27,241 results on '"Kahn S"'
Search Results
52. PB1006 Accuracy and Interrater Agreement of Death Event Adjudications by Physician Trainees: Validation of the ISTH Definition of Pulmonary Embolism-Related Death in an Autopsy Cohort
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Marx, C., primary, Schenker, C., additional, Xu, Y., additional, Salvatore, S., additional, Kahn, S., additional, Garcia, D., additional, Delluc, A., additional, Kraaijpoel, N., additional, Langlois, N., additional, Girard, P., additional, Le Gal, G., additional, and Tritschler, T., additional
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- 2023
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53. Author Correction: Strong correlations and orbital texture in single-layer 1T-TaSe2 (Nature Physics, (2020), 16, 2, (218-224), 10.1038/s41567-019-0744-9)
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Chen, Y, Ruan, W, Wu, M, Tang, S, Ryu, H, Tsai, HZ, Lee, RL, Kahn, S, Liou, F, Jia, C, Albertini, OR, Xiong, H, Jia, T, Liu, Z, Sobota, JA, Liu, AY, Moore, JE, Shen, ZX, Louie, SG, Mo, SK, and Crommie, MF
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Fluids & Plasmas ,Mathematical Sciences ,Physical Sciences - Abstract
In the version of this Article previously published, co-author Ryan L. Lee was missing the middle initial. This has now been corrected in the online versions.
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- 2021
54. Concepts in Cancer Medicine. Edited by Kahn S. Benham Love Richard R. Sherman Charles Jr Chakravorty Ranes. Pages. Grune & Stratton, New York, London, and Paris, 1982. $39.50.
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- 1983
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55. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey: Technical Summary
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Frieman, Joshua A., Bassett, B., Becker, A., Choi, C., Cinabro, D., DeJongh, F., Depoy, D. L., Dilday, B., Doi, M., Garnavich, P. M., Hogan, C. J., Holtzman, J., Im, M., Jha, S., Kessler, R., Konishi, K., Lampeitl, H., Marriner, J., Marshall, J. L., McGinnis, D., Miknaitis, G., Nichol, R. C., Prieto, J. L., Riess, A. G., Richmond, M. W., Romani, R., Sako, M., Schneider, D. P., Smith, M., Takanashi, N., Tokita, K., van der Heyden, K., Yasuda, N., Zheng, C., Adelman-McCarthy, J., Annis, J., Assef, R. J., Barentine, J., Bender, R., Blandford, R. D., Boroski, W. N., Bremer, M., Brewington, H., Collins, C. A., Crotts, A., Dembicky, J., Eastman, J., Edge, A., Edmondson, E., Elson, E., Eyler, M. E., Filippenko, A. V., Foley, R. J., Frank, S., Goobar, A., Gueth, T., Gunn, J. E., Harvanek, M., Hopp, U., Ihara, Y., Ivezić, Ž., Kahn, S., Kaplan, J., Kent, S., Ketzeback, W., Kleinman, S. J., Kollatschny, W., Kron, R. G., Krzesiński, J., Lamenti, D., Leloudas, G., Lin, H., Long, D. C., Lucey, J., Lupton, R. H., Malanushenko, E., Malanushenko, V., McMillan, R. J., Mendez, J., Morgan, C. W., Morokuma, T., Nitta, A., Ostman, L., Pan, K., Rockosi, C. M., Romer, A. K., Ruiz-Lapuente, P., Saurage, G., Schlesinger, K., Snedden, S. A., Sollerman, J., Stoughton, C., Stritzinger, M., SubbaRao, M., Tucker, D., Vaisanen, P., Watson, L. C., Watters, S., Wheeler, J. C., Yanny, B., and York, D.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II (SDSS-II) has embarked on a multi-year project to identify and measure light curves for intermediate-redshift (0.05 < z < 0.35) Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) using repeated five-band (ugriz) imaging over an area of 300 sq. deg. The survey region is a stripe 2.5 degrees wide centered on the celestial equator in the Southern Galactic Cap that has been imaged numerous times in earlier years, enabling construction of a deep reference image for discovery of new objects. Supernova imaging observations are being acquired between 1 September and 30 November of 2005-7. During the first two seasons, each region was imaged on average every five nights. Spectroscopic follow-up observations to determine supernova type and redshift are carried out on a large number of telescopes. In its first two three-month seasons, the survey has discovered and measured light curves for 327 spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia, 30 probable SNe Ia, 14 confirmed SNe Ib/c, 32 confirmed SNe II, plus a large number of photometrically identified SNe Ia, 94 of which have host-galaxy spectra taken so far. This paper provides an overview of the project and briefly describes the observations completed during the first two seasons of operation., Comment: Submitted to The Astronomical Journal (24 pages, 10 figures)
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- 2007
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56. Resonance scattering in the X-ray emission line profiles of Zeta Puppis
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Leutenegger, M. A., Cohen, D. H., Kahn, S. M., Owocki, S. P., and Paerels, F. B. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer observations of pairs of X-ray emission line profiles from the O star Zeta Pup that originate from the same He-like ion. The two profiles in each pair have different shapes and cannot both be consistently fit by models assuming the same wind parameters. We show that the differences in profile shape can be accounted for in a model including the effects of resonance scattering, which affects the resonance line in the pair but not the intercombination line. This implies that resonance scattering is also important in single resonance lines, where its effect is difficult to distinguish from a low effective continuum optical depth in the wind. Thus, resonance scattering may help reconcile X-ray line profile shapes with literature mass-loss rates., Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures, to appear in the workshop proceedings 'Clumping in Hot Star Winds', eds. W.-R. Hamann, A. Feldmeier, & L. Oskinova
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- 2007
57. Plasma Lens for Us Based Super Neutrino Beam at Either FNAL or BNL
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Hershcovitch, A., Weng, W., Diwan, M., Gallardo, J., Kirk, H., Johnson, B., Kahn, S., Garate, E., and Van Drie, A.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics - Abstract
The plasma lens concept is examined as an alternative to focusing horns and solenoids for a neutrino beam facility. The concept is based on a combined high-current lens/target configuration. Current is fed at an electrode located downstream from the beginning of the target where pion capturing is needed. The current is carried by plasma outside the target. A second plasma lens section, with an additional current feed, follows the target. The plasma is immersed in a relatively small solenoidal magnetic field to facilitate its current profile shaping to optimize pion capture. Simulations of the not yet fully optimized configuration yielded a 25% higher neutrino flux at a detector situated at 3 km from the target than the horn system for the entire energy spectrum and a factor of 2.5 higher flux for neutrinos with energy larger than 3 GeV. A major advantage of plasma lenses is in background reduction. In antineutrino operation, neutrino background is reduced by a factor of close to 3 for the whole spectrum, and for energy larger than 3 GeV, neutrino background is reduced by a factor of 3.6. Plasma lenses have additional advantages: larger axial currents, high signal purity: minimal neutrino background in antineutrino runs. The lens medium consists of plasma, consequently, particle absorption and scattering is negligible. Withstanding high mechanical and thermal stresses in a plasma is not an issue., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures submitted to Particle Accelerators Conference 2007 (PAC07)
- Published
- 2007
58. Report of the US long baseline neutrino experiment study
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Barger, V., Bishai, M., Bogert, D., Bromberg, C., Curioni, A., Dierckxsens, M., Diwan, M., Dufour, F., Finley, D., Fleming, B. T., Gallardo, J., Heim, J., Huber, P., Jung, C. K., Kahn, S., Kearns, E., Kirk, H., Kirk, T., Lande, K., Laughton, C., Lee, W. Y., Lesko, K., Lewis, C., Litchfield, P., Mann, A. K., Marchionni, A., Marciano, W., Marfatia, D., Marino, A. D., Marshak, M., Menary, S., McDonald, K., Messier, M., Pariseau, W., Parsa, Z., Pordes, S., Potenza, R., Rameika, R., Saoulidou, N., Simos, N., Van Berg, R., Viren, B., Whisnant, K., Wilson, R., Winter, W., Yanagisawa, C., Yumiceva, F., Zimmerman, E. D., and Zwaska, R.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
