1,403 results on '"Angelini L."'
Search Results
2. VTSCat: The VERITAS Catalog of Gamma-Ray Observations
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Acharyya, A., Adams, C. B., Archer, A., Bangale, P., Bartkoske, J. T., Batista, P., Benbow, W., Buckley, J. H., Brill, A., Capasso, M., Christiansen, J. L., Chromey, A. J., Daniel, M. K., Errando, M., Falcone, A., Farrell, K. A, Feng, Q., Finley, J. P., Foote, G. M, Fortson, L., Furniss, A., Gallagher, G., Gent, A., Giuri, C., Gueta, O., Hanlon, W. F, Hanna, D., Hassan, T., Hervet, O., Hoang, J., Holder, J., Hughes, G., Humensky, T. B., Jin, W., Kaaret, P., Kertzman, M., Kieda, D., Kleiner, T. K., Korzoun, N., Krennrich, F., Kumar, S., Lang, M. J., Lundy, M., Maier, G., McGrath, C. E, Millard, M. J, Mooney, C. L., Moriarty, P., Mukherjee, R., Nieto, D., Nievas-Rosillo, M., O'Brien, S., Ong, R. A., Otte, A. N., Pandel, D., Park, N., Patel, S. R., Patel, S., Pfrang, K., Pichel, A., Pohl, M., Prado, R. R., Pueschel, E., Quinn, J., Ragan, K., Reynolds, P. T., Ribeiro, D., Richards, G. T., Roache, E., Rovero, A. C., Rulten, C., Ryan, J. L., Sadeh, I., Santander, M., Schlenstedt, S., Sembroski, G. H., Shang, R., Splettstoesser, M., Stevenson, B., Tak, D., Vassiliev, V. V., Wakely, S. P., Weinstein, A., Williams, D. A., Williamson, T. J, Angelini, L., Basu-Zych, A., Sabol, E., and Smale, A.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The ground-based gamma-ray observatory VERITAS (Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array System) is sensitive to photons of astrophysical origin with energies in the range between $\approx 85$ GeV to $\approx 30$ TeV. The instrument consists of four 12-m diameter imaging Cherenkov telescopes operating at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory (FLWO) in southern Arizona. VERITAS started four-telescope operations in 2007 and collects about 1100 hours of good-weather data per year. The VERITAS collaboration has published over 100 journal articles since 2008 reporting on gamma-ray observations of a large variety of objects: Galactic sources like supernova remnants, pulsar wind nebulae, and binary systems; extragalactic sources like star forming galaxies, dwarf-spheroidal galaxies, and highly-variable active galactic nuclei. This note presents VTSCat: the catalog of high-level data products from all VERITAS publications., Comment: Version with corrected author list
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- 2023
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3. A Search for the 3.5 keV Line from the Milky Way's Dark Matter Halo with HaloSat
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Silich, E. M., Jahoda, K., Angelini, L., Kaaret, P., Zajczyk, A., LaRocca, D. M., Ringuette, R., and Richardson, J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Previous detections of an X-ray emission line near 3.5 keV in galaxy clusters and other dark matter-dominated objects have been interpreted as observational evidence for the decay of sterile neutrino dark matter. Motivated by this, we report on a search for a 3.5 keV emission line from the Milky Way's galactic dark matter halo with HaloSat. As a single pixel, collimated instrument, HaloSat observations are impervious to potential systematic effects due to grazing incidence reflection and CCD pixelization, and thus may offer a check on possible instrumental systematic errors in previous analyses. We report non-detections of a $\sim$3.5 keV emission line in four HaloSat observations near the Galactic Center. In the context of the sterile neutrino decay interpretation of the putative line feature, we provide 90% confidence level upper limits on the 3.5 keV line flux and 7.1 keV sterile neutrino mixing angle: $F \leq 0.077$ ph cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$ sr$^{-1}$ and $\sin^2(2\theta) \leq 4.25 \times 10^{-11}$. The HaloSat mixing angle upper limit was calculated using a modern parameterization of the Milky Way's dark matter distribution, and in order to compare with previous limits, we also report the limit calculated using a common historical model. The HaloSat mixing angle upper limit places constraints on a number of previous mixing angle estimates derived from observations of the Milky Way's dark matter halo and galaxy clusters, and excludes several previous detections of the line. The upper limits cannot, however, entirely rule out the sterile neutrino decay interpretation of the 3.5 keV line feature., Comment: accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal, 14 pages, 7 figures
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- 2021
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4. Typical values of z-resolution for different Digital Breast Tomosynthesis systems evaluated in a multicenter study
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Dalmonte, S., Golinelli, P., Oberhofer, N., Strocchi, S., Rossetti, V., Berta, L., Porzio, M., Angelini, L., Paruccini, N., Villa, R., Bertolini, M., Delle Canne, S., Cavallari, M., D'Ercole, L., Guerra, G., Rosasco, R., Cannillo, B., D'Alessio, A., Di Nicola, E., Origgi, D., De Marco, P., Maldera, A., Scabbio, C., Rottoli, F., Castriconi, R., Lorenzini, E., Pasquali, G., Pietrobon, F., Bregant, P., Giovannini, G., Favuzza, V., Bruschi, A., D'Urso, D., Maestri, D., De Novellis, S., Fracassi, A., Boschiroli, L., Quattrocchi, M., Gilio, M.A., Roberto, E., Altabella, L., Califano, G., Cimmino, M.C., Bortoli, E., Deiana, E., Pagan, L., Berardi, P., Ardu, V., Azzeroni, R., Campoleoni, M., and Ravaglia, V.
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- 2024
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5. Fully Immersive Virtual Reality Using 360° Videos to Manage Well-Being in Older Adults: A Scoping Review
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Restout, J., Bernache-Assollant, I., Morizio, C., Boujut, A., Angelini, L., Tchalla, A., and Perrochon, A.
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- 2023
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6. Understanding Older Adults’ Affect States in Daily Life for Promoting Self-reflection About Mental Wellbeing
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Sykora, M., Elayan, S., Angelini, L., Röcke, Christina, El Kamali, M., Mugellini, Elena, Guye, Sabrina, Bartezzaghi, Emilio, Series Editor, Bracchi, Giampio, Series Editor, Del Bo, Adalberto, Series Editor, Sagarra Trias, Ferran, Series Editor, Stellacci, Francesco, Series Editor, Zio, Enrico, Series Editor, Andreoni, Giuseppe, editor, and Mambretti, Cinzia, editor
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- 2021
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7. HILIGT, Upper Limit Servers II — Implementing the data servers
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König, O., Saxton, R.D., Kretschmar, P., Angelini, L., Belanger, G., Evans, P.A., Freyberg, M.J., Savchenko, V., Traulsen, I., and Wilms, J.
