7,336 results on '"Reynolds, C."'
Search Results
202. Initial Measurements of Black Hole Spin in GX 339-4 from Suzaku Spectroscopy
- Author
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Miller, J. M., Reynolds, C. S., Fabian, A. C., Cackett, E. M., Miniutti, G., Raymond, J., Steeghs, D., Reis, R., and Homan, J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on a deep Suzaku observation of the stellar-mass black hole GX 339-4 in outburst. A clear, strong, relativistically-shaped iron emission line from the inner accretion disk is observed. The broad-band disk reflection spectrum revealed is one of the most sensitive yet obtained from an accreting black hole. We fit the Suzaku spectra with a physically-motivated disk reflection model, blurred by a new relativistic line function in which the black hole spin parameter is a variable. This procedure yielded a black hole spin parameter of a = 0.89 +/- 0.04. Joint modeling of these Suzaku spectra and prior XMM-Newton spectra obtained in two different outburst phases yields a spin parameter of a = 0.93 +/- 0.01. The degree of consistency between these results suggests that disk reflection models allow for spin measurements that are not strongly biased by scattering effects. We suggest that the best value of the black hole spin parameter is a = 0.93 +/- 0.01 (statistical) +/- 0.04 (systematic). Although preliminary, these results represent the first direct measurement of non-zero spin in a stellar-mass black hole using relativistic line modeling., Comment: 4 pages, 3 color figures, accepted for publication in ApJL 4/16/08
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- 2008
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203. The Accretion Disk Wind in the Black Hole GRO J1655-40
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Miller, J. M., Raymond, J., Reynolds, C. S., Fabian, A. C., Kallman, T. R., and Homan, J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on simultaneous Chandra/HETGS and RXTE observations of the transient stellar-mass black hole GRO J1655-40, made during its 2005 outburst. Chandra reveals a line-rich X-ray absorption spectrum consistent with a disk wind. Prior modeling of the spectrum suggested that the wind may be magnetically driven, potentially providing insights into the nature of disk accretion onto black holes. In this paper, we present results obtained with new models for this spectrum, generated using three independent photoionization codes: XSTAR, Cloudy, and our own code. Fits to the spectrum in particular narrow wavelength ranges, in evenly spaced wavelength slices, and across a broad wavelength band all strongly prefer a combination of high density, high ionization, and small inner radius. Indeed, the results obtained from all three codes require a wind that originates more than 10 times closer to the black hole and carrying a mass flux that is on the order of 1000 times higher than predicted by thermal driving models. If seminal work on thermally-driven disk winds is robust, magnetic forces may play a role in driving the disk wind in GRO J1655-40. However, even these modeling efforts must be regarded as crude given the complexity of the spectra. We discuss these results in the context of accretion flows in black holes and other compact objects., Comment: Many color figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2008
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204. The Effect of Property Taxes on Businesses : Evidence from a Dynamic Regression Discontinuity Approach
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Enami, Ali, Reynolds, C. Lockwood, and Rohlin, Shawn M.
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- 2018
205. How major a factor was transport in the Industrial Revolution (1750-1830)? Was its transformation a cause or consequence of the Industrial Revolution?
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Reynolds, C. P. B.
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- 1988
206. Service Coordination Policies and Models: National Status.
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North Carolina Univ., Chapel Hill. Frank Porter Graham Center., Harbin, Gloria L., Bruder, M., Mazzarella, C., Gabbard, G., and Reynolds, C.
- Abstract
This report discusses the findings of a study that investigated state coordination of early intervention services for infants, toddlers, and young children with disabilities. State Part C coordinators participated in a survey that sought their perceptions of values under girding service coordination, approach to service coordination, policies, monitoring, evaluation, funding, and broad organization structure and approach to service delivery in which service coordination is embedded. Results indicate: (1) service coordination models are reported to be working "somewhat" to "slightly more than somewhat"; (2) 17 states are considering changing their service coordination models; (3) all key stakeholders possess positive values that would facilitate effective service coordination; (4) a lack of specificity exists in the lead agencies' policies regarding the description of aspects of the service coordination role; (5) interagency agreements also lack specificity and fail to address key issues such as the use of multiple service coordinators; (6) Individualized Family Service Plans often fail to include supports and services provided by social services agencies; and (7) on a continuum of coordinated service delivery ranging from very little to a highly collaborative systems, 35 states are using one of the 3 models on the lower end of the continuum. (Contains 21 tables and 12 references.) (CR)
- Published
- 2001
207. Maternal Nutrition and the Risk of Obesity and Diabetes in the Offspring
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Reynolds, C. M., primary, Bridge-Comer, P. E., additional, and Vickers, M. H., additional
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- 2020
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208. The O6-methyguanine-DNA methyltransferase inhibitor O6-benzylguanine enhanced activity of temozolomide + irinotecan against models of high-risk neuroblastoma
- Author
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Hindle, Ashly, Koneru, Balakrishna, Makena, Monish Ram, Lopez-Barcons, Lluis, Chen, Wan Hsi, Nguyen, Thinh H., and Reynolds, C. Patrick
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- 2020
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209. Suzaku observations of Markarian 335: evidence for a distributed reflector
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Larsson, J., Miniutti, G., Fabian, A. C., Miller, J. M., Reynolds, C. S., and Ponti, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on a 151 ks net exposure Suzaku observation of the Narrow Line Seyfert 1 galaxy Mrk 335. The 0.5-40 keV spectrum contains a broad Fe line, a strong soft excess below about 2 keV and a Compton hump around 20-30 keV. We find that a model consisting of a power law and two reflectors provides the best fit to the time-averaged spectrum. In this model, an ionized, heavily blurred, inner reflector produces most of the soft excess, while an almost neutral outer reflector (outside ~40 r_g) produces most of the Fe line emission. The spectral variability of the observation is characterised by spectral hardening at very low count rates. In terms of our power-law + two-reflector model it seems like this hardening is mainly caused by pivoting of the power law. The rms spectrum of the entire observation has the curved shape commonly observed in AGN, although the shape is significantly flatter when an interval which does not contain any deep dip in the lightcurve is considered. We also examine a previous 133 ks XMM-Newton observation of Mrk 335. We find that the XMM-Newton spectrum can be fitted with a similar two-reflector model as the Suzaku data and we confirm that the rms spectrum of the observation is flat. The flat rms spectra, as well as the high-energy data from the Suzaku PIN detector, disfavour an absorption origin for the soft excess in Mrk 335., Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2007
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210. An X-ray Spectral Analysis of the Central Regions of NGC 4593