This report provides the results of an extensive and important study of the potential for a U.S. scientific program that will extend our knowledge of neutrino oscillations well beyond what can be anticipated from ongoing and planned experiments worldwide. The program examined here has the potential to provide the U.S. particle physics community with world leading experimental capability in this intensely interesting and active field of fundamental research. Furthermore, this capability could be unique compared to anywhere else in the world because of the available beam intensity and baseline distances. The present study was initially commissioned in April 2006 by top research officers of Brookhaven National Laboratory and Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory and, as the study evolved, it also provided responses to questions formulated and addressed to the study group by the Neutrino Scientific Advisory Committee (NuSAG) of the U.S. DOE and NSF. The participants in the study, its Charge and history, plus the study results and conclusions are provided in this report and its appendices. A summary of the conclusions is provided in the Executive Summary., Comment: 109 pages, 56 figures, The report, all associated presentations, and documents produced during this study can be obtained at http://nwg.phy.bnl.gov/fnal-bnl
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- 2007
59. Capella Corona Revisited: A Combined View from \textit{XMM-Newton} RGS, \textit{Chandra} HETGS, and LETGS
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Gu, M. F., Gupta, R., Peterson, J. R., Sako, M., and Kahn, S. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a combined analysis of the X-ray emission of the Capella corona obtained with \textit{XMM-Newton} RGS, \textit{Chandra} HETGS, and LETGS. An improved atomic line database and a new differential emission measure (DEM) deconvolution method are developed for this purpose. Our new atomic database is based on the Astrophysical Plasma Emission Database and incorporates improved calculations of ionization equilibrium and line emissivities for L-shell ions of abundant elements using the Flexible Atomic Code. The new DEM deconvolution method uses a Markov Chain Monte-Carlo (MCMC) technique which differs from existing MCMC or $\chi^2$-fitting based methods. We analyze the advantages and disadvantages of each individual instrument in determining the DEM and elemental abundances. We conclude that results from either RGS or HETGS data alone are not robust enough due to their failure to constrain DEM in some temperature region or the lack of significant continuum emission in the wavelength band of the spectrometers, and that the combination of HETGS and RGS gives more stringent constraints on the DEM and abundance determinations. Using the LETGS data, we show that the recently discovered inconsistencies between the EUV and X-ray lines of Fe XVIII and XIX also exist in more highly charged iron ions, up to Fe XXIII, and that enhanced interstellar absorption due to partially ionized plasma along the Capella line of sight may explain some, but not all, of these discrepancies., Comment: Accepted in ApJ
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- 2006
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60. Use of the WAIS-R and the halstead-reitan battery to differentiate substance abusers, organically impaired, and substance abusers/organically impaired individuals Hartwig, W. H., Kahn, S., & Kay, B.
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- 1997
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61. A Cost-Effective Design for a Neutrino Factory
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Berg, J. S., Bogacz, S. A., Caspi, S., Cobb, J., Fernow, R. C., Gallardo, J. C., Kahn, S., Kirk, H., Neuffer, D., Palmer, R. B., Paul, K., Witte, H., and Zisman, M.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics - Abstract
There have been active efforts in the U.S., Europe, and Japan on the design of a Neutrino Factory. This type of facility produces intense beams of neutrinos from the decay of muons in a high energy storage ring. In the U.S., a second detailed Feasibility Study (FS2) for a Neutrino Factory was completed in 2001. Since that report was published, new ideas in bunching, cooling and acceleration of muon beams have been developed. We have incorporated these ideas into a new facility design, which we designate as Study 2B (ST2B), that should lead to significant cost savings over the FS2 design., Comment: 46 pages, 38 figures; to be submitted to Physical Review Special Topics: Accelerators and Beams
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- 2005
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62. An X-ray Galaxy Cluster Survey for Investigations of Dark Energy
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Haiman, Z., Allen, S., Bahcall, N., Bautz, M., Boehringer, H., Borgani, S., Bryan, G., Cabrera, B., Canizares, C., Citterio, O., Evrard, A., Finoguenov, A., Griffiths, R., Hasinger, G., Henry, P., Jahoda, K., Jernigan, G., Kahn, S., Lamb, D., Majumdar, S., Mohr, J., Molendi, S., Mushotzky, R., Pareschi, G., Peterson, J., Petre, R., Predehl, P., Rasmussen, A., Ricker, G., Ricker, P., Rosati, P., Sanderson, A., Stanford, A., Voit, M., Wang, S., White, N., and White, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The amount and nature of dark energy (DE) can be tightly constrained by measuring the spatial correlation features and evolution of a sample of ~ 100,000 galaxy clusters over the redshift range 0
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- 2005
63. Laboratory simulation of cometary x rays using a high-resolution microcalorimeter
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Beiersdorfer, P., Chen, H., Boyce, K. R., Brown, G. V., Kelley, R. L., Kilbourne, C. A., Porter, F. S., and Kahn, S. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
X-ray emission following charge exchange has been studied on the University of California Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory electron beam ion traps EBIT-I and EBIT-II using a high-resolution microcalorimeter. The measured spectra include the K-shell emission from hydrogenlike and heliumlike C, N, O, and Ne needed for simulations of cometary x-ray emission. A comparison of the spectra produced in the interaction of O8+ with N2 and CH4 is presented that illustrates the dependence of the observed spectrum on the interaction gas., Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures
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- 2005
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64. The Fall 2004 SDSS Supernova Survey
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Sako, Masao, Romani, Roger, Frieman, Josh, Adelman-McCarthy, Jen, Becker, Andrew, DeJongh, Fritz, Dilday, Ben, Estrada, Juan, Hendry, John, Holtzman, Jon, Kaplan, Jared, Kessler, Rick, Lampeitl, Hubert, Marriner, John, Miknaitis, Gajus, Riess, Adam, Tucker, Douglas, Barentine, J., Blandford, R., Brewington, H., Dembicky, J., Harvanek, M., Hawley, S., Hogan, C., Johnston, D., Kahn, S., Ketzeback, B., Kleinman, S., Krzesinski, J., Lamenti, D., Long, D., McMillan, R., Newman, P., Nitta, A., Nichol, R., Scranton, R., Sheldon, E., Snedden, S., Stoughton, C., York, D., and Collaboration, the SDSS
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In preparation for the Supernova Survey of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) II, a proposed 3-year extension to the SDSS, we have conducted an early engineering and science run during the fall of 2004, which consisted of approximately 20 scheduled nights of repeated imaging of half of the southern equatorial stripe. Transient supernova-like events were detected in near real-time and photometric measurements were made in the five SDSS filter bandpasses with a cadence of ~2 days. Candidate type Ia supernovae (SNe) were pre-selected based on their colors, light curve shape, and the properties of the host galaxy. Follow-up spectroscopic observations were performed with the Astrophysical Research Consortium 3.5m telescope and the 9.2m Hobby-Eberly Telescope to confirm their types and measure the redshifts. The 2004 campaign resulted in 22 spectroscopically confirmed SNe, which includes 16 type Ia, 5 type II, and 1 type Ib/c. These SN Ia will help fill in the sparsely sampled redshift interval of z = 0.05 - 0.35, the so-called 'redshift desert', in the Hubble diagram. Detailed investigation of the spectral properties of these moderate-redshift SNe Ia will also provide a bridge between local SNe and high-redshift objects, and will help us understand the systematics for future cosmological applications that require high photometric precision. Finally, the large survey volume also provides the opportunity to select unusual supernovae for spectroscopic study that are poorly sampled in other surveys. We report on some of the early results from this program and discuss potential future applications., Comment: 6 pages; Presentation at the 22nd Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics; minor revisions
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- 2005
65. 6D Ionization Muon Cooling with Tabletop Rings
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Summers, D. J., Bracker, S. B., Cremaldi, L. M., Godang, R., Cline, D. B., Garren, A. A., Hanson, G. G., Klier, A., Kahn, S. A., Kirk, H. G., and Palmer, R. B.
