4,811 research outputs found
Unpowered Aerodynamic Characteristics of a 15-Percent Scale Model of a Twin-Engine Commuter Aircraft
An experimental investigation was conducted in the Ames 12-Foot Pressure Wind Tunnel to determine the unpowered aerodynamic characteristics of a 15-percent-scale model of a twin-engine commuter aircraft. Model longitudinal aerodynamic characteristics were examined at discrete flap deflections for various angle-of-attack and wind-tunnel-velocity ranges with the empennage on and off. Data are presented for the basic model configuration consisting of the fuselage, wing, basic wing leading edge, double slotted flaps, midengine nacelles, and empennage. Other configurations tested include a particle-span drooped leading edge (dropped outboard of the engine nacelles), a full-span drooped leading edge, low- and high-mounted engine nacelles, and a single-slotted flap. An evaluation was made of the model mounting system by comparing data obtained with the model mounted conventionally on the wind-tunnel model-support struts and the model inverted
Accreting millisecond X-ray pulsars: 10 years of INTEGRAL observations
During the last 10 years, INTEGRAL made a unique contribution to the study of
accreting millisecond X-ray pulsars (AMXPs), discovering three of the 14
sources now known of this class. Besides increasing the number of known AMXPs,
INTEGRAL also carried out observations of these objects above 20 keV,
substantially advancing our understanding of their behaviour. We present here a
review of all the AMXPs observed with INTEGRAL and discuss the physical
interpretation of their behaviour in the X-ray domain. We focus in particular
on the lightcurve profile during outburst, as well as the timing, spectral, and
thermonuclear type-I X-ray bursts properties.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures. Proceedings of "An INTEGRAL view of the
high-energy sky (the first 10 years)" the 9th INTEGRAL Workshop, October
15-19, 2012, Paris, Franc
Thermonuclear burst physics with RXTE
Recently we have made measurements of thermonuclear burst energetics and
recurrence times which are unprecedented in their precision, largely thanks to
the sensitivity of the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. In the "Clocked Burster",
GS 1826-24, hydrogen burns during the burst via the rapid-proton (rp) process,
which has received particular attention in recent years through theoretical and
modelling studies. The burst energies and the measured variation of alpha (the
ratio of persistent to burst flux) with accretion rate strongly suggests solar
metallicity in the neutron star atmosphere, although this is not consistent
with the corresponding variation of the recurrence time. Possible explanations
include extra heating between the bursts, or a change in the fraction of the
neutron star over which accretion takes place. I also present results from 4U
1746-37, which exhibits regular burst trains which are interrupted by "out of
phase" bursts.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, AIP conference proceedings format. To appear in
the proceedings of the "X-ray Timing 2003: Rossi and Beyond" meeting held in
Cambridge, MA, November, 200
Non-Existence of Black Holes in Certain Spacetimes
Assuming certain asymptotic conditions, we prove a general theorem on the
non-existence of static regular (i.e., nondegenerate) black holes in spacetimes
with a negative cosmological constant, given that the fundamental group of
space is infinite. We use this to rule out the existence of regular negative
mass AdS black holes with Ricci flat scri. For any mass, we also rule out a
class of conformally compactifiable static black holes whose conformal infinity
has positive scalar curvature and infinite fundamental group, subject to our
asymptotic conditions. In a limited, but important, special case our result
adds new support to the AdS/CFT inspired positive mass conjecture of Horowitz
and Myers.Comment: 17 pages, Latex. Typos corrected, minor changes to the text. Accepted
for publication in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Indications for a slow rotator in the Rapid Burster from its thermonuclear bursting behaviour
We perform time-resolved spectroscopy of all the type I bursts from the Rapid
Burster (MXB 1730-335) detected with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. Type I
bursts are detected at high accretion rates, up to \sim 45% of the Eddington
luminosity. We find evidence that bursts lacking the canonical cooling in their
time-resolved spectra are, none the less, thermonuclear in nature. The type I
bursting rate keeps increasing with the persistent luminosity, well above the
threshold at which it is known to abruptly drop in other bursting low-mass
X-ray binaries. The only other known source in which the bursting rate keeps
increasing over such a large range of mass accretion rates is the 11 Hz pulsar
IGR J174802446. This may indicate a similarly slow spin for the neutron star
in the Rapid Burster
Nonexistence of marginally trapped surfaces and geons in 2+1 gravity
We use existence results for Jang's equation and marginally outer trapped
surfaces (MOTSs) in 2+1 gravity to obtain nonexistence of geons in 2+1 gravity.
