4,473 research outputs found
The two states of Sgr A* in the near-infrared: bright episodic flares on top of low-level continuous variability
In this paper we examine properties of the variable source Sgr A* in the
near-infrared (NIR) using a very extensive Ks-band data set from NACO/VLT
observations taken 2004 to 2009. We investigate the variability of Sgr A* with
two different photometric methods and analyze its flux distribution. We find
Sgr A* is continuously emitting and continuously variable in the near-infrared,
with some variability occurring on timescales as long as weeks. The flux
distribution can be described by a lognormal distribution at low intrinsic
fluxes (<~5 mJy, dereddened with A_{Ks}=2.5). The lognormal distribution has a
median flux of approximately 1.1 mJy, but above 5 mJy the flux distribution is
significantly flatter (high flux events are more common) than expected for the
extrapolation of the lognormal distribution to high fluxes. We make a general
identification of the low level emission above 5 mJy as flaring emission and of
the low level emission as the quiescent state. We also report here the
brightest Ks-band flare ever observed (from August 5th, 2008) which reached an
intrinsic Ks-band flux of 27.5 mJy (m_{Ks}=13.5). This flare was a factor 27
increase over the median flux of Sgr A*, close to double the brightness of the
star S2, and 40% brighter than the next brightest flare ever observed from
Sgr~A*.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Secular evolution of compact binaries near massive black holes: gravitational wave sources and other exotica
The environment near super massive black holes (SMBHs) in galactic nuclei
contain a large number of stars and compact objects. A fraction of these are
likely to be members of binaries. Here we discuss the binary population of
stellar black holes and neutron stars near SMBHs and focus on the secular
evolution of such binaries, due to the perturbation by the SMBH. Binaries with
highly inclined orbits in respect to their orbit around the SMBH are strongly
affected by secular Kozai processes, which periodically change their
eccentricities and inclinations (Kozai-cycles). During periapsis approach, at
the highest eccentricities during the Kozai-cycles, gravitational wave emission
becomes highly efficient. Some binaries in this environment can inspiral and
coalesce at timescales much shorter than a Hubble time and much shorter than
similar binaries which do not reside near a SMBH. The close environment of
SMBHs could therefore serve as catalyst for the inspiral and coalescence of
binaries, and strongly affect their orbital properties. Such compact binaries
would be detectable as gravitational wave (GW) sources by the next generation
of GW detectors (e.g. advanced- LIGO). About 0.5% of such nuclear merging
binaries will enter the LIGO observational window while on orbit that are still
very eccentric (e>~0.5). The efficient gravitational wave analysis for such
systems would therefore require the use of eccentric templates. We also find
that binaries very close to the MBH could evolve through a complex dynamical
(non-secular) evolution leading to emission of several GW pulses during only a
few yrs (though these are likely to be rare). Finally, we note that the
formation of close stellar binaries, X-ray binaries and their merger products
could be induced by similar secular processes, combined with tidal friction
rather than GW emission as in the case of compact object binaries.Comment: 15 pages, 7 Figures. ApJ accepte
The mean infrared emission of SagittariusA*
(abridged) The massive black hole at the center of the Milky Way,
SagittariusA* is, in relative terms, the weakest accreting black hole
accessible to observations. At the moment, the mean SED of SgrA* is only known
reliably in the radio to mm regimes. The goal of this paper is to provide
constraints on the mean emission from SgrA* in the near-to-mid infrared.