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Physics - Accelerator Physics ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Progress on six dimensional ionization muon cooling with relatively small rings of magnets is described. Lattices being explored include scaling sector cyclotrons with edge focusing and strong focusing, fixed field alternating gradient (FFAG) rings. Ionization cooling is provided by high pressure hydrogen gas which removes both transverse and longitudinal momentum. Lost longitudinal momentum is replaced using radio frequency (RF) cavities, giving a net transverse emittance reduction. The longer path length in the hydrogen of higher momentum muons decreases longitudinal emittance at the expense of transverse emittance. Thus emittance exchange allows these rings to cool in all six dimensions and not just transversely. Alternatively, if the RF is located after the ring, it may be possible to cool the muons by stopping them as they spiral adiabatically into a central swarm. As momentum goes to zero, the momentum spread goes to zero. The resulting cooled muons can lead to an intense muon beam which could be a source for neutrino factories or muon colliders., Comment: Six pages. One LaTeX, one style, and five postscript figure files. To appear in the proceedings of DPF 2004: Annual Meeting of the Division of Particles and Fields (DPF) of the American Physical Society (APS), Riverside, California, 26-31 Aug 2004
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- 2005
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66. DEMO design using the SYCOMORE system code: Influence of technological constraints on the reactor performances
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Reux, C., Kahn, S., Zani, L., Pégourié, B., Piot, N., Owsiak, M., Aiello, G., Artaud, J.-F., Boutry, A., Dardour, S., Di Gallo, L., Duchateau, J.-L., Galassi, D., Imbeaux, F., Jaboulay, J.-C., Magaud, P., Said, J., Saoutic, B., and Sardain, P.
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- 2018
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67. XMM-Newton observations of the heavily absorbed Seyfert 1 galaxy IC 4329A
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Steenbrugge, K. C., Kaastra, J. S., Sako, M., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Behar, E., Paerels, F. B. S., Blustin, A. J., and Kahn, S. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We detect seven distinct absorbing systems in the high-resolution X-ray spectrum of the Seyfert 1 galaxy IC 4329A, taken with XMM-Newton. Firstly we detect absorption due to cold gas in our own Galaxy and warm gas in the Galactic halo or the Local Group. This local warm gas is only detected through O VII absorption, from which we deduce a temperature between 0.03 and 0.2 keV. In IC 4329A we detect absorption from the host galaxy as well as from a warm absorber, close to the nucleus, which has 4 components. The absorption from the host galaxy is well modeled by neutral material. The warm absorber detected in IC 4329A is photoionized and has an ionization range between log $\xi$ = -1.37 and log $\xi$ = 2.7. A broad excess is measured at the O VIII Ly$\alpha$ and N VII Ly$\alpha$ emission lines, which can be modeled by either disklines or multiple Gaussians. From the lightcurve we find that the source changed luminosity by about 20 % over the 140 ks observation, while the spectral shape, i.e. the softness ratio did not vary. In the EPIC spectra a narrow Fe K$\alpha$ and Fe XXVI Ly$\alpha$ emission line are detected. The narrowness of the Fe K$\alpha$ line and the fact that there is no evidence for flux variability between different observations leads us to conclude that the Fe K$\alpha$ line is formed at a large distance from the central black hole., Comment: Accepted by A&A, 10 pages, 14 figures
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- 2004
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68. Multivariate Monte Carlo Methods for the Reflection Grating Spectrometers on XMM-Newton
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Peterson, J. R., Jernigan, J. G., and Kahn, S. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We propose a novel multivariate Monte Carlo method as an efficient and flexible approach to analyzing extended X-ray sources with the Reflection Grating Spectrometer (RGS) on XMM Newton. A multi-dimensional interpolation method is used to efficiently calculate the response function for the RGS in conjunction with an arbitrary spatially-varying spectral model. Several methods of event comparison that effectively compare the multivariate RGS data are discussed. The use of a multi-dimensional instrument Monte Carlo also creates many opportunities for the use of complex astrophysical Monte Carlo calculations in diffuse X-ray spectroscopy. The methods presented here could be generalized to other X-ray instruments as well., Comment: 36 pages, 14 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2004
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69. Supernova / Acceleration Probe: A Satellite Experiment to Study the Nature of the Dark Energy
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SNAP Collaboration, Aldering, G., Althouse, W., Amanullah, R., Annis, J., Astier, P., Baltay, C., Barrelet, E., Basa, S., Bebek, C., Bergstrom, L., Bernstein, G., Bester, M., Bigelow, B., Blandford, R., Bohlin, R., Bonissent, A., Bower, C., Brown, M., Campbell, M., Carithers, W., Commins, E., Craig, W., Day, C., DeJongh, F., Deustua, S., Diehl, T., Dodelson, S., Ealet, A., Ellis, R., Emmet, W., Fouchez, D., Frieman, J., Fruchter, A., Gerdes, D., Gladney, L., Goldhaber, G., Goobar, A., Groom, D., Heetderks, H., Hoff, M., Holland, S., Huffer, M., Hui, L., Huterer, D., Jain, B., Jelinsky, P., Karcher, A., Kent, S., Kahn, S., Kim, A., Kolbe, W., Krieger, B., Kushner, G., Kuznetsova, N., Lafever, R., Lamoureux, J., Lampton, M., Fevre, O. Le, Levi, M., Limon, P., Lin, H., Linder, E., Loken, S., Lorenzon, W., Malina, R., Marriner, J., Marshall, P., Massey, R., Mazure, A., McKay, T., McKee, S., Miquel, R., Morgan, N., Mortsell, E., Mostek, N., Mufson, S., Musser, J., Nugent, P., Oluseyi, H., Pain, R., Palaio, N., Pankow, D., Peoples, J., Perlmutter, S., Prieto, E., Rabinowitz, D., Refregier, A., Rhodes, J., Roe, N., Rusin, D., Scarpine, V., Schubnell, M., Sholl, M., Smadja, G., Smith, R. M., Smoot, G., Snyder, J., Spadafora, A., Stebbins, A., Stoughton, C., Szymkowiak, A., Tarle, G., Taylor, K., Tilquin, A., Tomasch, A., Tucker, D., Vincent, D., von der Lippe, H., Walder, J-P., Wang, G., and Wester, W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Supernova / Acceleration Probe (SNAP) is a proposed space-based experiment designed to study the dark energy and alternative explanations of the acceleration of the Universe's expansion by performing a series of complementary systematics-controlled measurements. We describe a self-consistent reference mission design for building a Type Ia supernova Hubble diagram and for performing a wide-area weak gravitational lensing study. A 2-m wide-field telescope feeds a focal plane consisting of a 0.7 square-degree imager tiled with equal areas of optical CCDs and near infrared sensors, and a high-efficiency low-resolution integral field spectrograph. The SNAP mission will obtain high-signal-to-noise calibrated light-curves and spectra for several thousand supernovae at redshifts between z=0.1 and 1.7. A wide-field survey covering one thousand square degrees resolves ~100 galaxies per square arcminute. If we assume we live in a cosmological-constant-dominated Universe, the matter density, dark energy density, and flatness of space can all be measured with SNAP supernova and weak-lensing measurements to a systematics-limited accuracy of 1%. For a flat universe, the density-to-pressure ratio of dark energy can be similarly measured to 5% for the present value w0 and ~0.1 for the time variation w'. The large survey area, depth, spatial resolution, time-sampling, and nine-band optical to NIR photometry will support additional independent and/or complementary dark-energy measurement approaches as well as a broad range of auxiliary science programs. (Abridged), Comment: 40 pages, 18 figures, submitted to PASP, http://snap.lbl.gov
- Published
- 2004
70. The complex soft X-ray spectrum of NGC 4151