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- 2022
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8. Preoperative Radiotherapy of Soft Tissue Sarcoma with Simultaneous Integrated Boost: A Phase II Study
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Greto, D., primary, Loi, M., additional, Burchini, L., additional, Banini, M., additional, Bonaparte, I., additional, Angelini, L., additional, Carnevale, M.G., additional, Mattioli, C., additional, Ganovelli, M., additional, Talamonti, C., additional, Arilli, C., additional, Zani, M., additional, Francolini, G., additional, Simontacchi, G., additional, Bonomo, P., additional, Campanacci, D.A., additional, and Livi, L., additional
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- 2023
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9. Understanding Older Adults’ Affect States in Daily Life for Promoting Self-reflection About Mental Wellbeing
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Sykora, M., primary, Elayan, S., additional, Angelini, L., additional, Röcke, Christina, additional, El Kamali, M., additional, Mugellini, Elena, additional, and Guye, Sabrina, additional
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- 2021
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10. X-ray view of four high-luminosity Swift/BAT AGN: Unveiling obscuration and reflection with Suzaku
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Fioretti, V., Angelini, L., Mushotzky, R. F., Koss, M., and Malaguti, G.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Swift/BAT nine-month survey observed 153 AGN, all with ultra-hard X-ray BAT fluxes in excess of 10^-11 erg cm^-2 s^-1 and an average redshift of 0.03. Among them, four of the most luminous BAT AGN (44.73 < Log L(BAT) < 45.31) were selected as targets of Suzaku follow-up observations: J2246.0+3941 (3C 452), J0407.4+0339 (3C 105), J0318.7+6828, and J0918.5+0425. The column density, scattered/reflected emission, the properties of the Fe K line, and a possible variability are fully analyzed. For the latter, the spectral properties from Chandra, XMM-Newton and Swift/XRT public observations were compared with the present Suzaku analysis. Of our sample, 3C 452 is the only certain Compton-thick AGN candidate because of i) the high absorption and strong Compton reflection; ii) the lack of variability; iii) the "buried" nature, i.e. the low scattering fraction (<0.5%) and the extremely low relative [OIII] luminosity. In contrast 3C 105 is not reflection-dominated, despite the comparable column density, X-ray luminosity and radio morphology, but shows a strong long-term variability in flux and scattering fraction, consistent with the soft emission being scattered from a distant region (e.g., the narrow emission line region). The sample presents high (>100) X-to-[OIII] luminosity ratios, confirming the [OIII] luminosity to be affected by residual extinction in presence of mild absorption, especially for "buried" AGN such as 3C 452. Three of our targets are powerful FRII radio galaxies, making them the most luminous and absorbed AGN of the BAT Seyfert survey despite the inversely proportional N_H - L_X relation., Comment: A&A paper in press, 17 pages
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- 2013
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11. Possible Detection of an Emission Cyclotron Resonance Scattering Feature from the Accretion-powered Pulsar 4U 1626-67
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Iwakiri, W. B., Terada, Y., Mihara, T., Angelini, L., Tashiro, M. S., Enoto, T., Yamada, S., Makishima, K., Nakajima, M., and Yoshida, A.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present analysis of 4U 1626-67, a 7.7 s pulsar in a low-mass X-ray binary system, observed with the hard X-ray detector of the Japanese X-ray satellite Suzaku in March 2006 for a net exposure of \sim88 ks. The source was detected at an average 10-60 keV flux of \sim4 x10^-10 erg cm^-2 s^-1. The phase-averaged spectrum is reproduced well by combining a negative and positive power-law times exponential cutoff (NPEX) model modified at \sim 37 keV by a cyclotron resonance scattering feature (CRSF). The phase-resolved analysis shows that the spectra at the bright phases are well fit by the NPEX with CRSF model. On the other hand, the spectrum in the dim phase lacks the NPEX high-energy cutoff component, and the CRSF can be reproduced by either an emission or an absorption profile. When fitting the dim phase spectrum with the NPEX plus Gaussian model, we find that the feature is better described in terms of an emission rather than an absorption profile. The statistical significance of this result, evaluated by means of an F-test, is between 2.91 x 10^-3 and 1.53 x 10^-5, taking into account the systematic errors in the background evaluation of HXD-PIN. We find that, the emission profile is more feasible than the absorption one for comparing the physical parameters in other phases. Therefore, we have possibly detected an emission line at the cyclotron resonance energy in the dim phase., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ on March 16, 2012. 12 pages, 14 figures
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- 2012
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12. The prompt-afterglow connection in Gamma-Ray Bursts: a comprehensive statistical analysis of Swift X-ray light-curves
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Margutti, R., Zaninoni, E., Bernardini, M. G., Chincarini, G., Pasotti, F., Guidorzi, C., Angelini, L., Burrows, D. N., Capalbi, M., Evans, P. A., Gehrels, N., Kennea, J., Mangano, V., Moretti, A., Nousek, J., Osborne, J. P., Page, K. L., Perri, M., Racusin, J., Romano, P., Sbarufatti, B., Stafford, S., and Stamatikos, M.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a comprehensive statistical analysis of Swift X-ray light-curves of Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) collecting data from more than 650 GRBs discovered by Swift and other facilities. The unprecedented sample size allows us to constrain the REST FRAME X-ray properties of GRBs from a statistical perspective, with particular reference to intrinsic time scales and the energetics of the different light-curve phases in a common rest-frame 0.3-30 keV energy band. Temporal variability episodes are also studied and their properties constrained. Two fundamental questions drive this effort: i) Does the X-ray emission retain any kind of "memory"of the prompt gamma-ray phase? ii) Where is the dividing line between long and short GRB X-ray properties? We show that short GRBs decay faster, are less luminous and less energetic than long GRBs in the X-rays, but are interestingly characterized by similar intrinsic absorption. We furthermore reveal the existence of a number of statistically significant relations that link the X-ray to prompt gamma-ray parameters in long GRBs; short GRBs are outliers of the majority of these 2-parameter relations. However and more importantly, we report on the existence of a universal 3-parameter scaling that links the X-ray and the gamma-ray energy to the prompt spectral peak energy of BOTH long and short GRBs: E_{X,iso}\propto E_{gamma,iso}^{1.00\pm 0.06}/E_{pk}^{0.60\pm 0.10}., Comment: MNRAS Accepted. 15 pages. On-line tables available
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- 2012
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13. Recovering Swift-XRT energy resolution through CCD charge trap mapping
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Pagani, C., Beardmore, A. P., Abbey, A. F., Mountford, C., Osborne, J. P., Capalbi, M., Perri, M., Angelini, L., Burrows, D. N., Campana, S., Cusumano, G., Evans, P. A., Kennea, J. A., Moretti, A., Page, K. L., and Starling, R. L. C.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The X-ray telescope on board the Swift satellite for gamma-ray burst astronomy has been exposed to the radiation of the space environment since launch in November 2004. Radiation causes damage to the detector, with the generation of dark current and charge trapping sites that result in the degradation of the spectral resolution and an increase of the instrumental background. The Swift team has a dedicated calibration program with the goal of recovering a significant proportion of the lost spectroscopic performance. Calibration observations of supernova remnants with strong emission lines are analysed to map the detector charge traps and to derive position-dependent corrections to the measured photon energies. We have achieved a substantial recovery in the XRT resolution by implementing these corrections in an updated version of the Swift XRT gain file and in corresponding improvements to the Swift XRT HEAsoft software. We provide illustrations of the impact of the enhanced energy resolution, and show that we have recovered most of the spectral resolution lost since launch., Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2011
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14. The Swift Serendipitous Survey in deep XRT GRB fields (SwiftFT) I. The X-ray catalog and number counts
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Puccetti, S., Capalbi, M., Giommi, P., Perri, M., Stratta, G., Angelini, L., Burrows, D. N., Campana, S., Chincarini, G., Cusumano, G., Gehrels, N., Moretti, A., Nousek, J., Osborne, J. P., and Tagliaferri, G.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We searched for X-ray serendipitous sources in over 370 Swift-XRT fields centered on gamma ray bursts detected between 2004 and 2008 and observed with total exposures ranging from 10 ks to over 1 Ms. This defines the Swift Serendipitous Survey in deep XRT GRB fields, which is quite broad compared to existing surveys (~33 square degrees) and medium depth, with a faintest flux limit of 7.2e-16 erg cm^-2 s^-1 in the 0.5 to 2 keV energy range. The survey has a high degree of uniformity thanks to the stable point spread function and small vignetting correction factors of the XRT, moreover is completely random on the sky as GRBs explode in totally unrelated parts of the sky. In this paper we present the sample and the X-ray number counts of the high Galactic-latitude sample, estimated with high statistics over a wide flux range (i.e., 7.2e-16 to ~5e-13 erg cm^-2 s^-1 in the 0.5-2 keV band and 3.4e-15 to ~6e-13 erg cm^-2 s^-1 in the 2-10 keV band). We detect 9387 point-like sources, while 7071 point-like sources are found at high Galactic-latitudes (i.e. >=20 deg). The large number of detected sources resulting from the combination of large area and deep flux limits make this survey a new important tool for investigating the evolution of AGN. In particular, the large area permits finding rare high-luminosity objects like QSO2, which are poorly sampled by other surveys, adding precious information for the luminosity function bright end. The high Galactic-latitude logN-logS relation is well determined over all the flux coverage, and it is nicely consistent with previous results at 1 sigma confidence level. By the hard X-ray color analysis, we find that the Swift Serendipitous Survey in deep XRT GRB fields samples relatively unobscured and mildly obscured AGN, with a fraction of obscured sources of ~37% (~15%) in the 2-10 (0.3-3 keV) band., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2011
