ], [ "Briggs", "F. H.", "", "Kapteyn Astronomical Institute,\n Groningen" ] ]
astro-ph/0001017
Herpin
F. Herpin (Dept. Fisica Molecular, IEM, CSIC, Madrid, Spain), J.Cernicharo (same address), and A. Heras (Space Science Dept. of ESA, ESTEC, Netherlands)
H2 emission from CRL 618
4 pages, 3 figures, proceeding of the "H2 in Space" conference, Paris, September 1999
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We present a complete study of the H2 infrared emission, including the pure rotational lines, of the proto Planetary Nebulae CRL 618 with the ISO SWS. A large number of lines are detected. The analysis of our observations shows: (i) an OTP ratio very different from the classical value of 3, probably around 1.76-1.87; (ii) a stratification of the emitting region, and more precisely different regions of emission, plausibly located in the lobes, in an intermediate zone, and close to the torus; (iii) different excitation mechanisms, collisions and fluorescence.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 17:19:55 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Herpin", "F.", "", "Dept. Fisica Molecular, IEM, CSIC, Madrid, Spain" ], [ "Cernicharo", "J.", "", "same address" ], [ "Heras", "A.", "", "Space Science Dept. of ESA, ESTEC,\n Netherlands" ] ]
astro-ph/0001018
Inese I. Ivans
Christopher Sneden (1), Inese I. Ivans (1), Robert P. Kraft (2) ((1) McDonald Observatory and Univ. of Texas at Austin (2) UCO/Lick Observatory and Univ. of California at Santa Cruz)
Do AGB Stars Differ Chemically from RGB Stars in Globular Clusters?
9 pages, 2 figures (memsait.sty, epsf.sty) to appear in Workshop Proceedings of "The Changes in Abundances in Asymptotic Giant Branch Stars", held in Monteporzio Catone (Italy), September 1999, to be published by Mem.Soc.Astron.It., eds. F. D'Antona and R. Gallino
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
Recent improvements in globular cluster colour-magnitude diagrams, coupled with an increase in large-sample spectroscopic abundance studies of cluster giants, finally allow some attempts at a statistically meaningful comparison of the chemical compositions of red giant branch (RGB) and asymptotic branch (AGB) cluster stars. We review some of the extant data here, concluding that in a few clusters the AGB stars show on average smaller amounts of high-temperature proton-capture synthesis products (low oxygen, high sodium and aluminum) at their surfaces than do the first-ascent RGB stars. This suggests that those RGB stars with envelopes that have been enriched with proton-capture material also have high helium contents. Such stars after the He-flash then take up residence on the bluest parts of the horizontal branch (as a consequence of their high envelope helium), probably never to return to the AGB during subsequent evolutionary stages.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 19:12:00 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Sneden", "Christopher", "" ], [ "Ivans", "Inese I.", "" ], [ "Kraft", "Robert P.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001019
Kevin Hurley
K. Hurley, N. Lund, S. Brandt, C. Barat, T. Cline, R. Sunyaev, O. Terekhov, A. Kuznetsov, S. Sazonov, A. Castro-Tirado
The Ulysses Supplement to the GRANAT/WATCH Catalog of Cosmic Gamma-Ray Bursts
26 pages, plus 25 gif figures; submitted to the Astrophysical Journal Supplements
Astrophys.J.Suppl. 128 (2000) 549-560
10.1086/313400
null
astro-ph
null
We present 3rd interplanetary network (IPN) localization data for 56 gamma-ray bursts in the GRANAT/ WATCH catalog which occurred between 1990 November and 1994 September. These localizations are obtained by triangulation using various combinations of spacecraft in the IPN, which consisted of Ulysses, BATSE, Pioneer Venus Orbiter (PVO), Mars Observer (MO), WATCH, and PHEBUS. The intersections of the triangulation annuli with the WATCH error circles produce error boxes with areas as small as 16 sq. arcmin., reducing the sizes of the error circles by up to a factor of 800.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 19:08:23 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Hurley", "K.", "" ], [ "Lund", "N.", "" ], [ "Brandt", "S.", "" ], [ "Barat", "C.", "" ], [ "Cline", "T.", "" ], [ "Sunyaev", "R.", "" ], [ "Terekhov", "O.", "" ], [ "Kuznetsov", "A.", "" ], [ "Sazonov", "S.", "" ], [ "Castro-Tirado", "A.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001020
J. A. Lopez
J.A. Lopez, J. Meaburn, L.F. Rodriguez, R. Vazquez, W. Steffen and M. Bryce
HST/WFPC2 observations of the core of KjPn 8
4 pages, 1 figure. To appear in ``Asymmetrical Planetary Nebulae II: from Origins to Microstructures'' ASP Conference Series, Vol. 199, 2000; J.H. Kastner, N. Soker and S.A. Rappaport, eds
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
Narrow-band images of the core of the extraordinary poly-polar planetary nebula KjPn 8 have been obtained with the WFPC2 camera on board the Hubble Space Telescope. Spasmodic bipolar ejections, in changing directions have occurred over thousands of years to create KjPn 8. The central star is finally revealed in these observations and its compact nebular core is resolved into a remarkably young, aprox. 500 years old, elliptical ring. The highest speed bipolar outflows are perpendicular to this central ring which is identified as the latest event in the creation of this nebula. The formation history of KjPn 8 has involved two distinct planetary nebula-like events, probably originating froma a binary core evolution with components of similar mass.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 19:42:35 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Lopez", "J. A.", "" ], [ "Meaburn", "J.", "" ], [ "Rodriguez", "L. F.", "" ], [ "Vazquez", "R.", "" ], [ "Steffen", "W.", "" ], [ "Bryce", "M.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001021
Michiel R. Hogerheijde
Michiel R. Hogerheijde (1), Goeran Sandell (2) ((1) Radio Astronomy Laboratory, Astronomy Department, University of California, Berkeley; (2) NRAO Greenbank)
Testing envelope models of young stellar objects with submillimeter continuum and molecular-line observation
35 pages incl. 9 figures. Uses AAS LaTeX v5.0 and psfig
null
10.1086/308795
null
astro-ph
null
This paper examines the density and velocity structure of envelopes around young stellar objects through submillimeter continuum imaging of four objects in Taurus and previously obtained molecular-line data. Observations carried out with the SCUBA on the JCMT at 850 and 450 micron of L1489 IRS, L1535 IRS, L1527 IRS, and TMC 1 reveal ~2000 AU elongated structures embedded in extended envelopes. The density distribution in these envelopes is equally well fit by a radial power-law of index p=1.0-2.0 or with a collapse model such as that of Shu (1997: ApJ, 214, 488). This inside-out collapse model predicts 13CO, C18O, HCO+, and H13CO+ line profiles which closely match observed spectra toward three of our four sources. This shows that the inside-out collapse model offers a good description of YSO envelopes, but also that reliable constraints on its parameters require independent measurements of the density and the velocity structure, e.g., through continuum and line observations. For the remaining source, L1489 IRS, we find that a model consisting of a 2000 AU radius, rotating, disk-like structure better describes the data. Possibly, this source is in transition between the embedded Class I and the optically revealed T Tauri phases. Two apparently starless cores are found at ~10,000 AU from L1489 IRS and L1535 IRS. They are cold, 10-15 K, contain 0.5-3.0 M_sol, and have flat density distributions characterized by a Gaussian of ~10,000 AU FWHM. The proximity of these cores shows that star formation in truly isolated cores is rare even in Taurus.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 20:10:38 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Hogerheijde", "Michiel R.", "" ], [ "Sandell", "Goeran", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001022
Joshua N. Winn
Catherine S. Trotter, Joshua N. Winn and Jacqueline N. Hewitt (MIT)
A multipole-Taylor expansion for the potential of gravitational lens MG J0414+0534
44 pages, 5 figures, 11 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ
null
10.1086/308861
null
astro-ph
null
We employ a multipole-Taylor expansion to investigate how tightly the gravitational potential of the quadruple-image lens MG J0414+0534 is constrained by recent VLBI observations. These observations revealed that each of the four images of the background radio source contains four distinct components, thereby providing more numerous and more precise constraints on the lens potential than were previously available. We expand the two-dimensional lens potential using multipoles for the angular coordinate and a modified Taylor series for the radial coordinate. After discussing the physical significance of each term, we compute models of MG J0414+0534 using only VLBI positions as constraints. The best-fit model has both interior and exterior quadrupole moments as well as exterior m=3 and m=4 multipole moments. The deflector centroid in the models matches the optical galaxy position, and the quadrupoles are aligned with the optical isophotes. The radial distribution of mass could not be well constrained. We discuss the implications of these models for the deflector mass distribution and for the predicted time delays between lensed components.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 21:54:25 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Trotter", "Catherine S.", "", "MIT" ], [ "Winn", "Joshua N.", "", "MIT" ], [ "Hewitt", "Jacqueline N.", "", "MIT" ] ]
astro-ph/0001023
Neal J. Evans II
Neal J. Evans II
Studies of Low-Mass Star Formation with ALMA
10 pg., 4 figs
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
ALMA will revolutionize the study of star formation by providing a combination of angular resolution and sensitivity that far exceeds that of present instruments. I will focus on studies of relatively isolated cores that are forming low-mass stars. There is a general paradigm for the formation of such stars, and there are detailed theoretical predictions for the evolution of the density and velocity fields for different assumptions about the initial conditions. Because the theory is well developed, observational tests are particularly revealing. The primary probes of physical conditions in these regions are discussed and the sensitivity of ALMA to these probes is shown and compared to the current state of the art. The consequences for the ALMA requirements are discussed.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 22:17:58 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Evans", "Neal J.", "II" ] ]
astro-ph/0001024
Carl Heiles
Carl Heiles, L.M. Haffner, R.J. Reynolds, S.L. Tufte
Physical Conditions, Grain Temperatures, and Enhanced Very Small Grains in the Barnard Loop
21 pages, 6 figures. Accepted by Astrophysical Journal
null
10.1086/308935
null
astro-ph
null
We derive the radio spectral index of the Barnard Loop (BL) from large-scale radio surveys at four frequencies and find it to be a thermal source. We use the radio data together with H-alpha data to determine the electron temperature in BL, the lambda-Ori HII region, and a high-latitude filament; all of these regions are somewhat cooler than typical HII regions. We perform least squares fits of the DIRBE diffuse IR intensities to the 21-cm line and radio continuum intensities. After the resolution of a ``geometrical conundrum'', this allows us to derive the electron density n_e; we find n_e ~ 2.0 cm^{-3} and pressure (P/k) ~ 24000 cm^{-3} K. Grains within BL are warmer than in HI regions. Trapped L-alpha accounts for the extra heating that is required. This is a general effect that needs to be accounted for in all analyses that examine IR emission from H^+ regions. Very small grains that emit 60 micron radiation are enhanced in BL relative to HI by a factor of 2-3, while PAH's that emit 12 micron are probably deficient by a factor ~2.
[ { "created": "Mon, 3 Jan 2000 23:46:33 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Heiles", "Carl", "" ], [ "Haffner", "L. M.", "" ], [ "Reynolds", "R. J.", "" ], [ "Tufte", "S. L.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001025
Qingjuan Yu
Scott Tremaine, Qingjuan Yu (Princeton University Observatory)
Resonant capture, counter-rotating disks, and polar rings
10 pages, 6 figures, Latex. Submitted to MNRAS
Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 319 (2000) 1
10.1046/j.1365-8711.2000.03653.x
null
astro-ph
null
We suggest that polar rings and/or counter-rotating disks in flattened galaxies can be formed from stars captured at the Binney resonance, where the rate of precession of the angular momentum vector of a disk star equals the pattern speed of a triaxial halo. If the halo pattern speed is initially retrograde and slowly decays to zero, stars can be trapped as the Binney resonance sweeps past them, and levitated into polar orbits. If the halo pattern speed is initially retrograde and slowly changes to prograde, trapped stars can evolve from prograde to retrograde disk orbits. The stellar components of polar rings formed by this process should consist of two equal, counter-rotating star streams.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 00:15:10 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Tremaine", "Scott", "", "Princeton University Observatory" ], [ "Yu", "Qingjuan", "", "Princeton University Observatory" ] ]
astro-ph/0001026
Deepto Chakrabarty
Deepto Chakrabarty (MIT), Michael J. Pivovaroff (MIT), Lars E. Hernquist (CfA), Jeremy S. Heyl (CfA/Caltech), Ramesh Narayan (CfA)
The Central X-Ray Point Source in Cassiopeia A
17 pages including 2 figs. To appear in ApJ, Vol. 546 (Jan 10, 2001). Minor revisions per referee. Pulsation limits revised in light of HRC wiring problem. Typos corrected
null
10.1086/318994
null
astro-ph
null
The spectacular first light observation by the Chandra X-Ray Observatory revealed an X-ray point source near the center of the 300 yr old Cas A supernova remnant. We present an analysis of the public X-ray spectral and timing data. No coherent pulsations were detected in the Chandra/HRC data. The 3-sigma upper limit on the pulsed fraction is <35% for P>20 ms. The Chandra/ACIS spectrum of the point source may be fit with an ideal blackbody (kT=0.5 keV), or with BB models modified by the presence of a NS atmosphere (kT=0.25-0.35 keV), but the temperature is higher and the inferred emitting area lower than expected for a 300 yr old NS according to standard cooling models. The spectrum may also be fit with a power law model (photon index 2.8-3.6). Both the spectral properties and the timing limits of the point source are inconsistent with a young Crab-like pulsar, but are quite similar to the properties of the anomalous X-ray pulsars. The spectral parameters are also very similar to those of the other radio-quiet X-ray point sources in the supernova remnants Pup A, RCW 103, and PKS 1209-52. Current limits on an optical counterpart for the Cas A point source rule out models that invoke fallback accretion onto a compact object if fallback disk properties are similar to those in quiescent low-mass X-ray binaries. However, the optical limits are marginally consistent with plausible alternative assumptions for a fallback disk. In this case, accreting NS models can explain the X-ray data, but an accreting BH model is not promising.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 00:16:35 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Tue, 29 Aug 2000 22:35:54 GMT", "version": "v2" }, { "created": "Sun, 10 Sep 2000 16:01:02 GMT", "version": "v3" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Chakrabarty", "Deepto", "", "MIT" ], [ "Pivovaroff", "Michael J.", "", "MIT" ], [ "Hernquist", "Lars E.", "", "CfA" ], [ "Heyl", "Jeremy S.", "", "CfA/Caltech" ], [ "Narayan", "Ramesh", "", "CfA" ] ]
astro-ph/0001027
Enrique Vazquez-Semadeni
Enrique V\'azquez-Semadeni, Adriana Gazol (Instituto de Astronomia, UNAM) and John Scalo (U. of Texas)
Is Thermal Instability Significant in Turbulent Galactic Gas?
