1,260 results on '"Gruber, D."'
Search Results
2. Dysphagie bei Parkinson-Syndromen
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Gandor, F., Berger, L., Gruber, D., Warnecke, T., Vogel, A., and Claus, I.
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- 2023
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3. Vaginal bulge is not always prolapse; could be a cyst
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Trikhacheva, A, primary, Dengler, K, additional, Murdock, T, additional, and Gruber, D, additional
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- 2024
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4. Vaginal assisted laparoscopic sacrocolpopexy (VALS) for gals with advanced pelvic organ prolapse
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Welch, E, primary, Dengler, K, additional, Gisseman, J, additional, and Gruber, D, additional
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- 2024
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5. The Five Year Fermi/GBM Magnetar Burst Catalog
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Collazzi, A. C., Kouveliotou, C., van der Horst, A. J., Younes, G. A., Kaneko, Y., Gogus, E., Lin, L., Granot, J., Finger, M. H., Chaplin, V. L., Huppenkothen, D., Watts, A. L., von Kienlin, A., Baring, M. G., Gruber, D., Bhat, P. N., Gibby, M. H., Gehrels, N., McEnery, J., van der Klis, M., and Wijers, R. A. M. J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Since launch in 2008, the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) has detected many hundreds of bursts from magnetar sources. While the vast majority of these bursts have been attributed to several known magnetars, there is also a small sample of magnetar-like bursts of unknown origin. Here we present the Fermi/GBM magnetar catalog, giving the results of the temporal and spectral analyses of 440 magnetar bursts with high temporal and spectral resolution. This catalog covers the first five years of GBM magnetar observations, from July 2008 to June 2013. We provide durations, spectral parameters for various models, fluences and peak fluxes for all the bursts, as well as a detailed temporal analysis for SGR J1550-5418 bursts. Finally, we suggest that some of the bursts of unknown origin are associated with the newly discovered magnetar 3XMM J185246.6+0033.7., Comment: 65 pages, 24 figures, 13 tables; accepted for publication in ApJ Supplement
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- 2015
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6. Localization of Gamma-Ray Bursts using the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor
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Connaughton, V., Briggs, M. S., Goldstein, A., Meegan, C. A., Paciesas, W. S., Preece, R. D., Wilson-Hodge, C. A., Gibby, M. H., Greiner, J., Gruber, D., Jenke, P., Kippen, R. M., Pelassa, V., Xiong, S., Yu, H. -F., Bhat, P. N., Burgess, J. M., Byrne, D., Fitzpatrick, G., Foley, S., Giles, M. M., Guiriec, S., van der Horst, A. J., von Kienlin, A., McBreen, S., McGlynn, S., Tierney, D., and Zhang, B. -B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) has detected over 1400 Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) since it began science operations in July, 2008. We use a subset of over 300 GRBs localized by instruments such as Swift, the Fermi Large Area Telescope, INTEGRAL, and MAXI, or through triangulations from the InterPlanetary Network (IPN), to analyze the accuracy of GBM GRB localizations. We find that the reported statistical uncertainties on GBM localizations, which can be as small as 1 degree, underestimate the distance of the GBM positions to the true GRB locations and we attribute this to systematic uncertainties. The distribution of systematic uncertainties is well represented (68% confidence level) by a 3.7 degree Gaussian with a non-Gaussian tail that contains about 10% of GBM-detected GRBs and extends to approximately 14 degrees. A more complex model suggests that there is a dependence of the systematic uncertainty on the position of the GRB in spacecraft coordinates, with GRBs in the quadrants on the Y-axis better localized than those on the X-axis., Comment: accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series
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- 2014