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Schurch, N. J., Warwick, R. S., Griffiths, R. E., and Kahn, S. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of the complex soft X-ray spectrum of NGC 4151 measured by the RGS instruments aboard XMM-Newton. The XMM-Newton RGS spectra demonstrate that the soft X-ray emission is extremely rich in X-ray emission lines and radiative recombination continua (RRC), with no clear evidence for any underlying continuum emission. Line emission, and the associated RRC, are clearly detected from hydrogen-like and helium-like ionization states of neon, oxygen, nitrogen and carbon. The measured lines are blueshifted with a velocity of between ~100-1000 km/s, with respect to the systemic velocity of NGC 4151, approximately consistent with the outflow velocities of the absorption lines observed in the UV, suggestive of an origin for the UV and soft X-ray emission in the same material. Plasma diagnostics imply a range of electron temperatures of ~1-5x10^4 K and electron densities of between 10^8-10^10 cm^-3. The soft X-ray spectrum of NGC 4151 is extremely similar to that of NGC 1068, suggesting that the soft X-ray excesses observed in many Seyfert galaxies may be composed of similar emission features. Modelling the RGS spectra in terms of emission from photoionized and photoexcited gas in an ionization cone reproduces all of the hydrogen-like and helium-like emission features observed in the soft X-ray spectrum of NGC 4151 in detail and confirms the correspondence between the soft X-ray emission in NGC 4151 and NGC 1068., Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures (2 colour). Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2004
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71. Spatially resolved X-ray spectroscopy of cooling clusters of galaxies
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Kaastra, J. S., Tamura, T., Peterson, J. R., Bleeker, J. A. M., Ferrigno, C., Kahn, S. M., Paerels, F. B. S., Piffaretti, R., Branduardi-Raymont, G., and Boehringer, H.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present spatially resolved X-ray spectra taken with the EPIC cameras of XMM-Newton of a sample of 17 cooling clusters and three non-cooling clusters for comparison. The deprojected spectra are analyzed with a multi-temperature model, independent of any a priori assumptions about the physics behind the cooling and heating mechanisms. All cooling clusters show a central decrement of the average temperature, most of them of a factor of ~2. At each radius within the cooling region the gas is non-isothermal. The differential emission measure distribution peaks near the maximum (ambient) temperature, and steeply declines towards lower temperatures, proportional to T^3, or alternatively a cut-off at about a quarter to half of the maximum temperature. In general, we find a poor correlation between radio flux of the central galaxy and the temperature decrement of the cooling flow. This is interpreted as evidence that except for a few cases heating by a central AGN is not the most common cause of weak cooling flows. We investigate the role of heat conduction by electrons and find that the theoretically predicted conductivity rates are not high enough to balance radiation losses. The differential emission measure distribution has remarkable similarities with the predictions from coronal magnetic loop models. Also the physical processes involved (radiative cooling, thermal conduction along the loops, gravity) are similar for clusters loops and coronal loops. If coronal loop models apply to clusters, we find that a few hundred loops per scale height should be present. The typical loop sizes deduced from the observed emission measure distribution are consistent with the characteristic magnetic field sizes deduced from Faraday rotation measurements., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics, main journal, 25 pages, 12 figures
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- 2003
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72. Structure and Dynamics of Stellar Winds in High-mass X-ray Binaries
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Sako, M., Kahn, S. M., Paerels, F., Liedahl, D. A., Watanabe, S., Nagase, F., and Takahashi, T.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A review of spectroscopic results obtained from Chandra High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer and XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer observations of several wind-fed high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs) is presented. These observations allow us to study the structure of the stellar wind in more detail and provide, for the first time, a dyanmical view of the X-ray photoionized wind that surrounds the compact object. At the same time, however, they are also providing us with numerous puzzles that cannot be explained in terms of simple models. For example, simple spherically-symmetric wind models cannot explain the observed orbital-phase variability of the line intensities and shapes, which may be caused by intrinsic asymmetries due to the presence of the compact object and/or more complicated radiative transfer effects. The observed line shifts are smaller than those expected from extensions of simple wind models of isolated OB supergiants. In addition, several novel spectroscopic discoveries have been made, including: (1) P-Cygni lines from an expanding wind, (2) detection of multiple Si K fluorescent lines from a wide range of charge states, (3) Compton scattered Fe K lines from a cold medium. We discuss how these spectroscopic diagnostics can be used to understand some of the global properties of stellar winds in HMXBs., Comment: 10 pages; invited review at the High-resolution X-ray Spectroscopy Workshop with XMM-Newton and Chandra, MSSL, Oct 24-25, 2002
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- 2003
73. Chandra LETGS and XMM-Newton observations of NGC 4593
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Steenbrugge, K. C., Kaastra, J. S., Blustin, A. J., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Sako, M., Behar, E., Kahn, S. M., Paerels, F. B. S., and Walter, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper, we analyze spectra of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 4593 obtained with the Chandra Low Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer (LETGS), the Reflection Grating Spectrometer (RGS) and the European Photon Imaging Camera's (EPIC) onboard of XMM-Newton. The two observations were separated by ~7 months. In the LETGS spectrum we detect a highly ionized warm absorber corresponding to an ionization state of 400x10^{-9} W m, visible as a depression at 10-18 \AA. This depression is formed by multiple weak Fe and Ne lines. A much smaller column density was found for the lowly ionized warm absorber, corresponding to xi = 3x10^{-9} W m. However, an intermediate ionization warm absorber is not detected. For the RGS data the ionization state is hard to constrain. The EPIC results show a narrow Fe Kalpha line., Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2003
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74. Atomic Calculations and Spectral Models of X-ray Absorption and Emission Features From Astrophysical Photoionized Plasmas
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Kinkhabwala, A., Behar, E., Sako, M., Gu, M. F., Kahn, S. M., and Paerels, F. B. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed model of the discrete X-ray spectroscopic features expected from steady-state, low-density photoionized plasmas. We apply the Flexible Atomic Code (FAC) to calculate all of the necessary atomic data for the full range of ions relevant for the X-ray regime. These calculations have been incorporated into a simple model of a cone of ions irradiated by a point source located at its tip (now available as the XSPEC model PHOTOION). For each ionic species in the cone, photoionization is balanced by recombination and ensuing radiative cascades, and photoexcitation of resonance transitions is balanced by radiative decay. This simple model is useful for diagnosing X-ray emission mechanisms, determining photoionization/photoexcitation/recombination rates, fitting temperatures and ionic emission measures, and probing geometrical properties (covering factor/column densities/radial filling factor/velocity distributions) of absorbing/reemitting regions in photoionized plasmas. Such plasmas have already been observed in diverse astrophysical X-ray sources, including active galactic nuclei, X-ray binaries, cataclysmic variables, and stellar winds of early-type stars, and may also provide a significant contribution to the X-ray spectra of gamma-ray-burst afterglows and the intergalactic medium., Comment: Submitted to ApJ. XSPEC model codes for PHOTOION, PHSI, MPABS, and SIABS can be found at http://xmm.astro.columbia.edu/research.html
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- 2003
75. Very Long Baseline Neutrino Oscillation Experiment for Precise Measurements of Mixing Parameters and CP Violating Effects
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Diwan, M. V., Beavis, D., Chen, Mu-Chun, Gallardo, J., Hahn, R. L., Kahn, S., Kirk, H., Marciano, W., Morse, W., Parsa, Z., Samios, N., Semertzidis, Y., Viren, B., Weng, W., Yamin, P., Yeh, M., Frati, W., Lande, K., Mann, A. K., Van Berg, R., Wildenhain, P., Klein, J. R., Mocioiu, I., Shrock, R., and McDonald, K. T.
