11 results on '"Sánchez Fernández C"'
Search Results
2. Multiwavelength study of the very long GRB 020410
- Author
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Nicastro, L., in 't Zand, J. J. M., Amati, L., Golenetskii, S., Castro-Tirado, A., Gorosabel, J., Lazzati, D., Costa, E., De Pasquale, M., Feroci, M., Heise, J., Pian, E., Piro, L., Sánchez-Fernández, C., Tristram, P., Nicastro, L., in 't Zand, J. J. M., Amati, L., Golenetskii, S., Castro-Tirado, A., Gorosabel, J., Lazzati, D., Costa, E., De Pasquale, M., Feroci, M., Heise, J., Pian, E., Piro, L., Sánchez-Fernández, C., and Tristram, P.
- Abstract
GRB 020410 is by far the longest γ-ray burst (with a duration of about 1600 s) to have been followed up from the X-ray through the radio regime. Afterglow emission was detected in X-rays and at optical wavelengths whereas no emission was detected at 8 GHz brighter than 120 μJy. The decaying X-ray afterglow, back-extrapolated to 11 h after the burst, had a flux of 7.9 $\times$10-12erg cm-2s-1(2–10 keV); the brightest detected so far. No direct redshift determination is available yet for this GRB, but according to the empirical relationship between the peak energy in the $\nu F_\nu$spectrum and the isotropic energy output, zis constrained in the range 0.9–1.5. The reconstructed optical afterglow light curve implies at least two breaks in the simple power law decay. This may be related to emergence of an SN, or refreshment of the external shock by a variation in the circumstellar medium. Considering the backward extrapolation of the 2–10 keV afterglow decay, the prompt lightcurve variability and its spectral evolution, we conclude that the long duration of this event is due to a prolonged activity of the “central engine”.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
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3. Detection of an optical transient following the 13 March 2000 short/hard gamma-ray burst*
- Author
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Castro-Tirado, A. J., Castro Cerón, J. M., Gorosabel, J., Páta, P., Soldán, J., Hudec, R., Jelinek, M., Topinka, M., Bernas, M., Mateo Sanguino, T. J., Postigo, A. de Ugarte, Berná, J. Á., Henden, A., Vrba, F., Canzian, B., Harris, H., Delfosse, X., de Pontieu, B., Polcar, J., Sánchez-Fernández, C., de la Morena, B. A., Más-Hesse, J. M., Torres Riera, J., Barthelmy, S., Castro-Tirado, A. J., Castro Cerón, J. M., Gorosabel, J., Páta, P., Soldán, J., Hudec, R., Jelinek, M., Topinka, M., Bernas, M., Mateo Sanguino, T. J., Postigo, A. de Ugarte, Berná, J. Á., Henden, A., Vrba, F., Canzian, B., Harris, H., Delfosse, X., de Pontieu, B., Polcar, J., Sánchez-Fernández, C., de la Morena, B. A., Más-Hesse, J. M., Torres Riera, J., and Barthelmy, S.
- Abstract
We imaged the error box of a gamma-ray burst of the short (0.5 s), hard type (GRB 000313), with the BOOTES-1 experiment in southern Spain, starting 4 min after the γ–ray event, in the I-band. A bright optical transient (OT 000313) with $I = 9.4 \pm 0.1$was found in the BOOTES-1 image, close to the error box (3σ) provided by BATSE. Late time $VRIK^\prime$-band deep observations failed to reveal an underlying host galaxy. If the OT 000313 is related to the short, hard GRB 000313, this would be the first optical counterpart ever found for this kind of events (all counterparts to date have been found for bursts of the long, soft type). The fact that only prompt optical emission has been detected (but no afterglow emission at all, as supported by theoretical models) might explain why no optical counterparts have ever been found for short, hard GRBs. This fact suggests that most short bursts might occur in a low-density medium and favours the models that relate them to binary mergers in very low-density environments.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The high-frequency QPOs in GRS 1915+105
- Author
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Belloni, T., Méndez, M., Sánchez-Fernández, C., Belloni, T., Méndez, M., and Sánchez-Fernández, C.