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7. Time resolved spectroscopy of SGR J1550-5418 bursts detected with Fermi/GBM
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Younes, G., Kouveliotou, C., van der Horst, A. J., Baring, M. G., Granot, J., Watts, A. L., Bhat, P. N., Collazzi, A., Gehrels, N., Gorgone, N., Gogus, E., Gruber, D., Grunblatt, S., Huppenkothen, D., Kaneko, Y., von Kienlin, A., van der Klis, M., Lin, L., Mcenery, J., van Putten, T., and Wijers, R. A. M. J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on time-resolved spectroscopy of the 63 brightest bursts of SGR J1550-5418, detected with Fermi/Gamma-ray Burst Monitor during its 2008-2009 intense bursting episode. We performed spectral analysis down to 4 ms time-scales, to characterize the spectral evolution of the bursts. Using a Comptonized model, we find that the peak energy, E_peak, anti-correlates with flux, while the low-energy photon index remains constant at -0.8 up to a flux limit F~10^-5 erg s-1 cm-2. Above this flux value the E_peak-flux correlation changes sign, and the index positively correlates with flux reaching 1 at the highest fluxes. Using a two black-body model, we find that the areas and fluxes of the two emitting regions correlate positively. Further, we study here for the first time, the evolution of the temperatures and areas as a function of flux. We find that the area-kT relation follows lines of constant luminosity at the lowest fluxes, R^2 \propto kT^-4, with a break at higher fluxes ($F>10^-5.5 erg s-1 cm-2). The area of the high-kT component increases with flux while its temperature decreases, which we interpret as due to an adiabatic cooling process. The area of the low-kT component, on the other hand, appears to saturate at the highest fluxes, towards R_max~30 km. Assuming that crust quakes are responsible for SGR bursts and considering R_max as the maximum radius of the emitting photon-pair plasma fireball, we relate this saturation radius to a minimum excitation radius of the magnetosphere, and put a lower limit on the internal magnetic field of SGR J1550-5418, B_int>~4.5x10^15 G., Comment: 11 Pages, 6 Figures, accpeted for publication in ApJ
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- 2014
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8. Simultaneous optical/gamma-ray observations of GRB 121217's prompt emission
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Elliott, J., Yu, H. -F., Schmidl, S., Greiner, J., Gruber, D., Oates, S., Kobayashi, S., Zhang, B., Cummings, J. R., Filgas, R., Gehrels, N., Grupe, D., Kann, D. A., Klose, S., Krühler, T., Guelbenzu, A. Nicuesa, Rau, A., Rossi, A., Siegel, M., Schady, P., Sudilovsky, V., Tanga, M., and Varela, K.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Since the advent of the Swift satellite it has been possible to obtain precise localisations of GRB positions of sub-arcsec accuracy within seconds, facilitating ground-based robotic telescopes to automatically slew to the target within seconds. This has yielded a plethora of observational data for the afterglow phase of the GRB, but the quantity of data (<2 keV) covering the initial prompt emission still remains small. Only in a handful of cases has it been possible obtain simultaneous coverage of the prompt emission in a multi-wavelength regime (gamma-ray to optical), as a result of: observing the field by chance prior to the GRB (e.g. 080319B/naked-eye burst), long-prompt emission (e.g., 080928, 110205A) or triggered on a pre-cursor (e.g., 041219A, 050820A, 061121). This small selection of bursts have shown both correlated and uncorrelated gamma-ray and optical light curve behaviour, and the multi-wavelength emission mechanism remains far from resolved (i.e. single population synchrotron self-Component, electron distributions, additional neutron components or residual collisions). Such multi-wavelength observations during the GRB prompt phase are pivotal in providing further insight on the poorly understood prompt emission mechanism. We add to this small sample the Swift burst 121217A that had two distinct periods of prompt emission separated by ~700 s, observed by Swift/BAT, Swift/XRT and Fermi/GBM. As a result of the time delay of the second emission, it enabled optical imaging (from 3 to 7 bands) to be taken with the GROND instrument to a resolution as fine as 10s. This multi-wavelength data will hopefully allow us to shed more light on the current picture of prompt emission physics., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 7th Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium, GRB 2013: paper 32 in eConf Proceedings C1304143
