2,207 research outputs found
Signatures of Dark Matter Scattering Inelastically Off Nuclei
Direct dark matter detection focuses on elastic scattering of dark matter
particles off nuclei. In this study, we explore inelastic scattering where the
nucleus is excited to a low-lying state of 10-100 keV, with subsequent prompt
de-excitation. We calculate the inelastic structure factors for the odd-mass
xenon isotopes based on state-of-the-art large-scale shell-model calculations
with chiral effective field theory WIMP-nucleon currents. For these cases, we
find that the inelastic channel is comparable to or can dominate the elastic
channel for momentum transfers around 150 MeV. We calculate the inelastic
recoil spectra in the standard halo model, compare these to the elastic case,
and discuss the expected signatures in a xenon detector, along with
implications for existing and future experiments. The combined information from
elastic and inelastic scattering will allow to determine the dominant
interaction channel within one experiment. In addition, the two channels probe
different regions of the dark matter velocity distribution and can provide
insight into the dark halo structure. The allowed recoil energy domain and the
recoil energy at which the integrated inelastic rates start to dominate the
elastic channel depend on the mass of the dark matter particle, thus providing
a potential handle to constrain its mass.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. Matches resubmitted version to Phys. Rev. D. One
figure added; supplemental material (fits to the structure functions) added
as an Appendi
Goethite Dissolution in the Presence of Phytosiderophores: Rates, Mechanisms, and the Synergistic Effect of Oxalate
The purpose of this study was the elucidation of the chemical mechanism of an important process in iron acquisition by graminaceous plants: the dissolution of iron oxides in the presence of phytosiderophores. We were particularly interested in the effects of diurnal root exudation of phytosiderophores and of the presence of other organic ligands in the rhizosphere of graminaceous plants on the dissolution mechanism. Phytosiderophores of the type 2′-deoxymugineic acid (DMA) were purified from the root exudates of wheat plants (Triticum aestivum L. cv. Tamaro). DMA-promoted dissolution of goethite under steady-state and non-steady-state conditions and its dependence on pH, adsorbed DMA concentration, and the presence of the organic ligand oxalate were studied. We show that dissolution of goethite by phytosiderophores follows a surface controlled ligand promoted dissolution mechanism. We also found that oxalate, an organic ligand commonly found in rhizosphere soils, has a synergistic effect on the steady-state dissolution of goethite by DMA. Under non-steady-state addition of the phytosiderophore, mimicking the diurnal exudation pattern of phytosiderophore release, a fast dissolution of iron is triggered in the presence of oxalate. To investigate the efficiency of these mechanisms in plant iron acquisition, wheat plants were grown on a substrate amended with goethite as only iron source. The chlorophyll status of these plants was similar to iron-fertilized plants and significantly higher than in plants grown in iron free nutrient solutions. This demonstrates that wheat can efficiently mobilize iron, even from well crystalline goethite that is usually considered unavailable for plant nutritio
Continuum and Emission-Line Properties of Broad Absorption Line Quasars
We investigate the continuum and emission-line properties of 224 broad
absorption line quasars (BALQSOs) with 0.9<z<4.4 drawn from the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey (SDSS) Early Data Release (EDR), which contains 3814 bona fide
quasars. We find that low-ionization BALQSOs (LoBALs) are significantly
reddened as compared to normal quasars, in agreement with previous work.
High-ionization BALQSOs (HiBALs) are also more reddened than the average
nonBALQSO. Assuming SMC-like dust reddening at the quasar redshift, the amount
of reddening needed to explain HiBALs is E(B-V)~0.023 and LoBALs is
E(B-V)~0.077 (compared to the ensemble average of the entire quasar sample). We
find that there are differences in the emission-line properties between the
average HiBAL, LoBAL, and nonBAL quasar. These differences, along with
differences in the absorption line troughs, may be related to intrinsic quasar
properties such as the slope of the intrinsic (unreddened) continuum; more
extreme absorption properties are correlated with bluer intrinsic continua.