18 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to ApJ
null
10.1086/309318
null
astro-ph
null
We investigate numerically the role of thermal instability (TI) as a generator of density structures in the interstellar medium (ISM), both by itself and in the context of a globally turbulent medium. Simulations of the instability alone show that the condenstion process which forms a dense phase (``clouds'') is highly dynamical, and that the boundaries of the clouds are accretion shocks, rather than static density discontinuities. The density histograms (PDFs) of these runs exhibit either bimodal shapes or a single peak at low densities plus a slope change at high densities. Final static situations may be established, but the equilibrium is very fragile: small density fluctuations in the warm phase require large variations in the density of the cold phase, probably inducing shocks into the clouds. This result suggests that such configurations are highly unlikely. Simulations including turbulent forcing show that large- scale forcing is incapable of erasing the signature of the TI in the density PDFs, but small-scale, stellar-like forcing causes erasure of the signature of the instability. However, these simulations do not reach stationary regimes, TI driving an ever-increasing star formation rate. Simulations including magnetic fields, self-gravity and the Coriolis force show no significant difference between the PDFs of stable and unstable cases, and reach stationary regimes, suggesting that the combination of the stellar forcing and the extra effective pressure provided by the magnetic field and the Coriolis force overwhelm TI as a density-structure generator in the ISM. We emphasize that a multi-modal temperature PDF is not necessarily an indication of a multi-phase medium, which must contain clearly distinct thermal equilibrium phases.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 02:56:40 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Vázquez-Semadeni", "Enrique", "", "Instituto de Astronomia,\n UNAM" ], [ "Gazol", "Adriana", "", "Instituto de Astronomia,\n UNAM" ], [ "Scalo", "John", "", "U. of Texas" ] ]
astro-ph/0001028
Fan Junhui
J.H. Fan (CfA, Gnu, Cas-Pku.Bac) and R.G. Lin (CfA, Gnu)
The variability analysis of PKS 2155-304
11 pages, 4 figures, A&A (accepted)
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
In this paper, the post-1977 photometric observations of PKS 2155-304 are compiled and used to discuss the variation periodicity. Largest amplitude variations ($\Delta U = 1^{m}.5$; $\Delta B = 1^{m}.65$; $\Delta V = 1^{m}.85 $; $\Delta R = 1^{m}.25$; $\Delta I = 1^{m}.14 $) and color indices ($(B-V) = 0.30\pm 0.06$; $(U-B) = -0.72\pm 0.08$; $(B-R) = 0.62\pm 0.07$; $(V-R) = 0.32\pm 0.04$) are found. The Jurkevich's method and DCF (Discrete Correlation Function) method indicate possible periods of 4.16-year and 7.0-year in the V light curve.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 06:55:17 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Fan", "J. H.", "", "CfA, Gnu, Cas-Pku.Bac" ], [ "Lin", "R. G.", "", "CfA, Gnu" ] ]
astro-ph/0001029
Fan Junhui
J.H. Fan (CfA, Gnu, Cas-Pku.Bac)
Long-term Variability Properties and Periodicity Analysis for Blazars
10 pages, 2 table, no figure, a proceeding paper for Pacific Rim Conference on Stellar Astrophysics, Aug. 1999, HongKong, China
null
10.1007/978-94-010-0878-5_38
null
astro-ph
null
In this paper, the compiled long-term optical and infrared measurements of some blazars are used to analyze the variation properties and the optical data are used to search for periodicity evidence in the lightcurve by means of the Jurkevich technique and the discrete correlation function (DCF) method. Following periods are found: 4.52-year for 3C 66A; 1.56 and 2.95 years for AO 0235+164; 14.4, 18.6 years for PKS 0735+178; 17.85 and 24.7 years for PKS 0754+100; 5.53 and 11.75 for OJ 287. 4.45, and 6.89 years for PKS 1215; 9 and 14.84 years for PKS 1219+285; 2.0, 13.5 and 22.5 for 3C273; 7.1 year for 3C279; 6.07 for PKS 1308+326; 3.0 and 16.5 years for PKS 1418+546; 2.0 and 9.35 years for PKS 1514-241; 18.18 for PKS 1807+698; 4.16 and 7.0 for 2155-304; 14 and 20 years for BL Lacertae. Some explanations have been discussed.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 08:29:59 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2016-01-27
[ [ "Fan", "J. H.", "", "CfA, Gnu, Cas-Pku.Bac" ] ]
astro-ph/0001030
Roberto Della Ceca
R. Della Ceca, T. Maccacaro, P. Rosati, and V. Braito
A Hard Medium Survey with ASCA. III.: a Type 2 AGN revealed from X-ray Spectroscopy
8 pages, 6 figures, Latex manuscript, Accepted for publication in the Astronomy and Astrophysics - Main Journal
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
In this paper we report the discovery of an hard X-ray selected Type 2 Seyfert galaxy and we present and discuss its X-ray and optical spectrum together with the radio to X-ray energy distribution. The X-ray source - AXJ2254+1146 - is part of the ASCA Hard Serendipitous Survey (HSS). What makes this discovery particularly noteworthy is the fact that the Type 2 classification of this Seyfert galaxy has resulted directly from the X-ray data and has been confirmed by optical spectroscopy only subsequently. The X-ray spectrum of AXJ2254+1146 is best described by a model consisting of an unresolved Gaussian line at $6.43\pm 0.1$ keV plus the so called "leaky-absorber" continua having an intrinsic power law photon index of $\Gamma$ = $2.51^{2.76}_{2.17}$ (1 $\sigma$ confidence interval). The best fit values of the absorbing column density ($N_H$ = $1.85^{2.24}_{1.47} \times 10^{23}$ cm$^{-2}$), of the line equivalent width ($0.6^{0.84}_{0.36}$ keV) and of the scattering fraction ($0.7^{1.4}_{0.1} %$), lead us to classify it as a Type 2 AGN from an X-ray point of view. Inspection of the POSS II image reveals the presence, within the ASCA X-ray error circle, of the nearby Sbc spiral galaxy UGC 12237 ($m_{B_o}=14.26$) that, even on positional ground considerations alone, is the most likely optical counterpart of AXJ2254+1146. Subsequent optical spectroscopy of UGC 12237 has confirmed its Seyfert 2 optical nature.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 10:45:13 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Della Ceca", "R.", "" ], [ "Maccacaro", "T.", "" ], [ "Rosati", "P.", "" ], [ "Braito", "V.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001031
Robert Lucas
Robert Lucas (1), Pierre Cox (2) and Patrick J. Huggins (3) ((1) Institut de RadioAstronomie Millimetrique, (2) Institut d'Astrophysique Spatiale, (3) Physics Department, New York University)
Multiple Outflows in AFGL 2688
To appear in ``Asymmetrical Planetary Nebulae II: from Origins to Microstructures,'' ASP Conference Series, Vol. 199, 2000; J.H. Kastner, N. Soker, & S.A. Rappaport, eds
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We present high resolution (1.1x0.9'') imaging of the proto-planetary nebula AFGL 2688 in the CO (J=2-1) line using the IRAM interferometer. The observations reveal with unprecedented detail the structure and the kinematics of the gas ejected by the star over the past few hundred years and exemplify the mechanism by which point symmetries are imprinted on the structure of planetary nebulae at early stages of their formation.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 11:00:43 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Lucas", "Robert", "" ], [ "Cox", "Pierre", "" ], [ "Huggins", "Patrick J.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001032
Richard Hook
Richard N. Hook, Ethan J. Schreier and George Miley
Limits on the Spatial Extent of AGN Measured with the Fine Guidance Sensors of the HST
33 pages, 24 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
The optical structure of several AGN has been studied using the Fine Guidance Sensors (FGS) on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The FGSs are interferometric devices which can resolve structure on scales of 20 milliarcsecs or less and hence have the potential to improve on the resolution attainable by HST's cameras. The FGSs produce interferometric fringes known as S-curves which are related to the intensity profile of the object on the sky. These have been analyzed using a simple model for the radial intensity distribution and strength of the underlying background illumination of the observed objects. Eight different observations of six different AGN have been analyzed. No statistically significant differences from point sources are detected but significant upper limits of order 20 milliarcseconds are placed on any spatial extent. Systematic effects limiting the resolution are discussed and some simple conclusions about the physical size and luminosity densities of the emitting regions of the AGN implied by the data are given.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 11:44:39 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Hook", "Richard N.", "" ], [ "Schreier", "Ethan J.", "" ], [ "Miley", "George", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001033
Sergei A. Trushkin
S.A. Trushkin (SAO RAS, Russia)
Radio emission of the Galactic X-rays binaries with relativistic jets
10 pages, LaTeX, 14 Postscript figures, talk given at the Gamov Memorial International Conference (GMIC'99) "Early Universe: Cosmological Problems and Instrumental Technologies" in St.Petersburg, 23-27 August, 1999, to appear in Astron. Astrophys. Trans., 2000
null
10.1080/10556790008238598
SAO 99-T
astro-ph
null
Variable non-thermal radio emission from Galactic X-ray binaries is a trace of relativistic jets, created near accretion disks. The spectral characteristics of a lot of radio flares in the X-ray binaries with jets (RJXB) is discussed in this report. We carried out several long daily monitoring programs with the RATAN-600 radio telescope of the sources: SS433, Cyg X-3, LSI+61o303, GRS 1915+10 and some others. We also reviewed some data from the GBI monitoring program at two frequencies and hard X-ray BATSE (20-100 keV) and soft X-ray RTXE (2-12 keV) ASM data. We confirmed that flaring radio emission of Cyg X-3 correlated with hard and anti-correlated with soft X-ray emission during the strong flare (>$ Jy) in May 1997. During two orbital periods we investigated radio light curves of the remarkable X-binary LSI+61o303. Two flaring events near a phase 0.6 of the 26.5-day orbital period have been detected for first time at four frequencies simultaneously. Powerful flaring events of SS433 were detected at six frequencies in May 1996 and in May 1999. The decay of the flare is exactly fitted by an exponential law and the rate of the decay $\tau$ depends upon frequency as tau \propto \nu^{-0.4} in the first flare and does not depend upon frequency in the second flare, and is equal to \tau=6+-1 days at frequencies from 0.96 to 21.7 GHz in the last flare in May 1999. Many flaring RJXB show two, exponential and power, laws of flare decay. Moreover, these different laws could be present in one or several flares and commonly flare decays are faster at a higher frequency. The decay law seems to change because of geometric form of the conical hollow jets. The synchrotron and inverse Compton losses could explain general frequency dependences in flare evolution. In conclusion we summarized the general radio properties of RJXB.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 14:21:35 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Trushkin", "S. A.", "", "SAO RAS, Russia" ] ]
astro-ph/0001034
R. L. J. van der Meer
A. C. Brinkman, C. J. T. Gunsing, J. S. Kaastra, R. L. J. van der Meer, R. Mewe, F. Paerels, A. J. J. Raassen, J. J. van Rooijen (SRON), H. Br\"auninger, W. Burkert, V. Burwitz, G. Hartner, P. Predehl (MPE), J.-U. Ness, J. H. M. M. Schmitt (Uni Hamburg), J. J. Drake, O. Johnson, M. Juda, V. Kashyap, S. S. Murray, D. Pease, P. Ratzlaff, B. J. Wargelin (Harvard-CFA)
First Light Measurements of Capella with the Low Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer aboard the Chandra X-ray Observatory
4 pages (ApJ letter LaTeX), 2 PostScript figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters, 2000
null
10.1086/312504
null
astro-ph
null
We present the first X-ray spectrum obtained by the Low Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer (LETGS) aboard the Chandra X-ray Observatory. The spectrum is of Capella and covers a wavelength range of 5-175 A (2.5-0.07 keV). The measured wavelength resolution, which is in good agreement with ground calibration, is $\Delta \lambda \simeq$ 0.06 A (FWHM). Although in-flight calibration of the LETGS is in progress, the high spectral resolution and unique wavelength coverage of the LETGS are well demonstrated by the results from Capella, a coronal source rich in spectral emission lines. While the primary purpose of this letter is to demonstrate the spectroscopic potential of the LETGS, we also briefly present some preliminary astrophysical results. We discuss plasma parameters derived from line ratios in narrow spectral bands, such as the electron density diagnostics of the He-like triplets of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, as well as resonance scattering of the strong Fe XVII line at 15.014 A.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 15:03:31 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2016-08-15
[ [ "Brinkman", "A. C.", "", "SRON" ], [ "Gunsing", "C. J. T.", "", "SRON" ], [ "Kaastra", "J. S.", "", "SRON" ], [ "van der Meer", "R. L. J.", "", "SRON" ], [ "Mewe", "R.", "", "SRON" ], [ "Paerels", "F.", "", "SRON" ], [ "Raassen", "A. J. J.", "", "SRON" ], [ "van Rooijen", "J. J.", "", "SRON" ], [ "Bräuninger", "H.", "", "MPE" ], [ "Burkert", "W.", "", "MPE" ], [ "Burwitz", "V.", "", "MPE" ], [ "Hartner", "G.", "", "MPE" ], [ "Predehl", "P.", "", "MPE" ], [ "Ness", "J. -U.", "", "Uni Hamburg" ], [ "Schmitt", "J. H. M. M.", "", "Uni Hamburg" ], [ "Drake", "J. J.", "", "Harvard-CFA" ], [ "Johnson", "O.", "", "Harvard-CFA" ], [ "Juda", "M.", "", "Harvard-CFA" ], [ "Kashyap", "V.", "", "Harvard-CFA" ], [ "Murray", "S. S.", "", "Harvard-CFA" ], [ "Pease", "D.", "", "Harvard-CFA" ], [ "Ratzlaff", "P.", "", "Harvard-CFA" ], [ "Wargelin", "B. J.", "", "Harvard-CFA" ] ]
astro-ph/0001035
Herpin
F. Herpin (Dept Fisica Molecular, I.E.M., C.S.I.C., Madrid, Spain), and J. Cernicharo (same address)
O-bearing Molecules in Carbon-rich Proto-Planetary Objects
16 pages, 3 figures, accepted in Astrophys. Journal Letters
null
10.1086/312507
null
astro-ph
null
We present ISO LWS observations of the proto-planetary nebula CRL 618, a star evolving very fast to the planetary nebula stage. In addition to the lines of 12CO, 13CO, HCN and HNC, we report on the detection of H2O and OH emission together with the fine structure lines of [OI] at 63 and 145 um. The abundance of the latter three species relative to 12CO are 4 10^{-2}, 8 10^{-4} and 4.5 (approximate value) in the regions where they are produced. We suggest that O-bearing species other than CO are produced in the innermost region of the circumstellar envelope. The UV photons from the central star photodissociate most of the molecular species produced in the AGB phase and allow a chemistry dominated by standard ion-neutral reactions. Not only allow these reactions the formation of O-bearing species, but they also modify the abundances of C-rich molecules like HCN and HNC for which we found an abundance ratio of roughly 1, much lower than in AGB stars. The molecular abundances in the different regions of the circumstellar envelope have been derived from radiative transfer models and our knowledge of its physical structure.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 15:23:16 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Herpin", "F.", "", "Dept Fisica Molecular, I.E.M., C.S.I.C., Madrid, Spain" ], [ "Cernicharo", "J.", "", "same address" ] ]