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Brenneman, L. W., Reynolds, C. S., Wilms, J., and Kaiser, M. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of XMM-Newton EPIC-pn data for the Seyfert-1 galaxy NGC 4593. We discuss the X-ray spectral properties of this source as well as its variations with time. The 0.5-10 keV spectrum shows significant complexity beyond a simple power-law form, with clear evidence existing for a "soft excess" as well as absorption by highly ionized plasma (a warm absorber) within the central engine of this active galactic nucleus. We show that the soft excess is best described as originating from thermal Comptonization by plasma that is appreciably cooler than the primary X-ray emitting plasma; we find that the form of the soft excess cannot be reproduced adequately by reflection from an ionized accretion disk. The only measurable deviation from the power-law continuum in the hard spectrum comes from the presence of cold and ionized fluorescent iron-K emission lines at 6.4 and 6.97 keV, respectively. While constraints on the ionized iron line are weak, the cold line is found to be narrow at CCD-resolution with a flux that does not track the temporal changes in the underlying continuum, implying an origin in the outer radii of the accretion disk or the putative molecular torus of Seyfert unification schemes. The X-ray continuum itself varies on all accessible time scales. We detect a ~230-second time-lag between soft and hard EPIC-pn bands that, if interpreted as scattering timescales within a Comptonizing disk corona, can be used to constrain the physical size of the primary X-ray source to a characteristic length scale of ~2 gravitational radii. Taken together, the small implied coronal size and the large implied iron line emitting region indicate a departure from the current picture of a "typical" AGN geometry., Comment: Accepted for publication by ApJ, 6/6/07
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- 2007
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211. Spatially resolved X-ray spectra of NGC 4258
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Yang, Y., Li, B., Wilson, A. S., and Reynolds, C. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report a spatially resolved, X-ray spectral analysis of NGC 4258 using archival {\it Chandra} and {\it XMM-Newton} observations. The {\it XMM-Newton} spectra of the nuclear region are well described by two power-law components, a soft (0.57 keV) thermal component, and an Fe K$\alpha$ line with EW = 40 $\pm$ 33 eV. The properties of the second, weaker power-law component are similar to those of an off-nuclear source $2.5\arcsec$ SW of the nucleus. The spectrum of the extended emission of the entire galaxy is well described by two thermal components (MEKAL) models with temperatures $\simeq 0.60$ and 0.22 keV. The {\it Chandra} and {\it XMM-Newton} spectra along the anomalous arms show that the absorbing column density to the SE anomalous arm is consistent with absorption by gas in our Galaxy, while the absorbing column to the NW anomalous arm is higher, indicating that the NW arm is partially on the far side of the galactic disk. The combined {\it Chandra} data clearly detect the X-ray emission from the hot spots at the end of the approximately N-S radio jets. By assuming the hot spots represent shocked thermal gas at the ends of the jets, we estimate shock powers of $\simeq 3 \times 10^{39} f^{-1/2}$ \ergps ($f $ is the filling factor), similar to the radiative power in the inner anomalous arms, consistent with the notion that the jets could be responsible for heating the gas in the anomalous arms., Comment: ApJ accepted; High resolution version can be found at http://www.astro.umd.edu/~yyang/AGNs/MS70759v2-1.pdf
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- 2007
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212. First e-VLBI observations of GRS 1915+105
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Rushton, A., Spencer, R. E., Strong, M., Campbell, R. M., Casey, S., Fender, R. P., Garrett, M. A., Miller-Jones, J. C. A., Pooley, G. G., Reynolds, C., Szomoru, A., Tudose, V., and Paragi, Z.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results from the first successful open call e-VLBI science run, observing the X-ray binary GRS 1915+105. e-VLBI science allows the rapid production of VLBI radio maps, within hours of an observation rather than weeks, facilitating a decision for follow-up observations. A total of 6 telescopes observing at 5 GHz across the European VLBI Network (EVN) were correlated in real time at the Joint Institute for VLBI in Europe (JIVE). Constant data rates of 128 Mbps were transferred from each telescope, giving 4 TB of raw sampled data over the 12 hours of the whole experiment. Throughout this, GRS 1915+105 was observed for a total of 5.5 hours, producing 2.8 GB of visibilities of correlated data. A weak flare occurred during our observations, and we detected a slightly resolved component of 2.7 x 1.2 milliarcsecond with a position angle of 140 (+/-2) degrees. The peak brightness was 10.2 mJy per beam, with a total integrated radio flux of 11.1 mJy., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS 4 pages, 3 figures
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- 2006
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213. The magnetic nature of disk accretion onto black holes
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Miller, J. M., Raymond, J., Fabian, A. C., Steeghs, D., Homan, J., Reynolds, C. S., van der Klis, M., and Wijnands, Rudy
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Although disk accretion onto compact objects - white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes - is central to much of high energy astrophysics, the mechanisms which enable this process have remained observationally elusive. Accretion disks must transfer angular momentum for matter to travel radially inward onto the compact object. Internal viscosity from magnetic processes and disk winds can in principle both transfer angular momentum, but hitherto we lacked evidence that either occurs. Here we report that an X-ray-absorbing wind discovered in an observation of the stellar-mass black hole binary GRO J1655-40 must be powered by a magnetic process that can also drive accretion through the disk. Detailed spectral analysis and modeling of the wind shows that it can only be powered by pressure generated by magnetic viscosity internal to the disk or magnetocentrifugal forces. This result demonstrates that disk accretion onto black holes is a fundamentally magnetic process., Comment: 15 pages, 2 color figures, accepted for publication in Nature. Supplemental materials may be obtained by clicking http://www.astro.lsa.umich.edu/~jonmm/nature1655.ps
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- 2006
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214. Accretion processes in AGN: The X-ray View
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Reynolds, C. S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We discuss constraints on the physics of the inner accretion disk, as well as the properties of the black hole itself, that can be derived by a detailed examination of the relativistically broadened spectral features (especially the fluorescent iron line) in the Seyfert galaxy MCG-6-30-15. To begin with, we show that spectral models which purport to eliminate the broad iron line in MCG-6-30-15 by invoking a moderately high ionization absorber are ruled out by recent high-resolution spectra from the Chandra High Energy Transmission Gratings. We then discuss the comparison of XMM-Newton data with accretion disk models. The "standard'' black hole disk model of Novikov, Page and Thorne supplemented by the so-called local corona assumption fails to produce sufficient broadening; this indicates that the real accretion disk in MCG-6-30-15 has significantly more centrally concentrated pattern of X-ray irradiation that predicted by this model. We discuss two possible resolutions. Firstly, the inner disk may be energized from torques imposed by magnetic connections between the disk-proper and either the plunging region or the rotating event horizon itself. Secondly, X-ray emission from a high-latitude source (such as would be the case of the X-ray source is actually the base of a jet) would be gravitationally focused onto the central portions of the disk. We discuss how spectral variability may be used to examine these possibilities and highlight the still outstanding mystery concerning the anti-correlation between the iron line equivalent width and relative normalization of the Compton reflection hump. We end with a few words about the exciting future of these studies in the future era of Constellation-X and LISA., Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures. To be published in Revista Mexicana de Astronomia y Astrofisica as a Proc. of the Conf. "Triggering Relativistic Jets", held in Cozumel (Mexico) from 28 March to 1 April 2005
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- 2006
215. The relation between accretion rate and jet power in X-ray luminous elliptical galaxies
