2,406 research outputs found
Interception and Offshore Processing of Asylum Seekers: The International Law Dimensions
For decades the international community has conducted a delicate and politically charged balancing act trying to reconcile the inexorable increase in refugees-and the need to find permanent homes for them with the fundamental right of all countries to have secure frontiers. While the notion of non-refoulement remains fundamental to the treatment of asylum seekers, their rights vis A vis the states in which they seek asylum are significantly circumscribed by their alien status. States have a right to control entry to their territories. In the development of asylum law and policy, the central difficulty for states, and indeed the international community, is how to construct an appropriate balance between the urgent humanitarian demands to protect those who are genuinely in need of asylum, and the exclusion of those who do not qualify for humanitarian protection
A simple derivation of Kepler's laws without solving differential equations
Proceeding like Newton with a discrete time approach of motion and a
geometrical representation of velocity and acceleration, we obtain Kepler's
laws without solving differential equations. The difficult part of Newton's
work, when it calls for non trivial properties of ellipses, is avoided by the
introduction of polar coordinates. Then a simple reconsideration of Newton's
figure naturally leads to en explicit expression of the velocity and to the
equation of the trajectory. This derivation, which can be fully apprehended by
beginners at university (or even before) can be considered as a first
application of mechanical concepts to a physical problem of great historical
and pedagogical interest
First observations of the X-ray transient EXO 2030+375 with IBIS/ISGRI
We present a first INTEGRAL observation of the 42s transient X-ray pulsar EXO
2030+375 with IBIS/ISGRI. The source was detected during Cyg X-1 observations
in December 2002. We analyzed observations during the outburst period from 9 to
21 December 2002 with a total exposure time of ~770 kiloseconds. EXO 2030+375
was almost always detected during single ~30 minute exposures in the 18-45
energy bands. The source light curve shows the characteristic outburst shape
observed in this source.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures (1 in CMYK color), accepted by Astronomy and
Astrophysics, INTEGRAL special issue, 200
P05-10. Sequential Immunization with a Subtype B HIV-1 Envelope Quasispecies Elicits Broader Neutralization than Vaccination with a Single Envelope Clone
A large spin-up rate measured with INTEGRAL in the High Mass X-ray Binary Pulsar SAXJ2103.5+4545
The High Mass X-ray Binary Pulsar SAXJ2103.5+4545 has been observed with
INTEGRAL several times during the last outburst in 2002-2004. We report a
comprehensive study of all INTEGRAL observations, allowing a study of the pulse
period evolution during the recent outburst. We measured a very rapid spin-up
episode, lasting 130days, which decreased the pulse period by 1.8s. The spin-up
rate, pdot=-1.5e-7 s/s, is the largest ever measured for SAXJ2103.5+4545, and
it is among the fastest for an accreting pulsar. The pulse profile shows
evidence for temporal variability, apparently not related to the source flux or
to the orbital phase. The X-ray spectrum is hard and there is significant
emission up to 150keV. A new derivation of the orbital period, based on RXTE
data, is also reported.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
INTEGRAL observations of the Be/X-ray binary EXO 2030+375 during outburst
We present a type-I outburst of the high-mass X-ray binary EXO 2030+375,
detected during INTEGRAL's Performance and Verification Phase in December 2002
(on-source time about 10e+06 seconds). In addition, six more outbursts have
been observed during INTEGRAL's Galactic Plane Scans. X-ray pulsations have
been detected with a pulse period of 41.691798+-0.000016 s. The X-ray
luminosity in the 5-300 keV energy range was 9.7*10e+36 erg/s, for a distance
of 7.1 kpc. Two unusual features were found in the light curve, with an initial
peak before the main outburst and another possible spike after the maximum.
RXTE observations confirm only the existence of the initial spike. Although the
initial peak appears to be a recurrent feature, the physical mechanisms
producing it and the possible second spike are unknown. Moreover, a four-day
delay between periastron passage and the peak of the outburst is observed. We
present for the first time a 5-300 keV broad-band spectrum of this source. It
can be modelled by the sum of a disk black body (kT_bb~8 keV) with either a
power law model with Gamma=2.04+-0.11 keV or a Comptonized component (spherical
geometry, kT_e=30 keV, tau=2.64, kT_W=1.5 keV).Comment: 10 pages, 11 figures, to be published in A&
INTEGRAL long-term monitoring of the Supergiant Fast X-ray Transient XTE J1739-302
In the past few years, a new class of High Mass X-Ray Binaries (HMXRB) has
been claimed to exist, the Supergiant Fast X-ray Transients (SFXT). These are
X-ray binary systems with a compact companion orbiting a supergiant star which
show very short and bright outbursts in a series of activity periods
overimposed on longer quiescent periods. Only very recently the first attempts
to model the behaviour of these sources have been published, some of them
within the framework of accretion from clumpy stellar winds.Our goal is to
analyze the properties of XTE J1739-302/IGR J17391-3021 within the context of
the clumpy structure of the supergiant wind. We have used INTEGRAL and RXTE/PCA
observations in order to obtain broad band (1-200 keV) spectra and light curves
of XTE J1739-302 and investigate its X-ray spectrum and temporal variability.
We have found that XTE J1739-302 follows a much more complex behaviour than
expected. Far from presenting a regular variability pattern, XTE J1739-302
shows periods of high, intermediate, and low flaring activity.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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