astro-ph/0001036
Martin Kerscher
Claus Beisbart, Martin Kerscher (University of Munich)
On Luminosity and morphology segregation in the Southern Sky Redshift Survey 2
O pages, superceeded by arXiv:astro-ph/0003358
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
The results are still valid, however this letter is superceeded by a significantly extended version which is available at astro-ph/0003358 and is scheduled for publication in the ApJ Dec. 10, 2000. We have withdrawn this letter to avoid confusion.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 15:26:14 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Tue, 17 Oct 2000 16:04:12 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Beisbart", "Claus", "", "University of Munich" ], [ "Kerscher", "Martin", "", "University of Munich" ] ]
astro-ph/0001037
Andrea Comastri
A. Comastri, F. Fiore, C. Vignali, F. La Franca, G. Matt
The BeppoSAX High Energy Large Area Survey (HELLAS): a progress Report
Invited talk, to appear in the Proceedings of the Conference: ``Large Scale Structure in the X-ray Universe" Santorini, Greece, 20-22 September 1999, 8 pages, 4 figures. Added references
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
The integrated emission of highly obscured AGN is expected to provide a major contribution to the X-ray energy density in the Universe: the X-ray background (XRB). The study of these objects is possible only at energies where the effects of absorption are less severe. For this reason we have carried out the BeppoSAX High Energy LLarge Area Survey in the hardest band (5-10 keV) accessible so far with imaging X-ray instruments. The source surface density at the survey limiting flux accounts for a significant fraction (20-30%) of the hard XRB. The X-ray data complemented by multiwavelength follow--up observations suggest that a large fraction of the hard sources are AGN and that X-ray absorption with column densities in the range 10^22-23.5 cm-2 is common among them. The great diversity in their optical-near-IR properties suggests that the optical appearance of obscured sources is a function of the X-ray luminosity. We briefly discuss the implications of these findings for the XRB models.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 15:53:10 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Mon, 10 Jan 2000 13:42:48 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Comastri", "A.", "" ], [ "Fiore", "F.", "" ], [ "Vignali", "C.", "" ], [ "La Franca", "F.", "" ], [ "Matt", "G.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001038
Riccardo Valdarnini
R.Valdarnini, S. Ghizzardi, S. Bonometto
Morphological evolution of X-ray clusters using hydrodynamical simulations
4 pages, To appear in "LSS in the X-ray Universe", Santorini 20-22 September 1999
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
A large set of TREESPH simulations is used to test the global morphology of galaxy clusters and its evolution against X-ray data. A powerful method to investigate substructures in galaxy clusters are the power ratios introduced by Buote & Tsai. We consider three flat cosmological models: CDM, LCDM($\Omega_\Lambda = 0.7$) and CHDM($\Omega_h = 0.2$, 1 massive $\nu$), all normalized so to fit the observed number of clusters. For each model we built 40 clusters, using a TREESPH code, and performed a statistical comparison with a data sample including nearby clusters observed with ROSAT PSPC instrument. The comparison disfavors the LCDM model, as clusters appear too relaxed, while CDM and CHDM clusters, in which a higher degree of complexity occurs, seem to be closer to observations. A better fit of data can be expected for some different DM mix. If DM distributions are used instead of baryons, we find substructures more pronounced than in gas and models have a different score. Using hydrodynamical simulations is therefore essential to our aims.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 16:08:51 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Valdarnini", "R.", "" ], [ "Ghizzardi", "S.", "" ], [ "Bonometto", "S.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001039
Subrata Pal
Subrata Pal, Debades Bandyopadhyay and Walter Greiner
Antikaon condensation in neutron stars
34 pages;13 figs;Revtex; change of title; a figure added; version to appear in Nucl. Phys. A
Nucl.Phys. A674 (2000) 553-577
10.1016/S0375-9474(00)00175-5
null
astro-ph nucl-th
null
We investigate the condensation of charged $K^-$ meson and neutral $\bar K^0$ meson in dense neutron star matter. Calculations are performed in relativistic mean field models in which both the baryon-baryon and (anti)kaon-baryon interactions are mediated by meson exchange. It is found that $\bar K^0$ condensation is quite sensitive to the antikaon optical potential and depends more strongly on the nucleonic equation of state. For moderate values of antikaon potential and a rather stiff equation of state, a significant region of maximum mass star will contain $\bar K^0$ meson. The critical density of $\bar K^0$ condensation is always higher than that of $K^-$ condensation. With the appearance of $K^-$ and $\bar K^0$ condensates, pairs of $p-K^-$ and $n-\bar K^0$ are produced with equal proportion leading to a perfectly symmetric matter of nucleons and antikaons in neutron stars. Along with $K^-$ condensate, $\bar K^0$ condensate makes the equation of state much softer resulting in smaller maximum mass stars compared to the case without any condensate.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 16:50:32 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Wed, 8 Mar 2000 14:02:57 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Pal", "Subrata", "" ], [ "Bandyopadhyay", "Debades", "" ], [ "Greiner", "Walter", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001040
Elizabeth J. Barton
Sidney van den Bergh (DAO/HIA/NRC)
Updated Information on the Local Group
19 pages, 1 figure, to be published in the April 2000 issue of PASP
Publ.Astron.Soc.Pac.112:529-536,2000
10.1086/316548
null
astro-ph
null
The present note updates the information published in my recent monograph on \underline{The Galaxies of the Local Group}. Highlights include (1) the addition of the newly discovered Cetus dwarf spheroidal as a certain member of the Local Group, (2) an improved distance for SagDIG, which now places this object very close to the edge of the Local Group zero-velocity surface, (3) more information on the evolutionary histories of some individual Local Group members, and (4) improved distance determinations to, and luminosities for, a number of Local Group members. These data increase the number of certain (or probable) Local Group members to 36. The spatial distribution of these galaxies supports Hubble's claim that the Local Group ``is isolated in the general field.'' Presently available evidence suggests that star formation continued much longer in many dwarf spheroidals than it did in the main body of the Galactic halo. It is suggested that ``young'' globular clusters, such as Ruprecht 106, might have formed in now defunct dwarf spheroidals. Assuming SagDIG, which is the most remote Local Group galaxy, to lie on, or just inside, the zero-velocity surface of the Local Group yields a dynamical age \gtrsim 17.9 \pm 2.7 Gyr.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 17:51:48 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2010-11-09
[ [ "Bergh", "Sidney van den", "", "DAO/HIA/NRC" ] ]
astro-ph/0001041
Roman Juszkiewicz
R. Juszkiewicz, P.G. Ferreira, H.A. Feldman, A.H. Jaffe, M. Davis
Evidence for a low-density Universe from the relative velocities of galaxies
12 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the Jan.7 issue of ``Science''; In the original version, the title appeared twice. This problem has now been corrected. No other changes were made
Science 287 (2000) 109-112
10.1126/science.287.5450.109
null
astro-ph
null
The motions of galaxies can be used to constrain the cosmological density parameter Omega and the clustering amplitude of matter on large scales. The mean relative velocity of galaxy pairs, estimated from the Mark III survey, indicates that Omega = 0.35 +0.35/-0.25. If the clustering of galaxies is unbiased on large scales, Omega = 0.35 +/- 0.15, so that an unbiased Einstein-de Sitter model (Omega = 1) is inconsistent with the data.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 18:17:05 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 13:59:33 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Juszkiewicz", "R.", "" ], [ "Ferreira", "P. G.", "" ], [ "Feldman", "H. A.", "" ], [ "Jaffe", "A. H.", "" ], [ "Davis", "M.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001042
Mir Abbas Jalali
M. A. Jalali and A. R. Rafiee
Eccentric Stellar Discs with Strong Density Cusps and Separable Potentials
5 pages, submitted to MNRAS
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We introduce a class of eccentric discs with "strong" density cusps whose potentials are of St\"ackel form in elliptic coordinates. Our models exhibit some striking features: sufficiently close to the location of the cusp, the potential and surface density distribution diverge as $\Phi \propto r^{-1}$ and $\Sigma \propto r^{-2}$, respectively. As we move outward from the centre, the model takes a non-axisymmetric, lopsided structure. In the limit, when $r$ tends to infinity, the isocontours of $\Phi$ and $\Sigma$ become spherically symmetric. It is shown that the configuration space is occupied by three families of regular orbits: {\it eccentric butterfly}, {\it aligned loop} and {\it horseshoe} orbits. These orbits are properly aligned with the surface density distribution and can be used to construct self-consistent equilibrium states.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 19:10:34 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Jalali", "M. A.", "" ], [ "Rafiee", "A. R.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001043
Vera Ellinger Margoniner
V. E. Margoniner & R. R. de Carvalho
Photometric Properties of 47 Clusters of Galaxies: I. The Butcher-Oemler Effect
35 pages including 8 figures, submitted to AJ
null
10.1086/301318
null
astro-ph
null
We present gri CCD photometry of 44 Abell clusters and 4 cluster candidates. Twenty one clusters in our sample have spectroscopic redshifts. Fitting a relation between mean g, r and i magnitudes, and redshift for this subsample, we have calculated photometric redshifts for the remainder with an estimated accuracy of 0.03. The resulting redshift range for the sample is 0.03<z<0.38. Color-magnitude diagrams are presented for the complete sample and used to study evolution of the galaxy population in the cluster environment. Our observations show a strong Butcher-Oemler effect (Butcher & Oemler 1978, 1984), with an increase in the fraction of blue galaxies (f_B) with redshift that seems more consistent with the steeper relation estimated by Rakos and Schombert (1995) than with the original one by Butcher & Oemler (1984). However, in the redshift range between ~ 0.08 and 0.2, where most of our clusters lie, there is a wide range of f_B values, consistent with no redshift evolution of the cluster galaxy population. A large range of f_B values is also seen between ~ 0.2 and 0.3, when Smail at al. (1998) x-ray clusters are added to our sample. The discrepancies between samples underscore the need for an unbiased sample to understand how much of the Butcher-Oemler effect is due to evolution, and how much to selection effects. We also tested the idea proposed by Garilli et al. (1996) that there is a population of unusually red galaxies which could be associated either with the field or clusters, but we find that these objects are all near the limiting magnitude of the images (20.5<r<22) and have colors that are consistent with those expected for stars or field galaxies at z ~ 0.7.
[ { "created": "Tue, 4 Jan 2000 23:36:38 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Margoniner", "V. E.", "" ], [ "de Carvalho", "R. R.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001044
Richard J. Rand
Richard J. Rand
Interferometric 12CO Observations of the Central Disk of NGC 4631: An Energetic Molecular Outflow
Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. LaTex manuscript 12 pages, 7 ps files of figures. Also available at http://www.phys.unm.edu/~rjr/rjrhome.html
null
10.1086/308869
null
astro-ph
null
We present interferometric observations of CO J=1-0 emission in the central regions of the edge-on galaxy NGC 4631, known for its extended gaseous halo and its tidal interactions. Previous single-dish observations revealed that almost all of the CO emission arises from a central ring or bar-like structure of length $\sim$ 4 kpc. We confirm this structure at higher resolution, and find that it is bent at the center, reflecting the overall bend in this galaxy apparent from optical images. The kinematic evidence favors a rigidly rotating ring over a bar. The gaseous halo emission in several tracers is concentrated above and below this molecular structure. To the north of an emission peak at the eastern end of the structure is an extraplanar feature showing filamentary and shell-like properties which we interpret as an energetic molecular outflow. The energies involved are difficult to estimate, but are probably of order 10$^{54}$ ergs or more. The CO concentration in the disk below this structure coincides with a bright HII region complex, a peak of radio emission, and the brightest X-ray feature in the inner disk of the galaxy seen in a ROSAT HRI map, all suggesting intense star formation. A filament of radio continuum emission may also have a footprint in this region of the disk. The origin of the outflow is unclear.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 00:03:20 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Rand", "Richard J.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001045
Marc Kamionkowski
Marc Kamionkowski and Ari Buchalter
The Second Peak: The Dark-Energy Density and the Cosmic Microwave Background
4 pages, 3 PostScript figures
null
null
CALT-68-2253
astro-ph hep-ph
null
Supernova evidence for a negative-pressure dark energy (e.g., cosmological constant or quintessence) that contributes a fraction $\Omega_\Lambda\simeq0.7$ of closure density has been bolstered by the discrepancy between the total density, $\Omega_{\rm tot}\simeq1$, suggested by the location of the first peak in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) power spectrum and the nonrelativistic-matter density $\Omega_m\simeq0.3$ obtained from dynamical measurements. Here we show that the impending identification of the location of the {\it second} peak in the CMB power spectrum will provide an immediate and independent probe of the dark-energy density. As an aside, we show how the measured height of the first peak probably already points toward a low matter density and places upper limits to the reionization optical depth and gravitational-wave amplitude.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 00:04:50 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Kamionkowski", "Marc", "" ], [ "Buchalter", "Ari", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001046
Motokazu Takizawa
Motokazu Takizawa (Univ. of Tokyo), Tsuguya Naito (Yamanashi Gakuin Univ.)