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Allen, S. W., Dunn, R. J. H., Fabian, A. C., Taylor, G. B., and Reynolds, C. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using Chandra X-ray observations of 9 nearby, X-ray luminous ellipticals with good optical velocity dispersion measurements, we show that a tight correlation exists between the Bondi accretion rates calculated from the X-ray data and estimated black hole masses, and the power emerging from these systems in relativistic jets. The jet powers, inferred from the energies and timescales required to inflate the cavities observed in the surrounding X-ray emitting gas, can be related to the accretion rates by a power law model. A significant fraction (2.2^{+1.0}_{-0.7} per cent, for P_jet=10^{43} erg/s) of the energy associated with the rest mass of material entering the accretion radius eventually emerges in the jets. The data also hint that this fraction may rise slightly with increasing jet power. Our results have significant implications for studies of accretion, jet formation and galaxy formation. The tight correlation between P_Bondi and P_jet suggests that the Bondi formulae provide a reasonable description of the accretion process, despite the likely presence of magnetic pressure and angular momentum in the accreting gas, and that the accretion flows are approximately stable over timescales of a few million years. Our results show that the black hole `engines' at the hearts of large elliptical galaxies and groups can feed back sufficient energy to stem cooling and star formation, leading naturally to the observed exponential cut off at the bright end of the galaxy luminosity function., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 10 pages, 4 figures. Includes an enhanced statistical analysis and some additional data. Conclusions unchanged
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- 2006
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216. XMM-Newton Archival Study of the ULX Population in Nearby Galaxies
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Winter, L. M., Mushotzky, R. F., and Reynolds, C. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of an archival XMM-Newton study of the bright X-ray point sources (L_X > 10^38 erg/s) in 32 nearby galaxies. From our list of approximately 100 point sources, we attempt to determine if there is a low-state counterpart to the Ultraluminous X-ray (ULX) population, searching for a soft-hard state dichotomy similar to that known for Galactic X-ray binaries and testing the specific predictions of the IMBH hypothesis. To this end, we searched for "low-state" objects, which we defined as objects within our sample which had a spectrum well fit by a simple absorbed power law, and "high-state" objects, which we defined as objects better fit by a combined blackbody and a power law. Assuming that ``low-state'' objects accrete at approximately 10% of the Eddington luminosity (Done & Gierlinski 2003) and that "high-state" objects accrete near the Eddington luminosity we further divided our sample of sources into low and high state ULX sources. We classify 16 sources as low-state ULXs and 26 objects as high-state ULXs. As in Galactic black hole systems, the spectral indices, Gamma, of the low-state objects, as well as the luminosities, tend to be lower than those of the high-state objects. The observed range of blackbody temperatures for the high state is 0.1-1 keV, with the most luminous systems tending toward the lowest temperatures. We therefore divide our high-state ULXs into candidate IMBHs (with blackbody temperatures of approximately 0.1 keV) and candidate stellar mass BHs (with blackbody temperatures of approximately 1.0 keV). A subset of the candidate stellar mass BHs have spectra that are well-fit by a Comptonization model, a property similar of Galactic BHs radiating in the "very-high" state near the Eddington limit., Comment: 54 pages, submitted to ApJ (March 2005), accepted (May 2006); changes to organization of paper
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- 2005
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217. Constraints on hot metals in the Vicinity of the Galaxy
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McKernan, B., Yaqoob, T., and Reynolds, C. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have searched for evidence of soft X-ray absorption by hot metals in the vicinity of the Galaxy in the spectra of a small sample of fifteen Type I AGN observed with the high resolution X-ray gratings on board Chandra. This is an extension of our previous survey of hot OVII and OVIII absorbing gas in the vicinity of the Galaxy. The strongest absorption signatures within a few hundred km/s of their rest-frame energies are most likely due to warm absorbing outflows from the nearest AGN, which are back-lighting the local hot gas. We emphasize that absorption signatures in the spectra of some distant AGN that are kinematically consistent with the recessional velocity of the AGN are most likely to be due to hot local gas. Along the sightline towards PG 1211+143, PDS 456 and MCG-6-30-15 there is a very large absorbing Fe column density which is kinematically consistent with absorption by hot, local Fe. The sightlines to these three AGN pass through the limb of the Northern Polar Spur (NPS), a local bubble formed from several supernovae which, if rich in Fe, may account for a large local Fe column. We obtain limits on the column density of local, highly ionized N, Ne, Mg, Si along all of the sightlines in our sample. We correlate the column density limits with those of highly ionized O along the same sightlines. Assuming the hot local gas is in collisionally ionized equilibrium, we obtain limits on the temperature and relative abundances of the metals in the hot local gas. Our limits on the ionic column densities in the local hot gas seem to be consistent with those observed in the hot halo gas of edge-on normal spiral galaxies., Comment: 9 pages,2 figures, MNRAS (accepted)
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- 2005
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218. A Chandra HETGS Spectral Study of the Iron K Bandpass in MCG-6-30-15: A Narrow View of the Broad Iron Line
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Young, A. J., Lee, J. C., Fabian, A. C., Reynolds, C. S., Gibson, R. R., and Canizares, C. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a high resolution X-ray spectrum of the iron K bandpass in MCG-6-30-15 based on a 522 ksec observation with Chandra's High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer. The Chandra spectrum is consistent with the presence of a relativistically broadened, highly redshifted iron K alpha emission line with a similar profile to previous observations. A number of narrow features are detected above 2 keV, including a narrow Fe K alpha emission line and narrow absorption lines from H- and He-like Fe, H-like S and H-like Si. This absorption is well described by a photoionized plasma with a column density log N_H = 23.2 and an ionization parameter log xi = 3.6, assuming the iron abundance has the Solar value and a velocity dispersion parameter b = 100 km/s. Applying this absorption model to a high fidelity XMM-Newton EPIC-pn spectrum we find that a broad iron line is still required with emission extending to within 1.9 gravitational radii of the black hole. If the iron line comes from an accretion disk truncated at the innermost stable circular orbit, this indicates that the black hole must be spinning rapidly with a>0.95. Ionized absorption models attempting to explain the 3-6 keV spectral curvature without strong gravity predict absorption lines in the 6.4-6.6 keV range that are inconsistent with the Chandra spectrum. The H- and He-like iron absorption lines in the Chandra spectrum are blueshifted by 2.0 (+0.7/-0.9) x 10^3 km/s compared to the source frame, and may originate in a high velocity, high ionization component of the warm absorber outflow. This high ionization component may dominate the energy budget of the outflow, and account for a significant fraction of the outflowing mass. (Abstract truncated)., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2005
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219. e-VLBI observations of SN2001em - an off-axis GRB candidate
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Paragi, Z., Garrett, M. A., Paczynski, B., Kouveliotou, C., Szomoru, A., Reynolds, C., Parsley, S. M., and Ghosh, T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Studying transient phenomena with the Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) technique faces severe difficulties because the turnaround time of the experiments from the observations to the scientific result is rather long. The e-VLBI technique has made it possible to transfer the data from a number of European VLBI Network (EVN) telescopes to the central data processor at JIVE through optical fibres, and correlate them in real time. The main goal of this paper is to introduce this rapidly developing new technique, by presenting observational results from a recent experiment. We observed SN2001em, a Type Ib/c supernova with an e-VLBI array and the Multi-Element Radio Linked Interferometer Network (MERLIN) in the UK. The source is marginally detected in our observations. We cannot make definite conclusions whether it is resolved at 1.6 GHz or not. Our data show that SN2001em either started fading in the last couple of months, or its radio spectrum is inverted at low frequencies,indicating free-free or synchrotron self-absorption. This is quite unusual, but not unprecedented in radio SNe., Comment: To appear in the proceedings of "Stellar End Products" conference held in Granada, Spain, 12-15 April 2005. Five pages, one figure
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- 2005
220. On viscosity, conduction and sound waves in the intracluster medium
