488 research outputs found
PKS B1400-33: an unusual radio relic in a poor cluster
We present new arcminute resolution radio images of the low surface
brightness radio source PKS B1400-33 that is located in the poor cluster Abell
S753. The observations consist of 330 MHz VLA, 843 MHz MOST and 1398 and 2378
MHz ATCA data. These new images, with higher surface brightness sensitivity
than previous observations, reveal that the large scale structure consists of
extended filamentary emission bounded by edge-brightened rims. The source is
offset on one side of symmetrically distributed X-ray emission that is centered
on the dominant cluster galaxy NGC 5419. PKS B1400-33 is a rare example of a
relic in a poor cluster with radio properties unlike those of most relics and
halos observed in cluster environments.
The diffuse source appears to have had an unusual origin and we discuss
possible mechanisms. We examine whether the source could be re-energized relic
radio plasma or a buoyant synchrotron bubble that is a relic of activity in NGC
5419. The more exciting prospect is that the source is relic plasma preserved
in the cluster gaseous environment following the chance injection of a radio
lobe into the ICM as a result of activity in a galaxy at the periphery of the
cluster.Comment: 26 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journa
An Australia telescope survey for CMB anisotropies
We have surveyed six distinct `empty fields' using the Australia Telescope
Compact Array in an ultra-compact configuration with the aim of imaging, with a
high brightness sensitivity, any arcmin-scale brightness-temperature
anisotropies in the background radio sky. The six well-separated regions were
observed at a frequency of 8.7 GHz and the survey regions were limited by the
ATCA primary beams which have a full width at half maximum of 6 arcmin at this
frequency; all fields were observed with a resolution of 2 arcmin and an rms
thermal noise of 24 microJy/beam. After subtracting foreground confusion
detected in higher resolution images of the fields, residual fluctuations in
Stokes I images are consistent with the expectations from thermal noise and
weaker (unidentified) foreground sources; the Stokes Q and U images are
consistent with expectations from thermal noise.
Within the sensitivity of our observations, we have no reason to believe that
there are any Sunyaev-Zeldovich holes in the microwave sky surveyed. Assuming
Gaussian-form CMB anisotropy with a `flat' spectrum, we derive 95 per cent
confidence upper limits of Q_flat < 10--11 microK in polarized intensity and
Q_flat < 25 microK in total intensity. The ATCA filter function peaks at l=4700
and has half maximum values at l=3350 and 6050.Comment: 17 pages, includes 8 figures and 6 tables, accepted for publication
in MNRA
The interior structure of rotating black holes 1. Concise derivation
This paper presents a concise derivation of a new set of solutions for the
interior structure of accreting, rotating black holes. The solutions are
conformally stationary, axisymmetric, and conformally separable.
Hyper-relativistic counter-streaming between freely-falling collisionless
ingoing and outgoing streams leads to mass inflation at the inner horizon,
followed by collapse. The solutions fail at an exponentially tiny radius, where
the rotational motion of the streams becomes comparable to their radial motion.
The papers provide a fully nonlinear, dynamical solution for the interior
structure of a rotating black hole from just above the inner horizon inward,
down to a tiny scale.Comment: Version 1: 8 pages, 3 figures. Version 2: Extensively revised to
emphasize the derivation of the solution rather than the solution itself. 11
pages, 4 figures. Version 3: Minor changes to match published version.
Mathematica notebook available at
http://jila.colorado.edu/~ajsh/rotatinginflationary/rotatinginflationary.n
A Case for Renewed Activity in the Giant Radio Galaxy J0116-473
We present ATCA radio observations of the giant radio galaxy J0116-473 at 12
and 22 cm wavelengths in total intensity and polarization. The images clearly
reveal a bright inner-double structure within more extended edge-brightened
lobe emission. The lack of hotspots at the ends of the outer lobes, the strong
core and the inner-double structure with its edge-brightened morphology lead us
to suggest that this giant radio galaxy is undergoing a renewed nuclear
activity: J0116-473 appears to be a striking example of a radio galaxy where a
young double source is evolving within older lobe material. We also report the
detection of a Mpc-long linear feature which is oriented perpendicular to the
radio axis and has a high fractional polarization.Comment: 25 pages, 10 figures, appeared in 2002 ApJ, 565, 25
Can Baryonic Features Produce the Observed 100 Mpc Clustering?
We assess the possibility that baryonic acoustic oscillations in adiabatic
models may explain the observations of excess power in large-scale structure on
100h^-1 Mpc scales. The observed location restricts models to two extreme areas
of parameter space. In either case, the baryon fraction must be large
(Omega_b/Omega_0 > 0.3) to yield significant features. The first region
requires Omega_0 < 0.2h to match the location, implying large blue tilts
(n>1.4) to satisfy cluster abundance constraints. The power spectrum also
continues to rise toward larger scales in these models. The second region
requires Omega_0 near 1, implying Omega_b well out of the range of big bang
nucleosynthesis constraints; moreover, the peak is noticeably wider than the
observations suggest. Testable features of both solutions are that they require
moderate reionization and thereby generate potentially observable (about 1 uK)
large-angle polarization, as well as sub-arc-minute temperature fluctuations.