Non-Thermal Emission from Relativistic Electrons in Clusters of Galaxies: A Merger Shock Acceleration Model
19 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
null
10.1086/308894
Kyoto 99-19
astro-ph
null
We have investigated evolution of non-thermal emission from relativistic electrons accelerated at around the shock fronts during merger of clusters of galaxies. We estimate synchrotron radio emission and inverse Compton scattering of cosmic microwave background photons from extreme ultraviolet (EUV) to hard X-ray range. The hard X-ray emission is most luminous in the later stage of merger. Both hard X-ray and radio emissions are luminous only while signatures of merging events are clearly seen in thermal intracluster medium (ICM). On the other hand, EUV radiation is still luminous after the system has relaxed. Propagation of shock waves and bulk-flow motion of ICM play crucial roles to extend radio halos. In the contracting phase, radio halos are located at the hot region of ICM, or between two substructures. In the expanding phase, on the other hand, radio halos are located between two ICM hot regions and shows rather diffuse distribution.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 04:30:31 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Takizawa", "Motokazu", "", "Univ. of Tokyo" ], [ "Naito", "Tsuguya", "", "Yamanashi Gakuin\n Univ." ] ]
astro-ph/0001047
Hiroshi Muraishi
H. Muraishi, T. Tanimori, S. Yanagita, T. Yoshida, M. Moriya, T. Kifune, S. A. Dazeley, P. G. Edwards, S. Gunji, S. Hara, T. Hara, A. Kawachi, H. Kubo, Y. Matsubara, Y. Mizumoto, M. Mori, Y. Muraki, T. Naito, K. Nishijima, J. R. Patterson, G. P. Rowell, T. Sako, K. Sakurazawa, R. Susukita, T. Tamura, and T. Yoshikoshi
Evidence for TeV gamma-ray emission from the shell type SNR RXJ1713.7-3946
Accepted for publication by Astronomy and Astrophysics (5 pages, 2 figures)
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We report the results of TeV gamma-ray observations of the shell type SNR RXJ1713.7-3946 (G347.3-0.5). The discovery of strong non-thermal X-ray emission from the northwest part of the remnant strongly suggests the existence of electrons with energies up to 100 TeV in the remnant, making the SNR a good candidate TeV gamma-ray source. We observed RXJ1713.7-3946 from May to August 1998 with the CANGAROO 3.8m atmospheric imaging Cerenkov telescope and obtained evidence for TeV gamma-ray emission from the NW rim of the remnant with the significance of 5.6 sigma. The observed TeV gamma-ray flux from the NW rim region was estimated to be (5.3 +/- 0.9[statistical] +/- 1.6[systematic]) * 10^{-12} photons cm^{-2} s^{-1} at energies >= 1.8 +/- 0.9 TeV. The data indicate that the emitting region is much broader than the point spread function of our telescope. The extent of the emission is consistent with that of hard X-rays observed by ASCA. This TeV gamma-ray emission can be attributed to the Inverse Compton scattering of the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation by shock accelerated ultra-relativistic electrons. Under this assumption, a rather low magnetic field of 11 micro gauss is deduced for the remnant from our observation.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 05:31:25 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Muraishi", "H.", "" ], [ "Tanimori", "T.", "" ], [ "Yanagita", "S.", "" ], [ "Yoshida", "T.", "" ], [ "Moriya", "M.", "" ], [ "Kifune", "T.", "" ], [ "Dazeley", "S. A.", "" ], [ "Edwards", "P. G.", "" ], [ "Gunji", "S.", "" ], [ "Hara", "S.", "" ], [ "Hara", "T.", "" ], [ "Kawachi", "A.", "" ], [ "Kubo", "H.", "" ], [ "Matsubara", "Y.", "" ], [ "Mizumoto", "Y.", "" ], [ "Mori", "M.", "" ], [ "Muraki", "Y.", "" ], [ "Naito", "T.", "" ], [ "Nishijima", "K.", "" ], [ "Patterson", "J. R.", "" ], [ "Rowell", "G. P.", "" ], [ "Sako", "T.", "" ], [ "Sakurazawa", "K.", "" ], [ "Susukita", "R.", "" ], [ "Tamura", "T.", "" ], [ "Yoshikoshi", "T.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001048
Penny D. Sackett
Penny D. Sackett
The 24-Hour Night Shift: Astronomy from Microlensing Monitoring Networks
Invited Targeted Talk at ``Gravitational Lensing: Recent Progress and Future Goals,'' 28 July 1999, Boston. To appear in the ASP Conference Series, eds. T.G. Brainerd and C.S. Kochanek. 8 postscript pages, LaTex requires paspconf.sty
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
Scores of on-going microlensing events are now announced yearly by the microlensing discovery teams OGLE, MACHO and EROS. These early warning systems have allowed other international microlensing networks to focus considerable resources on intense photometric - and occasionally spectroscopic - monitoring of microlensing events. Early results include: metallicity measurements of main sequence Galactic bulge stars; limb darkening determinations for stars in the Bulge and Small Magellanic Cloud; proper motion measurements that constrain microlens identity; and constraints on Jovian-mass planets orbiting (presumably stellar) lenses. These results and auxiliary science such as variable star studies and optical identification of gamma ray bursts are reviewed.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 05:42:54 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Sackett", "Penny D.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001049
Peter Nugent
Greg Aldering, Robert Knop and Peter Nugent
The Rise Times of High and Low Redshift Type Ia Supernovae are Consistent
18 pages, 4 figures, Accepted for publication in the Astronomical Journal. Also available at http://www.lbl.gov/~nugent/papers.html Typos were corrected and a few sentences were added for improved clarity
null
10.1086/301344
LBNL-44232
astro-ph
null
We present a self-consistent comparison of the rise times for low- and high-redshift Type Ia supernovae. Following previous studies, the early light curve is modeled using a t-squared law, which is then mated with a modified Leibundgut template light curve. The best-fit t-squared law is determined for ensemble samples of low- and high-redshift supernovae by fitting simultaneously for all light curve parameters for all supernovae in each sample. Our method fully accounts for the non-negligible covariance amongst the light curve fitting parameters, which previous analyses have neglected. Contrary to Riess et al. (1999), we find fair to good agreement between the rise times of the low- and high-redshift Type Ia supernovae. The uncertainty in the rise time of the high-redshift Type Ia supernovae is presently quite large (roughly +/- 1.2 days statistical), making any search for evidence of evolution based on a comparison of rise times premature. Furthermore, systematic effects on rise time determinations from the high-redshift observations, due to the form of the late-time light curve and the manner in which the light curves of these supernovae were sampled, can bias the high-redshift rise time determinations by up to +3.6/-1.9 days under extreme situations. The peak brightnesses - used for cosmology - do not suffer any significant bias, nor any significant increase in uncertainty.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 07:29:54 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Sat, 29 Jan 2000 16:25:09 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Aldering", "Greg", "" ], [ "Knop", "Robert", "" ], [ "Nugent", "Peter", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001050
Fumihide Iwamuro
F. Iwamuro, K. Motohara, T. Maihara, J. Iwai, H. Tanabe, T. Taguchi, R. Hata, H. Terada, M. Goto, S. Oya, M. Iye, M. Yoshida, H. Karoji, R. Ogasawara, K. Sekiguchi
Near-infrared emission-line galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field North
12 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in PASJ(2000)
null
10.1093/pasj/52.1.73
null
astro-ph
null
We present the 2.12~$\mu$m narrow-band image of the Hubble Deep Field North taken with the near-infrared camera (CISCO) on the Subaru telescope. Among five targets whose H$\alpha$ or [O~{\sc iii}] emission lines are redshifted into our narrow-band range expected from their spectroscopic redshift, four of them have strong emission lines, especially for the two [O~{\sc iii}] emission-line objects. The remaining one target shows no H$\alpha$ emission in spite of its bright rest-UV luminosity, indicating that this object is already under the post-starburst phase. The volume-averaged $SFR$ derived from the detected two H$\alpha$ emission is roughly consistent with that evaluated from the rest-UV continuum.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 08:10:20 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Fri, 7 Jan 2000 06:19:49 GMT", "version": "v2" }, { "created": "Mon, 24 Jan 2000 03:58:16 GMT", "version": "v3" } ]
2015-06-24
[ [ "Iwamuro", "F.", "" ], [ "Motohara", "K.", "" ], [ "Maihara", "T.", "" ], [ "Iwai", "J.", "" ], [ "Tanabe", "H.", "" ], [ "Taguchi", "T.", "" ], [ "Hata", "R.", "" ], [ "Terada", "H.", "" ], [ "Goto", "M.", "" ], [ "Oya", "S.", "" ], [ "Iye", "M.", "" ], [ "Yoshida", "M.", "" ], [ "Karoji", "H.", "" ], [ "Ogasawara", "R.", "" ], [ "Sekiguchi", "K.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001051
Fumihide Iwamuro
F. Iwamuro, K. Motohara, T. Maihara, J. Iwai, H. Tanabe, T. Taguchi, R. Hata, T. Terada, M. Goto, S. Oya, Subaru project team
Infrared Imaging of the Gravitational Lens PG 1115+080 with the Subaru Telescope
11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in PASJ(2000)
null
10.1093/pasj/52.1.25
null
astro-ph
null
We present high spatial resolution images of the gravitational-lens system PG 1115+080 taken with the near-infrared camera (CISCO) on the Subaru telescope. The FWHM of the combined image is $0.''32$ in the $K'$-band, yielding spatial resolution of $0.''14$ after a deconvolution procedure. This is a first detection of an extended emission adjacent to the A1/A2 components, indicating the presence of a fairly bright emission region with a characteristic angular radius of $\sim$ 5 mas (40 pc). The near-infrared image of the Einstein ring was extracted in both the $J$ and $K'$ bands. The $J-K'$ color is found to be significantly redder than that of a synthetic model galaxy with an age of 3 Gyr, the age of the universe at the quasar redshift.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 08:40:24 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2015-06-24
[ [ "Iwamuro", "F.", "" ], [ "Motohara", "K.", "" ], [ "Maihara", "T.", "" ], [ "Iwai", "J.", "" ], [ "Tanabe", "H.", "" ], [ "Taguchi", "T.", "" ], [ "Hata", "R.", "" ], [ "Terada", "T.", "" ], [ "Goto", "M.", "" ], [ "Oya", "S.", "" ], [ "team", "Subaru project", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001052
Eleonore Paul
Alfred Krabbe, Bruce J. Sams III, Reinhard Genzel, Niranjan Thatte, Francisco Prada
Near infrared imaging spectroscopy of NGC1275
16 pages, LaTex, 15 gif figures, aa.cls required, accepted for A&A, high resolution images at http://astro1.ws.ba.dlr.de
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We present H and K band imaging spectroscopy of the core regions of the cD/AGN galaxy NGC1275. The spectra, including lines from H2, H, 12CO bandheads, [FeII], and [FeIII], are exploited to constrain the star formation and excitation mechanisms in the galaxy's nucleus. The near-infrared properties can largely be accounted for by ionized gas in the NLR, dense molecular gas, and hot dust concentrated near the active nucleus of NGC1275. The strong and compact H2 emission is mostly from circumnuclear gas excited by the AGN and not from the cooling flow. The extended emission of latetype stars is diluted in the center by the thermal emission of hot dust.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 08:42:54 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Krabbe", "Alfred", "" ], [ "Sams", "Bruce J.", "III" ], [ "Genzel", "Reinhard", "" ], [ "Thatte", "Niranjan", "" ], [ "Prada", "Francisco", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001053
C. C. Popescu
Cristina C. Popescu, Richard J. Tuffs, Joerg Fischera, Heinrich Voelk (MPIK Heidelberg)
On the FIR emission from intracluster dust
19 pages, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We make predictions for the diffuse far-infrared (FIR) emission from dust in the intracluster medium (ICM) of the Virgo cluster using detailed information on potential dust sources, grain heating and sputtering rates available for this cluster from recent optical and X-ray studies. We show that the infrared emission from dust injected by sources inside the core region of the Virgo cluster is a factor of 10 below the detection limit of currently available telescopes. The outer regions of dynamically young clusters like the Virgo cluster have a further potential source of intracluster grains since they are still accreting freshly infalling spiral galaxies which are presumably contained in an accreting intergalactic medium (IGM). We show that cosmic ray driven winds from the infalling spirals can inject grains into a subvirial IGM that is external to the observed X-ray-emitting ICM. Sputtering during the injection process and in the IGM is weak, so that the injected grains should accumulate in the IGM until the infall brings them into contact with the hot ICM. This effect dominates the dust injection rate from known sources embedded in the hot Virgo ICM. Thus, any detection of diffuse IR emission would probe the current dust accretion rate for the cluster, acting as an indicator of the youth and the dynamical state of the cluster. The predictions for the Virgo cluster are generalised to other clusters and the possibility of detection of dynamically young clusters at cosmological distances is discussed.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 09:36:37 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Popescu", "Cristina C.", "", "MPIK Heidelberg" ], [ "Tuffs", "Richard J.", "", "MPIK Heidelberg" ], [ "Fischera", "Joerg", "", "MPIK Heidelberg" ], [ "Voelk", "Heinrich", "", "MPIK Heidelberg" ] ]
astro-ph/0001054
Ulrich Hopp
U. Hopp, D. Engels, R.F. Green, A.V. Ugryumov, Y.I. Izotov, H.-J. Hagen, A.Y. Kniazev, V.A. Lipovetsky, S.A. Pustilnik, N. Brosch, J. Masegosa, J.-M. M artin, I. M'arquez
The Hamburg/SAO Survey for Emission-Line Galaxies. III. The Third List of 81 Galaxies
A&A latex file with 8 tables and one figure. Astron. Astrophys. Suppl. accepted 2000
null
10.1051/aas:2000162
null
astro-ph
null
We present the third list with results {Tables 2 to 6 are available only in electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr (130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/Abstract.html. Figures A1 to A9 will be made available only in the electronic version of the journal.} of the Hamburg/SAO Survey for Emission-Line Galaxies (HSS therein, SAO - Special Astrophysical Observatory, Russia). This survey is based on the digitized objective-prism photoplate database of the Hamburg Quasar Survey (HQS). Here, we present new spectroscopic results of candidates which were obtained in 1998 with the 2.1 m KPNO and the 2.2 m Calar Alto telescopes. All candidates are selected in the declination band +35$^{\circ}$ to +40$^{\circ}$. The follow-up spectroscopy with the 2 m class telescopes confirmed 85 emission-line objects out of 113 observed candidates and allowed their quantitative spectral classification. For 80 of them, the redshifts are determined for the first time. For 5 previously known ELGs, line ratios are presented for the first time. We could classify 55 out of the 85 emission-line objects as BCG/H{\sc ii} galaxies or probable BCGs, 4 - as QSOs, 6 - as Seyfert galaxies, 1 - as super-association in a subluminous spiral galaxy, and 11 are low-excitation objects - either starburst nuclear (SBN), or dwarf amorphous nuclear starburst galaxies (DANS). We could not classify 8 ELGs. Further, for 8 more galaxies we did not detect any significant emission lines.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 11:37:56 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Hopp", "U.", "" ], [ "Engels", "D.", "" ], [ "Green", "R. F.", "" ], [ "Ugryumov", "A. V.", "" ], [ "Izotov", "Y. I.", "" ], [ "Hagen", "H. -J.", "" ], [ "Kniazev", "A. Y.", "" ], [ "Lipovetsky", "V. A.", "" ], [ "Pustilnik", "S. A.", "" ], [ "Brosch", "N.", "" ], [ "Masegosa", "J.", "" ], [ "artin", "J. -M. M", "" ], [ "M'arquez", "I.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001055
Leonid Piyugin
L.S. Pilyugin (Main Astron. Obs. of Nat. Academy of Sc. of Ukraine), F.Ferrini (University of Pisa, Italy)
The oxygen abundance deficiency in irregular galaxies
8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
New Astron.Rev. 44 (2000) 335-339
10.1016/S1387-6473(00)00057-9
null
astro-ph
null
The observed oxygen abundances in a number of irregular galaxies have been compared with predictions of the closed-box model of chemical and photometric evolution of galaxies. Oxygen is found to be deficient with respect to the predicted abundances. This is an indicator in favor of loss of heavy elements via galactic winds or/and of infall of low--abundance gas onto the galaxy. The oxygen abundance deficiency observed within the optical edge of a galaxy cannot be explained by mixing with the gas envelope observed outside the optical limit. We confirm the widespread idea that a significant part of the heavy elements is ejected by irregular galaxies in the intergalactic medium.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 12:04:57 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Pilyugin", "L. S.", "", "Main Astron. Obs. of Nat. Academy of Sc. of Ukraine" ], [ "Ferrini", "F.", "", "University of Pisa, Italy" ] ]
astro-ph/0001056
Annalisa Celotti
Annalisa Celotti (1) and Roger D. Blandford (2) ((1) SISSA, Trieste, Italy, (2) Caltech, Pasadena, USA)
On the Formation of Jets
10 pages, Springer-Verlag LaTex style. To appear in Proc. ESO Workshop on "Black Holes in Binaries and Galactic Nuclei", Garching (Sept. 1999), L. Kaper, E.P.J. van den Heuvel, P.A. Woudt eds., Springer-Verlag
null
10.1007/10720995_43
null
astro-ph
null
The phenomenology of jets associated with a variety of black hole systems is summarized, emphasizing the constraints imposed on their origin. Models of jet formation are reviewed, focusing in particular on recent ideas concerning MHD models. Finally, the potential for advancing our understanding of jets both through future observations - especially forthcoming X-ray missions - and for elucidating some crucial theoretical questions is highlighted.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 12:30:38 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Celotti", "Annalisa", "" ], [ "Blandford", "Roger D.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001057
Leonid Piyugin
L.S. Pilyugin (Main Astron. Obs. of Nat. Academy of Sc. of Ukraine), F.Ferrini (University of Pisa, Italy)
On the origin of the luminosity - metallicity relation for late-type galaxies: Spirals to irregulars transition
5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophys.Space Sci. 277 (2001) 441-444
null
null
astro-ph
null
We consider the roles of two widely invoked mechanisms for the metallicity-luminosity correlation among late-type galaxies: higher astration level and decreasing efficiency of heavy-element loss with increasing luminosity. We find that both mechanisms contribute about equally to the range in oxygen abundance between low (logL_B = 8) and high (logL_B = 10.5) luminosity galaxies. We also consider the transition from spirals to irregulars, finding that both the oxygen abundance deficiency (indicating the degree of mass exchange between a galaxy and its environment) and the gas fraction vary smoothly along the sequence. Thus we find no "irregular versus spiral dichotomy".