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Fabian, A. C., Reynolds, C. S., Taylor, G. B., and Dunn, R. J. H.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Recent X-ray and optical observations of the Perseus cluster indicate that the viscous and conductive dissipation of sound waves is the mechanism responsible for heating the intracluster medium and thus balancing radiative cooling of cluster cores. We discuss this mechanism more generally and show how the specific heating and cooling rates vary with temperature and radius. It appears that the heating mechanism is most effective above 10^7K, which allows for radiative cooling to proceed within normal galaxy formation but will stifle the growth of very massive galaxies. The scaling of the wavelength of sound waves with cluster temperature and feedback in the system are investigated., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, MNRAS accepted
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- 2005
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221. EVN observations of eleven GHz-Peaked-Spectrum radio sources at 2.3/8.4GHz
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Xiang, L., Dallacasa, D., Cassaro, P., Jiang, D., and Reynolds, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results of EVN observations of eleven GHz-Peaked-Spectrum (GPS) radio sources at 2.3/8.4 GHz. These sources are from the classical ''bright'' GPS source samples with peak flux densities $>$ 0.2 Jy and spectral indices $\alpha < -0.2$ ($S \propto \nu^{-\alpha}$) in the optically thick regime of their convex spectra. Most of the target sources did not have VLBI images at the time this project started. The aim of the work is to find Compact Symmetric Object (CSO) candidates from the ''bright'' GPS samples. These CSOs play a key role in understanding the very early stage of the evolution of individual radio galaxies. The reason for investigating GPS source samples is that CSO candidates are more frequently found among this class of radio sources. In fact both classes, GPS and CSO, represent a small fraction of the flux limited and flat-spectrum samples like PR+CJ1 (PR: Pearson-Readhead survey, CJ1: the first Caltech--Jodrell Bank survey) and CJF (the Caltech--Jodrell Bank flat spectrum source survey) with a single digit percentage progressively decreasing with decreasing flux density limit. Our results, with at least 3, but possibly more CSO sources detected among a sample of 11, underline the effectiveness of our approach. The three confirmed CSO sources (1133+432, 1824+271, and 2121$-$014) are characterized by a symmetric pair of resolved components, each with steep spectral indices. Five further sources (0144+209, 0554$-$026, 0904+039, 0914+114 and 2322$-$040) can be considered likely CSO candidates. The remaining three sources (0159+839, 0602+780 and 0802+212) are either of core-jet type or dominated by a single component at both frequencies., Comment: 11 pages, 22 figures, accepted by A&A
- Published
- 2005
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222. From truck to optical fibre: the coming-of-age of eVLBI
- Author
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Szomoru, A., Biggs, A., Garrett, M. A., van Langevelde, H. J., Olnon, F., Paragi, Z., Parsley, S., Pogrebenko, S., and Reynolds, C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Spurred by the advent of disk-based recording systems and the nearly explosive increase of internet bandwidth, eVLBI (Parsley et al. 2004) has undergone a remarkable development over the past two years. From ftp-based transfers of small amounts of astronomical data, through near real-time correlation (disk-buffered at the correlator), it has culminated this spring in the first three telescope real-time correlation at JIVE (Onsala, Westerbork and Jodrell Bank). In this paper we will give a review of this development and the current state of affairs. We will also address the current limitations and the way we may improve both bandwidth and reliability and finally we will discuss the opportunities a true high-bandwidth real-time VLBI correlator will provide., Comment: 4 pages. 3 figures. Proceedings of the 7th European VLBI Network Symposium held in Toledo, Spain on October 12-15, 2004. Editors: R. Bachiller, F. Colomer, J.-F. Desmurs, P. de Vicente (Observatorio Astronomico Nacional), p. 257-260. Needs evn2004.cls
- Published
- 2004
223. Spitzer 24 micron imaging of Faint Radio Sources in the FLSv: a new radio-loud, Mid-IR/optically obscured population?
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Orienti, M., Garrett, M. A., Reynolds, C., and Morganti, R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Data from the Spitzer Space Telescope (the First Look Survey - FLS) have recently been made public. We have compared the 24 micron images with very deep WSRT 1.4 GHz observations (Morganti et al. 2004), centred on the FLS verification strip (FLSv). Approximately 75% of the radio sources have corresponding 24 micron identifications. Such a close correspondence is expected, especially at the fainter radio flux density levels, where star forming galaxies are thought to dominate both the radio and mid-IR source counts. Spitzer detects many sources that have no counter-part in the radio. However, a significant fraction of radio sources detected by the WSRT (about 25%) have no mid-IR identification in the FLSv (implying a 24 micron flux density less than 100 microJy). The fraction of radio sources without a counterpart in the mid-IR appears to increase with increasing radio flux density, perhaps indicating that some fraction of the AGN population may be detected more readily at radio than Mid-IR wavelenghts. We present initial results on the nature of the radio sources without Spitzer identification, using data from various multi-waveband instruments, including the publicly available R-band data from the Kitt Peak 4-m telescope., Comment: 2 pages. 3 figures. Proceedings of the 7th European VLBI Network Symposium held in Toledo, Spain on October 12-15, 2004. Editors: R. Bachiller, F. Colomer, J.-F. Desmurs, P. de Vicente (Observatorio Astronomico Nacional), p. 129-131. Needs evn2004.cls
- Published
- 2004
224. Intermediate Scale Structures in BL Lac objects
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Reynolds, C., Cawthorne, T. V., and Gabuzda, D. C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The parsec-scale total intensity structures of BL Lac objects share many characteristics with quasars: e.g. well-collimated jets and superluminal motion. However, the jets of BL Lac objects appear to fade much more quickly than those in quasars and on VLA scales many BL Lacs have structures comparable to those of low luminosity (FR I) radio galaxies, in which kpc-scale flow speeds are non-relativistic. The region between parsec and kiloparsec scales is therefore one of transition in BL Lac objects. We have carried out VLBI observations of a small sample of BL Lac objects at frequencies between 2.3 GHz and 327 MHz in order to investigate this transition region. Preliminary results for two of these sources are presented here. Coherent structures are detected in these sources out to a distance of several tens of parsecs. We find evidence for significant changes in jet structure on scales of a few tens of milliarcseconds, both in terms of the orientation and collimation of the jets., Comment: 4 pages. 9 figures. Proceedings of the 7th European VLBI Network Symposium held in Toledo, Spain on October 12-15, 2004. Editors: R. Bachiller, F. Colomer, J.-F. Desmurs, P. de Vicente (Observatorio Astronomico Nacional), p. 45-48. Needs evn2004.cls
- Published
- 2004
225. The nature of the Mid-IR faint radio sources from the Spitzer First Look Survey
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Orienti, M., Garrett, M. A., Reynolds, C., and Morganti, R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Data from the Spitzer Space Telescope (the First Look Survey - FLS) have recently been made public. We have compared the 24 micron images with very deep WSRT 1.4 GHz observations, centred on the FLS verification strip (FLSv). Approximately 75% of the radio sources have corresponding 24 micron identifications. Such a close correspondence is expected, especially at the fainter radio flux density levels, where star forming galaxies are thought to dominate both the radio and mid-IR source counts. However, a significant fraction of radio sources detected by WSRT (25%) have no mid-IR detection in the FLSv (implying a 24 micron flux density less than 0.1 mJy). We present initial results on the nature of the radio sources without Spitzer identification, using data from various multi-waveband instruments, including the publicly available R-band data from the Kitt Peak 4-m telescope., Comment: 2 pages, to appear in the proceedings of the workshop "Multiband approach to AGN" Bonn October 2004 in Memorie della Societa Astronomica Italiana
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- 2004
226. O VII and O VIII absorption by hot gas in the vicinity of the Galaxy
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McKernan, B., Yaqoob, T., and Reynolds, C. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