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15. Field and Globular Cluster LMXBs in NGC 4278
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Fabbiano, G., Brassington, N. J., Lentati, L., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., Gallagher, J., Kalogera, V., Kim, D. -W., King, A. R., Kundu, A., Pellegrini, S., Richings, A. J., Trinchieri, G., Zezas, A., and Zepf, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report a detailed spectral analysis of the population of low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) detected in the elliptical galaxy NGC~4278 with Chandra. Seven luminous sources were studied individually, four in globular clusters (GCs), and three in the stellar field. The range of (0.3-8 keV) $L_X$ for these sources suggests that they may be black hole binaries (BHBs). Comparison of our results with simulations allows us to discriminate between disk and power-law dominated emission, pointing to spectral/luminosity variability, reminiscent of Galactic BHBs. The BH masses derived from a comparison of our spectral results with the $L_X \sim T^4_{in}$ relation of Galactic BHBs are in the 5-15 $M_{\odot}$ range, as observed in the Milky Way. The analysis of joint spectra of sources selected in three luminosity ranges suggests that while the high luminosity sources have prominent thermal disk emission components, power-law components are likely to be important in the mid and low-luminosity spectra. Comparing low-luminosity average spectra, we find a relatively larger $N_H$ in the GC spectrum; we speculate that this may point to either a metallicity effect, or to intrinsic physical differences between field and GC accreting binaries. Analysis of average sample properties uncover a previously unreported $L_X - R_G$ correlation (where $R_G$ is the galactocentric radius) in the GC-LMXB sample, implying richer LMXB populations in more central GCs. No such trend is seen in the field LMXB sample. We can exclude that the GC $L_X - R_G$ correlation is the by-product of a luminosity effect, and suggest that it may be related to the presence of more compact GCs at smaller galactocentric radii, fostering more efficient binary formation., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2010
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16. Probing the Low Mass X-ray Binaries/Globular Cluster connection in NGC1399
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Paolillo, M., Puzia, T., Zepf, S. E., Maccarone, T. J., Goudfrooij, P., Kundu, A., Fabbiano, G., and Angelini, L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a wide field study of the Globular Clusters/Low Mass X-ray Binaries connection in the cD elliptical NGC1399, combining HST/ACS and Chandra high resolution data. We find evidence that LMXB formation likelihood is influenced by GCs structural parameters, in addition to the well known effects of mass and metallicity, independently from galactocentric distance., Comment: in press in the Proceedings of the X-ray 2009 Conference, 7-11 September 2009, Bologna, Italy
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- 2010
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17. The 2008 October Swift detection of X-ray bursts/outburst from the transient SGR-like AXP 1E 1547.0-5408
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Israel, G. L., Esposito, P., Rea, N., Dall'Osso, S., Senziani, F., Romano, P., Mangano, V., Götz, D., Zane, S., Tiengo, A., Palmer, D. M., Krimm, H., Gehrels, N., Mereghetti, S., Stella, L., Turolla, R., Campana, S., Perna, R., Angelini, L., and De Luca, A.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on the detailed study of the 2008 October outburst from the anomalous X-ray pulsar (AXP) 1E 1547.0-5408 discovered through the Swift/Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) detection of SGR-like short X-ray bursts on 2008 October 3. The Swift/X-ray Telescope (XRT) started observing the source after less than 100 s since the BAT trigger, when the flux (about 6E-11 erg/cm^2/s in the 2-10 keV range) was >50 times higher than its quiescent level. Swift monitored the outbursting activity of 1E 1547.0-5408 on a daily basis for approximately three weeks. This strategy allowed us to find a phase-coherent solution for the source pulsations after the burst, which, besides period and period derivative, requires a positive Period second derivative term (spin-down increase). The time evolution of the pulse shape is complex and variable, with the pulsed fraction increasing from 20% to 50% within the Swift observational window. The XRT spectra can be fitted well by means of a single component, either a power-law (PL) or a blackbody (BB). During the very initial phases of the outburst the spectrum is hard, with a PL photon index about 2 (or kT about 1.4 keV) which steepens to about 4 (or kT about 0.8 keV) within one day from the BAT trigger, though the two components are likely present simultaneously during the first day spectra. An INTEGRAL observation carried out five days after the trigger provided an upper limit of about 2E-11 erg/cm^2/s to the emission of 1E 1547.0-5408 in the 18-60 keV band., Comment: 10 pages, 2 tables, 6 figures; accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2010
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18. The X-ray Spectra of the Luminous LMXBs in NGC 3379: Field and Globular Cluster Sources
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Brassington, N. J., Fabbiano, G., Blake, S., Zezas, A., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., Gallagher, J., Kalogera, V., Kim, D. -W., King, A. R., Kundu, A., Trinchieri, G., and Zepf, S.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
From a deep multi-epoch Chandra observation of the elliptical galaxy NGC 3379 we report the spectral properties of eight luminous LMXBs (LX>1.2E38 erg/s). We also present a set of spectral simulations, produced to aid the interpretation of low-count single-component spectral modeling. These simulations demonstrate that it is possible to infer the spectral states of X-ray binaries from these simple models and thereby constrain the properties of the source. Of the eight LMXBs studied, three reside within globular clusters, and one is a confirmed field source. Due to the nature of the luminosity cut all sources are either neutron star binaries emitting at or above the Eddington luminosity or black hole binaries. The spectra from these sources are well described by single-component models, with parameters consistent with Galactic LMXB observations, where hard-state sources have a range in photon index of 1.5-1.9 and thermally dominated sources have inner disc temperatures between ~0.7-1.55 keV. The large variability observed in the brightest globular cluster source (LX>4E38 erg/s) suggests the presence of a black hole binary. At its most luminous this source is observed in a thermally dominated state with kT=1.5 keV, consistent with a black hole mass of ~4 Msol. This observation provides further evidence that globular clusters are able to retain such massive binaries. We also observed a source transitioning from a bright state (LX~1E39 erg/s), with prominent thermal and non-thermal components, to a less luminous hard state (LX=3.8E38 erg/s, Gamma=1.85). In its high flux emission this source exhibits a cool-disc component of ~0.14 keV, similar to spectra observed in some ultraluminous X-ray sources. Such a similarity indicates a possible link between `normal' stellar mass black holes in a high accretion state and ULXs., Comment: Accepted to ApJ; 24 pages with 17 figures. Replacement includes additional simulations and a decision tree summarizing the simulation results
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- 2010
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19. Redundant variables and Granger causality
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Angelini, L., de Tommaso, M., Marinazzo, D., Nitti, L., Pellicoro, M., and Stramaglia, S.
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Quantitative Biology - Quantitative Methods ,Quantitative Biology - Neurons and Cognition - Abstract
We discuss the use of multivariate Granger causality in presence of redundant variables: the application of the standard analysis, in this case, leads to under-estimation of causalities. Using the un-normalized version of the causality index, we quantitatively develop the notions of redundancy and synergy in the frame of causality and propose two approaches to group redundant variables: (i) for a given target, the remaining variables are grouped so as to maximize the total causality and (ii) the whole set of variables is partitioned to maximize the sum of the causalities between subsets. We show the application to a real neurological experiment, aiming to a deeper understanding of the physiological basis of abnormal neuronal oscillations in the migraine brain. The outcome by our approach reveals the change in the informational pattern due to repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulations., Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Physical Review E
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- 2009
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20. Comparing GC and Field LMXBs in Elliptical Galaxies with deep Chandra and Hubble data
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Kim, D. -W., Fabbiano, G., Brassington, N. J., Fragos, T., Kalogera, V., Zezas, A., Jordan, A., Sivakoff, G. R., Kundu, A., Zepf, S. E., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., Gallagher, J. S., Juett, A. M., King, A. R., Pellegrini, S., Sarazin, C. L., and Trinchieri, G.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
(abridged) We present a statistical study of the low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB) populations of three nearby, old elliptical galaxies: NGC 3379, NGC 4278, and NGC 4697. With a cumulative ~1 Ms Chandra ACIS observing time, we detect 90-170 LMXBs within the D25 ellipse of each galaxy. Cross-correlating Chandra X-ray sources and HST optical sources, we identify 75 globular cluster (GC) LMXBs and 112 field LMXBs. In the low luminosity range allowed by our deeper data (LX < 5 x 1037 erg s-1), we find a significant relative lack of GC-LMXBs, when compared with field sources. Using the co-added sample from the three galaxies, we find that the incompleteness-corrected X-ray luminosity functions (XLFs) of GC and field LMXBs differ at ~4# significance at LX < 5 x 1037 erg s-1. As previously reported, these XLFs are consistent at higher luminosities. Our observations may indicate a potential predominance of GC-LMXBs with donors evolved beyond the main sequence, when compared to current models, but their efficient formation requires relatively high initial binary fractions in clusters. The field LMXB XLF can be fitted with either a single power-law model plus a localized excess at a luminosity of 5-6 x 1037 erg s-1, or a broken power-law with a similar low-luminosity break. This XLF may be explained with NS-red-giant LMXBs, contributing to ~15% of total LMXBs population at ~5x1037 erg s-1. The difference in the GC and field XLFs is consistent with different origins and/or evolutionary paths between the two LMXB populations, although a fraction of the field sources are likely to have originated in GCs., Comment: accepted in ApJ, to appear in September 20 2009 v703 issue 35 pages, 7 figures