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 12:32:39 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Pilyugin", "L. S.", "", "Main Astron. Obs. of Nat. Academy of Sc. of Ukraine" ], [ "Ferrini", "F.", "", "University of Pisa, Italy" ] ]
astro-ph/0001058
Cecile Gry
Edward B. Jenkins, Cecile Gry, Olivier Dupin
Electron densities, temperatures and ionization rates in two interstellar clouds in front of beta Canis Majoris, as revealed by UV absorption lines observed with IMAPS
17 pages, 2 figures, to be published in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Astron. Astrophys. 354,253 (2000)
null
null
astro-ph
null
The spectrum of beta CMa (Mirzam) between 1000 and 1200 A was recorded at a wavelength resolving power ~ 60 000 by the Interstellar Medium Absorption Profile Spectrograph (IMAPS) during its orbital flight on the ORFEUS-SPAS II mission in 1996. New information about interstellar absorption lines of CII, CII*, NI and OI from this spectrum are combined with the HST results reported by Dupin & Gry (1998) to arrive at new conclusions about the physical properties of the absorbing gas in front of beta CMa. For two prominent velocity components centered at heliocentric velocities of +20.0 and +30.5 km/s, designated by Dupin & Gry as Components C and D respectively, we use determinations of N(CII*)/N(CII) and N(MgI)/N(MgII) to solve for temperatures and electron densities. From our knowledge that oxygen and nitrogen have their ionizations coupled to that of hydrogen through charge exchange reactions, we can derive the hydrogen ionizations by comparing these elements to sulfur, which is likely not to be depleted onto dust grains. For Component C with an approximate column density of neutral and ionized hydrogen N(Htotal)=6 10^{18} cm^-2, we find that the neutral fraction n(HI)/n(Htotal)=0.25, 400<T<6500 K, and 0.08<n(e)<0.6 cm^-3, while for Component D with N(Htotal)=1.2 10^{19}cm^-2, we arrive at n(HI)/n(Htotal)=0.035, 8000<T<14000 K, and 0.09<n(e)<0.2cm^-3. The relatively large ionization fractions of H can arise if the clouds are about 130 pc away from us, so that they are exposed to the strong, ionizing radiation fields from epsilon and beta CMa. The presence of SiIII indicates the existence of additional gas with even higher levels of ionization.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 12:43:37 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Jenkins", "Edward B.", "" ], [ "Gry", "Cecile", "" ], [ "Dupin", "Olivier", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001059
Gurin
Alexander M. Ilyanok
Quantum Astronomy. Part II
in Russian, 29 pages
Vesti of the Institute of Modern Knowledge, 1999, vol. 2-3, p.71-102
null
null
astro-ph
null
A new method of fundamental quantum data sampling on basis of an optimum measuring scale has been designed. The method was applied for minimization of redundant experimental data in different fields of physics. Basing of this method there has been found the laws of binding electromagnetic, strong and gravitational interaction. It is shown that the laws of quantizing of physical quantities are the effect of space fibering. Moreover the said laws have a general electromagnetic nature as well. They are related to dimensionless electromagnetic constants - Na =861 and a-1=137,0360547255. These constants cover both the atomic and the space scales.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 13:48:39 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Ilyanok", "Alexander M.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001060
Maria Rosa Zapatero Osorio
Ya. Pavlenko (MAO, Ukraine), M. R. Zapatero Osorio, R. Rebolo (IAC, Spain)
On the Interpretation of the Optical Spectra of L-type Dwarfs
Accepted for publication in A&A. 12 pages (figures included)
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We present synthetic optical spectra in the range 640-930 nm of a sample of field L dwarfs and the brown dwarf GL229B. Our computations show that Li, Na, K, Rb, and Cs govern the spectra of these objects, with Na and K contributing significantly to block the optical emergent radiation. Molecular absorptions of TiO, VO, CrH, FeH and CaH also dominate in the early L-types showing a strength that progressively decreases for later types. We find that the densities of these molecules in the atmospheres are considerably smaller by larger factors than those predicted by the chemical equilibrium. In order to reproduce the overall shape of the optical spectra an additional opacity (AdO) is required to be implemented in the computations. We have modelled it with a simple law [a0 (nu / nu0)^N, N=4], and found that this provides a good fit to the data. This AdO could be due to molecular/dust absorption or to dust scattering. The EWs and intensities of the alkali lines are highly affected by this opacity. The Li line at 670.8 nm, widely used as a substellarity discriminator, is more affected by the AdO than by the natural depletion of neutral Li. Our computations display a rather strong feature even at Teffs around 1000 K; depending on the Teff and on the amount of dust in the atmospheres of very cool dwarfs, it might be possible to detect Li even at temperatures this cool. Changes in the physical conditions of dust formation in L-type dwarfs will cause variability of the alkali lines.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 14:42:00 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Pavlenko", "Ya.", "", "MAO, Ukraine" ], [ "Osorio", "M. R. Zapatero", "", "IAC,\n Spain" ], [ "Rebolo", "R.", "", "IAC,\n Spain" ] ]
astro-ph/0001061
Ofer Lahav
Ofer Lahav (Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge, UK)
Observational Tests for the Cosmological Principle and World Models
Review talk, to appear in the proceedings of the NATO ASI `Structure Formation in the Universe', Isaac Newton Institute, Cambridge, July 1999, ed. R. Crritenden & N, Turok. Kluwer; 12 pages Latex, with 3 embedded figures. Uses crckapb.sty
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We review observational tests for the homogeneity of the Universe on large scales. Redshift and peculiar velocity surveys, radio sources, the X-Ray Background, the Lyman-$\alpha$ forest and the Cosmic Microwave Background are used to set constraints on inhomogeneous models and in particular on fractal-like models. Assuming the Cosmological Principle and the FRW metric, we estimate cosmological parameters by joint analysis of peculiar velocities, the CMB, cluster abundance, IRAS and Supernovae. Under certain assumptions the best fit density parameter is Omega_m = 1 - lambda \approx 0.4 . We present a new method for joint estimation by combining different data sets in a Bayesian way, and utilising `Hyper-Parameters'.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 14:44:20 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Lahav", "Ofer", "", "Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge, UK" ] ]
astro-ph/0001062
Zlatan Tsvetanov
SDSS Collaboration, Zlatan I. Tsvetanov, et al
The Discovery of a Second Field Methane Brown Dwarf from Sloan Digital Sky Survey Commissioning Data
9 pages, 3 figures, AASTeX, to appear in ApJ Letters, authors list updated
Astrophys.J.531:L61-L65,2000
10.1086/312515
null
astro-ph
null
We report the discovery of a second field methane brown dwarf from the commissioning data of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The object, SDSS J134646.45-003150.4 (SDSS 1346-00), was selected because of its very red color and stellar appearance. Its spectrum between 0.8-2.5 mic is dominated by strong absorption bands of H_2O and CH_4 and closely mimics those of Gliese 229B and SDSS 162414.37+002915.6 (SDSS 1624+00), two other known methane brown dwarfs. SDSS 1346-00 is approximately 1.5 mag fainter than Gliese 229B, suggesting that it lies about 11 pc from the sun. The ratio of flux at 2.1 mic to that at 1.27 mic is larger for SDSS 1346-00 than for Gliese 229B and SDSS 1624+00, which suggests that SDSS 1346-00 has a slightly higher effective temperature than the others. Based on a search area of 130 sq. deg. and a detection limit of z* = 19.8, we estimate a space density of 0.05 pc^-3 for methane brown dwarfs with T_eff ~ 1000 K in the 40 pc^3 volume of our search. This estimate is based on small-sample statistics and should be treated with appropriate caution.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 15:25:32 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Sun, 9 Jan 2000 19:57:41 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "SDSS Collaboration", "", "" ], [ "Tsvetanov", "Zlatan I.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001063
Peter Kahabka
P. Kahabka (University of Bonn)
The nature of RXJ0052.1-7319
5 pages, accepted by A&A December 30th 1999
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
The nature of the X-ray source RXJ0052.1-7319 is discussed from observational data obtained from ROSAT observations performed in 1995 and 1996. An accurate position is derived from ROSAT HRI observations performed in 1995. The 6" error circle contains two OGLE microlensing optical variables of which one has previously been identified with a 14.5 mag Be-type star in the Small Magellanic Cloud. During the October 1996 observation RXJ0052.1-7319 was found to be extremely bright (with a count rate of ~1.1+/-0.1 s^-1) and 15.3 second X-ray pulsations have been discovered during this observation. This indicates for a high-mass X-ray binary nature of the source. During the 1995 observation the X-ray source detected at the position of RXJ0052.1-7319 was a factor 200 fainter. The corresponding luminosity has changed from 5.2x10^37 erg s^-1 to 2.6x10^35 erg s^-1 assuming SMC membership of the source. It is unclear whether the so-far unidentified second optical variable contributes to the X-ray flux of the source.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 15:40:17 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Kahabka", "P.", "", "University of Bonn" ] ]
astro-ph/0001064
Rafael Garrido
Rafael Garrido (Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia, CSIC, Granada, Spain)
Photometric modal discrimination in Delta Scuti and Gamma Doradus stars
6th Vienna Workshop in Astrophysics on Delta Scuti and Related stars. ASP Conference Series. M. Breger & M. Montgomery eds. 32 pages, 23 figures, newpasp style
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
The potential of photometric methods for the identification of l, the degree of spherical surface harmonic of a pulsating star, is investigated with special emphasis on Stromgren photometry applied to delta Scuti and gamma Dor variables. Limitations of actual model atmospheres when fine precision is required for the calculations of partial derivatives and integrals, which depend on limb darkening coefficients, are discussed. Two methods are discussed to calculate the phase lags, the angle between maximum temperature and minimum radius, and R, a parameter which describes departure from adiabaticity of the atmospheres of these pulsating stars. These quantities appear to be very dependent on the convection as parametrized by the mixing length theory. When one of the methods is applied to the gamma Dor stars gives phase lags close to 0 degrees, which are 90-180 degrees out of phase from typical delta Scuti stars. Examples are given for some High Amplitude Delta Scuti Stars (HADS) where the method can be easily applied and gives results consistent to interpret them as radial (l=0) pulsating stars. Other low amplitude delta Scuti stars could be oscillating in a non-radial (l=1, 2) mode. Multi-band photometry is concluded to be a very powerful tool for mode identification of delta Scuti and gamma Dor stars, specially with the more accurate photometry that will be achieved in the near future with the asteroseismological space missions now in progress.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 17:52:31 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Garrido", "Rafael", "", "Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia, CSIC, Granada,\n Spain" ] ]
astro-ph/0001065
Alison Sills
Alison Sills, M. H. Pinsonneault, D. M. Terndrup (OSU)
The Angular Momentum Evolution of Very Low Mass Stars
To appear in the May 10, 2000 ApJ
Astrophys.J.534:335-347,2000
10.1086/308739
null
astro-ph
null
We present theoretical models of the angular momentum evolution of very low mass stars (0.1 - 0.5 M_sun) and solar analogues (0.6 - 1.1 M_sun). We investigate the effect of rotation on the effective temperature and luminosity of these stars. We find that the decrease in T_eff and L can be significant at the higher end of our mass range, but becomes negligible below 0.4 M_sun. Formulae for relating T_eff to mass and v_rot are presented. We compare our models to rotational data from young open clusters of different ages to infer the rotational history of low mass stars, and the dependence of initial conditions and rotational evolution on mass. We find that the qualitative conclusions for stars below 0.6 M_sun do not depend on the assumptions about internal angular momentum transport, which makes these low mass stars ideal candidates for the study of the angular momentum loss law and distribution of initial conditions. We find that neither models with solid body nor differential rotation can simultaneously reproduce the observed stellar spin down in the 0.6 to 1.1 M_sun mass range and for stars between 0.1 and 0.6 M_sun. The most likely explanation is that the saturation threshold drops more steeply at low masses than would be predicted with a simple Rossby scaling. In young clusters there is a systematic increase in the mean rotation rate with decreased temperature below 3500 K (0.4 M_sun). This suggests either inefficient angular momentum loss or mass-dependent initial conditions for stars near the fully convective boundary. (abridged)
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 18:21:49 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-07-28
[ [ "Sills", "Alison", "", "OSU" ], [ "Pinsonneault", "M. H.", "", "OSU" ], [ "Terndrup", "D. M.", "", "OSU" ] ]
astro-ph/0001066
Nick Gnedin
Nickolay Y. Gnedin, Andrea Ferrara, and Ellen G. Zweibel
Generation of the Primordial Magnetic Fields during Cosmological Reionization
accepted for publication in ApJ. MPEG movies and color versions of figures are available at http://casa.colorado.edu/~gnedin/GALLERY/magfi_p.html
Astrophys.J. 539 (2000) 505-516
10.1086/309272
null
astro-ph
null
We investigate the generation of magnetic field by the Biermann battery in cosmological ionization fronts, using new simulations of the reionization of the universe by stars in protogalaxies. Two mechanisms are primarily responsible for magnetogenesis: i) the breakout of I-fronts from protogalaxies, and ii) the propagation of I-fronts through the high density neutral filaments which are part of the cosmic web. The first mechanism is dominant prior to overlapping of ionized regions (z ~ 7), whereas the second continues to operate even after that epoch. However, after overlap the field strength increase is largely due to the gas compression occurring as cosmic structures form. As a consequence, the magnetic field at z ~ 5 closely traces the gas density, and it is highly ordered on megaparsec scales. The mean mass-weighted field strength is B_0 ~ 10^{-19} G in the simulation box. There is a relatively well-defined, nearly linear correlation between B_0 and the baryonic mass of virialized objects, with B_0 ~ 10^{-18} G in the most massive objects (M ~ 10^9 M_sun) in our simulations. This is a lower limit, as lack of numerical resolution prevents us from following small scale dynamical processes which could amplify the field in protogalaxies. Although the field strengths we compute are probably adequate as seed fields for a galactic dynamo, the field is too small to have had significant effects on galaxy formation, on thermal conduction, or on cosmic ray transport in the intergalactic medium. It could, however, be observed in the intergalactic medium through innovative methods based on analysis of gamma-ray burst photon arrival times.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 19:26:13 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Thu, 23 Mar 2000 17:12:14 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Gnedin", "Nickolay Y.", "" ], [ "Ferrara", "Andrea", "" ], [ "Zweibel", "Ellen G.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001067
Tigran G. Arshakian
T. G. Arshakian (1 and 2) and M. S. Longair (1) ((1) Cavendish Laboratory, (2) Byurakan Observatory)
An asymmetric relativistic model for classical double radio sources
16 pages LaTeX, including 10 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
null
10.1046/j.1365-8711.2000.03098.x
null
astro-ph
null
There is substantial observational evidence against the symmetric relativistic model of FRII radio sources. An asymmetric relativistic model is proposed which takes account of both relativistic effects and intrinsic/environmental asymmetries to explain the structural asymmetries of their radio lobes. A key parameter of the model is the jet-side of the double sources, which is estimated for 80% of the FRII sources in the 3CRR complete sample. Statistical analyses of the properties of these sources show that the asymmetric model is in agreement with a wide range of observational data, and that the relativistic and intrinsic asymmetry effects are of comparable importance. Intrinsic/environmental asymmetry effects are more important at high radio luminosities and small physical scales. The mean translational speed of the lobes is found to be 0.11c, consistent with the speeds found from spectral ageing arguments. According to a Gaussian model, the standard deviation of lobe speeds is 0.04c. The results are in agreement with an orientation-based unification scheme in which the critical angle separating the radio galaxies from quasars is about 45 degrees.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 19:35:21 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Arshakian", "T. G.", "", "1 and 2" ], [ "Longair", "M. S.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001068