(abridged) We searched for evidence of soft X-ray absorption by hot gas in the vicinity of the Galaxy in a small sample of fifteen type I AGN observed with the high resolution X-ray gratings on board Chandra. We find that around half of the sight lines in our sample exhibit absorption due to local H- or He-like Oxygen (or both) at confidence levels ranging from >90% to >3sigma. Depending on the sight line, the absorption can be identified with hot gas in particular local structures, the Local Group (LG) or the putative local hot intergalactic medium (IGM). Several sight lines in our sample coincide with sight lines in a study of O VI absorption by local gas, so an assumption of collisional ionization equilibrium (CIE) allows us to constrain the temperature of the local hot gas. We show that some portion of the hot absorbing outflows apparently detected in the spectra of NGC 4051, PDS 456 and PG 1211+143 respectively could actually correspond to absorption by hot local gas since the outflow velocity from each of these AGN coincides with the respective cosmological recession velocity of the AGN., Comment: 8 pages. Modified discussion of Fe-K band absorption features in PDS 456 and PG 1211+143
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- 2004
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227. On the deep minimum state in the Seyfert galaxy MCG-6-30-15
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Reynolds, C. S., Wilms, J., Begelman, M. C., Staubert, R., and Kendziorra, E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
(abridged) We present a detailed spectral analysis of the first observation of the Seyfert 1 galaxy MCG-6-30-15 by the European Photon Imaging Camera on board the XMM-Newton observatory, together with contemporaneous data from the Proportional Counter Array on the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. Confirming our previously published result, we find that the presence of extremely broadened reflection features from an ionized relativistic accretion disk is required even when one employs the latest X-ray reflection models and includes the effect of complex absorption. The extremely broadened reflection features are also present if the primary continuum is modeled with a thermal Comptonisation spectrum rather than a simple power-law continuum. With this fact established, we examine these data using a relativistic smearing function corresponding to a ``generalized thin accretion disk'' model. We find strong evidence for torquing of the central parts of the accretion disk (presumably through magnetic interactions with the plunging region of the disk and/or the rotating black hole itself). We also perform a study of spectral variability within our observation. We find that the disk reflection features maintain roughly a constant equivalent width with respect to the observed continuum, as predicted by simple reflection models. Taken together with other studies of MCG-6-30-15 that find disk features to possess constant intensity at higher flux states, we suggest that the flux of disk features undergoes a saturation once the source emerges from a Deep Minimum state., Comment: 16 pages, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2004
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228. Evidence for Black Hole Spin in GX 339-4: XMM-Newton EPIC-pn and RXTE Spectroscopy of the Very High State
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Miller, J. M., Fabian, A. C., Reynolds, C. S., Nowak, M. A., Homan, J., Freyberg, M. J., Ehle, M., Belloni, T., Wijnands, R., van der Klis, M., Charles, P. A., and Lewin, W. H. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have analyzed spectra of the Galactic black hole GX 339-4 obtained through simultaneous 76 ksec XMM-Newton/EPIC-pn and 10 ksec RXTE observations during a bright phase of its 2002-2003 outburst. An extremely skewed, relativistic Fe K-alpha emission line and ionized disk reflection spectrum are revealed in these spectra. Self-consistent models for the Fe K-alpha emission line profile and disk reflection spectrum rule-out an inner disk radius compatible with a Schwarzschild black hole at more than the 8 sigma level of confidence. The best-fit inner disk radius of 2-3 r_g suggests that GX 339-4 harbors a black hole with a ~ 0.8-0.9 (where r_g = GM/c^2 and a=cJ/GM^2, and assuming that reflection in the plunging region is relatively small). This confirms indications for black hole spin based on a Chandra spectrum obtained later in the outburst. The emission line and reflection spectrum also rule-out a standard power-law disk emissivity in GX 339-4; a broken power-law form with enhanced emissivity inside ~6 r_{g} gives improved fits at more than the 8 sigma level of confidence. The extreme red wing of the line and steep emissivity require a centrally--concentrated source of hard X-rays which can strongly illuminate the inner disk. Hard X-ray emission from the base of a jet - enhanced by gravitational light bending effects - could create the concentrated hard X-ray emission; this process may be related to magnetic connections between the black hole and the inner disk. We discuss these results within the context of recent results from analyses of XTE J1650-500 and MCG-6-30-15, and models for the inner accretion flow environment around black holes., Comment: 5 pages, 2 color figures, uses emulateapj.sty and apjfonts.sty, ApJ Letters, accepted
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- 2003
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229. The hard X-ray spectrum of the Seyfert galaxy IRAS 18325-5926: cool corona, reflection from an ionized disk and variable iron K emission
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Iwasawa, K., Lee, J. C., Young, A. J., Reynolds, C. S., and Fabian, A. C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report our analysis of X-ray spectra of the Seyfert galaxy IRAS 18325-5926 (=Fairall 49) obtained from various X-ray observatories prior to XMM-Newton, including new results from two RXTE and one BeppoSAX observations. A relatively steep continuum slope (photon-index of ~2.2) in the 2-15 keV band is confirmed. The continuum spectrum observed with the BeppoSAX PDS shows a possible roll-over at energies above 30 keV, indicating a Comptonizing corona cooler than in other Seyfert nuclei. The X-ray spectrum above 2 keV is best explained with a model including reflection from a highly ionized disk with significant relativistic blurring. The iron K-alpha emission feature is then mainly due to FeXXV. The recent seven observations shows that the iron K emission flux appears to follow the continuum between the observations separated by a few months to years, although some exceptions suggest that the line strength may be determined in a more complex way., Comment: 11 pages, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2003
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230. Phase I trial of fenretinide delivered orally in a novel organized lipid complex in patients with relapsed/refractory neuroblastoma: A report from the new approaches to neuroblastoma therapy (NANT) consortium
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Maurer, Barry J, Kang, Min H, Villablanca, Judith G, Janeba, Jitka, Groshen, Susan, Matthay, Katherine K, Sondel, Paul M, Maris, John M, Jackson, Hollie A, Goodarzian, Fariba, Shimada, Hiroyuki, Czarnecki, Scarlett, Hasenauer, Beth, Reynolds, C Patrick, and Marachelian, Araz
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Pediatric ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Cancer ,Pediatric Cancer ,Neuroblastoma ,Rare Diseases ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Research ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Antineoplastic Agents ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Female ,Fenretinide ,Humans ,Male ,Maximum Tolerated Dose ,Neoplasm Recurrence ,Local ,Young Adult ,fenretinide ,LYM-X-SORB ,neuroblastoma ,pediatric ,powder ,LYM-X-SORB™ ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis ,Paediatrics - Abstract
BackgroundA phase I study was conducted to determine the maximum-tolerated dose, dose-limiting toxicities (DLTs), and pharmacokinetics of fenretinide (4-HPR) delivered in an oral powderized lipid complex (LXS) in patients with relapsed/refractory neuroblastoma.Procedure4-HPR/LXS powder (352-2,210 mg/m(2) /day) was administered on Days 0-6, in 21-day courses, by standard 3 + 3 design.ResultsThirty-two patients (median age = 8 years, range 3-27 years) enrolled with 30 evaluable for dose escalation. Prior therapies included stem cell transplantation/support (n = 26), 13-cis-retinoic acid (n = 22), (125/131) I-MIBG (n = 13), and anti-GD2 antibody (n = 6). 170+ courses were delivered. Course 1 DLTs were a Grade 3 (n = 1) alkaline phosphatase at 352 mg/m(2) /day. Other major toxicities were Grade 4 (n = 1) alkaline phosphatases on Courses 5 and 6 at 774 mg/m(2) /day, and Grade 3 (n = 1) ALT/AST elevation on Course 2 at 1,700 mg/m(2) /day. Of 29 response-evaluable patients, six had stable disease (SD) (4-26 courses); four with marrow- or bone disease-only had complete responses (CR) (10-46 courses). 4-HPR plasma levels were several folds higher (P
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- 2013