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- 2013
9. Prompt emission of GRB 121217A from gamma-rays to the NIR
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Elliott, J., Yu, H. -F., Schmidl, S., Greiner, J., Gruber, D., Oates, S., Kobayashi, S., Zhang, B., Cummings, J. R., Filgas, R., Gehrels, N., Grupe, D., Kann, D. A., Klose, S., Krühler, T., Guelbenzu, A. Nicuesa, Rau, A., Rossi, A., Siegel, M., Schady, P., Sudilovsky, V., Tanga, M., and Varela, K.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
The mechanism that causes the prompt-emission episode of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) is still widely debated despite there being thousands of prompt detections. The favoured internal shock model relates this emission to synchrotron radiation. However, it does not always explain the spectral indices of the shape of the spectrum, often fit with empirical functions. Multi-wavelength observations are therefore required to help investigate the possible underlying mechanisms that causes the prompt emission. We present GRB 121217A, for which we were able to observe its near-infrared (NIR) emission during a secondary prompt-emission episode with the Gamma-Ray Burst Optical Near-infrared Detector (GROND) in combination with the Swift and Fermi satellites, covering an energy range of 0.001 keV to 100 keV. We determine a photometric redshift of z=3.1+/-0.1 with a line-of-sight extinction of A_V~0 mag, utilising the optical/NIR SED. From the afterglow, we determine a bulk Lorentz factor of Gamma~250 and an emission radius of R<10^18 cm. The prompt-emission broadband spectral energy distribution is well fit with a broken power law with b1=-0.3+/-0.1, b2=0.6+/-0.1 that has a break at E=6.6+/-0.9 keV, which can be interpreted as the maximum injection frequency. Self-absorption by the electron population below energies of E_a<6 keV suggest a magnetic field strength of B~10^5 G. However, all the best fit models underpredict the flux observed in the NIR wavelengths, which also only rebrightens by a factor of ~2 during the second prompt emission episode, in stark contrast to the X-ray emission, which rebrightens by a factor of ~100, suggesting an afterglow component is dominating the emission. We present GRB 121217A one of the few GRBs for which there are multi-wavelength observations of the prompt-emission period and show that it can be understood with a synchrotron radiation model., Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2013
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10. Three in one: evolution of viviparity, coenocytic placenta and polyembryony in cyclostome bryozoans
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Nekliudova, U. A., Schwaha, T. F., Kotenko, O. N., Gruber, D., Cyran, N., and Ostrovsky, A. N.
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- 2021
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11. The First Pulse of the Extremely Bright GRB 130427A: A Test Lab for Synchrotron Shocks
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Preece, R., Burgess, J. Michael, von Kienlin, A., Bhat, P. N., Briggs, M. S., Byrne, D., Chaplin, V., Cleveland, W., Collazzi, A. C., Connaughton, V., Diekmann, A., Fitzpatrick, G., Foley, S., Gibby, M., Giles, M., Goldstein, A., Greiner, J., Gruber, D., Jenke, P., Kippen, R. M., Kouveliotou, C., McBreen, S., Meegan, C., Paciesas, W. S., Pelassa, V., Tierney, D., van der Horst, A. J., Wilson-Hodge, C., Xiong, S., Younes, G., Yu, H. -F., Ackermann, M., Ajello, M., Axelsson, M., Baldini, L., Barbiellini, G., Baring, M. G., Bastieri, D., Bellazzini, R., Bissaldi, E., Bonamente, E., Bregeon, J., Brigida, M., Bruel, P., Buehler, R., Buson, S., Caliandro, G. A., Cameron, R. A., Caraveo, P. A., Cecchi, C., Charles, E., Chekhtman, A., Chiang, J., Chiaro, G., Ciprini, S., Claus, R., Cohen-Tanugi, J., Cominsky, L. R., Conrad, J., D'Ammando, F., de Angelis, A., de Palma, F., Dermer, C. D., Desiante, R., Digel, S. W., Di