Despite the differences among BALQSO sub-types and nonBALQSOs, BALQSOs appear
to be drawn from the same parent population as nonBALQSOs when both are
selected by their UV/optical properties. We find that the overall fraction of
traditionally defined BALQSOs, after correcting for color-dependent selection
effects due to different SEDs of BALQSO and nonBALQSOs, is 13.4+/-1.2% and
shows no significant redshift dependence for 1.7<z<3.45. After a rough
completeness correction for the effects of dust extinction, we find that
approximately one in every six quasars is a BALQSO.Comment: 35 pages, 11 figures (1 color), 1 table; accepted by A
The Compact Structure of Radio-Loud Broad Absorption Line Quasars
We present the results of EVN+MERLIN VLBI polarization observations of 8
Broad Absorption Line (BAL) quasars at 1.6 GHz, including 4 LoBALs and 4 HiBALs
with either steep or flat spectra on VLA scales. Only one steep-spectrum
source, J1122+3124, shows two-sided structure on the scale of 2 kpc. The other
four steep-spectrum sources and three flat-spectrum sources display either an
unresolved image or a core-jet structure on scales of less than three hundred
parsecs. In all cases the marginally resolved core is the dominant radio
component. Linear polarization in the cores has been detected in the range of a
few to 10 percent. Polarization, together with high brightness temperatures
(from 2*10^9-5*10^10 K), suggest a synchrotron origin for the radio emission.
There is no apparent difference in the radio orphologies or polarization
between low-ionization and high-ionization BAL QSOs nor between flat- and
steep-spectrum sources. We discuss the orientation of BAL QSOs with both flat
and steep spectra, and consider a possible evolutionary scenario for BAL QSOs.
In this scenario, BAL QSOs are probably the young population of radio sources,
which are Compact Steep Spectrum or GHz peaked radio source analog at the low
end of radio power.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, 4 tables; accepted for publication in MNRA
The X-Ray Properties of the Optically Brightest Mini-BAL Quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
We have compiled a sample of 14 of the optically brightest radio-quiet
quasars (~~17.5 and ~~1.9) in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Data Release 5 quasar catalog that have C IV mini-BALs present in their
spectra. X-ray data for 12 of the objects were obtained via a Chandra snapshot
survey using ACIS-S, while data for the other two quasars were obtained from
archival XMM-Newton observations. Joint X-ray spectral analysis shows the
mini-BAL quasars have a similar average power-law photon index
() and level of intrinsic absorption () as non-BMB (neither BAL nor mini-BAL) quasars.
Mini-BAL quasars are more similar to non-BMB quasars than to BAL quasars in
their distribution of relative X-ray brightness (assessed with
). Relative colors indicate mild dust reddening in the
optical spectra of mini-BAL quasars. Significant correlations between
and UV absorption properties are confirmed for a sample
of 56 sources combining mini-BAL and BAL quasars with high signal-to-noise
ratio rest-frame UV spectra, which generally supports models in which X-ray
absorption is important in enabling driving of the UV absorption-line wind. We
also propose alternative parametrizations of the UV absorption properties of
mini-BAL and BAL quasars, which may better describe the broad absorption
troughs in some respects.Comment: ApJ accepted; 21 pages, 11 figures, and 9 table
Radio spectra and polarisation properties of radio-loud Broad Absorption Line Quasars
We present multi-frequency observations of a sample of 15 radio-emitting
Broad Absorption Line Quasars (BAL QSOs), covering a spectral range between 74
MHz and 43 GHz. They display mostly convex radio spectra which typically peak
at about 1-5 GHz (in the observer's rest-frame), flatten at MHz frequencies,
probably due to synchrotron self-absorption, and become steeper at high
frequencies, i.e., >~ 20 GHz. VLA 22-GHz maps (HPBW ~ 80 mas) show unresolved
or very compact sources, with linear projected sizes of <= 1 kpc. About 2/3 of
the sample look unpolarised or weakly polarised at 8.4 GHz, frequency in which
reasonable upper limits could be obtained for polarised intensity. Statistical
comparisons have been made between the spectral index distributions of samples
of BAL and non-BAL QSOs, both in the observed and the rest-frame, finding
