471 research outputs found
Variable X-ray Absorption toward Gravitationally-Lensed Blazar PKS1830-211
We present X-ray spectral analysis of five Chandra and XMM-Newton
observations of the gravitationally-lensed blazar PKS1830-211 from 2000 to
2004. We show that the X-ray absorption toward PKS1830-211 is variable, and the
variable absorption is most likely to be intrinsic with amplitudes of about
2-30e22 cm^-2 depending on whether or not the absorber is partially covering
the X-ray source. Our results confirm the variable absorption observed
previously, although interpreted differently, in a sequence of ASCA
observations. This large variation in the absorption column density can be
interpreted as outflows from the central engine in the polar direction,
consistent with recent numerical models of inflow/outflows in AGNs. In
addition, it could possibly be caused by the interaction between the blazar jet
and its environment, or the variation from the geometric configuration of the
jet. While the spectra can also be fitted with a variable absorption at the
lens redshift, we show that this model is unlikely. We also rule out the simple
microlensing interpretation of variability which was previously suggested.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, Accepted to A
SARAS 2: A Spectral Radiometer for probing Cosmic Dawn and the Epoch of Reionization through detection of the global 21 cm signal
The global 21 cm signal from Cosmic Dawn (CD) and the Epoch of Reionization
(EoR), at redshifts , probes the nature of first sources of
radiation as well as physics of the Inter-Galactic Medium (IGM). Given that the
signal is predicted to be extremely weak, of wide fractional bandwidth, and
lies in a frequency range that is dominated by Galactic and Extragalactic
foregrounds as well as Radio Frequency Interference, detection of the signal is
a daunting task. Critical to the experiment is the manner in which the sky
signal is represented through the instrument. It is of utmost importance to
design a system whose spectral bandpass and additive spurious can be well
calibrated and any calibration residual does not mimic the signal. SARAS is an
ongoing experiment that aims to detect the global 21 cm signal. Here we present
the design philosophy of the SARAS 2 system and discuss its performance and
limitations based on laboratory and field measurements. Laboratory tests with
the antenna replaced with a variety of terminations, including a network model
for the antenna impedance, show that the gain calibration and modeling of
internal additives leave no residuals with Fourier amplitudes exceeding 2~mK,
or residual Gaussians of 25 MHz width with amplitudes exceeding 2~mK. Thus,
even accounting for reflection and radiation efficiency losses in the antenna,
the SARAS~2 system is capable of detection of complex 21-cm profiles at the
level predicted by currently favoured models for thermal baryon evolution.Comment: 44 pages, 17 figures; comments and suggestions are welcom
The Equivalence Principle as a Stepping Stone from Special to General Relativity: A Socratic Dialog
In this paper we show how the student can be led to an understanding of the
connection between special relativity and general relativity by considering the
time dilation effect of clocks placed on the surface of the Earth. This paper
is written as a Socratic dialog between a lecturer Sam and a student Kim.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, uses the revtex4 documentclass. Submitted to the
American Journal of Physics. Minor modification and corrections following
referees' comment
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
The complex molecular absorption line system at z=0.886 towards PKS1830-211
New millimeter wave observations of the molecular absorption line system in
the gravitational lens to PKS1830-211 at z=0.88582 is presented.
Self-calibrated interferometer data shows unequivocally that the previously
detected absorption component is associated with the gravitationally lensed
south-west image of the background source. A second absorption line of
HCO+(2-1) at z=0.88582 is detected. This component is shifted in velocity by
-147 km/s relative to the main absorption line, and is shown to be associated
with the north-east image. These two absorption lines are used to constrain the
mass of the lensing galaxy. Upper limits to absorption and emission lines from
the possible absorption system at z=0.1927, seen in 21cm HI by Lovell et al,
are reported.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, Accepted for publication in 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
A Coordinated Radio Afterglow Program
We describe a ground-based effort to find and study afterglows at centimeter
and millimeter wavelengths. We have observed all well-localized gamma-ray
bursts in the Northern and Southern sky since BeppoSAX first started providing
rapid positions in early 1997. Of the 23 GRBs for which X-ray afterglows have
been detected, 10 have optical afterglows and 9 have radio afterglows. A
growing number of GRBs have both X-ray and radio afterglows but lack a
corresponding optical afterglow.Comment: To appear in Proc. of the 5th Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium, 5
pages, LaTe
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