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- 2009
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21. Deep Chandra Monitoring Observations of NGC 4278: Catalog of Source Properties
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Brassington, N. J., Fabbiano, G., Kim, D. -W., Zezas, A., Zepf, S., Kundu, A., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., Gallagher, J., Kalogera, V., Fragos, T., King, A. R., Pellegrini, S., and Trinchieri, G.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present the properties of the discrete X-ray sources detected in our monitoring program of the globular cluster (GC) rich elliptical galaxy, NGC 4278, observed with Chandra ACIS-S in six separate pointings, resulting in a co-added exposure of 458-ks. From this deep observation, 236 sources have been detected within the region overlapped by all observations, 180 of which lie within the D25 ellipse of the galaxy. These 236 sources range in Lx from 3.5E36 erg/s (with 3sigma upper limit <1E37 erg/s) to ~2E40 erg/s, including the central nuclear source which has been classified as a LINER. From optical data, 39 X-ray sources have been determined to be coincident with a globular cluster, these sources tend to have high X-ray luminosity, with ten of these sources exhibiting Lx>1E38 erg/s. From X-ray source photometry, it has been determined that the majority of the 236 point sources that have well constrained colors, have values that are consistent with typical LMXB spectra, with 29 of these sources expected to be background objects from the logN-logS relation. There are 103 sources in this population that exhibit long-term variability, indicating that they are accreting compact objects. 3 of these sources have been identified as transient candidates, with a further 3 possible transients. Spectral variations have also been identified in the majority of the source population, where a diverse range of variability has been identified, indicating that there are many different source classes located within this galaxy., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJS, 143 pages, with 12 figures
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- 2009
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22. Transient Low-Mass X-Ray Binary Populations in Elliptical Galaxies NGC 3379 and NGC 4278
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Fragos, T., Kalogera, V., Willems, B., Belczynski, K., Fabbiano, G., Brassington, N. J., Kim, D. -W., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., Gallagher, J. S., King, A. R., Pellegrini, S., Trinchieri, G., Zepf, S. E., and Zezas, A.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We propose a physically motivated and self-consistent prescription for the modeling of transient neutron star (NS) low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB) properties, such as duty cycle (DC), outburst duration and recurrence time. We apply this prescription to the population synthesis (PS) models of field LMXBs presented by Fragos et al. (2008), and compare the transient LMXB population to the Chandra X-ray survey of the two elliptical galaxies NGC 3379 and NGC 4278, which revealed several transient sources (Brassington et al., 2008, 2009). We are able to exclude models with a constant DC for all transient systems, while models with a variable DC based on the properties of each system are consistent with the observed transient populations. We predict that the majority of the observed transient sources in these two galaxies are LMXBs with red giant donors. Our comparison suggests that LMXBs formed through evolution of primordial field binaries are dominant in globular cluster (GC) poor elliptical galaxies, while they still have a significant contribution in GC rich ones., Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, submitted to The Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2009
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23. Methods and results of an automatic analysis of a complete sample of Swift-XRT observations of GRBs
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Evans, P. A., Beardmore, A. P., Page, K. L., Osborne, J. P., O'Brien, P. T., Willingale, R., Starling, R. L. C., Burrows, D. N., Godet, O., Vetere, L., Racusin, J., Goad, M. R., Wiersema, K., Angelini, L., Capalbi, M., Chincarini, G., Gehrels, N., Kennea, J. A., Margutti, R., Morris, D. C., Mountford, C. J., Pagani, C., Perri, M., Romano, P., and Tanvir, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a homogeneous X-ray analysis of all 318 Gamma Ray Bursts detected by the X-ray Telescope on the Swift satellite up to 2008 July 23; this represents the largest sample of X-ray GRB data published to date. In Sections 2--3 we detail the methods which the Swift-XRT team has developed to produce the enhanced positions, light curves, hardness ratios and spectra presented in this paper. Software using these methods continues to create such products for all new GRBs observed by the Swift-XRT. We also detail web-based tools allowing users to create these products for any object observed by the XRT, not just GRBs. In Sections 4--6 we present the results of our analysis of GRBs, including probability distribution functions of the temporal and spectral properties of the sample. We demonstrate evidence for a consistent underlying behaviour which can produce a range of light curve morphologies, and attempt to interpret this behaviour in the framework of external forward shock emission. We find several difficulties, in particular that reconciliation of our data with the forward shock model requires energy injection to continue for days to weeks., Comment: Spectral tables (8-10) have been replaced with corrected versions, following the discovery and correction of a glitch in the pile-up correction algorithm for the spectra which significantly affected ~10% of objects. Note that the overall PDFs and sample statsistics were not affected by this glitch
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- 2008
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24. POET: POlarimeters for Energetic Transients
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Hill, J. E., McConnell, M. L., Bloser, P., Legere, J., Macri, J., Ryan, J., Barthelmy, S., Angelini, L., Sakamoto, T., Black, J. K., Hartmann, D. H., Kaaret, P., Zhang, B., Ioka, K., Nakamura, T., Toma, K., Yamazaki, R., and Wu, X.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
POET (Polarimeters for Energetic Transients) is a Small Explorer mission concept proposed to NASA in January 2008. The principal scientific goal of POET is to measure GRB polarization between 2 and 500 keV. The payload consists of two wide FoV instruments: a Low Energy Polarimeter (LEP) capable of polarization measurements in the energy range from 2-15 keV and a high energy polarimeter (Gamma-Ray Polarimeter Experiment -- GRAPE) that will measure polarization in the 60-500 keV energy range. Spectra will be measured from 2 keV up to 1 MeV. The POET spacecraft provides a zenith-pointed platform for maximizing the exposure to deep space. Spacecraft rotation will provide a means of effectively dealing with systematics in the polarization response. POET will provide sufficient sensitivity and sky coverage to measure statistically significant polarization for up to 100 GRBs in a two-year mission. Polarization data will also be obtained for solar flares, pulsars and other sources of astronomical interest.
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- 2008
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25. Discovery of Hot Gas in Outflow in NGC3379
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Trinchieri, G., Pellegrini, S., Fabbiano, G., Fu, R., Brassington, N. J., Zezas, A., Kim, D. -W., Gallagher, J., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., Kalogera, V., King, A. R., and Zepf, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the discovery of a faint (L_x ~ 4 10^37 erg/s, 0.5-2 keV), out-flowing gaseous hot interstellar medium (ISM) in NGC 3379. This represents the lowest X-ray luminosity ever measured from a hot phase of the ISM in a nearby early type galaxy. The discovery of the hot ISM in a very deep Chandra observation was possible thanks to its unique spectral and spatial signatures, which distinguish it from the integrated stellar X-ray emission, responsible for most of the unresolved emission in the Chandra data. This hot component is found in a region of about 800 pc in radius at the center of the galaxy and has a total mass M~ 3 10^5 solar masses. Independent theoretical prediction of the characteristics of an ISM in this galaxy, based on the intrinsic properti es of NGC 3379, reproduce well the observed luminosity, temperature, and radial distribution and mass of the hot gas, and indicate that the gas is in an outflowing phase, predicted by models but not observed in any system so far., Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2008
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26. Models for Low-Mass X-Ray Binaries in the Elliptical Galaxies NGC3379 and NGC4278: Comparison with Observations
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Fragos, T., Kalogera, V., Belczynski, K., Fabbiano, G., Kim, D. -W., Brassington, N. J., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., Gallagher, J. S., King, A. R., Pellegrini, S., Trinchieri, G., Zepf, S. E., and Zezas, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present theoretical models for the formation and evolution of populations of low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXB) in the two elliptical galaxies NGC 3379 and NGC 4278. The models are calculated with the recently updated StarTrack code (Belczynski et al., 2006), assuming only a primordial galactic field LMXB population. StarTrack is an advanced population synthesis code that has been tested and calibrated using detailed binary star calculations and incorporates all the important physical processes of binary evolution. The simulations are targeted to modeling and understanding the origin of the X-ray luminosity functions (XLF) of point sources in these galaxies. For the first time we explore the population XLF down to luminosities of 3X10^36 erg/s, as probed by the most recent observational results (Kim et al., 2006). We consider models for the formation and evolution of LMXBs in galactic fields with different CE efficiencies, stellar wind prescriptions, magnetic braking laws and initial mass functions. We identify models that produce an XLF in excellent agreement with the observations both in shape and absolute normalization. We also find that the treatment of the outburst luminosity of transient systems remains a crucial factor for the determination of the XLF since the modeled populations are dominated by transient X-ray systems., Comment: 54 pages, 22 figure, submitted to The Astrophysical Journal