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High Energy Physics - Phenomenology - Abstract
We analyze the prospects of a feasible, Brookhaven National Laboratory based, very long baseline (BVLB) neutrino oscillation experiment consisting of a conventional horn produced low energy wide band beam and a detector of 500 kT fiducial mass with modest requirements on event recognition and resolution. Such an experiment is intended primarily to determine CP violating effects in the neutrino sector for 3-generation mixing. We analyze the sensitivity of such an experiment. We conclude that this experiment will allow determination of the CP phase $\delta_{CP}$ and the currently unknown mixing parameter $\theta_{13}$, if $\sin ^2 2 \theta_{13} \geq 0.01$, a value $\sim 15$ times lower than the present experimental upper limit. In addition to $\theta_{13}$ and $\delta_{CP}$, the experiment has great potential for precise measurements of most other parameters in the neutrino mixing matrix including $\Delta m^2_{32}$, $\sin^2 2\theta_{23}$, $\Delta m^2_{21}\times \sin 2 \theta_{12}$, and the mass ordering of neutrinos through the observation of the matter effect in the $\nu_\mu \to \nu_e$ appearance channel., Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures
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- 2003
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76. Multiwavelength studies of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC7469. II - X-ray and UV observations with XMM-Newton
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Blustin, A. J., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Behar, E., Kaastra, J. S., Kriss, G. A., Page, M. J., Kahn, S. M., Sako, M., and Steenbrugge, K. C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present an XMM-Newton observation of NGC 7469, including studies of the X-ray and UV variability, 0.2-10 keV spectral continuum, Fe K-alpha emission line and the first-ever high-resolution X-ray spectrum of the soft X-ray warm absorber. We compare the properties of this X-ray warm absorber with the UV warm absorber as seen in a FUSE observation one year previously. The 0.2-10 keV spectral continuum is best fitted by a power-law plus two blackbody model. An Fe K-alpha emission line is visible which consists of a single narrow component and is well-modelled by a simple gaussian. Narrow absorption and emission lines in the soft X-ray RGS spectrum demonstrate the existence of a multi-phase warm absorber with a range in log xi of ~ 2 to ~ -2 where xi is in erg cm s^-1. The warm absorber is blueshifted by several hundred km s^-1. The highest-ionisation phase of the absorber is the best constrained and has an overall equivalent Hydrogen column of order 10^20 cm^-2; we find that its ionisation parameter is consistent with that of the warm emitter which generates the narrow emission lines. We identify this high ionisation absorber with the low-velocity phase of the UV absorber observed by FUSE., Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, accepted by A&A, a companion paper to "Multiwavelength studies of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC7469. I - Far UV observations with FUSE" by Kriss et al., astro-ph/0302552
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- 2003
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77. Two Types of X-ray Spectra in Cataclysmic Variables
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Mukai, K., Kinkhabwala, A., Peterson, J. R., Kahn, S. M., and Paerels, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Chandra HETG spectra of seven cataclysmic variables. We find that they divide unambiguously into two distinct types. Spectra of the first type are remarkably well fit by a simple cooling flow model, which assumes only steady-state isobaric radiative cooling. The maximum temperature and the normalization, which provides a highly precise measurement of the accretion rate, are the only free parameters of this model. Spectra of the second type are grossly inconsistent with a cooling flow model. They instead exhibit a hard continuum, and show strong H-like and He-like ion emission but little Fe L-shell emission, which is consistent with expectations for line emission from a photoionized plasma. Using a simple photoionization model, we argue that the observed line emission for these sources can be driven entirely by the hard continuum. The physical significance of these two distinct types of X-ray spectra is also explored., Comment: 12 pages including 2 color figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2003
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78. A multilevel model of Kahn!s job engagement in predicting counterproductive work behaviors: Evidence from financial information technology firms.
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Huang, Stanley Y. B. and Yu-Ming Fei
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INFORMATION technology ,TRANSFORMATIONAL leadership ,SELF-esteem ,RESEARCH & development ,COUNTERPRODUCTIVITY (Labor) - Abstract
Copyright of Corporate Management Review is the property of College of Management, National Chiao Tung University and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
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- 2020
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79. The Soft X-ray Spectrum from NGC 1068 Observed with LETGS on Chandra
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Brinkman, A. C., Kaastra, J. S., van der Meer, R. L. J., Kinkhabwala, A., Behar, E., Kahn, S. M., Paerels, F. B. S., and Sako, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the combined spectral and spatial resolving power of the Low Energy Transmission Grating (LETGS) on board Chandra, we obtain separate spectra from the bright central source of NGC 1068 (Primary region), and from a fainter bright spot 4" to the NE (Secondary region). Both spectra are dominated by line emission from H- and He-like ions of C through S, and from Fe L-shell ions, but also include narrow radiative recombination continua, indicating that most of the soft X-ray emission arises in low-temperature (kT few eV) photoionized plasma. We confirm the conclusions of Kinkhabwala et al. (2002), based on XMM-Newton RGS observations, that the entire nuclear spectrum can be explained by recombination/radiative cascade following photoionization, and radiative decay following photoexcitation, with no evidence for hot, collisionally ionized plasma. In addition, this model also provides an excellent fit to the spectrum of the Secondary region, albeit with radial column densities a factor of three lower, as would be expected given its distance from the source of the ionizing continuum. The remarkable overlap and kinematical agreement of the optical and X-ray line emission, coupled with the need for a distribution of ionization parameter to explain the X-ray spectra, collectively imply the presence of a distribution of densities (over a few orders of magnitude) at each radius in the ionization cone. Relative abundances of all elements are consistent with Solar abundance, except for N, which is 2-3 times Solar. The long wavelength spectrum beyond 30 A is rich of L-shell transitions of Mg, Si, S, and Ar, and M-shell transitions of Fe. The velocity dispersion decreases with increasing ionization parameter, as deduced from these long wavelength lines and the Fe-L shell lines., Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2002
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80. High Resolution X-Ray Spectroscopic Constraints on Cooling Flow Models of Clusters of Galaxies and Gaseous Haloes Around Elliptical Galaxies
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Kahn, S. M., Peterson, J. R., Paerels, F. B. S., Xu, H., Kaastra, J. S., Ferrigno, C., Tamura, T., Bleeker, J. A. M., and Jernigan, J. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In many clusters of galaxies, the cooling time at the core of the intracluster medium is much less than the age of the system, suggesting that the the gas should continually lose energy by radiation. Simple thermodynamic arguments then require that the expected "cooling flow" should exhibit a specific spectroscopic signature, characterized by a differential emission measure distribution that is inversely proportional to the cooling function of the plasma. That prediction can be quantitatively tested for the first time by the Reflection Grating Spectrometer (RGS) experiment on XMM-Newton, which provides high resolution X-ray spectra, even for moderately extended sources like clusters. We present RGS data on 14 separate cooling flow clusters, sampling a very wide range in mass deposition rate. Surprisingly, in all cases we find a systematic deficit of low temperature emission relative to the predictions of the cooling flow models. However, we do see evidence for cooling flow gas at temperatures just below the cluster background temperature, $T_0$, roughly down to $T_0/2$. These results are difficult to reconcile with most of the possible explanations for the cooling flow problem that have been proposed to date. We also present RGS data on the massive elliptical galaxy NGC 4636. In this case, we detect evidence for resonance emission line scattering of high oscillator strength Fe L-shell emission lines within the gaseous halo of the galaxy. The detection of that effect leads to very tight constraints on physical conditions within the halo. However, here again, the expected signature of a cooling flow is not detected, perhaps suggesting some fundamental uncertainty in our understanding of radiative cooling in low density cosmic plasmas., Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, Contribution for Matter and Energy in Galaxy Clusters, April 2002, Chung-Li, Taiwan
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- 2002
81. Monte Carlo Methods for X-ray Dispersive Spectrometers
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Peterson, J. R., Jernigan, J. G., and Kahn, S. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We discuss multivariate Monte Carlo methods appropriate for X-ray dispersive spectrometers. Dispersive spectrometers have many advantages for high resolution spectroscopy in the X-ray band. Analysis of data from these instruments is complicated by the fact that the instrument response functions are multi-dimensional and relatively few X-ray photons are detected from astrophysical sources. Monte Carlo methods are the natural solution to these challenges, but techniques for their use are not well developed. We describe a number of methods to produce a highly efficient and flexible multivariate Monte Carlo. These techniques include multi-dimensional response interpolation and multi-dimensional event comparison. We discuss how these methods have been extensively used in the XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer in-flight calibration program. We also show several examples of a Monte Carlo applied to observations of clusters of galaxies and elliptical galaxies with the XMM-Newton observatory., Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, Contribution for Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation, August 2002, Waikoloa, HI, SPIE Vol. 4847, Printed with the permission of SPIE
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- 2002
82. High Resolution X-ray Spectroscopic Constraints on Cooling-Flow Models for Clusters of Galaxies