Leo Alberto Girardi
L. Girardi, J.-C. Mermilliod, G. Carraro
On the peculiar red clump morphology in the open clusters NGC 752 and NGC 7789
10 pages, 7 figures, accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics
A&A 354, 892
null
null
astro-ph
null
The red clump stars in the open cluster NGC 752 present a peculiar distribution in the colour-magnitude diagran (CMD): the clump is observed to present a faint extension, slightly to the blue of the main concentration of clump stars. We point out that a similar structure is present in the CMD of NGC 7789, and discuss their possible origins. This feature may be understood as the result of having, at the same time, stars of low-mass which undergo the helium-flash, and those just massive enough for avoiding it. The ages of both clusters are compatible with this interpretation. Similar features can be produced in theoretical models which assume a non-negligible mass spread for clump stars, of about 0.2 Mo. However, one can probably exclude that the observed effect is due to the natural mass range of core helium burning stars found in single isochrones, although present models do not present the level of detail necessary to completely explore this possibility. Also the possibility of a large age spread among cluster stars can be refuted on observational grounds. We then suggest a few alternatives. This spread may be resulting either from star-to-star variations in the mass-loss rates during the RGB phase. Alternatively, effects sush as stellar rotation or convective core overshooting, could be causing a significant spread in the core mass at He-ignition for star of similar mass. Finally, we point out that similar effects could also help to understand the distribution of clump stars in the CMDs of the clusters NGC 2660 and NGC 2204.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 22:22:27 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Girardi", "L.", "" ], [ "Mermilliod", "J. -C.", "" ], [ "Carraro", "G.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001069
Kate Y. L. Su
K. Y. L. Su, K. Volk and S. Kwok (University of Calgary)
2-D Radiation Transfer Model of Non-Spherically Symmetric Dust Shell in P roto-Planetary Nebulae
To appear in ``Asymmetrical Planetary Nebulae II: from Origins to Microstructures,'' ASP Conference Series, Vol. 199, 2000; J.H. Kastner, N. Soker, & S.A. Rappaport, eds
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We have fitted the HST images and the spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of three proto-planetary nebulae (PPN) with a 2-D radiation transfer model. The geometric and mass loss properties of these PPN are also derived.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 21:02:15 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Su", "K. Y. L.", "", "University of Calgary" ], [ "Volk", "K.", "", "University of Calgary" ], [ "Kwok", "S.", "", "University of Calgary" ] ]
astro-ph/0001070
F. H. Briggs
F.H. Briggs
Cold gas, the HI 21cm line and evolving galactic potentials
8 pages, 2 figures. Invited review to appear in Proceedings of the XIXth Recontres de Moriond, on "Building the Galaxies: from the Primordial Universe to the Present," Editors F. Hammer, T.X. Thuan, V. Cayatte, B. Guiderdoni and J. Tran Thanh Van, Editions Frontieres
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
Neutral hydrogen traces gravitational potentials. In the nearby universe, 21cm emission-line surveys show that the bulk of the HI resides in well-formed, optically-luminous galaxies. At high redshift, 21cm line absorption against background radio quasars occurs in gas-rich systems identified with the highest HI column densities -- the ``damped Lyman alpha'' quasar absorption-line systems. High spatial-resolution observations of the redshifted 21cm line absorbers measure sizes and kinematics of the neutral absorbers.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 21:59:42 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Briggs", "F. H.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001071
Takashi Murayama
Takashi Murayama, Shingo Nishiura, Tohru Nagao, Yasunori Sato, Yoshiaki Taniguchi, D. B. Sanders
Discovery of a Low Surface Brightness Object near Seyfert's Sextet
4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the April 2000 issue of The Astronomical Journal
Astron.J. 119 (2000) 1691-1694
10.1086/301320
null
astro-ph
null
We report the discovery of a low surface brightness (LSB) object serendipitously found during deep CCD imaging of a compact group of galaxies, Seyfert's Sextet, in VR and I bands. The LSB object is located 2.3 arcmin southwest from the group center. Its surface brightness within the angular effective radii of r_e(VR)=4.8 arcsec and r_e(I)=4.8 arcsec is very low --- mu_e(VR)=25.28 mag arcsec-2 and mu_e(I)=24.47 mag arcsec-2, respectively. The apparent magnitudes are m_AB(VR)=19.87 mag and m(I)=19.06 mag. The object is most likely a LSB dwarf galaxy, but other possibilities are also discussed.
[ { "created": "Wed, 5 Jan 2000 22:57:25 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Murayama", "Takashi", "" ], [ "Nishiura", "Shingo", "" ], [ "Nagao", "Tohru", "" ], [ "Sato", "Yasunori", "" ], [ "Taniguchi", "Yoshiaki", "" ], [ "Sanders", "D. B.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001072
Scott C. Trager
S. C. Trager (1), S. M. Faber (2), Guy Worthey (3), J. Jesus Gonzalez (4) ((1) OCIW, (2) UCO/Lick Observatory, (3) St. Ambrose, (4) IA-UNAM)
The Stellar Population Histories of Local Early-Type Galaxies. I. Population Parameters
Accepted to the Astronomical Journal, April 2000. 35 pages, 15 figures. Uses emulateapj.sty
Astron.J.119:1645-1676,2000
10.1086/301299
null
astro-ph
null
We present single stellar population (SSP) equivalent ages, metallicities, and abundance ratios for local elliptical galaxies derived from Hbeta, Mgb, and <Fe> absorption line strengths. We use an extension of the Worthey (1994) stellar population models that incorporates non-solar line-strength "response functions" by Tripicco & Bell (1995), allowing us to correct the models for the enhancements of Mg and other alpha-like elements relative to the Fe-peak elements. SSP-equivalent ages of local ellipticals from Gonzalez (1993) are found to vary widely, 1.5 < t < 18 Gyr, while metallicities [Z/H] and enhancement ratios [E/Fe] are strongly peaked around <[Z/H]>=+0.26 and <[E/Fe]>=+0.20 (in an aperture of radius Re/8). The enhancement ratios are milder than previous estimates, owing to the application of non-solar abundance corrections to both Mgb and <Fe> for the first time. Gradients in stellar populations within galaxies are found to be mild, with SSP-equivalent age decreasing by 25%, metallicity decreasing by <[Z/H]>=0.20 dex, and [E/Fe] remaining nearly constant out to an aperture of radius Re/2 for nearly all systems. Our ages have an overall zeropoint uncertainty of at least 25% due to uncertainties in the stellar evolution prescription, the oxygen abundance, the effect of non-solar abundances on the isochrones, and other unknowns. However, the relative age rankings of stellar populations should be largely unaffected by these errors. In particular, the large spread in ages appears to be real and cannot be explained by contamination of Hbeta by blue stragglers or hot horizontal branch stars, or by fill-in of Hbeta by emission. Correlations between these derived SSP-equivalent parameters and other galaxy observables will be discussed in future papers. (Abridged)
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 02:21:49 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2011-05-05
[ [ "Trager", "S. C.", "", "OCIW" ], [ "Faber", "S. M.", "", "UCO/Lick Observatory" ], [ "Worthey", "Guy", "", "St. Ambrose" ], [ "Gonzalez", "J. Jesus", "", "IA-UNAM" ] ]
astro-ph/0001073
Maartje Sevenster
M.Sevenster, H.Dejonghe, K.Van Caelenberg, H.J. Habing
Distribution functions for evolved stars in the inner galactic Plane
23 pages, 20 figures, LaTeX, accepted for publication in A+A
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We present dynamical distribution functions for evolved stars in the inner galactic plane. We use an axisymmetric, two-component Stackel potential that satisfies recent constraints on the galactic potential, amongst others a slightly declining local rotation curve. We show that this potential is adequate to model stellar-kinematic samples with radial extent ranging from \~100 pc to ~5 kpc in the Galaxy. The two-integral model that gives the best fit to the first three projected moments provides a very good global representation of the data but fails to reproduce the central dispersion, the central apparent scaleheight and the cylindrical rotation at intermediate longitudes. All these features are fitted well by a three--integral model. We discuss various properties of the 2I- and 3I models and the implications for galactic structure. A somewhat thicker disk component is needed to explain the distribution of older AGB stars in the plane; this component also fits the kinematics at higher latitudes better. We find that the Disk and the Bulge, as traced by AGB stars, are very similar dynamically and could well be one and the same component. There is a dynamically distinct component in the inner 100 pc of the Bulge, however.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 03:03:13 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Sevenster", "M.", "" ], [ "Dejonghe", "H.", "" ], [ "Van Caelenberg", "K.", "" ], [ "Habing", "H. J.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001074
Dwarkadas
Vikram Dwarkadas (1), Lewis Ball (1), James Caswell (2), Anne Green (3), Simon Johnston (1), Brian Schmidt (4), Mark Wardle (1) ((1) SRCfTA, (2) ATNF, (3) Astrophysics, U Sydney, (4) RSAA, ANU)
Supernova Remnants, Pulsars and the Interstellar Medium - Summary of a Workshop Held at U Sydney, March 1999
13 pages, Latex. To be published in the Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia, 2000, Vol 17, No 1
null
10.1071/AS00083
null
astro-ph
null
We summarise the proceedings of the SRCfTA workshop on ``Supernova Remnants, Pulsars and the Interstellar Medium'' that was held at the University of Sydney on Mar 18 and 19, 1999.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 06:57:08 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2015-06-24
[ [ "Dwarkadas", "Vikram", "" ], [ "Ball", "Lewis", "" ], [ "Caswell", "James", "" ], [ "Green", "Anne", "" ], [ "Johnston", "Simon", "" ], [ "Schmidt", "Brian", "" ], [ "Wardle", "Mark", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001075
Max Pettini
Max Pettini (Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge)
The First Galaxies: Clues from Element Abundances
15 pages, LaTex, 8 Postscript Figures. To appear in the Philosophical Transactions of The Royal Society, Series A
null
10.1098/rsta.2000.0628
null
astro-ph
null
It has recently become possible to measure directly the abundances of several chemical elements in a variety of environments at redshifts up to z = 5. In this review I summarise the latest observations of Lyman break galaxies, damped Lyman alpha systems and the Lyman alpha forest with a view to uncovering any clues which these data may offer to the first episodes of star formation. The picture which is emerging is one where the universe at z = 3 already included many of the components of today's galaxies--even at these early times we see evidence for Populations I and II stars, while the `smoking gun' for Population III objects may be hidden in the chemical composition of the lowest density regions of the IGM, yet to be deciphered.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 08:48:14 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Pettini", "Max", "", "Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge" ] ]
astro-ph/0001076
Kohji Yoshikawa
Kohji Yoshikawa (1), Y.P. Jing (2) and Yasushi Suto (2) ((1) Department of Astronomy, Kyoto University, (2) Department of Physics and RESCEU, University of Tokyo)
Cosmological SPH simulations with four million particles: statistical properties of X-ray clusters in a low-density universe
Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. 18 pages with 7 embedded figures
The Astrophysical Journal 535 (2000) 593-601
10.1086/308895
null
astro-ph
null
We present results from a series of cosmological SPH (smoothed particle hydrodynamics) simulations coupled with the P3M (Particle-Particle-Particle-Mesh) solver for the gravitational force. The simulations are designed to predict the statistical properties of X-ray clusters of galaxies as well as to study the formation of galaxies. We have seven simulation runs with different assumptions on the thermal state of the intracluster gas. Following the recent work by Pearce et al., we modify our SPH algorithm so as to phenomenologically incorporate the galaxy formation by decoupling the cooled gas particles from the hot gas particles. All the simulations employ 128^3 particles both for dark matter and for gas components, and thus constitute the largest systematic catalogues of simulated clusters in the SPH method performed so far. These enable us to compare the analytical predictions on statistical properties of X-ray clusters against our direct simulation results in an unbiased manner. We find that the luminosities of the simulated clusters are quite sensitive to the thermal history and also to the numerical resolution of the simulations, and thus are not reliable. On the other hand, the mass-temperature relation for the simulated clusters is fairly insensitive to the assumptions of the thermal state of the intracluster gas, robust against the numerical resolution, and in fact agrees well with the analytic prediction. Therefore the prediction for the X-ray temperature function of clusters on the basis of the Press-Schechter mass function and the virial equilibrium is fairly reliable.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 10:22:29 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Yoshikawa", "Kohji", "" ], [ "Jing", "Y. P.", "" ], [ "Suto", "Yasushi", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001077
Marten van Kerkwijk
M. H. van Kerkwijk (Utrecht University)
Neutron Star Mass Determinations
6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Proc. ESO Workshop on "Black Holes in Binaries and Galactic Nuclei", Garching (Sept. 1999), L. Kaper, E.P.J. van den Heuvel, P.A. Woudt eds., Springer-Verlag
null
10.1007/10720995_4
null
astro-ph
null
I review attempts made to determine the properties of neutron stars. The focus is on the maximum mass that a neutron star can have, or, conversely, the minimum mass required for the formation of a black hole. There appears to be only one neutron star for which there is strong evidence that its mass is above the canonical 1.4 solar masses, viz., Vela X-1, for which a mass close to 1.9 solar masses is found. Prospects for progress appear brightest for studies of systems in which the neutron star should have accreted substantial amounts of matter.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 10:26:50 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "van Kerkwijk", "M. H.", "", "Utrecht University" ] ]
astro-ph/0001078
Andrzej A. Zdziarski
Andrzej A. Zdziarski (Copernicus Ctr., Warsaw)
Radiative Processes and Geometry of Spectral States of Black-Hole Binaries
Invited review for IAU Symp. 195, Highly Energetic Physical Processes and Mechanisms for Emission from Astrophysical Plasmas, P. C. H. Martens, S. Tsuruta, & M. A. Weber, eds., ASP, pp. 153-170 (2000)
2000, IAU Symp. 195, P. C. H. Martens et al, eds, (San Francisco: ASP), 153
null
null
astro-ph
null
I review radiative processes responsible for X-ray emission in the hard (low) and soft (high) spectral states of black-hole binaries. The main process in the hard state appears to be thermal Comptonization (in a hot plasma) of blackbody photons emitted by a cold disk. This is supported by correlations between the spectral index, the strength of Compton reflection, and the peak frequencies in the power density spectrum, as well as by the frequency-dependence of Fourier-resolved spectra. Spectral variability may then be driven by the variable truncation radius of the disk. The soft state appears to correspond to the smallest truncation radii. However, the lack of high-energy cutoffs observed in the soft state implies that its main radiative process is Compton scattering of disk photons by non-thermal electrons. The bulk-motion Componization model for the soft state is shown to be ruled out by the data.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 11:20:51 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Wed, 19 Jan 2000 10:24:45 GMT", "version": "v2" }, { "created": "Sun, 11 Jun 2000 09:27:46 GMT", "version": "v3" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Zdziarski", "Andrzej A.", "", "Copernicus Ctr., Warsaw" ] ]
astro-ph/0001079
Sandip Kumar Chakrabarti
Sonali Chakrabarti and Sandip K. Chakrabarti
Can DNA bases be produced during molecular cloud collapse?