In particular, our results show that any 2+1 initial data set, which obeys the
dominant energy condition with cosmological constant \Lambda \geq 0 and which
satisfies a mild asymptotic condition, must have trivial topology. Moreover,
any data set obeying these conditions cannot contain a MOTS. The asymptotic
condition involves a cutoff at a finite boundary at which a null mean convexity
condition is assumed to hold; this null mean convexity condition is satisfied
by all the standard asymptotic boundary conditions. The results presented here
strengthen various aspects of previous related results in the literature. These
results not only have implications for classical 2+1 gravity but also apply to
quantum 2+1 gravity when formulated using Witten's solution space quantization.Comment: v3: Elements from the original two proofs of the main result have
been combined to give a single proof, thereby circumventing an issue with the
second proof associated with potential blow-ups of solutions to Jang's
equation. To appear in Commun. Math. Phy
Correlated radial velocity and X-ray variations in HD 154791/4U 1700+24
We present evidence for approximately 400-d variations in the radial velocity
of HD 154791 (V934 Her), the suggested optical counterpart of 4U 1700+24. The
variations are correlated with the previously reported approximately 400 d
variations in the X-ray flux of 4U 1700+24, which supports the association of
these two objects, as well as the identification of this system as the second
known X-ray binary in which a neutron star accretes from the wind of a red
giant. The HD 154791 radial velocity variations can be fit with an eccentric
orbit with period 404 +/- 3 d, amplitude K=0.75 +/- 0.12 km/s and eccentricity
e=0.26 +/- 0.15. There are also indications of variations on longer time scales
>~ 2000 d. We have re-examined all available ASM data following an unusually
large X-ray outburst in 1997-98, and confirm that the 1-d averaged 2-10 keV
X-ray flux from 4U 1700+24 is modulated with a period of 400 +/- 20 d. The mean
profile of the persistent X-ray variations was approximately sinusoidal, with
an amplitude of 0.108 +/- 0.012 ASM count/s (corresponding to 31% rms). The
epoch of X-ray maximum was approximately 40 d after the time of periastron
according to the eccentric orbital fit. If the 400 d oscillations from HD
154791/4U 1700+24 are due to orbital motion, then the system parameters are
probably close to those of the only other neutron-star symbiotic-like binary,
GX 1+4. We discuss the similarities and differences between these two systems.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; accepted by Ap
Spectral and timing properties of the accreting X-ray millisecond pulsar IGR J17498-2921
We analyze the spectral and timing properties of IGR J17498-2921 and the
characteristics of X-ray bursts to constrain the physical processes responsible
for the X-ray production in this class of sources. The broad-band average
spectrum is well-described by thermal Comptonization with an electron
temperature of kT_e ~ 50 keV, soft seed photons of kT_bb ~ 1 keV, and Thomson
optical depth \taut ~ 1 in a slab geometry. The slab area corresponds to a
black body radius of R_bb ~9 km. During the outburst, the spectrum stays
remarkably stable with plasma and soft seed photon temperatures and scattering
optical depth that are constant within the errors. This behavior has been
interpreted as indicating that the X-ray emission originates above the neutron
star (NS) surface in a hot slab (either the heated NS surface or the accretion
shock). The INTEGRAL, RXTE, and Swift data reveal the X-ray pulsation at a
period of 2.5 milliseconds up to ~65 keV. The pulsed fraction is consistent
with being constant, i.e. energy independent and has a typical value of 6-7%.
The nearly sinusoidal pulses show soft lags that seem to saturate near 10 keV
at a rather small value of ~ -60\mu s with those observed in other accreting
pulsars. The short burst profiles indicate that there is a hydrogen-poor
material at ignition, which suggests either that the accreted material is
hydrogen-deficient, or that the CNO metallicity is up to a factor of about two
times solar. However, the variation in the burst recurrence time as a function
of \dot{m} (inferred from the X-ray flux) is much smaller than predicted by
helium-ignition models.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1012.022
An X-Ray Jet from a White Dwarf - Detection of the Collimated Outflow from CH Cygni with Chandra
Most symbiotic stars consist of a white dwarf accreting material from the
wind of a red giant. An increasing number of these objects have been found to
produce jets. Analysis of archival Chandra data of the symbiotic system CH
Cygni reveals faint extended emission to the south, aligned with the optical
and radio jets seen in earlier HST and VLA observations. CH Cygni thus contains
only the second known white dwarf with an X-ray jet, after R Aquarii. The
X-rays from symbiotic-star jets appear to be produced when jet material is
shock-heated following collision with surrounding gas, as with the outflows
from some protostellar objects and bipolar planetary nebulae.Comment: 4 & a bit pages, 4 figures, accepted by ApJL; uses emulateapj.cls and
revtex4. Minor changes following referees report, & shortened to meet page
limi
Yields of oxidized volatile organic compounds during the OH radical initiated oxidation of isoprene, methyl vinyl ketone, and methacrolein under high-NO_x conditions
We present first-generation and total production yields of glyoxal, methylglyoxal, glycolaldehyde, and hydroxyacetone from the oxidation of isoprene, methyl vinyl ketone (MVK), and methacrolein (MACR) with OH under high NO_x conditions. Several of these first-generation yields are not included in commonly used chemical mechanisms, such as the Leeds Master Chemical Mechanism (MCM) v. 3.2. The first-generation yield of glyoxal from isoprene was determined to be 2.1 (±0.6)%. Inclusion of first-generation production of glyoxal, glycolaldehyde and hydroxyacetone from isoprene greatly improves performance of an MCM based model during the initial part of the experiments. In order to further improve performance of the MCM based model, higher generation glyoxal production was reduced by lowering the first-generation yield of glyoxal from C5 hydroxycarbonyls. The results suggest that glyoxal production from reaction of OH with isoprene under high NO_x conditions can be approximated by inclusion of a first-generation production term together with secondary production only via glycolaldehyde. Analogously, methylglyoxal production can be approximated by a first-generation production term from isoprene, and secondary production via MVK, MACR and hydroxyacetone. The first-generation yields reported here correspond to less than 5% of the total oxidized yield from isoprene and thus only have a small effect on the fate of isoprene. However, due to the abundance of isoprene, the combination of first-generation yields and reduced higher generation production of glyoxal from C5 hydroxycarbonyls is important for models that include the production of the small organic molecules from isoprene
- …