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- 2008
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27. Deep Chandra Monitoring Observations of NGC 3379: Catalog of Source Properties
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Brassington, N. J., Fabbiano, G., Kim, D. -W., Zezas, A., Zepf, S., Kundu, A., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., Gallagher, J., Kalogera, V., Fragos, T., King, A. R., Pellegrini, S., and Trinchieri, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the properties of the discrete X-ray sources detected in our monitoring program of the `typical' elliptical galaxy, NGC 3379, observed with Chandra ACIS-S in five separate pointings, resulting in a co-added exposure of 324-ks. From this deep observation, 132 sources have been detected within the region overlapped by all observations, 98 of which lie within the D25 ellipse of the galaxy. These 132 sources range in Lx from 6E35 erg/s (with 3sigma upper limit <4E36 erg/s) to ~2E39 erg/s, including one source with Lx>1E39 erg/s, which has been classified as a ULX. From optical data, 10 X-ray sources have been determined to be coincident with a globular cluster, these sources tend to have high X-ray luminosity, with three of these sources exhibiting Lx> 1E38 erg/s. From X-ray source photometry, it has been determined that the majority of the 132 sources that have well constrained colors, have values that are consistent with typical LMXB spectra. Additionally to this, a sub-population of 10 sources has been found to exhibit very hard spectra and it is expected that most of these sources are absorbed background AGN. There are 64 sources in this population that exhibit long-term variability, indicating that they are accreting compact objects. Five of these sources have been identified as transient candidates, with a further 3 possible transients. Spectral variations have also been identified in the majority of the source population, where a diverse range of variability has been identified, indicating that there are many different source classes located within this galaxy., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJS, 120 pages, with 14 figures. No changes from previous revision
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- 2007
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28. The Dearth of low-luminosity Globular Cluster LMXBs in NGC 3379
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Fabbiano, G., Brassington, N. J., Zezas, A., Zepf, s., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., Gallagher, J., Kalogera, V., Kim, D. -W., King, A. R., Kundu, A., Pellegrini, S., and Trinchieri, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Our campaign of deep monitoring observations with {\it Chandra} of the nearby elliptical galaxy NGC 3379 has lead to the detection of nine globular cluster (GC) and 53 field low mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) in the joint {\it Hubble}/{\it Chandra} field of view of this galaxy. Comparing these populations, we find a highly significant lack of GC LMXBs at the low (0.3-8 keV) X-ray luminosities (in the $\sim 10^{36}$ to $\sim 4\times10^{37}$ erg s$^{-1}$ range) probed with our observations. This result conflicts with the proposition that all LMXBs are formed in GCs. This lack of low-luminosity sources in GCs is consistent with continuous LMXB formation due to stellar interactions and with the transition from persistent to transient LMXBs. The observed cut-off X-ray luminosity favors a predominance of LMXBs with main-sequence donors instead of ultra-compact binaries with white-dwarf donors; ultra-compacts could contribute significantly only if their disks are not affected by X-ray irradiation. Our results suggest that current theories of magnetic stellar wind braking may work rather better for the unevolved companions of GC LMXBs than for field LMXBs and cataclysmic variables in the Galaxy, where these companions may be somewhat evolved., Comment: submitted to ApJ; 3 figs reloaded with correct author's list
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- 2007
29. The in-flight spectroscopic performance of the Swift XRT CCD camera during 2006-2007
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Godet, O., Beardmore, A. P., Abbey, A. F., Osborne, J. P., Page, K. L., Tyler, L., Burrows, D. N., Evans, P., Starling, R., Wells, A. A., Angelini, L., Campana, S., Chincarini, G., Citterio, O., Cusumano, G., Giommi, P., Hill, J. E., Kennea, J., LaParola, V., Mangano, V., Mineo, T., Moretti, A., Nousek, J. A., Pagani, C., Perri, M., Capalbi, M., Romano, P., Tagliaferri, G., and Tamburelli, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The Swift X-ray Telescope focal plane camera is a front-illuminated MOS CCD, providing a spectral response kernel of 135 eV FWHM at 5.9 keV as measured before launch. We describe the CCD calibration program based on celestial and on-board calibration sources, relevant in-flight experiences, and developments in the CCD response model. We illustrate how the revised response model describes the calibration sources well. Comparison of observed spectra with models folded through the instrument response produces negative residuals around and below the Oxygen edge. We discuss several possible causes for such residuals. Traps created by proton damage on the CCD increase the charge transfer inefficiency (CTI) over time. We describe the evolution of the CTI since the launch and its effect on the CCD spectral resolution and the gain., Comment: 8 pages, 5 colour figures, submitted to SPIE
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- 2007
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30. Very deep X-ray observations of the Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 4U 0142+614
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Rea, N., Nichelli, E., Israel, G. L., Perna, R., Oosterbroek, T., Parmar, A. N., Turolla, R., Campana, S., Stella, L., Zane, S., and Angelini, L.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on two new XMM-Newton observations of the Anomalous X-ray Pulsar (AXP) 4U 0142+614 performed in March and July 2004, collecting the most accurate spectrum for this source to date. Furthermore, we analyse two short archival observations performed in February 2002 and January 2003 (the latter already reported by Gohler et al. 2005) in order to study the long term behaviour of this AXP. 4U 0142+614 appears to be relatively steady in flux between 2002 and 2004, and the phase-averaged spectrum does not show any significant variability between the four epochs. We derive the deepest upper limits to date on the presence of lines in the 4U 0142+614 spectrum as a function of energy: equivalent width in the 1-3 keV energy range < 4 eV and < 8 eV for narrow and broad lines, respectively. A remarkable energy dependence in both the pulse profile and the pulsed fraction is detected, and consequently pulse-phase spectroscopy shows spectral variability as a function of phase. By making use of XMM-Newton and INTEGRAL data, we successfully model the 1-250 keV spectrum of 4U 0142+614 with three models presented in Rea et al. (2007a), namely the canonical absorbed blackbody plus two power-laws, a resonant cyclotron scattering model plus one power-law and two log-parabolic functions., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication on MNRAS (typos corrected and few references added)
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- 2007
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31. Evidence of Exponential Decay Emission in the Swift Gamma-ray Bursts
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Sakamoto, T., Hill, J. E., Yamazaki, R., Angelini, L., Krimm, H. A., Sato, G., Swindell, S., Takami, K., and Osborne, J. P.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a systematic study of the steep decay emission from gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) observed by the Swift X-Ray Telescope (XRT). In contrast to the analysis described in recent literature, we produce composite Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) and XRT light curves by extrapolating the XRT data (2-10 keV) into the BAT energy range (15-25 keV) rather than extrapolating the BAT data into the XRT energy band (0.3-10 keV). Based on the fits to the composite light curves, we have confirmed the existence of an exponential decay component which smoothly connects the BAT prompt data to the XRT steep decay for several GRBs. We also find that the XRT steep decay for some of the bursts can be well fit by a combination of a power-law with an exponential decay model. We discuss this exponential component within the frame work of both the internal and the external shock model., Comment: 33 pages, 34 figures; accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2007
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32. The exceptionally extended flaring activity in the X-ray afterglow of GRB 050730 observed with Swift and XMM-Newton
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Perri, M., Guetta, D., Antonelli, L. A., Cucchiara, A., Mangano, V., Reeves, J., Angelini, L., Beardmore, A. P., Boyd, P., Burrows, D. N., Campana, S., Capalbi, M., Chincarini, G., Cusumano, G., Giommi, P., Hill, J. E., Holland, S. T., La Parola, V., Mineo, T., Moretti, A., Nousek, J. A., Osborne, J. P., Pagani, C., Romano, P., Roming, P. W. A., Starling, R. L. C., Tagliaferri, G., Troja, E., Vetere, L., and Gehrels, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a detailed spectral and temporal analysis of Swift and XMM-Newton observations of the high redshift (z=3.969) GRB 050730. The X-ray afterglow of GRB 050730 was found to decline with time with superimposed intense flaring activity that extended over more than two orders of magnitude in time. Seven distinct re-brightening events starting from 236 s up to 41.2 ks after the burst were observed. The underlying decay of the afterglow was well described by a double broken power-law model with breaks at t_1= 237 +/- 20 s and t_2 = 10.1 (-2.2) (+4.6) ks. The temporal decay slopes before, between and after these breaks were alpha_1 = 2.1 +/- 0.3, alpha_2 = 0.44 (-0.08) (+0.14) and alpha_3 = 2.40 (+0.07) (-0.09), respectively. The spectrum of the X-ray afterglow was well described by a photoelectrically absorbed power-law with an absorbing column density N_H=(1.28 +/- 0.26) 10^22 cm^-2 in the host galaxy. Strong X-ray spectral evolution during the flaring activity was present. In the majority of the flares (6/7) the ratio Delta_t/t_p between the duration of the event and the time when the flare peaks was nearly constant and about 0.6-0.7. We showed that the observed spectral and temporal properties of the first three flares are consistent with being due both to high-latitude emission, as expected if the flares were produced by late internal shocks, or to refreshed shocks, i.e. late time energy injections into the main afterglow shock by slow moving shells ejected from the central engine during the prompt phase. The event fully satisfies the E_p-E_iso Amati relation while is not consistent with the E_p-E_jet Ghirlanda relation., Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2007
