3,661 research outputs found
X-Ray Spectral Variability of PKS 2005-489 During the Spectacular November 1998 Flare
We report on monitoring of the BL Lac object PKS 2005-489 by the Rossi X-ray
Timing Explorer (RXTE) in October-December 1998. During these months, the
source underwent a spectacular flare; at its peak on November 10, its 2-10 keV
flux was , over 30 times
brighter than in quiescence. During the rising phase, the X-ray spectrum of PKS
2005-489 hardened considerably, reaching near maximum. During the declining phase, the X-ray spectrum
steepened rapidly, reaching , then became somewhat harder
towards the end of December (). While such behavior has been
seen before, the simplicity, magnitude and duration of this flare allowed us to
study it in great detail. We argue that this flare was caused by either the
injection of particles into the jet or {\it in situ} particle acceleration, and
that the spectral steepening which followed the flare maximum was the result of
synchrotron cooling. Contrary to other recently observed blazar flares (e.g.,
Mkn 501, 3C 279, PKS 2155-304), our results do not imply a major shift in the
location of the synchrotron peak during this flare.Comment: ApJ Letters in press, 6 pages, 2 figures Corrected reference
The HI Environment of Nearby Lyman-alpha Absorbers
We present the results of a VLA and WSRT search for HI emission from the
vicinity of seven nearby clouds, which were observed in Lya absorption with HST
toward Mrk335, Mrk501 and PKS2155-304. We searched a volume of 40' x 40' x 1000
km/s. The HI mass sensitivity (5 sigma) varies from 5x10^6 to 5x10^8 Msun. We
detected HI emission in the vicinity of four out of seven absorbers. The
closest galaxy is a small dwarf galaxy at a projected distance of 68/h kpc from
the sight line toward Mrk335. It has the same velocity (V=1970 km/s) as one of
the absorbers, and has an HI mass of only 4x10^7 Msun. We found a more luminous
galaxy at the velocity (V=5100 km/s) of one of the absorbers toward
PKS2155-304, 230/h kpc from the sight line. Two other, stronger absorbers
toward PKS2155-304 at V=17,000 km/s are associated with a loose group of three
bright spiral galaxies, at projected distances of 300 to 600/h kpc. These
results support the conclusion that most nearby Lya forest clouds trace the
large-scale structures outlined by optically luminous galaxies. We do not find
any evidence for a physical association between an absorber and its closest
galaxy.Comment: 4 Tables, 11 Figures, to be published in Astron J. (Oct 1996) Vol 11
Thirteen new BL Lacertae objects discovered by an efficient x ray/radio/optical technique
The discovery of 13 serendipitous BL Lac objects in the Einstein IPC Slew Survey by means of x ray/radio vs. x ray/optical color-color diagrams and confirmation by optical spectroscopy are reported. These 13 BL Lacs were discovered using a technique which exploits the characteristic broad band spectra of BL Lacs. New VLA detections provide accurate fluxes (f(6 cm) is approximately 0.5 mJy) and 2 in. positions, facilitating the determination of an optical counterpart. All 13 new BL Lacs show essentially featureless optical spectra. Nine of these lie within the range of colors of known x ray selected BL Lacs. Of the remaining four, one is apparently x ray louder (by a factor of 1.5) or optically quieter (by 0.8 mags); and three are optically louder (by 1-1.3 mags) than x ray selected BL Lacs. Approximately 50 new BL Lacs in total are expected from VLA work and upcoming Australia Telescope observations, yielding a complete Slew Survey sample of approximately 90 BL Lacs
Ruling out IC/CMB X-rays in PKS 0637-752 and the Implications for TeV Emission from Large-Scale Quasar Jets
The Chandra X-ray observatory has discovered dozens of resolved,
kiloparsec-scale jets associated with powerful quasars in which the X-ray
fluxes are observed to be much higher than the expected level based on the
radio-optical synchrotron spectrum. The most popular explanation for the
anomalously high and hard X-ray fluxes is that these jets do not decelerate
significantly by the kiloparsec scale, but rather remain highly relativistic
(Lorentz factors 10). By adopting a small angle to the
line-of-sight, the X-rays can thus be explained by inverse Compton upscattering
of CMB photons (IC/CMB), where the observed emission is strongly Doppler
boosted. Using over six years of Fermi monitoring data, we show that the
expected hard, steady gamma-ray emission implied by the IC/CMB model is not
seen in PKS 0637-752, the prototype jet for which this model was first
proposed. IC/CMB emission is thus ruled out as the source of the X-rays,
joining recent results for the jets in 3C 273 (using the same method; Meyer et
al. 2014) and PKS 1136-135 (using UV polarization; Cara et al., 2013). We
further show that the Fermi observations give an upper limit of 6.5
for the four brightest X-ray knots of PKS 0637-752, and derive an updated limit
of 7.8 for knots A and B1 of 3C 273 (assuming equipartition). Finally,
we discuss the fact that high levels of synchrotron X-ray emission in a slow
jet will unavoidably lead to a level of angle-integrated TeV emission which
exceeds that of the TeV BL Lac class.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
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