4 pages including Figures; Accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
Using a reasonably large chemical reaction network consisting of 421 species, we show that along with normal chemical evolution of molecular cloud during collapse and star formation, significant amount of adenine, a DNA base, may be produced after an evolution of 10^{6-7} years. This findings may shed light on whether life on earth had to begin from scratch or these molecules could have contaminated the earth from the beginning.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 13:12:47 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Chakrabarti", "Sonali", "" ], [ "Chakrabarti", "Sandip K.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001080
Sabine Schindler
Sabine Schindler (Liverpool John Moores University)
X-ray and optical observations of three clusters of galaxies: Abell 901, Abell 1437, and Abell 3570
8 pages (incl. 6 figures), accepted for publication in A&A (Suppl.)
null
10.1051/aas:2000161
null
astro-ph
null
We analyse three clusters of galaxies, Abell 901 (z=0.17), Abell 1437 (z=0.13) and Abell 3570 (z=0.037). They have low to intermediate X-ray fluxes and an irregular morphology in the ROSAT All-Sky Survey (RASS). These clusters are chosen to test the abilities and limitations of the RASS in terms of cluster fluxes and cluster morphologies. Therefore some ``worst'' cases are used here. X-ray observations with the ROSAT/HRI and optical spectroscopic observations are carried out. The ROSAT/HRI observations, which have a much better spatial resolution than the RASS, reveal in two of the three cases a significantly different morphology than seen in the RASS. The reasons are point sources which could not be resolved in the RASS and were therefore confused with the cluster emission. For A3570 we could confirm the relaxed state of the cluster by the optical determination of a small velocity dispersion. In the cluster with the lowest flux (Abell 901) the countrate measurement is strongly affected by point sources, in the two other cases the countrate measurements of the RASS are reliable, i.e. they are reproduced by the ROSAT/HRI measurement. We conclude that for clusters with a flux of a few times 10^{-12} erg/cm^2/s or smaller, which show at the same time a non-relaxed morphology, the flux measurement of the RASS can be seriously affected by fore- or background sources. We point out that an all-sky survey of a second ABRIXAS mission would provide a much clearer source distinction for low-flux clusters and thus a much improved countrate determination.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 13:44:52 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Schindler", "Sabine", "", "Liverpool John Moores University" ] ]
astro-ph/0001081
Klaus Reinsch
K. Reinsch, A. van Teeseling, A. R. King, K. Beuermann
A limit-cycle model for the binary supersoft X-ray source RX J0513.9-6951
4 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We present new results of our X-ray monitoring of the transient binary supersoft X-ray source RX J0513.9-6951 in the LMC and of our re-analysis of optical light curves obtained during the MACHO project. We have covered a complete X-ray outburst cycle with the ROSAT HRI detector. From the amplitude and timescale of the soft X-ray variability, tight limits are derived for the temporal behaviour of the white-dwarf radius and the effective temperature of its envelope. A limit-cycle model is proposed to explain the observed optical and X-ray variability, the characteristic timescales of the durations of the X-ray on and off states, and those of the transitions between both states. Our observations confirm that the radius changes of the white-dwarf envelope occur on the Kelvin-Helmholtz timescale. The duration of the X-ray on and off states is compatible with the viscous timescales of the inner and outer accretion disk, respectively.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 14:55:26 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Reinsch", "K.", "" ], [ "van Teeseling", "A.", "" ], [ "King", "A. R.", "" ], [ "Beuermann", "K.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001082
Paolo Salucci
A. Borriello and P. Salucci
The Dark Matter Distribution in Disk Galaxies
8 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS accepted. New section and figures added, concerning CDM mass models. Minor changes to the rest of the paper
Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 323 (2001) 285
10.1046/j.1365-8711.2001.04077.x
null
astro-ph
null
We use high-quality optical rotation curves of 9 low-luminosity disk galaxies to obtain the velocity profile of the surrounding dark matter halos. We find that they increase linearly with radius at least out to the stellar disk edge, implying that, over the entire region where the stars reside, the density of the dark halo is constant. The properties of the halo mass structure found are similar to that claimed for a number of dwarf and low surface brightness galaxies, but provide a more substantial evidence of the discrepancy between the halo mass distribution predicted in standard cold dark matter scenario and those actually detected around galaxies. We find that the density profile proposed by Burkert (1995) reproduces the halo rotation curves, with halo central densities and core radii scaling as $\rho_0 \propto r_0^{-2/3}$.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 14:56:28 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Tue, 12 Sep 2000 14:11:29 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Borriello", "A.", "" ], [ "Salucci", "P.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001083
Reza Ansari
EROS Collaboration
Observation of Microlensing towards the Galactic Spiral Arms. EROS II 3 year survey
4 pages, 3 figures, submitted for publication in A&A Letters
null
null
LAL 00-02
astro-ph
null
We present an analysis of the light curves of 9.1 million stars observed during three seasons by EROS (Experience de Recherche d'Objets Sombres), in the Galactic plane away from the bulge. Seven stars exhibit luminosity variations compatible with gravitational microlensing effects due to unseen objects. The corresponding optical depth, averaged over four directions, is tau = 0.45 +0.24 -0.11 x 10^-6. While this value is compatible with expectations from simple galactic models under reasonable assumptions on the target distances, we find an excess of events with short timescale towards the direction closest to the Galactic Centre.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 15:13:53 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2012-08-27
[ [ "EROS Collaboration", "", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001084
Diego Harari
Diego Harari, Silvia Mollerach, Esteban Roulet
Signatures of galactic magnetic lensing upon ultra high energy cosmic rays
18 pages, 7 figures, uses JHEP.cls
JHEP 0002 (2000) 035
10.1088/1126-6708/2000/02/035
null
astro-ph hep-ph
null
We analyse several implications of lensing by the regular component of the galactic magnetic field upon the observed properties of ultra high energy cosmic rays. Magnetic fields deflect cosmic ray trajectories, causing flux (de)magnification, formation of multiple images of a single source, and time delays. We derive the energy dependence of these effects near the caustics at which the flux amplification of a point source diverges. We show that the large magnification of images around caustics leads to an amplification bias, which can make them dominate the flux in some energy ranges. We argue that clustering in the arrival directions of UHECRs of comparable energy may be due to magnetic lensing around caustics. We show that magnetic lensing can also significantly alter the observed composition of cosmic rays at the highest energies. We also show that the time delay between events from a single image may monotonically decrease with decreasing energy in the neighborhood of a caustic, opposite to its behaviour in normal regions.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 15:43:59 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Harari", "Diego", "" ], [ "Mollerach", "Silvia", "" ], [ "Roulet", "Esteban", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001085
Israel
G.L. Israel, S. Covino, S. Campana, V.F. Polcaro, P. Roche, L. Stella, A. Di Paola, D. Lazzati, S. Mereghetti, E. Giallongo, A. Fontana and F. Verrecchia
The discovery of the optical/IR counterpart of the 12s transient X-ray pulsar GS 0834-43
6 pages. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
null
10.1046/j.1365-8711.2000.03404.x
null
astro-ph
null
We report the discovery of the optical/infra-red counterpart of the 12.3s transient X-ray pulsar GS0834-43. We re-analysed archival ROSAT PSPC observations of GS0834-43, obtaining two new refined positions, about 14" and 18" away from the previously published one, and a new spin period measurement. Within the new error circles we found a relatively faint (V=20.1) early type reddened star (V-R=2.24). The optical spectrum shows a strong Halpha emission line. The IR observations of the field confirm the presence of an IR excess for the Halpha-emitting star (K'=11.4, J-K'=1.94) which is likely surrounded by a conspicuous circumstellar envelope. Spectroscopic and photometric data indicate a B0-2 V-IIIe spectral-type star located at a distance of 3-5kpc and confirm the Be-star/X-ray binary nature of GS0834-43.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 16:16:10 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Israel", "G. L.", "" ], [ "Covino", "S.", "" ], [ "Campana", "S.", "" ], [ "Polcaro", "V. F.", "" ], [ "Roche", "P.", "" ], [ "Stella", "L.", "" ], [ "Di Paola", "A.", "" ], [ "Lazzati", "D.", "" ], [ "Mereghetti", "S.", "" ], [ "Giallongo", "E.", "" ], [ "Fontana", "A.", "" ], [ "Verrecchia", "F.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001086
Anil K. Pradhan
Guo Xin Chen and Anil K. Pradhan (Department of Astronomy, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH)
Fluorescent Excitation of Spectral Lines in Planetary Nebulae
5 pages, 4 figures (fig.4 in color), ApJ (in press)
null
10.1086/308941
null
astro-ph
null
Fluorescent excitation of spectral lines is demonstrated as a function of temperature-luminosity and the distance of the emitting region from the central stars of planetary nebulae. The electron densities and temperatures are determined, and the method is exemplified through a detailed analysis of spectral observations of a high excitation PN, NGC 6741, observed by Hyung and Aller(1997). Fluorescence should also be important in the determination of element abundances. It is suggested that the method could be generally applied to determine or constrain the luminosity and the region of spectral emission in other intensively radiative sources such as novae, supernovae, and active galactic nuclei.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 16:38:42 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Chen", "Guo Xin", "", "Department of Astronomy, The Ohio\n State University, Columbus, OH" ], [ "Pradhan", "Anil K.", "", "Department of Astronomy, The Ohio\n State University, Columbus, OH" ] ]
astro-ph/0001087
Pauline Barmby
Pauline Barmby & John P. Huchra
Testing population synthesis models with globular cluster colors
To appear in ApJ Letters; 8 pages including 3 figures and 1 table
Astrophys.J. 531 (2000) L29
10.1086/312511
null
astro-ph
null
We have measured an extensive set of UBVRIJHK colors for M31 globular clusters [Barmby et al. 2000]. We compare the predicted simple stellar population colors of three population synthesis models to the intrinsic colors of Galactic and M31 globular clusters. The best-fitting models fit the cluster colors very well -- the weighted mean color offsets are all < 0.05 mag. The most significant offsets between model and data are in the U and B passbands; these are not unexpected and are likely due to problems with the spectral libraries used by the models. The metal-rich clusters ([Fe/H] > -0.8) are best fit by young (8 Gyr) models, while the metal-poor clusters are best fit by older (12--16 Gyr) models. If this range of globular cluster ages is correct, it implies that conditions for cluster formation must have existed for a substantial fraction of the galaxies' lifetimes.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 17:18:48 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Barmby", "Pauline", "" ], [ "Huchra", "John P.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001088
Tkashi Okamoto
Takashi Okamoto and Asao Habe
Evolution of Cluster Galaxies in Hierarchical Clustering Universes
accepted for publication in PASJ
Publ.Astron.Soc.Jap. 52 (2000) 457-463
10.1093/pasj/52.3.457
null
astro-ph
null
Using cosmological N-body simulations of critical (SCDM) and open ($\Omega = 0.3$, OCDM) cold dark matter models, we investigate evolution of cluster galaxies. From our numerical simulation, we construct merging history trees of the galaxies. By following their merging history, we show major merger fractions of the galaxies in cluster forming regions is roughly proportional to (1+z)^{4.5} at low redshifts (z < 2) and has a steep peak at $z \simeq 2.5$ and $z \simeq 3$ in SCDM and OCDM, respectively. We also show that the cluster galaxies are affected by tidal interaction after the clusters formed. Because the formation redshift of the cluster in SCDM, z_{form} = 0.15, is much more recent than that of the cluster in OCDM, z_{form} = 1.6, the cluster galaxies in SCDM show more rapid evolution by tidal interactions from z = 0.5 than those in OCDM.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 17:55:36 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Tue, 2 May 2000 09:35:42 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2015-06-24
[ [ "Okamoto", "Takashi", "" ], [ "Habe", "Asao", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001089
David H. Weinberg
John Phillips, David H. Weinberg, Rupert A. C. Croft, Lars Hernquist, Neal Katz and Max Pettini
Constraints on Cosmological Parameters from the Lyman-alpha Forest Power Spectrum and COBE-DMR
26 pages, 6 figs, ApJ, in press (10/01). New version corrects some numerical results for Lambda-CDM models, updates discussion in light of new observational developments (especially CMB). Main conclusions unchanged
Astrophys.J. 560 (2001) 15-27
10.1086/322369
null
astro-ph
null
We combine COBE-DMR measurements of cosmic microwave background anisotropy with a recent measurement of the mass power spectrum at redshift z=2.5 from Lya forest data to derive constraints on cosmological parameters and test the inflation+CDM scenario of structure formation. By treating the inflationary spectral index n as a free parameter, we can find successful fits to the COBE and Lya forest constraints in Omega_m=1 models with and without massive neutrinos and in low-Omega_m models with and without a cosmological constant. Within each class of model, the combination of COBE and the Lya forest P(k) constrains a parameter combination of the form (Omega_m h^a n^b Omega_b^c), with different indices for each case. This new constraint breaks some of the degeneracies in cosmological parameter determinations from other measurements. The Lya forest P(k) provides the first measurement of the slope of the linear mass power spectrum on ~Mpc scales, and it confirms a basic prediction of the inflationary CDM scenario: a nearly scale-invariant spectrum of primeval fluctuations (n~1) that bends towards k^{n-4} on small scales. Considering additional observational data, we find that COBE-normalized, Omega_m=1 models that match the Lya forest P(k) do not match the observed masses of rich galaxy clusters and that a low-Omega_m model with a cosmological constant provides the best overall fit, even without the direct evidence for cosmic acceleration from supernovae. Modest improvements in the Lya forest P(k) measurement could greatly restrict the allowable region of parameter space for CDM models, constrain the contribution of tensor fluctuations to CMB anisotropy, and achieve a more stringent test of the current consensus model of structure formation.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 18:13:07 GMT", "version": "v1" }, { "created": "Fri, 15 Jun 2001 18:24:17 GMT", "version": "v2" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Phillips", "John", "" ], [ "Weinberg", "David H.", "" ], [ "Croft", "Rupert A. C.", "" ], [ "Hernquist", "Lars", "" ], [ "Katz", "Neal", "" ], [ "Pettini", "Max", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001090
T. A. Aaron Sigut
T.A.A. Sigut, J.D. Landstreet, S.L.S. Shorlin
Emission Lines in the Spectrum of the 3He Star 3 Cen A
16 pages, 3 figures
null
10.1086/312499
null
astro-ph
null