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33. Long-term monitoring of the X-ray afterglow of GRB 050408 with Swift/XRT
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Capalbi, M., Malesani, D., Perri, M., Giommi, P., Covino, S., Cusumano, G., Mangano, V., Mineo, T., Campana, S., Chincarini, G., La Parola, V., Moretti, A., Romano, P., Tagliaferri, G., Angelini, L., Boyd, P., Burrows, D. N., Godet, O., Hill, J. E., Kennea, J. A., Marshall, F., O'Brien, P. T., and Gehrels, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present observations of the X-ray afterglow of GRB 050408, a gamma-ray burst discovered by HETE-II. Swift began observing the field 42 min after the burst, performing follow-up over a period of 38 d (thus spanning three decades in time).The X-ray light curve showed a steepening with time, similar to many other afterglows. However, the steepening was unusually smooth, over the duration of the XRT observation, with no clear break time. The early decay was too flat to be described in terms of standard models. We therefore explore alternative explanations, such as the presence of a structured afterglow or of long-lasting energy injection into the fireball from the central GRB engine. The lack of a sharp break puts constraints on these two models. In the former case, it may indicate that the angular energy profile of the jet was not a simple power law, while in the second model it implies that injection did not stop abruptly. The late decay may be due either to a standard afterglow (that is, with no energy injection), or to a jetted outflow still being refreshed. A significant amount of absorption was present in the X-ray spectrum, corresponding to a rest-frame Hydrogen column density NH = 1.2 (-0.3,+0.4)*10^22 cm^-2, indicative of a dense environment., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A; 7 pages, 3 figures
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- 2006
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34. Swift observations of GRB050904: the most distant cosmic explosion ever observed
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Cusumano, G., Mangano, V., Chincarini, G., Panaitescu, A., Burrows, D. N., La Parola, V., Sakamoto, T., Campana, S., Mineo, T., Tagliaferri, G., Angelini, L., Barthelemy, S. D., Beardmore, A. P., Boyd, P. T., Cominsky, L., Gronwall, C., Fenimore, E. E., Gehrels, N., Giommi, P., Goad, M., Hurley, K., Immler, S., Kennea, J. A., Mason, K. O., Marshall, F., Meszaros, P., Nousek, J. A., Osborne, J. P., Palmer, D. M., Roming, P. W. A., Wells, A., White, N. E., and Zhang, B.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Swift discovered the high redshift (z=6.29) GRB050904 with the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) and began observing with its narrow field instruments 161 s after the burst onset. This gamma-ray burst is the most distant cosmic explosion ever observed. Because of its high redshift, the X-ray Telescope (XRT) and BAT simultaneous observations provide 4 orders of magnitude of spectral coverage (0.2-150 keV; 1.4-1090 keV in the source rest frame) at a very early source-frame time (22 s). GRB050904 was a long, multi-peaked, bright GRB with strong variability during its entire evolution. The light curve observed by the XRT is characterized by the presence of a long flaring activity lasting up to 1-2 hours after the burst onset in the burst rest frame, with no evidence of a smooth power-law decay following the prompt emission as seen in other GRBs. However, the BAT tail extrapolated to the XRT band joins the XRT early light curve and the overall behavior resembles that of a very long GRB prompt. The spectral energy distribution softens with time, with the photon index decreasing from -1.2 during the BAT observation to -1.9 at the end of the XRT observation. The dips of the late X-ray flares may be consistent with an underlying X-ray emission arising from the forward shock and with the properties of the optical afterglow reported by Tagliaferri et al. (2005b). We interpret the BAT and XRT data as a single continuous observation of the prompt emission from a very long GRB. The peculiarities observed in GRB050904 could be due to its origin within one of the first star-forming regions in the Universe; very low metallicities of the progenitor at these epochs may provide an explanation., Comment: 9 pages, 2 table, 6 figures, accepted for publication on A&A
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- 2006
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35. UVES/VLT high resolution spectroscopy of GRB 050730 afterglow: probing the features of the GRB environment
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D'Elia, V., Fiore, F., Meurs, E., Chincarini, G., Melandri, A., Norci, L., Pellizza, L., Perna, R., Piranomonte, S., Sbordone, L., Stella, L., Tagliaferri, G., Vergani, S., Ward, P., Angelini, L., Antonelli, L. A., Burrows, D. N., Campana, S., Capalbi, M., Caraveo, P. A., Cimatti, A., Costa, E., Cusumano, G., D'Avanzo, P., Della Valle, M., Filliatre, P., Frontera, A. Fontana F., Fugazza, D., Gehrels, N., Giannini, T., Giommi, P., Goldoni, P., Guetta, D., Israel, G., Lazzati, D., Malesani, D., Marconi, G., Mason, K., Mereghetti, S., Molinari, E., Moretti, A., Nousek, J., Perri, M., Piro, L., Stratta, G., Testa, V., and Vietri, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We analyze high resolution spectroscopic observations of the optical afterglow of GRB050730, obtained with UVES@VLT about hours after the GRB trigger. The spectrum shows that the ISM of the GRB host galaxy at z = 3.967 is complex, with at least five components contributing to the main absorption system. We detect strong CII*, SiII*, OI* and FeII* fine structure absorption lines associated to the second and third component. For the first three components we derive information on the relative distance from the site of the GRB explosion. Component 1, which has the highest redshift, does not present any fine structure nor low ionization lines; it only shows very high ionization features, such as CIV and OVI, suggesting that this component is very close to the GRB site. From the analysis of low and high ionization lines and fine structure lines, we find evidences that the distance of component 2 from the site of the GRB explosion is 10-100 times smaller than that of component 3. We evaluated the mean metallicity of the z=3.967 system obtaining values about 0.01 of the solar metallicity or less. However, this should not be taken as representative of the circumburst medium, since the main contribution to the hydrogen column density comes from the outer regions of the galaxy while that of the other elements presumably comes from the ISM closer to the GRB site. Furthermore, difficulties in evaluating dust depletion correction can modify significantly these values. The mean [C/Fe] ratio agrees well with that expected by single star-formation event models. Interestingly the [C/Fe] of component 2 is smaller than that of component 3, in agreement with GRB dust destruction scenarios, if component 2 is closer than component 3 to the GRB site., Comment: 11 pages, 15 postscript figures, accepted for pubblication in A&A
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- 2006
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36. Swift and Suzaku Observations of the X-Ray Afterglow from the GRB 060105
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Tashiro, M. S., Abe, K., Angelini, L., Barthelmy, S., Gehrels, N., Ishikawa, N., Kaluzienski, L. J., Kawai, N., Kelley, R. L., Kinugasa, K., Kodaira, H., Kohmura, T., Kubota, K., Maeda, Y., Maeno, S., Murakami, H., Murakami, T., Nakagawa, Y. E., Nakazawa, K., Nousek, J., Okuno, S., Onda, K., Reeves, J. N., Ricker, G., Sato, G., Sonoda, E., Suzuki, M., Takahashi, T., Tamagawa, T., Torii, K., Ueda, Y., Urata, Y., Yamaoka, K., Yamauchi, M., Yonetoku, D., Yoshida, A., and Yoshinari, S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Results are presented of early X-ray afterglow observations of GRB 060105 by Swift and Suzaku. The bright, long gamma-ray burst GRB 060105 triggered the Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) at 06:49:28 on 5 January 2006. The Suzaku team commenced a pre-planned target of opportunity observation at 19 ks (5.3 hr) after the Swift trigger. Following the prompt emission and successive very steep decay, a shallow decay was observed from T_0+187 s to T_0+1287 s. After an observation gap during T_0 +(1.5-3) ks, an extremely early steep decay was observed in T_0+(4-30) ks. The lightcurve flattened again at T_0+30 ks, and another steep decay followed from T_0+50 ks to the end of observations. Both steep decays exhibited decay indices of 2.3 - 2.4. This very early break, if it is a jet break, is the earliest case among X-ray afterglow observations, suggesting a very narrow jet whose opening angle is well below 1 degree. The unique Suzaku/XIS data allow us to set very tight upper limits on line emission or absorption in this GRB. For the reported pseudo-redshift of z=4.0+/-1.3 the upper limit on the iron line equivalent width is 50 eV., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in PASJ Suzaku Special Issue (vol. 58)
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- 2006
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37. Cyclotron resonance energies at a low X-ray luminosity: A0535+262 observed with Suzaku
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Terada, Y., Mihara, T., Nakajima, M., Suzuki, M., Isobe, N., Makishima, K., Takahashi, H., Enoto, T., Kokubun, M., Kitaguchi, T., Naik, S., Dotani, T., Nagase, F., Tanaka, T., Watanabe, S., Kitamoto, S., Sudoh, K., Yoshida, A., Nakagawa, Y., Sugita, S., Kohmura, T., Kotani, T., Yonetoku, D., Angelini, L., Cottam, J., Mukai, K., Kelley, R., Soong, Y., Bautz, M., Kissel, S., and Doty, J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The binary X-ray pulsar A0535+262 was observed with the Suzaku X-ray observatory, on 2005 September 14 for a net exposure of 22 ksec. The source was in a declining phase of a minor outburst, exhibiting 3--50 keV luminosity of about $3.7 \times 10^{35}$ ergs s$^{-1}$ at an assumed distance of 2 kpc. In spite of the very low source intensity (about 30 mCrab at 20 keV), its electron cyclotron resonance was detected clearly with the Suzaku Hard X-ray Detector, in absorption at about 45 keV. The resonance energy is found to be essentially the same as those measured when the source is almost two orders of magnitude more luminous. These results are compared with the luminosity-dependent changes in the cyclotron resonance energy, observed from 4U 0115+63 and X 0331+53., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted to ApJL, high resolution version is available from http://cosmic.riken.jp/terada/01work/paper/a0535_suzaku2006.pdf
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- 2006
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38. Natural clustering: the modularity approach
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Angelini, L., Marinazzo, D., Pellicoro, M., and Stramaglia, S.