231. Purged versus non-purged peripheral blood stem-cell transplantation for high-risk neuroblastoma (COG A3973): a randomised phase 3 trial
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Kreissman, Susan G, Seeger, Robert C, Matthay, Katherine K, London, Wendy B, Sposto, Richard, Grupp, Stephan A, Haas-Kogan, Daphne A, LaQuaglia, Michael P, Yu, Alice L, Diller, Lisa, Buxton, Allen, Park, Julie R, Cohn, Susan L, Maris, John M, Reynolds, C Patrick, and Villablanca, Judith G
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Oncology and Carcinogenesis ,Regenerative Medicine ,Transplantation ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Stem Cell Research ,Stem Cell Research - Nonembryonic - Human ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Neurosciences ,Cancer ,Rare Diseases ,Neuroblastoma ,Adolescent ,Adult ,Child ,Child ,Preschool ,Disease-Free Survival ,Humans ,Immunomagnetic Separation ,Infant ,Peripheral Blood Stem Cell Transplantation ,Risk ,Oncology & Carcinogenesis ,Oncology and carcinogenesis - Abstract
BackgroundMyeloablative chemoradiotherapy and immunomagnetically purged autologous bone marrow transplantation has been shown to improve outcome for patients with high-risk neuroblastoma. Currently, peripheral blood stem cells (PBSC) are infused after myeloablative therapy, but the effect of purging is unknown. We did a randomised study of tumour-selective PBSC purging in stem-cell transplantation for patients with high-risk neuroblastoma.MethodsBetween March 16, 2001, and Feb 24, 2006, children and young adults (
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- 2013
232. Documenting the zenith of women song composers: A database of songs published in the united states and the British Commonwealth, CA. 1890-1930
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Reynolds, C
- Abstract
This article calls attention to a database devoted to women composers and songwriters and points to a few of the historical issues that this database makes it possible to investigate. The focus is women who composed songs between roughly 1890 and 1930, and who published in the United States, Great Britain, and the British Commonwealth. The database contains more than 15,500 entries of songs and song publications by 1,607 women who wrote in all styles (including classical, popular, and a range of styles in between). The database documents the extraordinary rise and decline of women song composers that occurred in the years before and after the First World War, to identify the leading composers and the most popular poets, and to discuss differences in the careers of American and British women songwriters. Among these was the propensity for American women to self-publish, not only successful women such as Anita Owen and Carrie Jacobs Bond, but also hundreds of amateurs who published just one or two songs. The thirty women with the best representation have at least eighty songs or song collections. At the top of the list are Liza Lehmann (with 334 songs and cycles), Lily Strickland (309), Maude Valerie White (233), and Carrie Jacobs Bond (194). World War I affected women composers deeply, reducing productivity and even ending some careers as songwriters. The database also makes it possible to study shifts in the poetry women chose to set before and after the war.
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- 2013
233. Antitumour activity and tolerability of an EphA2-targeted nanotherapeutic in multiple mouse models
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Kamoun, Walid S., Kirpotin, Dmitri B., Huang, Zhaohua Richard, Tipparaju, Suresh K., Noble, Charles O., Hayes, Mark E., Luus, Lia, Koshkaryev, Alexander, Kim, Jaeyeon, Olivier, Ken, Kornaga, Tad, Oyama, Shinji, Askoxylakis, Vasileios, Pien, Christine, Kuesters, Geoffrey, Dumont, Nancy, Lugovskoy, Alexey A., Schihl, Sarah A., Wilton, John H., Geddie, Melissa L., Suchy, James, Grabow, Stephanie, Kohli, Neeraj, Reynolds, C. Patrick, Blaydes, Rachel, Zhou, Yu, Sawyer, Andrew J., Marks, James D., and Drummond, Daryl C.
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- 2019
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234. Timing analysis of the Seyfert-1 galaxy MCG-6-30-15 with XMM-Newton data
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La Palombara, N., Molendi, S., Wilms, J., and Reynolds, C. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the main results of a deep timing analysis (in the 0.2-10 keV energy band) of the bright Seyfert-1 galaxy MCG-6-30-15 performed on XMM-Newton data. The light-curves and hardness ratios show that the source has large flux and spectral variations on time-scales of a few kiloseconds at most. From the analysis of both the power spectra and the structure function of the light curves we detected a relevant source variability between time-scales of ~0.3 and ~10 ks. Based on this result, we extracted a characteristic size of the X-ray emitting region of the order of 10^13 cm., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, LaTex, uses sproclnew.sty and epsfig.sty. Poster presentation, to be published in the proceedings of the 5th Italian AGN Meeting "Inflows, Outflows and Reprocessing around black holes"
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- 2002
235. The Chandra HETGS and RXTE view of GRS 1915+105
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Lee, J. C., Reynolds, C. S., Remillard, R., Schulz, N. S., Blackman, E. G., and Fabian, A. C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Chandra AO1 HETGS observation of the micro-quasar GRS 1915+105 in the low hard state reveals (1) neutral K absorption edges from Fe, Si, Mg, and S in cold gas, and (2) highly ionized (Fe XXV and Fe XXVI) absorption attributed to a hot disk, disk wind, or corona. The neutral edges reveal anomalous Si and Fe abundances which we attribute to surrounding cold material in/near the environment of GRS 1915+105. We also point out the exciting possibility for the first astrophysical detection of XAFS attributed to material in interstellar grains. We place constraints on the ionization parameter, temperature, and hydrogen equivalent number density of the absorber near the accretion disk based on the detection of the H- and He-like Fe absorption. Observed spectral changes in the ionized lines which track the light curve point to changes in both the ionizing flux and density of the absorber, supporting the presence of a flow. Details can be found in Lee et al., 2002, ApJ., 567, 1102, Comment: Proceedings of the 4th Microquasar Workshop, 2002, eds. Durouchoux, Fuchs & Rodriguez, published by the Center for Space Physics : Kolkata ; The main findings as presented in Lee et al., 2002, ApJ., 567, 1102 are summarized
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- 2002
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236. A Relativistic Fe K-alpha Emission Line in the Intermediate Luminosity BeppoSAX Spectrum of the Galactic Microquasar V4641 Sgr
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Miller, J. M., Fabian, A. C., Zand, J. J. M. in 't, Reynolds, C. S., Wijnands, R., Nowak, M. A., and Lewin, W. H. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Broad Fe K-alpha emission lines have recently been reported in a number of Galactic black holes. Such lines are useful accretion flow diagnostics because they may be produced at the inner accretion disk and shaped by relativistic effects, but in general they have only been observed at luminosities of L_X ~ 10^(37-38) erg/s in soft X-rays. The Galactic microquasar V4641 Sgr -- widely known for its 12.2 Crab (1.5-12 keV) outburst in 1999 September -- displayed low-level activity in 1999 March. BeppoSAX observed the source in this state and Fe K-alpha line emission was found (in 't Zand et al. 2000). In re-analyzing these data, we find strong evidence that the Fe K-alpha line profile is broadened. For the most likely values of the source distance and black hole mass measured by Orosz et al. (2001), our fits to the total spectrum indicate that the source was observed at a luminosity of L_X = 1.9 (+1.0, -0.8) * 10^(36) erg/s (2-10 keV), or L_X/L_Edd. = 1.8 (+0.9, -0.8) * 10^(-3). Advection-dominated accretion flow (ADAF) models predict a radially-recessed disk in this regime. In contrast, fits to the observed Fe K-alpha emission line profile with a relativistic line model constrain the inner disk to be consistent with the marginally stable circular orbit of a Schwarzschild black hole., Comment: 5 pages, 3 color figures. ApJ Letters, in press
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- 2002
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237. Pipeline Processing of VLBI Data
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Reynolds, C., Paragi, Z., and Garrett, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