Venere, L., Drell, P. S., Drlica-Wagner, A., Favuzzi, C., Franckowiak, A., Fukazawa, Y., Fusco, P., Gargano, F., Gehrels, N., Germani, S., Giglietto, N., Giordano, F., Giroletti, M., Godfrey, G., Granot, J., Grenier, I. A., Guiriec, S., Hadasch, D., Hanabata, Y., Harding, A. K., Hayashida, M., Iyyani, S., Jogler, T., Jóannesson, G., Kawano, T., Knödlseder, J., Kocevski, D., Kuss, M., Lande, J., Larsson, J., Larsson, S., Latronico, L., Longo, F., Loparco, F., Lovellette, M. N., Lubrano, P., Mayer, M., Mazziotta, M. N., Michelson, P. F., Mizuno, T., Monzani, M. E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Murgia, S., Nemmen, R., Nuss, E., Nymark, T., Ohno, M., Ohsugi, T., Okumura, A., Omodei, N., Orienti, M., Paneque, D., Perkins, J. S., Pesce-Rollins, M., Piron, F., Pivato, G., Porter, T. A., Racusin, J. L., Rainò, S., Rando, R., Razzano, M., Razzaque, S., Reimer, A., Reimer, O., Ritz, S., Roth, M., Ryde, F., Sartori, A., Scargle, J. D., Schulz, A., Sgrò, C., Siskind, E. J., Spandre, G., Spinelli, P., Suson, D. J., Tajima, H., Takahashi, H., Thayer, J. G., Thayer, J. B., Tibaldo, L., Tinivella, M., Torres, D. F., Tosti, G., Troja, E., Usher, T. L., Vandenbroucke, J., Vasileiou, V., Vianello, G., Vitale, V., Werner, M., Winer, B. L., Wood, K. S., and Zhu, S.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Gamma-ray burst (GRB) 130427A is one of the most energetic GRBs ever observed. The initial pulse up to 2.5 s is possibly the brightest well-isolated pulse observed to date. A fine time resolution spectral analysis shows power-law decays of the peak energy from the onset of the pulse, consistent with models of internal synchrotron shock pulses. However, a strongly correlated power-law behavior is observed between the luminosity and the spectral peak energy that is inconsistent with curvature effects arising in the relativistic outflow. It is difficult for any of the existing models to account for all of the observed spectral and temporal behaviors simultaneously., Comment: This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of the AAAS for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published online in Science Express on 21 November 2013 [DOI:10.1126/science.1242302] 15 pages, 4 figures and 1 table; includes supplementary online materials
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- 2013
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12. Time-resolved Analysis of Fermi GRBs with Fast and Slow-Cooled Synchrotron Photon Models
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Burgess, J. M., Preece, R. D., Connaughton, V., Briggs, M. S., Goldstein, A., Bhat, P. N., Greiner, J., Gruber, D., Kienlin, A., Kouveliotou, C., McGlynn, S., Meegan, C. A., Paciesas, W. S., Rau, A., Xiong, S., Axelsson, M., Baring, M. G., Dermer, C. D., Iyyani, S., Kocevski, D., Omodei, N., Ryde, F., and Vianello, G.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Time-resolved spectroscopy is performed on eight bright, long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) dominated by single emission pulses that were observed with the {\it Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope}. Fitting the prompt radiation of GRBs by empirical spectral forms such as the Band function leads to ambiguous conclusions about the physical model for the prompt radiation. Moreover, the Band function is often inadequate to fit the data. The GRB spectrum is therefore modeled with two emission components consisting of optically thin nonthermal synchrotron radiation from relativistic electrons and, when significant, thermal emission from a jet photosphere, which is represented by a blackbody spectrum. To produce an acceptable fit, the addition of a blackbody component is required in 5 out of the 8 cases. We also find that the low-energy spectral index \alpha is consistent with a synchrotron component with \alpha = -0.81\pm 0.1. This value lies between the limiting values of \alpha = -2/3 and \alpha = -3/2 for electrons in the slow and fast-cooling regimes, respectively, suggesting ongoing acceleration at the emission site. The blackbody component can be more significant when using a physical synchrotron model instead of the Band function, illustrating that the Band function does not serve as a good proxy for a nonthermal synchrotron emission component. The temperature and characteristic emission-region size of the blackbody component are found to, respectively, decrease and increase as power laws with time during the prompt phase. In addition, we find that the blackbody and nonthermal components have separate temporal behaviors.