Excellent imaging quality was reached in the MIR by using speckle imaging
combined with holographic image reconstruction, a novel technique for this kind
of data. No counterpart of SgrA* is detected at 8.6 microns. At this
wavelength, SgrA* is located atop a dust ridge, which considerably complicates
the search for a potential point source. An observed 3 sigma upper limit of ~10
mJy is estimated for the emission of SgrA* at 8.6 microns, a tighter limit at
this wavelength than in previous work. The de-reddened 3 sigma upper limit,
including the uncertainty of the extinction correction, is ~84 mJy . Based on
the available data, it is argued that, with currently available instruments,
SgrA* cannot be detected in the MIR, not even during flares. At 4.8 and 3.8
microns, on the other hand, SgrA* is detected at all times, at least when
considering timescales of a few up to 13 min. We derive well-defined
time-averaged, de-reddened flux densities of 3.8+-1.3 mJy at 4.8 microns and
5.0+-0.6 mJy at 3.8 microns. Observations with NIRC2/Keck and NaCo/VLT from the
literature provide good evidence that SgrA* also has a fairly well-defined
de-reddened mean flux of 0.5-2.5 mJy at wavelengths of 2.1-2.2 microns. We
present well-constrained anchor points for the SED of SgrA* on the
high-frequency side of the Terahertz peak. The new data are in general
agreement with published theoretical SEDs of the mean emission from SgrA*, but
we expect them to have an appreciable impact on the model parameters in future
theoretical work.Comment: accepted for publication by Astronomy & Astrophysics on 20 June 201
The Milky Way Nuclear Star Cluster
In the center of the Milky Way, as well as in many other galaxies, a compact
star cluster around a very massive black hole is observed. One of the possible
explanations for the formation of such Nuclear Star Clusters is based on the
'merging' of globular clusters in the inner galactic potential well. By mean of
sophisticated N-body simulations, we checked the validity of this hypothesis
and found that it may actually has been the one leading to the formation of the
Milky Way Nuclear Star Cluster.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, proceedings of "Stellar Clusters and Associations
- A RIA workshop on GAIA", 23-27 May 2011, Granada, Spai
The extreme luminosity states of Sagittarius A*
We discuss mm-wavelength radio, 2.2-11.8um NIR and 2-10 keV X-ray light
curves of the super massive black hole (SMBH) counterpart of Sagittarius A*
(SgrA*) near its lowest and highest observed luminosity states. The luminosity
during the low state can be interpreted as synchrotron emission from a
continuous or even spotted accretion disk. For the high luminosity state SSC
emission from THz peaked source components can fully account for the flux
density variations observed in the NIR and X-ray domain. We conclude that at
near-infrared wavelengths the SSC mechanism is responsible for all emission
from the lowest to the brightest flare from SgrA*. For the bright flare event
of 4 April 2007 that was covered from the radio to the X-ray domain, the SSC
model combined with adiabatic expansion can explain the related peak
luminosities and different widths of the flare profiles obtained in the NIR and
X-ray regime as well as the non detection in the radio domain.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures, accepted by A&
Evidence for X-ray synchrotron emission from simultaneous mid-IR to X-ray observations of a strong Sgr A* flare
This paper reports measurements of Sgr A* made with NACO in L' -band (3.80
um), Ks-band (2.12 um) and H-band (1.66 um) and with VISIR in N-band (11.88 um)
at the ESO VLT, as well as with XMM-Newton at X-ray (2-10 keV) wavelengths. On
4 April, 2007, a very bright flare was observed from Sgr A* simultaneously at
L'-band and X-ray wavelengths. No emission was detected using VISIR. The
resulting SED has a blue slope (beta > 0 for nuL_nu ~ nu^beta, consistent with
nuL_nu ~ nu^0.4) between 12 micron and 3.8 micron.
For the first time our high quality data allow a detailed comparison of
infrared and X-ray light curves with a resolution of a few minutes. The IR and
X-ray flares are simultaneous to within 3 minutes. However the IR flare lasts
significantly longer than the X-ray flare (both before and after the X-ray
peak) and prominent substructures in the 3.8 micron light curve are clearly not
seen in the X-ray data. From the shortest timescale variations in the L'-band
lightcurve we find that the flaring region must be no more than 1.2 R_S in
size.
