1,527 research outputs found
Quasi-Periodic Oscillations and energy spectra from the two brightest Ultra-Luminous X-ray sources in M82
Ultra-Luminous X-ray sources are thought to be accreting black holes that
might host Intermediate Mass Black Holes (IMBH), proposed to exist by
theoretical studies, even though a firm detection (as a class) is still
missing. The brightest ULX in M82 (M82 X-1) is probably one of the best
candidates to host an IMBH. In this work we analyzed the data of the recent
release of observations obtained from M82 X-1 taken by XMM-Newton. We performed
a study of the timing and spectral properties of the source. We report on the
detection of (46+-2) mHz Quasi-Periodic Oscillations (QPOs) in the power
density spectra of two observations. A comparison of the frequency of these
high-frequency QPOs with previous detections supports the 1:2:3 frequency
distribution as suggested in other studies. We discuss the implications if the
(46+-2) mHz QPO detected in M82 X-1 is the fundamental harmonic, in analogy
with the High-Frequency QPOs observed in black hole binaries. For one of the
observations we have detected for the first time a QPO at 8 mHz (albeit at a
low significance), that coincides with a hardening of the spectrum. We suggest
that the QPO is a milli-hertz QPO originating from the close-by transient ULX
M82 X-2, with analogies to the Low-Frequency QPOs observed in black hole
binaries.Comment: 9 pages (with 4 figures and 4 tables). Accepted for publication in
MNRAS (26/09/13
What brakes the Crab pulsar?
Optical observations provide convincing evidence that the optical phase of
the Crab pulsar follows the radio one closely. Since optical data do not depend
on dispersion measure variations, they provide a robust and independent
confirmation of the radio timing solution. The aim of this paper is to find a
global mathematical description of Crab pulsar's phase as a function of time
for the complete set of published Jodrell Bank radio ephemerides (JBE) in the
period 1988-2014. We apply the mathematical techniques developed for analyzing
optical observations to the analysis of JBE. We break the whole period into a
series of episodes and express the phase of the pulsar in each episode as the
sum of two analytical functions. The first function is the best-fitting local
braking index law, and the second function represents small residuals from this
law with an amplitude of only a few turns, which rapidly relaxes to the local
braking index law. From our analysis, we demonstrate that the power law index
undergoes "instantaneous" changes at the time of observed jumps in rotational
frequency (glitches). We find that the phase evolution of the Crab pulsar is
dominated by a series of constant braking law episodes, with the braking index
changing abruptly after each episode in the range of values between 2.1 and
2.6. Deviations from such a regular phase description behave as oscillations
triggered by glitches and amount to fewer than 40 turns during the above
period, in which the pulsar has made more than 2.0e10 turns. Our analysis does
not favor the explanation that glitches are connected to phenomena occurring in
the interior of the pulsar. On the contrary, timing irregularities and changes
in slow down rate seem to point to electromagnetic interaction of the pulsar
with the surrounding environment.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables; accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
Periodic signals from the Circinus region: two new cataclysmic variables and the ultraluminous X-ray source candidate GC X-1
The examination of two 2010 Chandra ACIS exposures of the Circinus galaxy
resulted in the discovery of two pulsators: CXO J141430.1-651621 and CXOU
J141332.9-651756. We also detected 26-ks pulsations in CG X-1, consistently
with previous measures. For ~40 other sources, we obtained limits on periodic
modulations. In CXO J141430.1-651621, which is ~2 arcmin outside the Circinus
galaxy, we detected signals at 6120(1) s and 64.2(5) ks. In the longest
observation, the source showed a flux of ~1.1e-13 erg/cm^2/s (absorbed, 0.5-10
keV) and the spectrum could be described by a power-law with photon index ~1.4.
From archival observations, we found that the luminosity is variable by ~50 per
cent on time-scales of weeks-years. The two periodicities pin down CXO
J141430.1-651621 as a cataclysmic variable of the intermediate polar subtype.