- Abstract
We analyzed two 1996 observations of the Galactic Microquasar GRS 1915+105 taken with the Proportional Counter Array on board the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. We focus on the properties of the high-frequency QPO as a function of the "dip"oscillations, a factor of 1000 slower. In one observation, 1996 May 5th, we find that the energy spectrum of the QPO at ~65 Hz changes drastically between the high-intervals and the dips, hardening during the dips to the point that the QPO peak is no longer detected at low energies. In the second observation, 1996 May 14th, although it has similar overall characteristics, the 65 Hz QPO is not seen, but another broader QPO peak appears at 27 Hz, only during the dips. This peak is too weak to obtain reliable information about its spectrum. Our results indicate that the presence/absence of high-frequency features in this enigmatic source are intimately linked to the slower oscillations and variations that happen on longer time scales.
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- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Efectos electrofisiológicos del sevoflurano versuspropofol en niños con síndrome de Wolff-Parkinson-White
- Author
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Rodríguez Pérez, E., Benito Bartolomé, F., Sanabria Carretero, P., Sánchez Fernández, C., Jiménez Mateos, E., and Goldman Tarlovsky, L.
- Abstract
Evaluar los efectos electrofisiológicos del sevoflurano en niños con síndrome de Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) sometidos a ablación por radiofrecuencia (RF).
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
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6. XMM-Newton detection of relativistic Fe emission in the X-ray spectrum of SAX J1711.6–3808Based on observations obtained with XMM-Newton, an ESA science mission with instruments and contributions directly funded by ESA Member States and NASA
- Author
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Sánchez-Fernández, C., Santos-Lleó, M., In' t Zand, J. J. M., González-Riestra, R., Altieri, B., Saxton, R., and Castro-Tirado, A. J.
- Abstract
The transient system SAX J1711.6–3808 was observed by XMM-Newton during its 2001 outburst, when the source was close to its maximum outburst luminosity. Our observations show that the broad Fe emission line detected in this outburst by In' t Zand et al. (2002) has indeed a relativistic nature, suggesting that SAX J1711.6–3808 harbors a black hole with a high spin parameter. (© 2006 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim)
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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7. Optical behaviour of XTE J1550-564 and XTE J1859+226 from outburst to quiescence
- Author
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Sánchez-Fernández, C., Castro-Tirado, A., Giménez, A., Zurita, C., Casares, J., and Lund, N.
- Abstract
We present here the optical light curves of the Soft X-ray TransientsXTE J1550-564 and XTEJ1859+226 from outburst to quiescence
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- 2001
- Full Text
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8. The 2000 April multiwavelength campaign of GRS 1915+105
- Author
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Ueda, Y., Yamaoka, K., Grove, J.E., McCollough, M., Durouchoux, P., Rodriguez, J., Mirabel, F., Swank, J., Feroci, M., Casella, P., Castro-Tirado, A.J., Sánchez-Fernández, C., Chaty, S., Castaneda, H., Kohno, K., Dhawan, V., Trushkin, S.A., Ebisawa, K., Kotani, T., and Inoue, H.
- Abstract
We report results from multiwavelength observations of the microquasarGRS 1915+105 performed during the 2000 April campaign. This is one ofthe biggest campaigns ever made for this source covering the broadband from radio to γ-rays. Multiwavelength light curves compiledfrom all the data reduced up to date and broad band spectra obtainedwith ASCA and RXTE are presented.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
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9. Minioutbursts in XTE J1859+226
- Author
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Zurita, C., Casares, J., RodrÍguez–Gil, P., Shahbaz, T., Charles, P.A., Sánchez–Fernández, C., Castro–Tirado, A., Abbot, T., and Hakala, P.
- Abstract
Photometry of the X-ray transient XTE J1859+226, obtained during outburst,showed at least 3 minioutbursts. During the second one, the source exhibiteda 0.3 mag modulation with QPO flaring activity during the minimum.
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- 2001
- Full Text
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10. What ignites on the neutron star of 4U 0614+091?
- Author
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Kuulkers, E., in 't Zand, J. J. M., Atteia, J.-L., Levine, A. M., Brandt, S., Smith, D. A., Linares, M., Falanga, M., Sánchez-Fernández, C., Markwardt, C. B., Strohmayer, T. E., Cumming, A., and Suzuki, M.