As part of an on-going effort to simplify the data analysis path for VLBI experiments, a pipeline procedure has been developed at JIVE to carry out much of the data reduction required for EVN experiments in an automated fashion. This pipeline procedure runs entirely within AIPS, the standard data reduction package used in astronomical VLBI, and is used to provide preliminary calibration of EVN experiments correlated at the EVN MkIV data processor. As well as simplifying the analysis for EVN users, the pipeline reduces the delay in providing information on the data quality to participating telescopes, hence improving the overall performance of the array. A description of this pipeline is presented here., Comment: 4 pages, 8 figures. To be presented at the URSI General Assembly, 2002
- Published
- 2002
238. Evidence for Spin and Energy Extraction in a Galactic Black Hole Candidate: The XMM-Newton/EPIC-pn Spectrum of XTE J1650-500
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Miller, J. M., Fabian, A. C., Wijnands, R., Reynolds, C. S., Ehle, M., Freyberg, M. J., van der Klis, M., Lewin, W. H. G., Sanchez-Fernandez, C., and Castro-Tirado, A. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We observed the Galactic black hole candidate XTE J1650-500 early in its Fall, 2001 outburst with the XMM-Newton European Photon Imaging pn Camera (EPIC-pn). The observed spectrum is consistent with the source having been in the "very high" state. We find a broad, skewed Fe K-alpha emission line which suggests that the primary in this system may be a Kerr black hole, and which indicates a steep emissivity profile that is hard to explain in terms of a standard accretion disk model. These results are quantitatively and qualitatively similar to those from an XMM-Newton observation of the Seyfert galaxy MCG--6-30-15. The steep emissivity in MCG--6-30-15 may be explained by the extraction and dissipation of rotational energy from a black hole with nearly- maximal angular momentum or material in the plunging region via magnetic connections to the inner accretion disk. If this process is at work in both sources, an exotic but fundamental general relativistic prediction may be confirmed across a factor of 10^6 in black hole mass. We discuss these results in terms of the accretion flow geometry in stellar-mass black holes, and the variety of enigmatic phenomena often observed in the very high state., Comment: Published in ApJL (Miller et al., 2002, ApJ, 570L, 69)
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- 2002
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239. The hydrodynamics of dead radio galaxies
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Reynolds, C. S., Heinz, S., and Begelman, M. C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a numerical investigation of dead, or relic, radio galaxies and the environmental impact that radio galaxy activity has on the host galaxy or galaxy cluster. We perform axisymmetric hydrodynamical calculations of light, supersonic, back-to-back jets propagating in a beta-model galaxy/cluster atmosphere. We then shut down the jet activity and let the resulting structure evolve passively. The dead source undergoes an initial phase of pressure driven expansion until it achieves pressure equilibrium with its surroundings. Thereafter, buoyancy forces drive the evolution and lead to the formation of two oppositely directed plumes that float high into the galaxy/cluster atmosphere. These plumes entrain a significant amount of low entropy material from the galaxy/cluster core and lift it high into the atmosphere. An important result is that a large fraction (at least half) of the energy injected by the jet activity is thermalized in the ISM/ICM core. The whole ISM/ICM atmosphere inflates in order to regain hydrostatic equilibrium. This inflation is mediated by an approximately spherical disturbance which propagates into the atmosphere at the sound speed. The fact that such a large fraction of the injected energy is thermalized suggests that radio galaxies may have an important role in the overall energy budget of rich ISM/ICM atmospheres. In particular, they may act as a strong and highly time-dependent source of negative feedback for galaxy/cluster cooling flows., Comment: 13 pages, 20 postscript figures. Accepted for publication in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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- 2002
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240. Headphone Based Spatial Audio Teleconferencing for Emerging Network Service Architectures
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Reynolds, C. J.
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621.382 - Published
- 2009
241. Mithramycin induces promoter reprogramming and differentiation of rhabdoid tumor
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Chasse, Maggie H, Johnson, Benjamin K, Boguslawski, Elissa A, Sorensen, Katie M, Rosien, Jessica E, Kang, Min H, Reynolds, C Patrick, Heo, Lyong, Madaj, Zachary B, Beddows, Ian, Foxa, Gabrielle E, Kitchen‐Goosen, Susan M, Williams, Bart O, Triche, Jr, Timothy J, and Grohar, Patrick J
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- 2021
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242. High resolution Chandra HETG and RXTE observations of GRS 1915+105 : A hot disk atmosphere & cold gas enriched in Iron and Silicon
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Lee, J. C., Reynolds, C. S., Schulz, N. S., Remillard, R., Blackman, E. G., and Fabian, A. C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The time-averaged 30 ks Chandra HETGS observation of the micro-quasar GRS 1915+105 in the low hard state reveals for the first time in this source neutral K absorption edges from Fe, Si, Mg, & S. Ionized resonance absorption from H-, and He-like Fe (XXV, XXVI), Ca XX and possibly emission from neutral Fe Kalpha and ionized Fe XXV (forbidden, or the resonance emission component of a P-Cygni profile) are also seen. We report the tentative detection of the first astrophysical signature of XAFS in the photoelectric edge of Si (and possibly Fe and Mg), attributed to material in grains. The large column densities measured from the neutral edges reveal anomalous Si and Fe abundances. Scenarios for which the anomalous abundances can be attributed to surrounding cold material associated with GRS 1915+105 and/or that the enrichment may signify either a highly unusual supernova/hypernova, or external supernova activity local to the binary are discussed. We attribute the ionized features to a hot disk, disk-wind, or corona environment. These features allow for constraints on the ionization parameter (log xi > 4.15), temperature (T > 2.4 x 10^6 K), and hydrogen equivalent number density (n > 10^{12} cm^{-3}) for this region. Variability studies with simultaneous RXTE data show that the light curve count rate tracks changes in the disk blackbody and the power-law flux. Spectral changes in the Chandra data also track the behavior of the light curve, and may point to changes in both the ionizing flux and density of the absorber. A 3.69 Hz QPO and weak first harmonic is seen in the RXTE data., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ., 9 pages, 5 figures
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- 2001
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243. RXTE monitoring of Centaurus A
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Benlloch, S., Rothschild, R. E., Wilms, J., Reynolds, C. S., Heindl, W. A., and Staubert, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the analysis from ~110 ks of X-ray observations of Centaurus A carried out with the Proportional Counter Array (PCA) and the High Energy X-ray Timing Experiment (HEXTE) instruments on Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) during three monitoring campaigns over the last 4 years (10 ks in 1996, 74 ks in 1998, and 25 ks in 2000). The joint PCA/HEXTE X-ray spectrum can be well described by a heavily absorbed power law with photon index 1.8 and a narrow iron line due to fluorescence of cold matter. The measured column depth decreased by about 30% between 1996 and 2000, while the detected 2-10 keV continuum flux remained constant between 1996 and 1998, but increased by 60% in 2000. Since in all three observations the iron line flux did not vary, a corresponding decrease in equivalent width was noted. No appreciable evidence for a reflection continuum in the spectrum was detected. We present the interpretation of the iron line strength through Monte Carlo computations of various geometries. No significant temporal variability was found in Cen A at time scales from days to tens of minutes., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2001
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244. Brahms rhapsodizing: The Alto Rhapsody and its expressive double
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Reynolds, C and Johns, DC
- Subjects
Music - Abstract