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Peterson, J. R., Kahn, S. M., Paerels, F. B. S., Kaastra, J. S., Tamura, T., Bleeker, J. A. M., Ferrigno, C., and Jernigan, J. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high resolution X-ray spectra of 14 putative cooling-flow clusters of galaxies obtained with the Reflection Grating Spectrometer on XMM-Newton. The clusters in the sample span a large range of temperatures and mass deposition rates. Various of these spectra exhibit line emission from O VIII, Ne X, Mg XII & XI, Al XIII & XII, Si XIV & XIII, N VII, and C VI as well as all Fe L ions. The spectra exhibit strong emission from cool plasma at just below the ambient temperature, $T_0$, down to $T_0/2$, but also exhibit a severe deficit of emission, relative to the predictions of the isobaric cooling-flow model at lower temperatures ($<$ $T_0/3$). In addition, the best-resolved spectra show emission throughout the entire X-ray temperature range, but increasingly less emission at lower temperatures than the cooling-flow model would predict. These results are difficult to reconcile with simple prescriptions for distorting the emission measure distribution, e.g. by including additional heating or rapid cooling terms. We enumerate some theoretical difficulties in understanding the soft X-ray spectra of cooling-flows independent of the classic problem of the failure to detect the cooling-flow sink. Empirically, the differential luminosity distribution is consistent with being proportional to the temperature to the power of $\approx$ 1 to 2, instead of being independent of the temperature, as expected in the standard multi-phase model. The primary differences in the observed low temperature spectra are ascribed to differences in the ambient temperature., Comment: 22 pages, 8 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2002
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83. Ultraviolet images of Seyfert galaxies from the Optical Monitor on XMM-Newton
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Blustin, A. J., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Breeveld, A., Brinkman, A., and Kahn, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Optical Monitor telescope (Mason et al. 2001) on XMM-Newton provides an exciting multi-wavelength dimension to observations of Active Galactic Nuclei. Here we present ultraviolet images, taken with the OM UVW2 filter (140-270 nm), of various Seyfert galaxies, some of which have never been observed in this waveband before. The images show UV emission from both the active nucleus and the host galaxy. The distribution of UV emission in the galaxy shows where star formation is occurring, thus giving us clues as to the evolution of the host galaxy and perhaps its relationship to the Seyfert Nucleus., Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures, to appear in ESA SP-488 (Proceeedings of the Estec Conference, New Visions of the X-ray Universe in the XMM-Newton and Chandra Era, September 2001), 2002
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- 2002
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84. Multi-wavelength study of the Seyfert 1 galaxy NGC 3783 with XMM-Newton
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Blustin, A. J., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Behar, E., Kaastra, J. S., Kahn, S. M., Page, M. J., Sako, M., and Steenbrugge, K. C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the analysis of multi-wavelength XMM-Newton data from the Seyfert galaxy NGC 3783, including UV imaging, X-ray and UV lightcurves, the 0.2-10 keV X-ray continuum, the iron K-alpha emission line, and high-resolution spectroscopy and modelling of the soft X-ray warm absorber. The 0.2-10 keV spectral continuum can be well reproduced by a power-law at higher energies; we detect a prominent Fe K-alpha emission line, with both broad and narrow components, and a weaker emission line at 6.9 keV which is probably a combination of Fe K-beta and Fe XXVI. We interpret the significant deficit of counts in the soft X-ray region as being due to absorption by ionised gas in the line of sight. This is demonstrated by the large number of narrow absorption lines in the RGS spectrum from iron, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, neon, argon, magnesium, silicon and sulphur. The wide range of iron states present in the spectrum enables us to deduce the ionisation structure of the absorbing medium. We find that our spectrum contains evidence of absorption by at least two phases of gas: a hotter phase containing plasma with a log ionisation parameter xi (where xi is in erg cm/s) of 2.4 and greater, and a cooler phase with log xi centred around 0.3. The gas in both phases is outflowing at speeds of around 800 km/s. The main spectral signature of the cold phase is the Unresolved Transition Array (UTA) of M-shell iron, which is the deepest yet observed; its depth requires either that the abundance of iron, in the cold phase, is several times that of oxygen, with respect to solar abundances, or that the absorption lines associated with this phase are highly saturated. The cold phase is associated with ionisation states that would also absorb in the UV., Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics; some measured wavelengths and blueshifts changed to correct a computing error
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- 2002
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85. XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer Observations of Discrete Soft-X-ray Emission Features from NGC 1068
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Kinkhabwala, A., Sako, M., Behar, E., Kahn, S. M., Paerels, F., Brinkman, A. C., Kaastra, J. S., Gu, M. F., and Liedahl, D. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first high-resolution, soft-X-ray spectrum of the prototypical Seyfert 2 galaxy, NGC 1068. This spectrum was obtained with the XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer. Emission lines from H-like and He-like low-Z ions (from C to Si) and Fe-L-shell ions dominate the spectrum. Strong, narrow radiative recombination continua (RRC) for several ions are also present, implying that most of the observed soft-X-ray emission arises in low-temperature (few eV) plasma. This plasma is photoionized by the inferred nuclear continuum (obscured along our line of sight), as in the unified model of active galactic nuclei (AGN). We find excess emission (compared with pure recombination) in all resonance lines (np to 1s) up to the photoelectric edge, demonstrating the importance of photoexcitation as well. We introduce a simple model of a cone of plasma irradiated by the nuclear continuum; the line emission we observe along our line of sight perpendicular to the cone is produced through recombination/radiative cascade following photoionization and radiative decay following photoexcitation. A remarkably good fit is obtained to the H-like/He-like ionic line series, with inferred radial ionic column densities consistent with recent observations of warm absorbers in Seyfert 1 galaxies. Previous Chandra imaging revealed a large (extending out to 500 pc) ionization cone containing most of the X-ray flux, implying that the warm absorber in NGC 1068 is a large-scale outflow. To explain the ionic column densities, a broad, flat distribution in the logarithm of the ionization parameter ($\xi=L_X/n_e r^2$) is necessary, spanning $\log\xi=0$--3. This suggests either radially-stratified ionization zones or the existence of a broad density distribution (spanning a few orders of magnitude) at each radius., Comment: 23 pages, 16 figures, ApJ (accepted). XSPEC local model "photo" is available at http://xmm.astro.columbia.edu/research.html
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- 2002
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86. High-Resolution X-ray imaging and spectroscopy of SNR N103B
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van der Heyden, K. J., Behar, E., Vink, J., Rasmussen, A. P., Kaastra, J. S., Bleeker, J. A. M., Kahn, S. M., and Mewe, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The X-ray emission from the young supernova remnant (SNR) N103B is measured and analysed using the high-resolution cameras and spectrometers on board XMMM and CHANDRA. The spectrum from the entire remnant is reproduced very well with three plasma components of kT=0.55, 0.65, and 3.5 keV, corresponding roughly to line emission by the O-K, Fe-L, and Fe-K species, respectively. Narrow band images reveal different morphologies for each component. The kT=0.65keV component, which dominates the emission measure (4.5E65m^{-3}), is in ionisation equilibrium. This provides a lower limit of 3000 yrs to the age of the remnant, which is considerably older than the previously assumed age of the remnant (1500 yrs). Based on the measured energy of the Fe-K feature at 6.5 keV, the hot (3.5 keV) component is found to be recently shocked (~200 yrs) and still ionising. The high elemental abundances of O and Ne and the low abundance of Fe could imply that SNR N103B originated from a type II supernova (SN) rather than a type Ia SN as previously thought., Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, submitted to A&A
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- 2002
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87. Soft X-ray Spectroscopy of NGC 1068 with XMM-Newton RGS and Chandra LETGS
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Kinkhabwala, A., Sako, M., Behar, E., Kahn, S. M., Paerels, F., Brinkman, A. C., Kaastra, J. S., van der Meer, R. L. J., Gu, M. F., and Liedahl, D. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high-resolution soft-X-ray spectra of the prototypical Seyfert 2 galaxy, NGC 1068, taken with XMM-Newton RGS and Chandra LETGS. Its rich emission-line spectrum is dominated by recombination in a warm plasma (bright, narrow radiative recombination continua provide the ``smoking gun''), which is photoionized by the inferred nuclear power-law continuum. Radiative decay following photoexcitation of resonant transitions is also significant. A self-consistent model of an irradiated cone of gas is capable of reproducing the hydrogenic/heliumlike ionic line series in detail. The radial ionic column densities we infer are consistent with absorption measurements (the warm absorber) in Seyfert 1 galaxies. This strongly suggests that the emission spectrum we observe from NGC 1068 emanates from its warm absorber. The observed extent of the ionization-cone/warm absorber in NGC 1068 of about 300 pc implies that a large fraction of the gas associated with generic warm absorbers may typically exist on the hundreds-of-parsec scale rather than much closer to the nucleus (e.g., less than a parsec). Spatially-resolved spectroscopy using the LETGS of two distinct emission regions yields two noticeably different spectra. We show that these differences are solely due to differing radial column densities. A fairly flat distribution in ionization parameter is necessary to explain the inferred radial ionic column densities of all spectra. This must primarily be due to a broad density distribution at each radius, spanning roughly 0.1-100 cm$^{-3}$. (Abridged), Comment: 9 pages, 15 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the symposium 'New Visions of the X-ray Universe in the XMM-Newton and Chandra Era', 26-30 November 2001, ESTEC, The Netherlands. Minor corrections/reference modifications (thanks to J. Krolik for pointing out)
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- 2002
88. High Resolution Spectroscopy of 14 Cooling-Flow Clusters of Galaxies Using the Reflection Grating Spectrometers on XMM-Newton
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Peterson, J. R., Ferrigno, C., Kaastra, J. S., Paerels, F. B. S., Kahn, S. M., Jernigan, J. G., Bleeker, J. A. M., and Tamura, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high resolution X-ray spectra of 14 cooling-flow X-ray clusters and groups obtained with the Reflection Grating Spectrometers (RGS) on XMM-Newton. The spectra exhibit line emission from a number of Fe L charge states as well as O VIII, Mg XII, Ne X, Si XIV & XIII, N VII, and C VI. All spectra show a deficit of soft X-ray lines predicted from the isobaric multi-phase spectral model as compared with morphological mass deposition rates from spatially-resolved spectroscopy with the European Photon Imaging Cameras (EPIC). We present some weak detections of plasma several times cooler than the ambient cluster temperatures. The results further suggest that either morphological mass deposition rates systematically overestimate the actual cooling rate or the emission measure of cooling-flows has a much steeper distribution than that predicted by a simple isobaric multi-phase model. We briefly discuss some modifications to the cooling-flow process., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, Contribution to "New Visions of the X-ray Universe in the XMM-Newton and Chandra Era" 26-30 November 2001, ESTEC, The Netherlands