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- 2013
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13. Discovery of a Cosmological, Relativistic Outburst via its Rapidly Fading Optical Emission
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Cenko, S. Bradley, Kulkarni, S. R., Horesh, Assaf, Corsi, Alessandra, Fox, Derek B., Carpenter, John, Frail, Dale A., Nugent, Peter E., Perley, Daniel A., Gruber, D., Gal-Yam, Avishay, Groot, Paul J., Hallinan, G., Ofek, Eran O., Rau, Arne, MacLeod, Chelsea L., Miller, Adam A., Bloom, Joshua S., Filippenko, Alexei V., Kasliwal, Mansi M., Law, Nicholas M., Morgan, Adam N., Polishook, David, Poznanski, Dovi, Quimby, Robert M., Sesar, Branimir, Shen, Ken J., Silverman, Jeffrey M., and Sternberg, Assaf
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report the discovery by the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) of the transient source PTF11agg, which is distinguished by three primary characteristics: (1) bright, rapidly fading optical transient emission; (2) a faint, blue quiescent optical counterpart; and (3) an associated year-long, scintillating radio transient. We argue that these observed properties are inconsistent with any known class of Galactic transients, and instead suggest a cosmological origin. The detection of incoherent radio emission at such distances implies a large emitting region, from which we infer the presence of relativistic ejecta. The observed properties are all consistent with the population of long-duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), marking the first time such an outburst has been discovered in the distant universe independent of a high-energy trigger. We searched for possible high-energy counterparts to PTF11agg, but found no evidence for associated prompt emission. We therefore consider three possible scenarios to account for a GRB-like afterglow without a high-energy counterpart: an "untriggered" GRB (lack of satellite coverage), an "orphan" afterglow (viewing-angle effects), and a "dirty fireball" (suppressed high-energy emission). The observed optical and radio light curves appear inconsistent with even the most basic predictions for off-axis afterglow models. The simplest explanation, then, is that PTF11agg is a normal, on-axis long-duration GRB for which the associated high-energy emission was simply missed. However, we have calculated the likelihood of such a serendipitous discovery by PTF and find that it is quite small (~ 2.6%). While not definitive, we nonetheless speculate that PTF11agg may represent a new, more common (> 4 times the on-axis GRB rate at 90% confidence) class of relativistic outbursts lacking associated high-energy emission., Comment: 45 pages, 7 figures; Resubmitted to ApJ after incorporating referee comments
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- 2013
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14. SGR J1550-5418 bursts detected with the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor during its most prolific activity
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van der Horst, A. J., Kouveliotou, C., Gorgone, N. M., Kaneko, Y., Baring, M. G., Guiriec, S., Gogus, E., Granot, J., Watts, A. L., Lin, L., Bhat, P. N., Bissaldi, E., Chaplin, V. L., Finger, M. H., Gehrels, N., Gibby, M. H., Giles, M. M., Goldstein, A., Gruber, D., Harding, A. K., Kaper, L., von Kienlin, A., van der Klis, M., McBreen, S., Mcenery, J., Meegan, C. A., Paciesas, W. S., Pe'er, A., Preece, R. D., Ramirez-Ruiz, E., Rau, A., Wachter, S., Wilson-Hodge, C., Woods, P. M., and Wijers, R. A. M. J.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We have performed detailed temporal and time-integrated spectral analysis of 286 bursts from SGR J1550-5418 detected with the Fermi Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) in January 2009, resulting in the largest uniform sample of temporal and spectral properties of SGR J1550-5418 bursts. We have used the combination of broadband and high time-resolution data provided with GBM to perform statistical studies for the source properties. We determine the durations, emission times, duty cycles and rise times for all bursts, and find that they are typical of SGR bursts. We explore various models in our spectral analysis, and conclude that the spectra of SGR J1550-5418 bursts in the 8-200 keV band are equally well described by optically thin thermal bremsstrahlung (OTTB), a power law with an exponential cutoff (Comptonized model), and two black-body functions (BB+BB). In the spectral fits with the Comptonized model we find a mean power-law index of -0.92, close to the OTTB index of -1. We show that there is an anti-correlation between the Comptonized Epeak and the burst fluence and average flux. For the BB+BB fits we find that the fluences and emission areas of the two blackbody functions are correlated. The low-temperature BB has an emission area comparable to the neutron star surface area, independent of the temperature, while the high-temperature blackbody has a much smaller area and shows an anti-correlation between emission area and temperature. We compare the properties of these bursts with bursts observed from other SGR sources during extreme activations, and discuss the implications of our results in the context of magnetar burst models., Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, 2 tables; minor changes, ApJ in press