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Condensed Matter - Statistical Mechanics ,Condensed Matter - Other Condensed Matter ,Physics - Data Analysis, Statistics and Probability - Abstract
We show that modularity, a quantity introduced in the study of networked systems, can be generalized and used in the clustering problem as an indicator for the quality of the solution. The introduction of this measure arises very naturally in the case of clustering algorithms that are rooted in Statistical Mechanics and use the analogy with a physical system., Comment: 11 pages, 5 figure enlarged version
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- 2006
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39. Probing the Low-Luminosity XLF in Normal Elliptical Galaxies
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Kim, D. -W., Fabbiano, G., Kalogera, V., King, A. R., Pellegrini, S., Trinchieri, G., Zepf, S. E., Zezas, A., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., and Gallagher, J. S.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first low luminosity (LX > 5 - 10 1036 erg s-1) X-ray luminosity functions (XLFs) of low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) determined for two typical old elliptical galaxies, NGC 3379 and NGC 4278. Because both galaxies contain little diffuse emission from hot ISM and no recent significant star formation (hence no high-mass X-ray binary contamination), they provide two of the best homogeneous sample of LMXBs. With 110 and 140 ks Chandra ACIS S3 exposures, we detect 59 and 112 LMXBs within the D25 ellipse of NGC 3379 and NGC 4278, respectively. The resulting XLFs are well represented by a single power-law with a slope (in a differential form) of 1.9 0.1. In NGC 4278, we can exclude the break at LX ~ 5 x 1037 erg s-1 that was recently suggested to be a general feature of LMXB XLFs. In NGC 3379 instead we find a localized excess over the power law XLF at ~4 x 1037 erg s-1, but with a marginal significance of ~1.6s. Because of the small number of luminous sources, we cannot constrain the high luminosity break (at 5 x 1038 erg s-1) found in a large sample of early type galaxies. While the optical luminosities of the two galaxies are similar, their integrated LMXB X-ray luminosities differ by a factor of 4, consistent with the relation between the X-ray to optical luminosity ratio and the globular cluster specific frequency., Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2006
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40. The Eclipsing ULX in NGC 3379
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Fabbiano, G., Kim, D. -W., Fragos, T., Kalogera, V., King, A. R., Angelini, L., Davies, R. L., Gallagher, J. S., Pellegrini, S., Trinchieri, G., Zepf, S. E., and Zezas, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report recent Chandra observations of the ULX in the elliptical galaxy NGC3379 that clearly detect two flux variability cycles. Comparing these data with the Chandra observation of ~5yr ago, we measure a flux modulation with a period of ~12.6hr. Moreover, we find that the emission undergoes a correlated spectral modulation, becoming softer at low flux. We argue that our results establish this source as a ULX binary in NGC3379. Given the old stellar population of this galaxy, the ULX is likely to be a soft transient, however historical X-ray sampling suggests that the current on phase has lasted ~10yr. We discuss our results in terms of ADC and wind-feedback models. We constrain the donor mass and orbital period at the onset of mass transfer within 1.15-1.4M and 12.5-16hr, respectively. The duration of the mass-transfer phase so far is probably ~1Gyr and the binary has been a soft X-ray transient throughout this time. These constraints are insensitive to the mass of the accretor., Comment: Submitted to ApJ, 16 pages, 3 color figures
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- 2006
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41. The shock break-out of GRB 060218/SN 2006aj
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Campana, S., Mangano, V., Blustin, A. J., Brown, P., Burrows, D. N., Chincarini, G., Cummings, J. R., Cusumano, G., Della Valle, M., Malesani, D., Meszaros, P., Nousek, J. A., Page, M., Sakamoto, T., Waxman, E., Zhang, B., Dai, Z. G., Gehrels, N., Immler, S., Marshall, F. E., Mason, K. O., Moretti, A., O'Brien, P. T., Osborne, J. P., Page, K. L., Romano, P., Roming, P. W. A., Tagliaferri, G., Cominsky, L. R., Giommi, P., Godet, O., Kennea, J. A., Krimm, H., Angelini, L., Barthelmy, S. D., Boyd, P. T., Palmer, D. M., Wells, A. A., and White, N. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Although the link between long Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) and supernovae (SNe) has been established, hitherto there have been no observations of the beginning of a supernova explosion and its intimate link to a GRB. In particular, we do not know however how a GRB jet emerges from the star surface nor how a GRB progenitor explodes. Here we report on observations of the close GRB060218 and its connection to SN2006aj. In addition to the classical non-thermal emission, GRB060218 shows a thermal component in its X-ray spectrum, which cools and shifts into the optical/UV band as time passes. We interpret these features as arising from the break out of a shock driven by a mildly relativistic shell into the dense wind surrounding the progenitor. Our observations allow us for the first time to catch a SN in the act of exploding, to directly observe the shock break-out and to provide strong evidence that the GRB progenitor was a Wolf-Rayet star., Comment: 12 pages, 3 color figures (final version). Accepted for publication in Nature
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- 2006
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42. The variable X-ray light curve of GRB 050713A: the case of refreshed shocks
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Guetta, D., Fiore, F., D'Elia, V., Perna, R., Antonelli, L. A., Piranomonte, S., Puccetti, S., Stella, L., Angelini, L., Schartel, N., Campana, S., Chincarini, G., Covino, S., Tagliaferri, G., Malesani, D., Guidorzi, C., Monfardini, A., Mundell, C. G., Cruz, de Leon, Castro-Tirado, A. J., Guzly, S., Gorosabel, J., Jelinek, M., and Gomboc, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed study of the spectral and temporal properties of the X-ray and optical emission of GRB050713a up to 0.5 day after the main GRB event. The X-ray light curve exhibits large amplitude variations with several rebrightenings superposed on the underlying three-segment broken powerlaw that is often seen in Swift GRBs. Our time-resolved spectral analysis supports the interpretation of a long-lived central engine, with rebrightenings consistent with energy injection in refreshed shocks as slower shells generated in the central engine prompt phase catch up with the afterglow shock at later times. Our sparsely-sampled light curve of the optical afterglow can be fitted with a single power law without large flares. The optical decay index appears flatter than the X-ray one, especially at later times., Comment: few changes, to be published in A&A
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- 2006
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43. Testing the Curvature Effect and Internal Origin of Gamma-Ray Burst Prompt Emissions and X-ray Flares with Swift Data
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Liang, E. W., Zhang, B., O'Brien, P. T., Willingale, R., Angelini, L., Burrows, D. N., Campana, S., Chincarini, G., Falcone, A., Gehrels, N., Goad, M. R., Grupe, D., Kobayashi, S., Mészáros, P., Nousek, J. A., Osborne, J. P., Page, K. L., and Tagliaferri, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The X-ray light curves of many gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) observed by the Swift X-Ray Telescope (XRT) have a very steep-decay component (tail) following the prompt gamma-rays in the early phase and have some erratic flares occurring at a time from ~10^2 up to ~10^5 seconds. Based on the assumption that these tails and flares are of internal shock origin and that their decline behaviors are dominated by the curvature effect of the fireball, we present a self-consistency test for this scenario with a sample of 36 prompt-emission-tails/flare-tails in 22 GRB XRT light curves. Our results show that the t0 of the prompt emission tails and the tails of well-separated flares are usually at the rising segment of the last pulse of the prompt emission or the corresponding X-ray flare, being self-consistent with the expectation of the internal dissipation models for the prompt emission and X-ray flares. Our results indicate that each X-ray flare forms a distinct new episode of central engine activity and the GRB central engine remains active after the prompt emission is over, sometimes up to ~1 day after the GRB trigger (e.g. GRB 050502B & GRB 050724). This challenges the conventional central engine models and calls for new ideas to re-start the central engine. We further show that the on-set time of the late central engine activity does not depend on the GRB duration. We also identify a minority group of GRBs whose combined BAT-XRT light curves are smoothly connected without an abrupt transition between the prompt emission and the afterglow. These GRBs may have an external origin for both the prompt emission and the afterglow., Comment: 17 pages total with 2 figures, version accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2006
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44. X-ray flare in XRF 050406: evidence for prolonged engine activity
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Romano, P., Moretti, A., Banat, P. L., Burrows, D. N., Campana, S., Chincarini, G., Covino, S., Malesani, D., Tagliaferri, G., Kobayashi, S., Zhang, B., Falcone, A. D., Angelini, L., Barthelmy, S., Beardmore, A. P., Capalbi, M., Cusumano, G., Giommi, P., Goad, M. R., Godet, O., Grupe, D., Hill, J. E., Kennea, J. A., La Parola, V., Mangano, V., Meszaros, P., Morris, D. C., Nousek, J. A., O'Brien, P. T., Osborne, J. P., Parsons, A., Perri, M., Pagani, C., Page, K. L., Wells, A. A., and Gehrels, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present observations of XRF 050406, the first burst detected by Swift showing a flare in its X-ray light curve. During this flare, which peaks at t_peak ~210s after the BAT trigger, a flux variation of (delta F)/F~6 in a very short time (delta t)/t_peak<<1 was observed. Its measured fluence in the 0.2-10 keV band was ~1.4x10^-8 erg cm^-2, which corresponds to 1-15% of the prompt fluence. We present indications of spectral variations during the flare. We argue that the producing mechanism is late internal shocks, which implies that the central engine is still active at 210s, though with a reduced power with respect to the prompt emission. The X-ray light curve flattens to a very shallow slope with decay index of ~0.5 after ~4400s, which also supports continued central engine activity at late times. This burst is classified as an X-ray flash, with a relatively low fluence (~10^-7 erg cm^-2 in the 15-350 keV band, E_iso~10^51 erg), a soft spectrum (photon index 2.65), no significant flux above ~50 keV and a peak energy E_p<15 keV. XRF 050406 is one of the first examples of a well-studied X-ray light curve of an XRF. We show that the main afterglow characteristics are qualitatively similar to those of normal GRBs. In particular, X-ray flares superimposed on a power-law light curve have now been seen in both XRFs and GRBs. This indicates that a similar mechanism may be at work for both kinds of events., Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&A; added references, corrected typos
