14,971 research outputs found
Exact quasinormal modes for a special class of black holes
Analytic exact expressions for the quasinormal modes of scalar and
electromagnetic perturbations around a special class of black holes are found
in d\ge3 dimensions. It is shown that, the size of the black hole provides a
bound for the angular momentum of the perturbation. Quasinormal modes appear
when this bound is fulfilled, otherwise the excitations become purely damped.Comment: 8 pages, no figures. Slightly updated version of the plenary talk
given at the General Relativity Conference: "50 Years of FaMAF and Workshop
on Global Problems in Relativity", hosted during November 2006 at FaMAF,
Universidad Nacional de Cordoba, Cordoba, Argentina
Dust in active nuclei. II. Powder or gravel?
In a companion paper, Maiolino et al. (2000) presented various observational
evidences for "anomalous" dust properties in the circumnuclear region of AGNs
and, in particular, the reduced E(B-V)/N_H and Av/N_H ratios, the absence of
the silicate absorption feature in mid-IR spectra of Sy2s and the absence of
the carbon dip in UV spectra of reddened Sy1s. In this paper we discuss various
explanations for these facts.
The observational constraints favor a scenario where coagulation, catalyzed
by the high densities in the circumnuclear region, yields to the formation of
large grains. The resulting extinction curve is featureless, flatter than
Galactic and the E(B-V)/N_H and Av/N_H ratios are significantly reduced. These
results should warn about an unappropriate use of the standard Galactic
extinction curve and Av/N_H ratio when dealing with the extreme gas conditions
typical of the circumnuclear clouds of AGNs.
We also investigated alternative scenarios for the observed anomalous
properties of dust in AGNs. Some of these scenarios might explain some of the
observed properties for a few objects, but they generally fail to account for
all of the observational constraints obtained for the large sample of AGNs
studied in these works.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Near-infrared K-band Spectroscopic Investigation of Seyfert 2 Nuclei in the CfA and 12 Micron Samples
We present near-infrared K-band slit spectra of the nuclei of 25 Seyfert 2
galaxies in the CfA and 12 micron samples. The strength of the CO absorption
features at 2.3-2.4 micron produced by stars is measured in terms of a
spectroscopic CO index. A clear anti-correlation between the observed CO index
and the nuclear K-L color is present, suggesting that a featureless hot dust
continuum heated by an AGN contributes significantly to the observed K-band
fluxes in the nuclei of Seyfert 2 galaxies. After correction for this AGN
contribution, we estimate nuclear stellar K-band luminosities for all sources,
and CO indices for sources with modestly large observed CO indices. The
corrected CO indices for 10 (=40%) Seyfert 2 nuclei are found to be as high as
those observed in star-forming or elliptical (=spheroidal) galaxies. We combine
the K-band data with measurements of the L-band 3.3 micron polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbon (PAH) emission feature, another powerful indicator for
star-formation, and find that the 3.3 micron PAH to K-band stellar luminosity
ratios are substantially smaller than those of starburst galaxies. Our results
suggest that the 3.3 micron PAH emission originates in the putative nuclear
starbursts in the dusty tori surrounding the AGNs, because of its high surface
brightness, whereas the K-band CO absorption features detected at the nuclei
are dominated by old bulge (=spheroid) stars, and thus may not be a powerful
indicator for the nuclear starbursts. We see no clear difference in the
strength of the CO absorption and PAH emission features between the CfA and 12
micron Seyfert 2s.Comment: 28 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ (10 October
2004, v614 issue
The TNG Near Infrared Camera Spectrometer
NICS (acronym for Near Infrared Camera Spectrometer) is the near-infrared
cooled camera-spectrometer that has been developed by the Arcetri Infrared
Group at the Arcetri Astrophysical Observatory, in collaboration with the
CAISMI-CNR for the TNG (the Italian National Telescope Galileo at La Palma,
Canary Islands, Spain).
As NICS is in its scientific commissioning phase, we report its observing
capabilities in the near-infrared bands at the TNG, along with the measured
performance and the limiting magnitudes. We also describe some technical
details of the project, such as cryogenics, mechanics, and the system which
executes data acquisition and control, along with the related software.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, compiled with A&A macros. A&A in pres
Preliminary results on the characterization and performances of ZBLAN fiber for infrared spectrographs
Present telescopes and future extremely large telescopes make use of
fiber-fed spectrographs to observe at optical and infrared wavelengths. The use
of fibers largely simplifies the interfacing of the spectrograph to the
telescope. At a high spectral resolution (R>50,000) the fibers can be used to
achieve very high spectral accuracy. GIANO is an infrared (0.95-2.5\mu m) high
resolution (R=50,000) spectrometer[1] [2] [3] that was recently commissioned at
the TNG telescope (La Palma). This instrument was designed and built for direct
feeding from the telescope [4]. However, due to constraints imposed on the
telescope interfacing during the pre-commissioning phase, it had to be
positioned on the rotating building, far from the telescope focus. Therefore, a
new interface to the telescope, based on IR-transmitting ZBLAN fibers with 85
\mu m core, was developed. In this article we report the first, preliminary
results of the effects of these fibers on the quality of the recorded spectra
with GIANO and with a similar spectrograph that we set-up in the laboratory.
The effects can be primarily associated to modal-noise (MN) that, in GIANO, is
much more evident than in optical spectrometers, because of the much longer
wavelengths.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. Presented at SPIE Astronomical
Telescope + Instrumentation 2014 (Ground-based and Airbone Instrumentation
for Astronomy 5, 9147-231). To be published in Proceeding of SPIE Volume 914
The Leonine Commission, 125 Years after its Founding, Settles in Paris
The origin, historical development and current projects of the Leonine Commission, which is in charge of the critical edition of the complete works of St. Thomas Aquinas
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