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- 2002
89. Can a Dusty Warm Absorber Model Reproduce the Soft X-ray Spectra of MCG-6-30-15 and Mrk 766?
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Sako, M., Kahn, S. M., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Kaastra, J. S., Brinkman, A. C., Page, M. J., Behar, E., Paerels, F., Kinkhabwala, A., Liedahl, D. A., and Herder, J. W. den
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
XMM-Newton RGS spectra of MCG-6-30-15 and Mrk 766 exhibit complex discrete structure, which was interpreted in a paper by Branduardi-Raymont et al. (2001) as evidence for the existence of relativistically broadened Lyman alpha emission from carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen, produced in the inner-most regions of an accretion disk around a Kerr black hole. This suggestion was subsequently criticized in a paper by Lee et al. (2001), who argued that for MCG-6-30-15, the Chandra HETG spectrum, which is partially overlapping the RGS in spectral coverage, is adequately fit by a dusty warm absorber model, with no relativistic line emission. We present a reanalysis of the original RGS data sets in terms of the Lee et al. (2001) model, and demonstrate that spectral models consisting of a smooth continuum with ionized and dust absorption alone cannot reproduce the RGS spectra of both objects. The original relativistic line model with warm absorption proposed by Branduardi-Raymont et al. (2001) provides a superior fit to the RGS data, both in the overall shape of the spectrum and in the discrete absorption lines. Limits on the amount of X-ray absorption by dust particles are discussed. We also discuss a possible theoretical interpretation for the putative relativistic Lyman alpha line emission in terms of the photoionized surface layers of the inner regions of an accretion disk., Comment: Replaced with accepted version. To appear in ApJ; tentatively scheduled for the v596 Oct. 10, 2003 issue
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- 2001
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90. High Resolution Observations of the Elliptical Galaxy NGC 4636 with the Reflection Grating Spectrometer On-Board XMM-Newton
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Xu, H., Kahn, S. M., Peterson, J. R., Behar, E., Paerels, F. B. S., Mushotzky, R. F., Jernigan, J. G., and Makishima, K.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first high spectral resolution X-ray observation of the giant elliptical galaxy NGC 4636, obtained with the Reflection Grating Spectrometer on-board the XMM-Newton Observatory. The resulting spectrum contains a wealth of emission lines from various charge states of oxygen, neon, magnesium, and iron. Examination of the cross-dispersion profiles of several of these lines provides clear, unambiguous evidence of resonance scattering by the highest oscillator strength lines, as well as a weak temperature gradient in the inner regions of the interstellar medium. We invoke a sophisticated new Monte Carlo technique which allows us to properly account for these effects in performing quantitative fits to the spectrum. Our spectral fits are not subject to many of the systematics that have plagued earlier investigations. The derived metal abundances are higher than have been inferred from prior, lower spectral resolution observations of this source (Awaki et al. 1994), but are still incompatible with conventional chemical enrichment models of elliptical galaxies. In addition, our data are incompatible with standard cooling flow models for this system - our derived upper limit to the mass deposition rate is below the predicted value by a factor of 3--5., Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures; submitted to ApJ
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- 2001
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91. Dielectronic Recombination (via N=2 --> N'=2 Core Excitations) and Radiative Recombination of Fe XX: Laboratory Measurements and Theoretical Calculations
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Savin, D. W., Behar, E., Kahn, S. M., Gwinner, G., Saghiri, A. A., Schmitt, M., Grieser, M., Repnow, R., Schwalm, D., Wolf, A., Bartsch, T., Mueller, A., Schippers, S., Badnell, N. R., Chen, M. H., and Gorczyca, T. W.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have measured the resonance strengths and energies for dielectronic recombination (DR) of Fe XX forming Fe XIX via N=2 --> N'=2 (Delta_N=0) core excitations. We have also calculated the DR resonance strengths and energies using AUTOSTRUCTURE, HULLAC, MCDF, and R-matrix methods, four different state-of-the-art theoretical techniques. On average the theoretical resonance strengths agree to within <~10% with experiment. However, the 1 sigma standard deviation for the ratios of the theoretical-to-experimental resonance strengths is >~30% which is significantly larger than the estimated relative experimental uncertainty of <~10%. This suggests that similar errors exist in the calculated level populations and line emission spectrum of the recombined ion. We confirm that theoretical methods based on inverse-photoionization calculations (e.g., undamped R-matrix methods) will severely overestimate the strength of the DR process unless they include the effects of radiation damping. We also find that the coupling between the DR and radiative recombination (RR) channels is small. We have used our experimental and theoretical results to produce Maxwellian-averaged rate coefficients for Delta_N=0 DR of Fe XX. For kT>~1 eV, which includes the predicted formation temperatures for Fe XX in an optically thin, low-density photoionized plasma with cosmic abundances, our experimental and theoretical results are in good agreement. We have also used our R-matrix results, topped off using AUTOSTRUCTURE for RR into J>=25 levels, to calculate the rate coefficient for RR of Fe XX. Our RR results are in good agreement with previously published calculations., Comment: To be published in ApJS. 65 pages with 4 tables and lots of figures
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- 2001
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92. High Resolution X-ray Spectroscopy of Seyfert 2 Galaxies
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Kahn, S. M., Kinkhabwala, A., Sako, M., Behar, E., Paerels, F. B. S., Brinkman, A. C., Kaastra, J. S., van der Meer, R., and Liedahl, D. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
X-ray spectroscopy of Seyfert 2 galaxies provides an excellent probe of the circumnuclear environment in active galactic nuclei. The grating experiments on both Chandra and XMM-Newton have now provided the first high resolution spectra of several of the brightest Seyfert 2's. We present Chandra HETG data on Markarian 3 and XMM-Newton RGS data on NGC 1068. In both cases, the spectra are dominated by emission lines due to radiative recombination following photoionization, photoexcitation, and fluorescence. There is no evidence for any significant contribution from collisionally-heated gas., Comment: 4 pages, to appear in New Century of X-ray Astronomy, ASP Conf. Ser., Vol. TBD, 2001
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- 2001
93. Soft X-ray Spectroscopy of Seyfert 2 Galaxies
- Author
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Kinkhabwala, A., Sako, M., Behar, E., Paerels, F., Kahn, S. M., Brinkman, A. C., Kaastra, J. S., van der Meer, R., and Liedahl, D. A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Soft X-ray spectroscopy of Seyfert 2 galaxies offers perhaps the best method to probe the possible connection between AGN activity and star formation. Obscuration of powerful radiation from the inferred nucleus allows for detailed study of circumnuclear emission regions. And soft X-ray spectroscopy of these regions allows for robust discrimination between warm gas radiatively driven by the AGN and hot collisionally-driven gas possibly associated with star formation. A simple model of a (bi-)cone of gas photoionized and photoexcited by a nuclear power-law continuum is sufficient to explain the soft X-ray spectra of all Seyfert 2 galaxies so far observed by the XMM-Newton and Chandra satellites. An upper limit of around 10 percent to an additional hot, collisionally-driven gas contribution to the soft X-ray regime appears to hold for five different Seyfert 2 galaxies, placing interesting constraints on circumnuclear star formation., Comment: 4 pages, to appear in The Central kpc of Starbursts and AGN, ASP Conf. Ser., Vol. TBD, 2001