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- 2006
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45. The Giant X-ray Flare of GRB 050502B: Evidence for Late-Time Internal Engine Activity
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Falcone, A. D., Burrows, D. N., Lazzati, D., Campana, S., Kobayashi, S., Zhang, B., Meszaros, P., Page, K. L., Kennea, J. A., Romano, P., Pagani, C., Angelini, L., Beardmore, A. P., Capalbi, M., Chincarini, G., Cusumano, G., Giommi, P., Goad, M. R., Godet, O., Grupe, D., Hill, J. E., La Parola, V., Mangano, V., Moretti, A., Nousek, J. A., O'Brien, P. T., Osborne, J. P., Perri, M., Tagliaferri, G., Wells, A. A., and Gehrels, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Until recently, X-ray flares during the afterglow of gamma ray bursts (GRBs) were a rarely detected phenomenon, thus their nature is unclear. During the afterglow of GRB 050502B, the largest X-ray flare ever recorded rose rapidly above the afterglow lightcurve detected by the Swift X-ray Telescope. The peak flux of the flare was >500 times that of the underlying afterglow, and it occurred at >12 minutes after the nominal prompt burst emission. The fluence of this X-ray flare, (1.0 +/- 0.05) x 10^{-6} erg cm^{-2} in the 0.2-10.0 keV energy band, exceeded the fluence of the nominal prompt burst. The spectra during the flare were significantly harder than those measured before and after the flare. Later in time, there were additional flux increases detected above the underlying afterglow, as well as a break in the afterglow lightcurve. All evidence presented below, including spectral and particularly timing information during and around the giant flare, suggests that this giant flare was the result of internal dissipation of energy due to late central engine activity, rather than an afterglow-related effect. We also find that the data are consistent with a second central engine activity episode, in which the ejecta is moving slower than that of the initial episode, causing the giant flare and then proceeding to overtake and refresh the afterglow shock, thus causing additional activity at even later times in the lightcurve., Comment: accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 2005
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46. Swift and XMM observations of the dark GRB 050326
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Moretti, A., De Luca, A., Malesani, D., Campana, S., Tiengo, A., Cucchiara, A., Reeves, J. N., Chincarini, G., Pagani, C., Romano, P., Tagliaferri, G., Banat, P., Capalbi, M., Perri, M., Cusumano, G., Mangano, V., Mineo, T., La Parola, V., Beardmore, A., Goad, M., Osborne, J. P., Hill, J. E., Angelini, L., Burrows, D. N., Kobayashi, S., Meszaros, P., Zhang, B., Barthelmy, S. D., Barbier, L., White, N. E., Fenimore, E. E., Cominsky, L. R., and Gehrels, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present Swift and XMM observations of GRB 050326, detected by Swift-BAT. The fluence was 7.7x10^-6 erg cm^-2 (20-150 keV), and its spectrum was hard, with a power law photon index 1.25. The afterglow light curve did not show any break nor flares between ~1 hr and ~6 d after the burst, and decayed with a slope 1.70. The afterglow spectrum is well fitted by a power-law model, suffering absorption both in the Milky Way and in the host galaxy. The rest-frame Hydrogen column density is significant, N_H_z > 4x10^21 cm^-2, and the redshift of the absorber is z > 1.5. There was good agreement between the Swift-XRT and XMM results. By comparing the prompt and afterglow fluxes, we found that an early break occurred before the XRT observation. The properties of the GRB 050326 afterglow are well described by a spherical fireball expanding in a uniform external medium, so a further steepening is expected at later times. The lack of such a break constrains the jet angle to be >7 deg. Using the redshift constraints provided by the X-ray analysis, we also estimated that the beaming-corrected gamma-ray energy was >3x10^51 erg, at the high end of GRB energies. Despite the brightness in X rays, only deep limits could be placed by Swift-UVOT at optical/UV wavelengths. Thus, this GRB was "truly dark", with the optical-to-X-ray spectrum violating the synchrotron limit. The optical and X-ray observations are consistent either with an absorbed event or with a high-redshift one. To obey the Ghirlanda relation, a moderate/large redshift z>4.5 is required. (abridged), Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication on A&A
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- 2005
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47. Evidence for intrinsic absorption in the Swift X-ray afterglows
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Campana, S., Romano, P., Covino, S., Lazzati, D., De Luca, A., Chincarini, G., Moretti, A., Tagliaferri, G., Cusumano, G., Giommi, P., Mangano, V., Perri, M., La Parola, V., Capalbi, M., Mineo, T., Antonelli, L. A., Burrows, D. N., Hill, J. E., Racusin, J. L., Kennea, J. A., Morris, D. C., Pagani, C., Nousek, J. A., Osborne, J. P., Goad, M. R., Page, K. L., Beardmore, A. P., Godet, O., O'Brien, P. T., Wells, A. A., Angelini, L., and Gehrels, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Gamma-ray burst (GRB) progenitors are observationally linked to the death of massive stars. X-ray studies of the GRB afterglows can deepen our knowledge of the ionization status and metal abundances of the matter in the GRB environment. Moreover, the presence of local matter can be inferred through its fingerprints in the X-ray spectrum, i.e. the presence of absorption higher than the Galactic value. A few studies based on BeppoSAX and XMM-Newton found evidence of higher than Galactic values for the column density in a number of GRB afterglows. Here we report on a systematic analysis of 17 GRBs observed by Swift up to April 15, 2005. We observed a large number of GRBs with an excess of column density. Our sample, together with previous determinations of the intrinsic column densities for GRBs with known redshift, provides evidence for a distribution of absorption consistent with that predicted for randomly occurring GRB within molecular clouds., Comment: Accepted for publication on A&A (5 pages and 2 figures)
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- 2005
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48. A refined position catalog of the Swift XRT afterglows
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Moretti, A., Perri, M., Capalbi, M., Angelini, L., Hill, J. E., Campana, S., Burrows, D. N., Osborne, J. P., Tagliaferri, G., Cusumano, G., Giommi, P., Romano, P., Mineo, T., Kennea, J., Morris, D., Nousek, J., Pagani, C., Racusin, J., Abbey, A. F., Beardmore, A. P., Godet, O., Goad, M. R., Page, K. L., Wells, A. A., and Chincarini, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a catalogue of refined positions of 68 gamma ray burst (GRB) afterglows observed by the Swift X-ray Telescope (XRT) from the launch up to 2005 Oct 16. This is a result of the refinement of the XRT boresight calibration. We tested this correction by means of a systematic study of a large sample of X-ray sources observed by XRT with well established optical counterparts. We found that we can reduce the systematic error radius of the measurements by a factor of two, from 6.5" to 3.2" (90% of confidence). We corrected all the positions of the afterglows observed by XRT in the first 11 months of the Swift mission. This is particularly important for the 37 X-ray afterglows without optical counterpart. Optical follow-up of dark GRBs, in fact, will be more efficient with the use of the more accurate XRT positions., Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 table ; accepted for publication in A&A Letters. The revised version contains updated positions
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- 2005
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49. The X-ray Telescope on board Swift: status and main results
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Tagliaferri, G., Campana, S., Chincarini, G., Giommi, P., Cusumano, G., Burrows, D. N., Hill, J. E., Kennea, J. A., Nousek, J. A., Osborne, J. P., O'Brien, P. T., Wells, A., Angelini, L., and team, the XRT
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The X-ray Telescope (XRT), on board the {\it Swift} satellite, provides: automated source detection and position with few arcsecond accuracy within few seconds from target acquisition; CCD spectroscopy and imaging capability (0.2-10 keV), with the capability of detecting a milliCrab source in about 10 seconds; automatic adjusting of the CCD readout mode to optimize the science return as the source fades. Swift main scientific goal is the study of gamma-ray burst (GRBs). XRT can observe GRB afterglows over several orders of magnitude in flux. The first results obtained during the first ten months of operation confirm that XRT is fully compliant with the requirements and is providing excellent results. In particular it is detecting a very steep decay in the early X-ray light curve of many afterglows. Often there are also strong flares superimposed to the X-ray light curve, probably related to the continued internal engine activity. XRT is also localising for the first time the X-ray counterparts to short bursts., Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures. Proceedings of the Conferenxe "The X-ray Universe", San Lorenzo de El Escorial (madrid, Spain), 26-30 September 2005
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- 2005
50. XRT Light curves: Morphology, Flares and Energy
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Chincarini, G., Mangano, V., Moretti, A., Perri, M., Romano, P., Campana, S., Covino, S., Tagliaferri, G., Angelini, L., Burrows, D., Giommi, P., Osborne, J., and Team, Swift
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Following a brief introduction we show that the observations obtained so far with the Swift satellite begin to shed light over a variety of problems that were left open following the excellent performance and related discoveries of the Italian - Dutch Beppo SAX satellite. The XRT light curves show common characteristics that are reasonably understood within the framework of the fireball model. Unforeseen flares are however detected in a large fraction of the GRB observed and the energy emitted by the brightest ones may be as much as 85% of the total soft X ray emission measured by XRT. These characteristics seems to be common to long and short bursts., Comment: 6 pages, 9 figures. Proceedings of conference "The X-Ray Universe", San Lorenzo de El Escorial (Madrid, Spain), 26-30 September 2005
- Published
- 2005
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