steeper spectra among non-BAL QSOs. However constraining this comparison to
compact sources results in no significant differences between both
distributions. This comparison is consistent with BAL QSOs not being oriented
along a particular line of sight. In addition, our analysis of the spectral
shape, variability and polarisation properties shows that radio BAL QSOs share
several properties common to young radio sources like Compact Steep Spectrum
(CSS) or Gigahertz-Peaked Spectrum (GPS) sources.Comment: 18 pages, 11 Postscript figures, 12 Tables. Accepted for publication
in MNRA
The reddest ISO-2MASS quasar
In the course of the NIR/MIR AGN search combining the 6.7 mu ISOCAM Parallel
Survey and 2MASS we have discovered 24 type-1 quasars about a third of which
are too red to be discriminated by optical/UV search techniques. Here we report
on a detailed case study of the reddest type-1 quasar of our sample (J2341) at
redshift z=0.236 with M_K=-25.8 and J-K=1.95. We performed spectroscopy in the
optical with VLT/FORS1 and in the MIR with Spitzer as well as NIR imaging with
ISPI at CTIO. The optical and NIR observations reveal a star forming
emission-line galaxy at the same redshift as the quasar with a projected linear
separation of 1.8 arcsec (6.7 kpc). The quasar and its companion are embedded
in diffuse extended continuum emission. Compared with its companion the quasar
exhibits redder optical-NIR colours, which we attribute to hot nuclear dust.
The MIR spectrum shows only few emission lines superimposed on a power-law
spectral energy distribution. However, the lack of strong FIR emission suggests
that our potentially interacting object contains much less gas and dust and is
in a stage different from dust reddened ULIRG-AGN like Mrk 231. The optical
spectrum shows signatures for reddening in the emission-lines and no
post-starburst stellar population is detected in the host galaxy of the quasar.
The optical continuum emission of the active nucleus appears absorbed and
diluted. Even the combination of absorption and host dilution is not able to
match J2341 with standard quasar templates. While the BLR shows only a rather
moderate absorption of E_(B-V)=0.3, the continuum shorter than 4500 AA requires
strong obscuration with E_(B-V)=0.7, exceeding the constraints from the low
upper limit on the 9.7 mu silicate absorption. This leads us to conclude that
the continuum of J2341 is intrinsically redder than that of typical quasars.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figure
Herschel-ATLAS: the far-infrared properties and star-formation rates of broad absorption line quasi-stellar objects
We have used data from the Herschel-ATLAS at 250, 350 and 500 \mu m to
determine the far-infrared (FIR) properties of 50 Broad Absorption Line Quasars
(BAL QSOs). Our sample contains 49 high-ionization BAL QSOs (HiBALs) and 1
low-ionization BAL QSO (LoBAL) which are compared against a sample of 329
non-BAL QSOs. These samples are matched over the redshift range 1.5 \leq z <
2.3 and in absolute i-band magnitude over the range -28 \leq M_{i} \leq -24. Of
these, 3 BAL QSOs (HiBALs) and 27 non-BAL QSOs are detected at the > 5 sigma
level. We calculate star-formation rates (SFR) for our individually detected
HiBAL QSOs and the non-detected LoBAL QSO as well as average SFRs for the BAL
and non-BAL QSO samples based on stacking the Herschel data. We find no
difference between the HiBAL and non-BAL QSO samples in the FIR, even when
separated based on differing BAL QSO classifications. Using Mrk 231 as a
template, the weighted mean SFR is estimated to be \approx240\pm21 M_{\odot}
yr^{-1} for the full sample, although this figure should be treated as an upper
limit if AGN-heated dust makes a contribution to the FIR emission. Despite
tentative claims in the literature, we do not find a dependence of {\sc C\,iv}
equivalent width on FIR emission, suggesting that the strength of any outflow
in these objects is not linked to their FIR output. These results strongly
suggest that BAL QSOs (more specifically HiBALs) can be accommodated within a
simple AGN unified scheme in which our line-of-sight to the nucleus intersects
outflowing material. Models in which HiBALs are caught towards the end of a
period of enhanced spheroid and black-hole growth, during which a wind
terminates the star-formation activity, are not supported by the observed FIR
properties.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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