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- 2001
94. Confronting atomic data with Fe L-shell spectra of stellar coronae
- Author
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Behar, E., Cottam, J., Peterson, J. R., Sako, M., Kahn, S. M., Bar-Shalom, A., Klapisch, M., and Brinkman, A. C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
It is common to suggest the uncertainties in the atomic data for explaining difficulties that arise in interpreting astrophysical x-ray spectra. The atomic data for the Fe L-shell ions have, over the years, been considered particularly suspect. In this paper, we confront Fe-L spectra calculated using the HULLAC atomic code assuming coronal conditions with recent observations of the stellar coronae of Capella and HR 1099, obtained with the high-resolution grating spectrometers on board Chandra and XMM-Newton. We find very good agreement, which indicates that Fe-L transition rates calculated with state-of-the-art codes, can generally be trusted in the analysis of x-ray spectra., Comment: Submitted for the proceedings of "X-ray astronomy 2000",(Palermo Sep. 2000), Eds. R. Giacconi, L. Stella, S. Serio, ASP Conf. Series
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- 2001
95. A physically consistent model for X-ray emission by Seyfert 2 galaxies demonstrated on NGC 1068
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Behar, E., Kinkhabwala, A., Sako, M., Paerels, F., Kahn, S. M., Brinkman, A. C., Kaastra, J., and van der Meer, R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Preliminary analysis of the X-ray spectrum of NGC 1068 obtained by the RGS spectrometer on board XMM-Newton is presented. A physically consistent model is developed in order to quantitatively describe the reprocessing of the central AGN continuum source into the discrete X-ray emission observed in Seyfert 2 galaxies. All the important atomic processes are taken into account, including photoexcitation, which has been neglected in some previous models. The model fits the high resolution NGC 1068 data very well, which implies that the contribution of hot collisional gas to the X-ray spectrum of NGC 1068 is negligible., Comment: Submitted for the proceedings of Mass Outflows in AGNs: New Perspectives
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- 2001
96. Kahnʼs Wire Passer Used in Medial Canthal Tendon Fixation
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Kahn, Mon-Te, primary, Yau, Chi-Wang, additional, Fu, Yao-An, additional, and Ma, Lib, additional
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- 1991
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
97. Stellar Coronae with \textit{XMM-Newton} RGS. I. Coronal Structure
- Author
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Guedel, M., Audard, M., Boggende, A. J. den, Brinkman, A. C., Herder, J. W. den, Kaastra, J. S., Mewe, R., Raassen, A. J. J., de Vries, C., Behar, E., Cottam, J., Kahn, S. M., Paerels, F. B. S., Peterson, J. M., Rasmussen, A. P., Sako, M., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Sakelliou, I., and Erd, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
First results from high-resolution coronal spectroscopy with the {\it XMM-Newton} Reflection Grating Spectrometers (RGS) are reviewed. Five stellar systems (HR 1099, Capella, Procyon, YY Gem, AB Dor) have been observed. The emphasis of the present paper is on overall coronal structure. Elemental abundances in {\it active stars} are found to be `anomalous' in the sense that they tend to increase with increasing First Ionization Potential (FIP - i.e., signifying an inverse FIP effect). Coronal densities are measured at levels of a few times $10^{10}$ cm$^{-3}$ for cooler plasma, although there are indications for very high densities in the hotter plasma components., Comment: To appear in Proc. of "X-ray astronomy 2000",(Palermo Sep. 2000), Eds. R. Giacconi, L. Stella, S. Serio, ASP Conf. Series, in press
- Published
- 2000
98. Stellar Coronae with \textit{XMM-Newton} RGS. II. X-ray Variability
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Audard, M., Guedel, M., Boggende, A. J. den, Brinkman, A. C., Herder, J. W. den, Kaastra, J. S., Mewe, R., Raassen, A. J. J., de Vries, C., Behar, E., Cottam, J., Kahn, S. M., Paerels, F. B. S., Peterson, J. M., Rasmussen, A. P., Sako, M., Branduardi-Raymont, G., Sakelliou, I., and Erd, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
First results from high-resolution coronal spectroscopy of flares with the Reflection Grating Spectrometers on board the \textit{XMM-Newton} satellite are reviewed. Rotational modulation in the X-ray light curve of HR 1099 is discussed. Results from time-dependent spectroscopy of flares in the active stars HR 1099, AB Dor, YY Gem are also presented. Variations in the shape of the emission measure distributions, in the abundances and in the average density of the cool plasma are discussed., Comment: To appear in Proc. of "X-ray astronomy 2000",(Palermo Sep. 2000), Eds. R. Giacconi, L. Stella, S. Serio, ASP Conf. Series, in press
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- 2000
99. Soft X-ray emission lines from a relativistic accretion disk in MCG -6-30-15 and Mrk 766
- Author
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Branduardi-Raymont, G., Sako, M., Kahn, S. M., Brinkman, A. C., Kaastra, J. S., and Page, M. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer (RGS) spectra of the Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxies MCG -6-30-15 and Mrk 766 are physically and spectroscopically inconsistent with standard models comprising a power-law continuum absorbed by either cold or ionized matter. We propose that the remarkably similar features detected in both objects in the 5 - 35 A band are H-like oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon emission lines, gravitationally redshifted and broadened by relativistic effects in the vicinity of a Kerr black hole. We discuss the implications of our interpretation, and demonstrate that the derived parameters can be physically self-consistent., Comment: 6 pages, 4 Postscript figures; accepted for publication in A&A Letters, special XMM-Newton issue, Feb. 2001
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- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
100. High resolution X-Ray spectroscopy of Zeta Puppis with the XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer
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Kahn, S. M., Leutenegger, M. A., Cottam, J., Rauw, G., Vreux, J. -M., Boggende, A. J. F. den, Mewe, R., and Guedel, M.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first high resolution X-ray spectrum of the bright O4Ief supergiant star Zeta Puppis, obtained with the Reflection Grating Spectrometer on-board XMM-Newton. The spectrum exhibits bright emission lines of hydrogen-like and helium-like ions of nitrogen, oxygen, neon, magnesium, and silicon, as well as neon-like ions of iron. The lines are all significantly resolved, with characteristic velocity widths of order 1000-1500 km s^{-1}. The nitrogen lines are especially strong, and indicate that the shocked gas in the wind is mixed with CNO-burned material, as has been previously inferred for the atmosphere of this star from ultraviolet spectra. We find that the forbidden to intercombination line ratios within the helium-like triplets are anomalously low for N VI, O VII, and Ne IX. While this is sometimes indicative of high electron density, we show that in this case, it is instead caused by the intense ultraviolet radiation field of the star. We use this interpretation to derive constraints on the location of the X-ray emitting shocks within the wind that are consistent with current theoretical models for this system., Comment: 6 pages, 5figures, accepted for publication in A&A Letters XMM issue
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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