Emission in the 4d - 4f transitions of MnII (multiplet 13, 6122-6132 Ang), in the 4f - 6g transitions of PII, and in 6149.5 Ang of HgII has been detected in the spectrum of the helium weak star 3 Centauri A (B5 III-IVp). Weaker emission from the same MnII multiplet is also seen in the hot, mild HgMn star 46 Aquila (B9 III).It is suggested that the emission is of photospheric origin and may be evidence for the stratification of manganese, phosphorus and mercury in the photosphere of 3 CenA, and of manganese in 46Aql.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 18:33:44 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Sigut", "T. A. A.", "" ], [ "Landstreet", "J. D.", "" ], [ "Shorlin", "S. L. S.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001091
Michael Pivovaroff
M. J. Pivovaroff (MIT), V. M. Kaspi (MIT), and F. Camilo (Columbia)
X-ray observations of the high magnetic field radio pulsar PSR J1814-1744
11 pages, including 2 embedded figures. Accepted by ApJ
null
10.1086/308848
null
astro-ph
null
PSR J1814-1744 is a 4 s radio pulsar with surface dipole magnetic field strength 5.5*10^13 G, inferred assuming simple magnetic dipole braking. This pulsar's spin parameters are very similar to those of anomalous X-ray pulsars (AXPs), suggesting that this may be a transition object between the radio pulsar and AXP population, if AXPs are isolated, high magnetic field neutron stars as has recently been hypothesized. We present archival X-ray observations of PSR J1814-1744 made with ROSAT and ASCA. X-ray emission is not detected from the position of the radio pulsar. The derived upper flux limit implies an X-ray luminosity significantly smaller than those of all known AXPs. This conclusion is insensitive to the possibility that X-ray emission from PSR J1814-1744 is beamed or that it undergoes modest variability. When interpreted in the context of the magnetar mechanism, these results argue that X-ray emission from AXPs must depend on more than merely the inferred surface magnetic field strength. This suggests distinct evolutionary paths for radio pulsars and AXP, despite their proximity in period--period derivative phase space.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 18:45:03 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2016-08-30
[ [ "Pivovaroff", "M. J.", "", "MIT" ], [ "Kaspi", "V. M.", "", "MIT" ], [ "Camilo", "F.", "", "Columbia" ] ]
astro-ph/0001092
Tim O'Brien
C. D. Gill, T.J. O'Brien
Hubble Space Telescope imaging and ground-based spectroscopy of old nova shells - I. FH Ser, V533 Her, BT Mon, DK Lac, V476 Cyg
Accepted by MNRAS, 10 pages, 7 figures
null
10.1046/j.1365-8711.2000.03342.x
null
astro-ph
null
In this paper we report on the first five out of eleven observations in our programme of Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging of old nova shells. We present new WFPC2 images of the shells around FH Ser and V533 Her taken in the F656N (Halpha+[NII]) filter. We also show long-slit spectra taken using the William Herschel Telescope (WHT) in La Palma for these objects in the same spectral range. The shell around FH Ser is found to be a prolate ellipsoid of ellipticity 1.3 +/- 0.1 inclined at 62 +/- 4 deg to the line of sight. The shell has an equatorial ring which is found to be due to increased emission in the two [NII] lines rather than Halpha. The expansion velocity, systemic velocity and distance are found to be 490 +/- 20 km/s, -45 km/s and 950 +/- 50 pc. The origin of the [NII] equatorial ring is discussed in the context of a photoionization feature resulting from aspherical illumination by the central source rather than a simple density enhancement. It is possible however that the ring is also in part due to an extremely localised increase in the nitrogen abundance. Similar imaging and spectroscopy of the nova V533 Her reveal a shell of radius 5 +/- 0.7 arcsec with an axial ratio of 1.2 +/- 0.2, expansion velocity of 850 +/- 150 km/s and distance 1250 +/- 300 pc. The shells around BT Mon, DK Lac and V476 Cyg were not detected with HST.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 18:49:55 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Gill", "C. D.", "" ], [ "O'Brien", "T. J.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001093
Peter Berczik
Peter Berczik (Main Astronomical Observatory of Ukrainian National Academy of Sciences)
Chemo - Photometric evolution of star forming disk galaxy
4 pages, LaTeX2e, using the eslab.cls file, presented as a poster in the 33rd ESLAB Symp. "Star formation from the small to the large scale", Noordwijk, The Netherlands, 2-5 November 1999, (F. Favata, A.A. Kaas & A. Wilson eds, ESA SP-445, 2000)
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
The chemical and photometric evolution of star forming disk galaxies is investigated. Numerical simulations of the complex gasdynamical flows are based on our own coding of the Chemo - Dynamical Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamical (CD - SPH) approach, which incorporates the effects of star formation. As a first application, the model is used to describe the chemical and photometric evolution of a disk galaxy like the Milky Way.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 19:13:48 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Berczik", "Peter", "", "Main Astronomical Observatory of Ukrainian National\n Academy of Sciences" ] ]
astro-ph/0001094
Jonathan Slavin
Jonathan D. Slavin, Christopher F. McKee, and David J. Hollenbach
Photoionization of Galactic Halo Gas by Old Supernova Remnants
AASTeX 5.01; 34 pages, 2 figures; submitted to Astrophysical Journal
null
10.1086/309409
null
astro-ph
null
We present new calculations on the contribution from cooling hot gas to the photoionization of warm ionized gas in the Galaxy. We show that hot gas in cooling supernova remnants (SNRs) is an important source of photoionization, particularly for gas in the halo. We find that in many regions at high latitude this source is adequate to account for the observed ionization so there is no need to find ways to transport stellar photons from the disk. The flux from cooling SNRs sets a floor on the ionization along any line of sight. Our model flux is also shown to be consistent with the diffuse soft X-ray background and with soft X-ray observations of external galaxies. We consider the ionization of the clouds observed towards the halo star HD 93521, for which there are no O stars close to the line of sight. We show that the observed ionization can be explained successfully by our model EUV/soft X-ray flux from cooling hot gas. In particular, we can match the H alpha intensity, the S++/S+ ratio, and the C+* column. From observations of the ratios of columns of C+* and either S+ or H0, we are able to estimate the thermal pressure in the clouds. The slow clouds require high (~10^4 cm^-3 K) thermal pressures to match the N(C+*)/N(S+) ratio. Additional heating sources are required for the slow clouds to maintain their ~7000 K temperatures at these pressures, as found by Reynolds, Hausen & Tufte (1999).
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 19:49:46 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Slavin", "Jonathan D.", "" ], [ "McKee", "Christopher F.", "" ], [ "Hollenbach", "David J.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001095
Wei Cui
Wei Cui (MIT), Shuang Nan Zhang (UAH), and Wan Chen (UMd/GSFC)
Phase Lag and Coherence Function of X-ray emission from Black Hole Candidate XTE J1550-564
To appear in ApJ Letters
null
10.1086/312520
null
astro-ph
null
We report the results from measuring the phase lag and coherence function of X-ray emission from black hole candidate (BHC) XTE J1550-564. These X-ray temporal properties have been recognized to be increasingly important in providing important diagnostics of the dynamics of accretion flows around black holes. For XTE J1550-564, we found significant hard lag --- the X-ray variability in high energy bands {\em lags} behind that in low energy bands --- associated both with broad-band variability and quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO). However, the situation is more complicated for the QPO: while hard lag was measured for the first harmonic of the signal, the fundamental component showed significant {\em soft} lag. Such behavior is remarkably similar to what was observed of microquasar GRS 1915+105. The phase lag evolved during the initial rising phase of the 1998 outburst. The magnitude of both the soft and hard lags of the QPO increases with X-ray flux, while the Fourier spectrum of the broad-band lag varies significantly in shape. The coherence function is relatively high and roughly constant at low frequencies, and begins to drop almost right after the first harmonic of the QPO. It is near unity at the beginning and decreases rapidly during the rising phase. Also observed is that the more widely separated the two energy bands are the less the coherence function between the two. It is interesting that the coherence function increases significantly at the frequencies of the QPO and its harmonics. We discuss the implications of the results on the models proposed for BHCs.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 22:03:16 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Cui", "Wei", "", "MIT" ], [ "Zhang", "Shuang Nan", "", "UAH" ], [ "Chen", "Wan", "", "UMd/GSFC" ] ]
astro-ph/0001096
Amy Barger
A.J. Barger, L.L. Cowie, E.A. Richards
Mapping the Evolution of High Redshift Dusty Galaxies with Submillimeter Observations of a Radio-Selected Sample
18 pages, accepted by The Astronomical Journal for April 2000 issue
Astron.J. 119 (2000) 2092-2109
10.1086/301341
null
astro-ph
null
Direct submm imaging has recently revealed the 850-micron background to be mostly composed of a population of distant ultraluminous infrared galaxies, but identifying the optical/NIR counterparts to these sources has proved difficult due to the poor submm spatial resolution. However, the proportionality of both cm and submm data to the star formation rate suggests that high resolution radio continuum maps with subarcsecond positional accuracy can be exploited to locate submm sources. In this paper we present results from a targeted SCUBA survey of micro-Jansky radio sources in the flanking fields of the Hubble Deep Field. Even with relatively shallow 850-micron SCUBA observations (>6 mJy at 3-sigma), we were successful at making submm detections of optical/NIR-faint (I>24 and K~21-22) radio sources, and our counts closely match the bright counts from submm surveys. Redshift estimates can be made from the ratio of the submm flux to the radio flux across the 100 GHz break in the spectral energy distribution. This millimetric redshift estimation places the bright submm population at z=1-3 where it forms the high redshift tail of the faint radio population. The star formation rate density (SFRD) due to ultraluminous infrared galaxies increases by more than two orders of magnitude from z~0 to z~1-3. The SFRD at high redshift inferred from our >6 mJy submm observations is comparable to that observed in the UV/optical. (Abridged)
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 23:03:23 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Barger", "A. J.", "" ], [ "Cowie", "L. L.", "" ], [ "Richards", "E. A.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001097
Kate Y. L. Su
K. Y. L. Su (1), S. Kwok (1), B. J. Hrivnak (2), R. Sahai (3) ((1) University of Calgary, (2) Valparaiso University, (3) JPL/Caltech)
HST NICMOS Observation of Proto-Planetary Nebulae
To appear in ``Asymmetrical Planetary Nebulae II: from Origins to Microstructures,'' ASP Conference Series, Vol. 199, 2000; J.H. Kastner, N. Soker, & S.A. Rappaport, eds
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
We report NICMOS wide-band and polarimetric observations of four proto-planetary nebulae. Molecular hydrogen emission is detected near the ends of the bipolar lobes of IRAS 17150-3224, which is evidence for the interaction of a fast, collimated outflow with the remnant of the asymptotic giant branch wind.
[ { "created": "Thu, 6 Jan 2000 23:16:14 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Su", "K. Y. L.", "" ], [ "Kwok", "S.", "" ], [ "Hrivnak", "B. J.", "" ], [ "Sahai", "R.", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001098
Omar Almaini
O. Almaini (University of Edinburgh)
The X-ray/submillimetre link
Invited review, to appear in proceedings of the ``Large Scale Structure in the X-ray Universe'' conference, held in Santorini, Greece, September 1999, eds. M. Plionis and I. Georgantopoulos (Editions Frontieres), 8 pages, 2 figures. Also available at http://www.roe.ac.uk/~omar/astro.html
null
null
null
astro-ph
null
It is widely believed that most of the cosmic X-ray background (XRB) is produced by a vast, hitherto undetected population of obscured AGN. Deep X-ray surveys with Chandra and XMM will soon test this hypothesis. Similarly, recent sub-mm surveys with SCUBA have revealed an analogous population of exceptionally luminous, dust-enshrouded {\em star-forming} galaxies at high redshift. There is now growing evidence for an intimate link between these obscured populations. There are currently large uncertainties in the models, but several independent arguments lead to the conclusion that a significant fraction of the SCUBA sources ($10-30% $) will contain quasars. Recent observational studies of SCUBA survey sources appear to confirm these predictions, although the relative roles of AGN and star-forming activity in heating the dust are unclear. Forthcoming surveys combining X-ray and sub-mm observations will provide a very powerful tool for disentangling these processes.
[ { "created": "Fri, 7 Jan 2000 17:54:41 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2007-05-23
[ [ "Almaini", "O.", "", "University of Edinburgh" ] ]
astro-ph/0001099
Andreas A. Berlind
Andreas A. Berlind (1), Vijay K. Narayanan (1 and 2), David H. Weinberg (1) .((1) The Ohio State University, (2) Princeton University)
Biased Estimates of Omega from Comparing Smoothed Predicted Velocity Fields to Unsmoothed Peculiar Velocity Measurements
11 pages including 2 eps figures. Submitted to ApJ
null
10.1086/309085
null
astro-ph
null
We show that a regression of unsmoothed peculiar velocity measurements against peculiar velocities predicted from a smoothed galaxy density field leads to a biased estimate of the cosmological density parameter Omega, even when galaxies trace the underlying mass distribution and galaxy positions and velocities are known perfectly. The bias arises because the errors in the predicted velocities are correlated with the predicted velocities themselves. We investigate this bias using cosmological N-body simulations and analytic arguments. In linear perturbation theory, for cold dark matter power spectra and Gaussian or top hat smoothing filters, the bias in Omega is always positive, and its magnitude increases with increasing smoothing scale. This linear calculation reproduces the N-body results for Gaussian smoothing radii R_s > 10 Mpc/h, while non-linear effects lower the bias on smaller smoothing scales, and for R_s < 3 Mpc/h Omega is underestimated rather than overestimated. The net bias in Omega for a given smoothing filter depends on the underlying cosmological model. The effect on current estimates of Omega from velocity-velocity comparisons is probably small relative to other uncertainties, but taking full advantage of the statistical precision of future peculiar velocity data sets will require either equal smoothing of the predicted and measured velocity fields or careful accounting for the biases discussed here.
[ { "created": "Fri, 7 Jan 2000 01:04:31 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-10-31
[ [ "Berlind", "Andreas A.", "", "The Ohio State University" ], [ "Narayanan", "Vijay K.", "", "1 and 2" ], [ "Weinberg", "David H.", "", "The Ohio State University" ], [ ".", "", "" ] ]
astro-ph/0001100
Sandy Leggett
S. K. Leggett, F. Allard, Conard Dahn, P. H. Hauschildt, T. H. Kerr, J. Rayner
Spectral Energy Distributions for Disk and Halo M--Dwarfs
24 pages including 13 figures, 4 Tables; accepted by ApJ
Astrophys.J.535:965-974,2000
10.1086/308887
null
astro-ph
null
We have obtained infrared (1 to 2.5 micron) spectroscopy for 42 halo and disk dwarfs with spectral type M1 to M6.5. These data are compared to synthetic spectra generated by the latest model atmospheres of Allard & Hauschildt. Photospheric parameters metallicity, effective temperature and radius are determined for the sample. We find good agreement between observation and theory except for known problems due to incomplete molecular data for metal hydrides and water. The metal-poor M subdwarfs are well matched by the models as oxide opacity sources are less important in this case. The derived effective temperatures for the sample range from 3600K to 2600K; at these temperatures grain formation and extinction are not significant in the photosphere. The derived metallicities range from solar to one-tenth solar. The radii and effective temperatures derived agree well with recent models of low mass stars.
[ { "created": "Fri, 7 Jan 2000 01:21:50 GMT", "version": "v1" } ]
2009-05-29
[ [ "Leggett", "S. K.", "" ], [ "Allard", "F.", "" ], [ "Dahn", "Conard", "" ], [ "Hauschildt", "P. H.", "" ], [ "Kerr", "T. H.", "" ], [ "Rayner", "J.", "" ] ]

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