The high X-ray to infrared flux ratio, blue nuL_nu slope MIR to L' -band, and
the soft nuL_nu spectral index of the X-ray flare together place strong
constraints on possible flare emission mechanisms. We find that it is
quantitatively difficult to explain this bright X-ray flare with inverse
Compton processes. A synchrotron emission scenario from an electron
distribution with a cooling break is a more viable scenario.Comment: ApJ, 49 pages, 9 figure
Source-intrinsic near-infrared properties of Sgr A*: Total intensity measurements
We present a comprehensive data description for Ks-band measurements of Sgr
A*. We characterize the statistical properties of the variability of Sgr A* in
the near-infrared, which we find to be consistent with a single-state process
forming a power-law distribution of the flux density. We discover a linear
rms-flux relation for the flux-density range up to 12 mJy on a timescale of 24
minutes. This and the power-law flux density distribution implies a
phenomenological, formally non-linear statistical variability model with which
we can simulate the observed variability and extrapolate its behavior to higher
flux levels and longer timescales. We present reasons why data with our cadence
cannot be used to decide on the question whether the power spectral density of
the underlying random process shows more structure at timescales between 25 min
and 100 min compared to what is expected from a red noise random process.Comment: Accepted to ApJS, August 27, 201
The Spectral Energy Distribution of Fermi bright blazars
(Abridged) We have conducted a detailed investigation of the broad-band
spectral properties of the \gamma-ray selected blazars of the Fermi LAT Bright
AGN Sample (LBAS). By combining our accurately estimated Fermi gamma-ray
spectra with Swift, radio, infra-red, optical and other hard X-ray/gamma-ray
data, collected within three months of the LBAS data taking period, we were
able to assemble high-quality and quasi-simultaneous Spectral Energy
Distributions (SED) for 48 LBAS blazars.The SED of these gamma-ray sources is
similar to that of blazars discovered at other wavelengths, clearly showing, in
the usual Log - Log F representation, the typical broad-band
spectral signatures normally attributed to a combination of low-energy
synchrotron radiation followed by inverse Compton emission of one or more
components. We have used these SEDs to characterize the peak intensity of both
the low and the high-energy components. The results have been used to derive
empirical relationships that estimate the position of the two peaks from the
broad-band colors (i.e. the radio to optical and optical to X-ray spectral
slopes) and from the gamma-ray spectral index. Our data show that the
synchrotron peak frequency is positioned between 10 and
10 Hz in broad-lined FSRQs and between and Hz in
featureless BL Lacertae objects.We find that the gamma-ray spectral slope is
strongly correlated with the synchrotron peak energy and with the X-ray
spectral index, as expected at first order in synchrotron - inverse Compton
scenarios. However, simple homogeneous, one-zone, Synchrotron Self Compton
(SSC) models cannot explain most of our SEDs, especially in the case of FSRQs
and low energy peaked (LBL) BL Lacs. (...)Comment: 85 pages, 38 figures, submitted to Ap
Search for new phenomena in final states with an energetic jet and large missing transverse momentum in pp collisions at √ s = 8 TeV with the ATLAS detector
Results of a search for new phenomena in final states with an energetic jet and large missing transverse momentum are reported. The search uses 20.3 fb−1 of √ s = 8 TeV data collected in 2012 with the ATLAS detector at the LHC. Events are required to have at least one jet with pT > 120 GeV and no leptons. Nine signal regions are considered with increasing missing transverse momentum requirements between Emiss T > 150 GeV and Emiss T > 700 GeV. Good agreement is observed between the number of events in data and Standard Model expectations. The results are translated into exclusion limits on models with either large extra spatial dimensions, pair production of weakly interacting dark matter candidates, or production of very light gravitinos in a gauge-mediated supersymmetric model. In addition, limits on the production of an invisibly decaying Higgs-like boson leading to similar topologies in the final state are presente
Search for the standard model Higgs boson in the H to ZZ to 2l 2nu channel in pp collisions at sqrt(s) = 7 TeV
A search for the standard model Higgs boson in the H to ZZ to 2l 2nu decay
channel, where l = e or mu, in pp collisions at a center-of-mass energy of 7
TeV is presented. The data were collected at the LHC, with the CMS detector,
and correspond to an integrated luminosity of 4.6 inverse femtobarns. No
significant excess is observed above the background expectation, and upper
limits are set on the Higgs boson production cross section. The presence of the
standard model Higgs boson with a mass in the 270-440 GeV range is excluded at
95% confidence level.Comment: Submitted to JHE
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