- Abstract
The low-mass X-ray binary 4U 0614+091 is a source of sporadic thermonuclear (type I) X-ray bursts. We find bursts with a wide variety of characteristics in serendipitous wide-field X-ray observations by the WATCH on EURECA, the ASM on RXTE, the WFCs on BeppoSAX, the FREGATE on HETE-2, the IBIS/ISGRI on INTEGRAL, and the BAT on Swift, as well as pointed observations with the PCA and HEXTE on RXTE. Most of the bursts are bright, i.e., they reach a peak flux of about 15 Crab, but a few are weak and only reach a peak flux below a Crab. One of the bursts shows a very strong photospheric radius-expansion phase. This allows us to evaluate the distance to the source, which we estimate to be 3.2 kpc. The burst durations vary generally from about 10 s to 5 min. However, after one of the intermediate-duration bursts, a faint tail is seen to at least about 2.4 h after the start of the burst. One very long burst was observed, which lasted for several hours. This superburst candidate was followed by a normal type-I burst only 19 days later. This is, to our knowledge, the shortest burst-quench time among the superbursters. The observation of a superburst in this system is difficult to reconcile if the system is accreting at about 1% of the Eddington limit. We describe the burst properties in relation to the persistent emission. No strong correlations are apparent, except that the intermediate-duration bursts occurred when 4U 0614+091's persistent emission was lowest and calm, and when bursts were infrequent (on average roughly one every month to 3 months). The average burst rate increased significantly after this period. The maximum average burst recurrence rate is about once every week to 2 weeks. The burst behaviour may be partly understood if there is at least an appreciable amount of helium present in the accreted material from the donor star. If the system is an ultra-compact X-ray binary with a CO white-dwarf donor, as has been suggested, this is unexpected. If the bursts are powered by helium, we find that the energy production per accumulated mass is about 2.5 times less than expected for pure helium matter.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. What ignites on the neutron star of 4U 0614+091?
- Author
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Kuulkers, E., in 't Zand, J. J. M., Atteia, J.-L., Levine, A. M., Brandt, S., Smith, D. A., Linares, M., Falanga, M., Sánchez-Fernández, C., Markwardt, C. B., Strohmayer, T. E., Cumming, A., and Suzuki, M.
- Abstract
The low-mass X-ray binary 4U 0614+091 is a source of sporadic thermonuclear (type I) X-ray bursts. We find bursts with a wide variety of characteristics in serendipitous wide-field X-ray observations by the WATCH on EURECA, the ASM on RXTE, the WFCs on BeppoSAX, the FREGATE on HETE-2, the IBIS/ISGRI on INTEGRAL, and the BAT on Swift, as well as pointed observations with the PCA and HEXTE on RXTE. Most of the bursts are bright, i.e., they reach a peak flux of about 15 Crab, but a few are weak and only reach a peak flux below a Crab. One of the bursts shows a very strong photospheric radius-expansion phase. This allows us to evaluate the distance to the source, which we estimate to be 3.2 kpc. The burst durations vary generally from about 10 s to 5 min. However, after one of the intermediate-duration bursts, a faint tail is seen to at least about 2.4 h after the start of the burst. One very long burst was observed, which lasted for several hours. This superburst candidate was followed by a normal type-I burst only 19 days later. This is, to our knowledge, the shortest burst-quench time among the superbursters. The observation of a superburst in this system is difficult to reconcile if the system is accreting at about 1% of the Eddington limit. We describe the burst properties in relation to the persistent emission. No strong correlations are apparent, except that the intermediate-duration bursts occurred when 4U 0614+091's persistent emission was lowest and calm, and when bursts were infrequent (on average roughly one every month to 3 months). The average burst rate increased significantly after this period. The maximum average burst recurrence rate is about once every week to 2 weeks. The burst behaviour may be partly understood if there is at least an appreciable amount of helium present in the accreted material from the donor star. If the system is an ultra-compact X-ray binary with a CO white-dwarf donor, as has been suggested, this is unexpected. If the bursts are powered by helium, we find that the energy production per accumulated mass is about 2.5 times less than expected for pure helium matter.
- Published
- 2010
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