The period of CXOU J141332.9-651756 is 6378(3) s. It is located inside the
Circinus galaxy, but the low absorption indicates a Galactic foreground object.
The flux was ~5e-14 erg/cm^2/s in the Chandra observations and showed ~50 per
cent variations on weekly/yearly scales; the spectrum is well fit by a power
law ~0.9. These characteristics and the large modulation suggest that CXOU
J141332.9-651756 is a magnetic cataclysmic variable, probably a polar. For CG
X-1, we show that if the source is in the Circinus galaxy, its properties are
consistent with a Wolf-Rayet plus black hole binary. We consider the
implications of this for ultraluminous X-ray sources and the prospects of
Advanced LIGO and Virgo. In particular, from the current sample of WR-BH
systems we estimate an upper limit to the detection rate of stellar BH-BH
mergers of ~16 events per yr.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables; accepted for publication in MNRA
QuantEYE: The Quantum Optics Instrument for OWL
QuantEYE is designed to be the highest time-resolution instrument on ESO:s
planned Overwhelmingly Large Telescope, devised to explore astrophysical
variability on microsecond and nanosecond scales, down to the quantum-optical
limit. Expected phenomena include instabilities of photon-gas bubbles in
accretion flows, p-mode oscillations in neutron stars, and quantum-optical
photon bunching in time. Precise timescales are both variable and unknown, and
studies must be of photon-stream statistics, e.g., their power spectra or
autocorrelations. Such functions increase with the square of the intensity,
implying an enormously increased sensitivity at the largest telescopes.
QuantEYE covers the optical, and its design involves an array of
photon-counting avalanche-diode detectors, each viewing one segment of the OWL
entrance pupil. QuantEYE will work already with a partially filled OWL main
mirror, and also without [full] adaptive optics.Comment: 7 pages; Proceedings from meeting 'Instrumentation for Extremely
Large Telescopes', held at Ringberg Castle, July 2005 (T.Herbst, ed.
1RXS J214303.7+065419/RBS 1774: A New Isolated Neutron Star Candidate
We report on the identification of a new possible Isolated Neutron Star
candidate in archival ROSAT observations. The source 1RXS J214303.7+065419,
listed in the ROSAT Bright Survey as RBS 1774, is very soft, exhibits a thermal
spectrum well fitted by a blackbody at eV and has a low column
density, . Catalogue searches revealed
no known sources in other energy bands close to the X-ray position of RBS 1774.
Follow-up optical observations with NTT showed no peculiar object within the
X-ray error circle. The absence of any plausible optical counterpart down to
results in an X-ray to optical flux ratio in excess of 1000.Comment: LaTeX (A&A style files), 5 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication
in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters. Minor correction
A very faint core-collapse supernova in M85
An anomalous transient in the early Hubble-type (S0) galaxy Messier 85 (M85)
in the Virgo cluster was discovered by Kulkarni et al. (2007) on 7 January 2006
that had very low luminosity (peak absolute R-band magnitude MR of about -12)
that was constant over more than 80 days, red colour and narrow spectral lines,
which seem inconsistent with those observed in any known class of transient
events. Kulkarni et al. (2007) suggest an exotic stellar merger as the possible
origin. An alternative explanation is that the transient in M85 was a type
II-plateau supernova of extremely low luminosity, exploding in a lenticular
galaxy with residual star-forming activity. This intriguing transient might be
the faintest supernova that has ever been discovered.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures. Submitted to Nature "Brief Communication Arising"
on 18 July 2007, Accepted on 17 August 2007. Arising from: Kulkarni et al.
2007, Nature, 447, 458-46
SN 2013ab : A normal type IIP supernova in NGC 5669
We present densely-sampled ultraviolet/optical photometric and low-resolution
optical spectroscopic observations of the type IIP supernova 2013ab in the
nearby (24 Mpc) galaxy NGC 5669, from 2 to 190d after explosion.
