865 research outputs found
IR Kuiper Belt Constraints
We compute the temperature and IR signal of particles of radius and
albedo at heliocentric distance , taking into account the
emissivity effect, and give an interpolating formula for the result. We compare
with analyses of COBE DIRBE data by others (including recent detection of the
cosmic IR background) for various values of heliocentric distance, ,
particle radius, , and particle albedo, . We then apply these
results to a recently-developed picture of the Kuiper belt as a two-sector disk
with a nearby, low-density sector (40<R<50-90 AU) and a more distant sector
with a higher density. We consider the case in which passage through a
molecular cloud essentially cleans the Solar System of dust. We apply a simple
model of dust production by comet collisions and removal by the
Poynting-Robertson effect to find limits on total and dust masses in the near
and far sectors as a function of time since such a passage. Finally we compare
Kuiper belt IR spectra for various parameter values.Comment: 34 pages, LaTeX, uses aasms4.sty, 11 PostScript figures not embedded.
A number of substantive comments by a particularly thoughtful referee have
been addresse
Heavy Quark Production and PDF's Subgroup Report
We present a status report of a variety of projects related to heavy quark
production and parton distributions for the Tevatron Run II.Comment: Latex. 8 pages, 7 eps figures. Contribution to the Physics at Run II
Workshops: QCD and Weak Boson Physic
Parton Distributions Working Group
The main focus of this working group was to investigate the different issues
associated with the development of quantitative tools to estimate parton
distribution functions uncertainties. In the conclusion, we introduce a
"Manifesto" that describes an optimal method for reporting data.Comment: Report of the Parton Distributions Working Group of the 'QCD and Weak
Boson Physics workshop in preparation for Run II at the Fermilab Tevatron'.
Co-Conveners: L. de Barbaro, S.A. Keller, S. Kuhlmann, H. Schellman, and
W.-K. Tun
Summary of the Very Large Hadron Collider Physics and Detector Workshop
One of the options for an accelerator beyond the LHC is a hadron collider
with higher energy. Work is going on to explore accelerator technologies that
would make such a machine feasible. This workshop concentrated on the physics
and detector issues associated with a hadron collider with an energy in the
center of mass of the order of 100 to 200 TeV
Bispectrum speckle interferometry of the massive protostellar outflow source IRAS 23151+5912
We present bispectrum speckle interferometry of the massive protostellar
object IRAS 23151+5912 in the near-infrared K' band. The reconstructed image
shows the diffuse nebulosity north-east of two point-like sources in
unprecedented detail. The comparison of our near-infrared image with mm
continuum and CO molecular line maps shows that the brighter of the two point
sources lies near the center of the mm peak, indicating that it is a high-mass
protostar. The nebulosity coincides with the blue-shifted molecular outflow
component. The most prominent feature in the nebulosity is a bow-shock-like
arc. We assume that this feature is associated with a precessing jet which has
created an inward-pointed cone in the swept-up material. We present numerical
jet simulations that reproduce this and several other features observed in our
speckle image of the nebulosity. Our data also reveal a linear structure
connecting the central point source to the extended diffuse nebulosity. This
feature may represent the innermost part of a jet that drives the strong
molecular outflow (PA ~80 degr) from IRAS 23151+5912. With the aid of radiative
transfer calculations, we demonstrate that, in general, the observed inner
structures of the circumstellar material surrounding high-mass stars are
strongly influenced by the orientation and symmetry of the bipolar cavity.Comment: accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics; preprints with high-resolution
images can be obtained from
http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/tpreibis/iras23151.htm
The Agile Alert System For Gamma-Ray Transients
In recent years, a new generation of space missions offered great
opportunities of discovery in high-energy astrophysics. In this article we
focus on the scientific operations of the Gamma-Ray Imaging Detector (GRID)
onboard the AGILE space mission. The AGILE-GRID, sensitive in the energy range
of 30 MeV-30 GeV, has detected many gamma-ray transients of galactic and
extragalactic origins. This work presents the AGILE innovative approach to fast
gamma-ray transient detection, which is a challenging task and a crucial part
of the AGILE scientific program. The goals are to describe: (1) the AGILE
Gamma-Ray Alert System, (2) a new algorithm for blind search identification of
transients within a short processing time, (3) the AGILE procedure for
gamma-ray transient alert management, and (4) the likelihood of ratio tests
that are necessary to evaluate the post-trial statistical significance of the