This article presents two new hypotheses about Brahms's Alto Rhapsody, op. 53 (1869), a work Brahms referred to as his "bridal song." Consulting a range of nineteenth-century sources, I explore the implications of rhapsody as a genre for this composition and argue that they include the classical convention of rhapsody as a poetic cento, or Stoppelgedicht. Centos, poems made up of quotations from earlier works, were often written for important events such as weddings; examples include the Cento nuptialis, which was discussed, among others, by August Wilhelm Ambros in his Geschichte der Musik (1864). Brahms's musical sources include Wagner's Tristan und Isolde and several works based on Goethe's Faust, including, especially, Liszt's Faust-Symphonie. My second hypothesis is that Brahms likely composed his Schicksalslied, op. 54, as a companion piece to the Alto Rhapsody. The two pieces respond to each other through several shared musical and textual correspondences. They deal in paired ways with the division between mortal suffering and otherworldly grace, and they embrace conventions and characters from antiquity. Invoking a concept proposed by Lawrence Kramer, I interpret these works as "expressive doubles" of each other. My investigation suggests that Brahms probably began work on the Rhapsody at least a year earlier than previously thought. © 2012 by the Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
- Published
- 2012
245. Chandra--ASCA--RXTE observations of the micro-quasar GRS 1915+105
- Author
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Lee, J. C., Schulz, N. S., Reynolds, C. S., Fabian, A. C., and Blackman, E. G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
A Chandra AO1 30ks HETGS observation of the X-ray transient micro-quasar GRS 1915+105 reveals absorption edges and faint line emission over the HETG energy range. We find from a preliminary analysis evidence for prominent neutral K edges associated with iron, silicon, magnesium, and tentatively sulphur. The column densities assuming solar abundances are consistent with ~ few x $10^{22} cm^{-2}$ in excess of the Galactic value, and may point to surrounding cold material associated with GRS 1915+105. Neutral Fe K$\alpha$ emission, and ionized absorption from Fe XXV and Fe XXVI are resolved. We limit our discussion to the Chandra results., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, Contributed talk at "X-ray Astronomy 2000" meeting, Palermo, Italy, Sept. 2000. Proceedings to be published in ASP Conference series, eds. R. Giaconni, L. Stella, & S. Serio, 2000
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- 2000
246. Shocks and sonic booms in the intracluster medium: X-ray shells and radio galaxy activity
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Reynolds, C. S., Heinz, S., and Begelman, M. C.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Motivated by hydrodynamic simulations, we discuss the X-ray appearance of radio galaxies embedded in the intracluster medium (ICM) of a galaxy cluster. We distinguish three regimes. In the early life of a powerful source, the entire radio cocoon is expanding supersonically and hence drives a strong shock into the ICM. Eventually, the sides of the cocoon become subsonic and the ICM is disturbed by the sonic booms of the jet's working surface. In both of these regimes, X-ray observations would find an X-ray shell. In the strong shock regime, this shell will be hot and relatively thin. However, in the weak shock (sonic-boom) regime, the shell will be approximately the same temperature as the undisturbed ICM. If a cooling flow is present, the observed shell may even be cooler than the undisturbed ICM due to the lifting of cooler material into the shell from the inner (cooler) regions of the cluster. In the third and final regime, the cocoon has collapsed and no well-defined X-ray shell will be seen. We discuss ways of estimating the power and age of the source once its regime of behavior has been determined., Comment: 4 pages, submitted for publication in Astrophysical Journal. Full paper (including figure) can be obtained from http://rocinante.Colorado.EDU/~chris/papers/xray_hydro.ps
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- 2000
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247. X-ray iron line variability: constraints on the inner accretion disk
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Reynolds, C. S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
After reviewing the basic physics of X-ray reflection in AGN, we present three case studies which illustrate the current state of X-ray reflection studies. For the low-luminosity AGN NGC4258, we find that the iron line is much narrower than is typically found in higher luminosity AGN. We argue that this is evidence for either a truncated cold accretion disk (possibly due to a transition to an advection dominate accretion flow at r ~ 100GM/c^2) or a large r ~ 100GM/c^2 X-ray emitting corona surrounding the accretion disk. We also present results for the higher luminosity Seyfert nuclei in NGC5548 and MCG-6-30-15. In both of these sources, RXTE shows that the iron line equivalent width decreases with increasing luminosity. Furthermore, the iron line equivalent width is found to be anticorrelated with the relative strength of the reflection continuum, contrary to all simple reflection models. It is proposed that continuum-flux correlated changes in the ionization of the accretion disk surface can explain this spectral variability. Finally, we address the issue of X-ray iron line reverberation in the light of these complicating factors., Comment: 17 pages, 12 postscript figures. Invited talk at "Probing the Physics of Active Galactic Nuclei" workshop, NASA-GSFC, June 2000
- Published
- 2000
248. Broad iron lines in Active Galactic Nuclei
- Author
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Fabian, A. C., Iwasawa, K., Reynolds, C. S., and Young, A. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
An intrinsically narrow line emitted by an accretion disk around a black hole appears broadened and skewed as a result of the Doppler effect and gravitational redshift. The fluorescent iron line in the X-ray band at 6.4-6.9keV is the strongest such line and is seen in the X-ray spectrum of many active galactic nuclei and, in particular, Seyfert galaxies. It is an important diagnostic with which to study the geometry and other properties of the accretion flow very close to the central black hole. The broad iron line indicates the presence of a standard thin accretion disk in those objects, often seen at low inclination. The broad iron line has opened up strong gravitational effects around black holes to observational study with wide-reaching consequences for both astrophysics and physics., Comment: 26 pages. Invited review, accepted for publication in PASP
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
249. A deep X-ray observation of NGC 4258 and its surrounding field
- Author
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Reynolds, C. S., Nowak, M. A., and Maloney, P. R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a deep X-ray observation of the low-luminosity active galactic nucleus in NGC4258 (M106) using ASCA. The soft X-ray spectrum <2keV is dominated by thermal emission from optically-thin plasma with kT~0.5keV. The hard X-ray emission is clearly due to a power-law component with photon index Gamma=1.8 absorbed by a column density of N_H=8x10^22/cm^2. The power-law is readily identified with primary X-ray emission from the AGN central engine. We also clearly detect a narrow iron K-alpha emission line at 6.4keV. No broad component is detected. We suggest that the bulk of this narrow line comes from the accretion disk and, furthermore, that the power-law X-ray source which excites this line emission (which is typically identified with a disk corona) must be at least 100GM/c^2 in extent. This is in stark contrast to many higher-luminosity Seyfert galaxies which display a broad iron line indicating a small 10 GM/c^2 X-ray emitting region. It must be stressed that this study constrains the size of the X-ray emitting corona rather than the presence/absence of a radiatively efficient accretion disk in the innermost regions. If, instead, a substantial fraction of the observed narrow line originates from material not associated with the accretion disk, limits can be placed on the parameter space of possible allowed relativistically broad iron lines. By comparing our data with previous ASCA observations, we find marginal evidence for a change in absorbing column density through to the central engine, and good evidence for a change in the AGN flux., Comment: 11 pages, 9 postscript figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
250. An extended multi-zone model for the MCG-6-30-15 warm absorber
- Author
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Morales, R., Fabian, A. C., and Reynolds, C. S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The variable warm absorber seen with {\em ASCA} in the X-ray spectrum of MCG$-$6-30-15 shows complex time behaviour in which the optical depth of OVIII anticorrelates with the flux whereas that of OVII is unchanging. The explanation in terms of a two zone absorber has since been challenged by {\em BeppoSAX} observations. These present a more complicated behaviour for the OVIII edge. We demonstrate here that the presence of a third, intermediate, zone can explain all the observations. In practice, warm absorbers are likely to be extended, multi-zone regions of which only part causes directly observable absorption edges at any given time., Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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