Continuous photometric observations, with the cadence of typically a day to one
week, were acquired with the 1-2m class telescopes in the LCOGT network, ARIES
telescopes in India and various other telescopes around the globe. The light
curve and spectra suggest that the SN is a normal type IIP event with a plateau
duration of days with mid plateau absolute visual magnitude of
-16.7, although with a steeper decline during the plateau (0.92 mag 100 d in band) relative to other archetypal SNe of similar brightness.
The velocity profile of SN 2013ab shows striking resemblance with those of SNe
1999em and 2012aw. Following the Rabinak & Waxman (2011) prescription, the
initial temperature evolution of the SN emission allows us to estimate the
progenitor radius to be 800 R, indicating that the SN
originated from a red supergiant star. The distance to the SN host galaxy is
estimated to be 24.3 Mpc from expanding photosphere method (EPM). From our
observations, we estimate that 0.064 M of Ni was synthesized
in the explosion. General relativistic, radiation hydrodynamical modeling of
the SN infers an explosion energy of erg, a progenitor
mass (at the time of explosion) of M and an initial radius
of R.Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
SN 2005cs in M51 I. The first month of evolution of a subluminous SN II plateau
Early time optical observations of supernova (SN) 2005cs in the Whirlpool
Galaxy (M51), are reported. Photometric data suggest that SN 2005cs is a
moderately under-luminous Type II plateau supernova (SN IIP). The SN was
unusually blue at early epochs (U-B ~ -0.9 about three days after explosion)
which indicates very high continuum temperatures. The spectra show relatively
narrow P-Cygni features, suggesting ejecta velocities lower than observed in
more typical SNe IIP. The earliest spectra show weak absorption features in the
blue wing of the He I 5876A absorption component and, less clearly, of H
and H. Based on spectral modelling, two different interpretations can
be proposed: these features may either be due to high-velocity H and He I
components, or (more likely) be produced by different ions (N II, Si II).
Analogies with the low-luminosity, Ni-poor, low-velocity SNe IIP are
also discussed.
While a more extended spectral coverage is necessary in order to determine
accurately the properties of the progenitor star, published estimates of the
progenitor mass seem not to be consistent with stellar evolution models.Comment: 12 pages, 11 Figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Optical and Ultraviolet Observations of the Very Young Type IIP SN 2014cx in NGC 337
Extensive photometric and spectroscopic observations are presented for SN
2014cx, a type IIP supernova (SN) exploding in the nearby galaxy NGC 337. The
observations are performed in optical and ultraviolet bands, covering from -20
to +400 days from the peak light. The stringent detection limit from
prediscovery images suggests that this supernova was actually detected within
about 1 day after explosion. Evolution of the very early-time light curve of SN
2014cx is similar to that predicted from a shock breakout and post-shock
cooling decline before reaching the optical peak. Our photometric observations
show that SN 2014cx has a plateau duration of ~ 100 days, an absolute V-band
magnitude of ~ -16.5 mag at t~50 days, and a nickel mass of 0.056+-0.008 Msun.
The spectral evolution of SN 2014cx resembles that of normal SNe IIP like SN
1999em and SN 2004et, except that it has a slightly higher expansion velocity
(~ 4200 km/s at 50 days). From the cooling curve of photospheric temperature,
we derive that the progenitor has a pre-explosion radius of ~ 640 Rsun,
consistent with those obtained from SNEC modeling (~ 620 Rsun) and
hydrodynamical modeling of the observables (~ 570 Rsun). Moreover, the
hydrodynamical simulations yield a total explosion energy of ~ 0.4*10e51 erg,
and an ejected mass of ~ 8 Msun. These results indicate that the immediate
progenitor of SN 2014cx is likely a red supergiant star with a mass of ~ 10
Msun.Comment: 47 pages, 12 figures and 7 tables. Accepted by Ap
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