results. Special algorithms and an optimized sequence of tasks are necessary to
reach our goal. Data are automatically analyzed at every orbital downlink by an
alert pipeline operating on different timescales. As proper flux thresholds are
exceeded, alerts are automatically generated and sent as SMS messages to
cellular telephones, e-mails, and push notifications of an application for
smartphones and tablets. These alerts are crosschecked with the results of two
pipelines, and a manual analysis is performed. Being a small scientific-class
mission, AGILE is characterized by optimization of both scientific analysis and
ground-segment resources. The system is capable of generating alerts within two
to three hours of a data downlink, an unprecedented reaction time in gamma-ray
astrophysics.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures, 5 table
Macondo-1 well oil-derived polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
Mesozooplankton (>200 mm) collected in August and September of 2010 from the northern Gulf of Mexico show evidence of exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). Multivariate statistical analysis revealed that distributions of PAHs extracted from mesozooplankton were related to the oil released from the ruptured British Petroleum Macondo-1 (M-1) well associated with the R/V Deepwater Horizon blowout. Mesozooplankton contained 0.03–97.9 ng g 1 of total PAHs and ratios of fluoranthene to fluoranthene + pyrene less than 0.44, indicating a liquid fossil fuel source. The distribution of PAHs isolated from mesozooplankton extracted in this study shows that the 2010 Deepwater Horizon spill may have contributed to contamination in the northern Gulf of Mexico ecosystem
Direct Evidence for Hadronic Cosmic-Ray Acceleration in the Supernova Renmant IC 443
The Supernova Remnant (SNR) IC 443 is an intermediate-age remnant well known
for its radio, optical, X-ray and gamma-ray energy emissions. In this Letter we
study the gamma-ray emission above 100 MeV from IC 443 as obtained by the AGILE
satellite. A distinct pattern of diffuse emission in the energy range 100 MeV-3
GeV is detected across the SNR with its prominent maximum (source "A")
localized in the Northeastern shell with a flux F = (47 \pm 10) 10^{-8} photons
cm^{-2} s^{-1} above 100 MeV. This location is the site of the strongest shock
interaction between the SNR blast wave and the dense circumstellar medium.
Source "A" is not coincident with the TeV source located 0.4 degree away and
associated with a dense molecular cloud complex in the SNR central region. From
our observations, and from the lack of detectable diffuse TeV emission from its
Northeastern rim, we demonstrate that electrons cannot be the main emitters of
gamma-rays in the range 0.1-10 GeV at the site of the strongest SNR shock. The
intensity, spectral characteristics, and location of the most prominent
gamma-ray emission together with the absence of co-spatial detectable TeV
emission are consistent only with a hadronic model of cosmic-ray acceleration
in the SNR. A high-density molecular cloud (cloud "E") provides a remarkable
"target" for nucleonic interactions of accelerated hadrons: our results show
enhanced gamma-ray production near the molecular cloud/shocked shell
interaction site. IC 443 provides the first unambiguous evidence of cosmic-ray
acceleration by SNRs.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; accepted by ApJLetters on Jan 21, 201
Episodic Transient Gamma-Ray Emission from the Microquasar Cygnus X-1
Cygnus X-1 is the archetypal black hole (BH) binary system in our Galaxy. We
report the main results of an extensive search for transient gamma-ray emission
from Cygnus X-1 carried out in the energy range 100 MeV - 3 GeV by the AGILE
satellite, during the period 2007 July - 2009 October. The total exposure time
is about 300 days, during which the source was in the "hard" X-ray spectral
state. We divided the observing intervals in 2 or 4 week periods, and searched
for transient and persistent emission. We report an episode of significant
transient gamma-ray emission detected on 2009, October 16 in a position
compatible with Cygnus X-1 optical position. This episode, occurred during a
hard spectral state of Cygnus X-1, shows that a 1-2 day time variable emission
above 100 MeV can be produced during hard spectral states, having important
theoretical implications for current Comptonization models for Cygnus X-1 and
other microquasars. Except for this one short timescale episode, no significant
gamma-ray emission was detected by AGILE. By integrating all available data we
obtain a 2 upper limit for the total integrated flux of
in the energy range
100 MeV - 3 GeV. We then clearly establish the existence of a spectral cutoff
in the energy range 1-100 MeV that applies to the typical hard state outside
the flaring period and that confirms the historically known spectral cutoff
above 1 MeV.Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ on the 9th of Feb 2010, 5 pages, 3
figure
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