In short, baryonic features in adiabatic models may explain the observed excess
only if currently favored determinations of cosmological parameters are in
substantial error or if present surveys do not represent a fair sample of
100h^-1 Mpc structures.Comment: LaTeX, 7 pages, 5 Postscript figures, submitted to ApJ Letter
Mosaicking with cosmic microwave background interferometers
Measurements of cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies by
interferometers offer several advantages over single-dish observations. The
formalism for analyzing interferometer CMB data is well developed in the
flat-sky approximation, valid for small fields of view. As the area of sky is
increased to obtain finer spectral resolution, this approximation needs to be
relaxed. We extend the formalism for CMB interferometry, including both
temperature and polarization, to mosaics of observations covering arbitrarily
large areas of the sky, with each individual pointing lying within the flat-sky
approximation. We present a method for computing the correlation between
visibilities with arbitrary pointing centers and baselines and illustrate the
effects of sky curvature on the l-space resolution that can be obtained from a
mosaic.Comment: 9 pages; submitted to Ap
The Stellar Content of Obscured Galactic Giant H II Regions
Near infrared images of the Galactic giant HII region W43 reveal a dense
stellar cluster at its center. Broad band JHK photometry of the young cluster
and K-band spectra of three of its bright stars are presented. The 2 micron
spectrum of the brightest star in the cluster is very well matched to the
spectra of Wolf-Rayet stars of sub-type WN7. Two other stars are identified as
O type giants or supergiants by their NIII and CIV emission. The close spatial
clustering of O and the hydrogen WN type stars is analogous to the intense star
burst clusters R136 in the Large Magellanic Cloud and NGC3603 in the Galaxy.Comment: 22 pages (LaTex), including 7 figures (eps
Confirmation of two extended objects along the line of sight to PKS1830-211 with ESO-VLT adaptive optics imaging
We report on new high-resolution near-infrared images of the gravitationally
lensed radio source PKS1830-211, a quasar at z=2.507. These adaptive optics
observations, taken with the Very Large Telescope (VLT), are further improved
through image deconvolution. They confirm the presence of a second object along
the line of sight to the quasar, in addition to the previously known spiral
galaxy. This additional object is clearly extended in our images. However, its
faint luminosity does not allow to infer any photometric redshift. If this
galaxy is located in the foreground of PKS1830-211, it complicates the modeling
of this system and decreases the interest in using PKS1830-211 as a means to
determine H0 via the time delay between the two lensed images of the quasar.Comment: Accepted in A&A Letter
Systematic Errors in Cosmic Microwave Background Interferometry
Cosmic microwave background (CMB) polarization observations will require
superb control of systematic errors in order to achieve their full scientific
potential, particularly in the case of attempts to detect the B modes that may
provide a window on inflation. Interferometry may be a promising way to achieve
these goals. This paper presents a formalism for characterizing the effects of
a variety of systematic errors on interferometric CMB polarization
observations, with particular emphasis on estimates of the B-mode power
spectrum. The most severe errors are those that couple the temperature
anisotropy signal to polarization; such errors include cross-talk within
detectors, misalignment of polarizers, and cross-polarization. In a B mode
experiment, the next most serious category of errors are those that mix E and B
modes, such as gain fluctuations, pointing errors, and beam shape errors. The
paper also indicates which sources of error may cause circular polarization
(e.g., from foregrounds) to contaminate the cosmologically interesting linear
polarization channels, and conversely whether monitoring of the circular
polarization channels may yield useful information about the errors themselves.
For all the sources of error considered, estimates of the level of control that
will be required for both E and B mode experiments are provided. Both
experiments that interfere linear polarizations and those that interfere
circular polarizations are considered. The fact that circular experiments
simultaneously measure both linear polarization Stokes parameters in each
baseline mitigates some sources of error.Comment: 19 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
PKS 1830-211: A Possible Compound Gravitational Lens
Measurements of the properties of gravitational lenses have the power to tell
us what sort of universe we live in. The brightest known radio Einstein
ring/gravitational lens PKS 1830-211 (Jauncey et al., 1991), whilst obscured by
our Galaxy at optical wavelengths, has recently been shown to contain
absorption at the millimetre waveband at a redshift of 0.89 (Wiklind and
Combes, 1996a). We report the detection of a new absorption feature, most
likely due to neutral hydrogen in a second redshift system at z = 0.19.
Follow-up VLBI observations have spatially resolved the absorption and reveal
it to cover the NE compact component and part of the lower surface brightness
ring. This new information, together with existing evidence of the unusual VLBI
radio structure and difficulties in modeling the lensing system, points to the
existence of a second lensing galaxy along our line of sight and implies that
PKS 1830-211 may be a compound gravitational lens.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX (aasms4.sty). Accepted for publication in
ApJ Letters. Preprint also available at
http://kerr.phys.utas.edu.au/preprints
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