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- 2012
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15. New SPB stars in the field of the young open cluster NGC 2244 discovered by the MOST photometric satellite
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Gruber, D., Saio, H., Kuschnig, R., Fossati, L., Handler, G., Zwintz, K., Weiss, W. W., Matthews, J. M., Guenther, D. B., Moffat, A. F. J., Rucinski, S. M., and Sasselov, D.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
During two weeks of nearly continuous optical photometry of the young open cluster NGC 2244 obtained by the MOST satellite, we discovered two new SPB stars, GSC 00154-00785 and GSC 00154-01871. We present frequency analyses of the MOST light curves of these stars, which reveal two oscillation frequencies (0.61 and 0.71 c/d) in GSC 00154-00785 and two (0.40 and 0.51 c/d) in GSC 00154-01871. These frequency ranges are consistent with g-modes of $\ell \leq 2$ excited in models of main-sequence or pre-main-sequence (PMS) stars of masses 4.5 - 5 $M_{\odot}$ and solar composition $(X, Z)= (0.7, 0.02)$. Published proper motion measurements and radial velocities are insufficient to establish unambiguously cluster membership for these two stars. However, the PMS models which fit best their eigenspectra have ages consistent with NGC 2244. If cluster membership can be confirmed, these would be the first known PMS SPB stars, and would open a new window on testing asteroseismically the interior structures of PMS stars., Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2011
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16. The SEDs and Host Galaxies of the dustiest GRB afterglows
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Krühler, T., Greiner, J., Schady, P., Savaglio, S., Afonso, P. M. J., Clemens, C., Elliott, J., Filgas, R., Gruber, D., Kann, D. A., Klose, S., Küpcü-Yoldas, A., McBreen, S., Olivares, E. F., Pierini, D., Rau, A., Rossi, A., Nardini, M., Guelbenzu, A. Nicuesa, Sudilovsky, V., and Updike, A. C.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
(Abridged) Until recently the information inferred from gamma-ray burst follow-up observations was mostly limited to optically bright afterglows, biasing all demographic studies against sight-lines that contain large amounts of dust. Here, we present GRB afterglow and host observations for a sample of bursts that are exemplary of previously missed ones because of high visual extinction along the sight-line. This facilitates an investigation of the properties, geometry and location of the absorbing dust of these poorly-explored host galaxies, and a comparison to hosts from optically-selected samples. The hosts of the dustiest afterglows are diverse in their properties, but on average redder, more luminous and massive than the hosts of optically-bright events. We hence probe a different galaxy population, suggesting that previous host samples miss most of the massive, chemically-evolved and metal-rich members. This also indicates that the dust along the sight-line is often related to host properties, and thus probably located in the diffuse ISM or interstellar clouds and not in the immediate GRB environment. Some of the hosts in our sample, are blue, young or of small stellar mass illustrating that even apparently non-extinguished galaxies possess very dusty sight-lines due to a patchy dust distribution. The presented observations establish a population of luminous, massive and correspondingly chemically-evolved GRB hosts. This suggests that GRBs trace the global star-formation rate better than studies based on optically-selected host samples indicate, and the previously-claimed deficiency of high-mass host galaxies was at least partially a selection effect., Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures, resubmitted to A&A after referee report
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- 2011
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17. Quasi-Periodic Pulsations in Solar Flares: new clues from the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor
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Gruber, D., Lachowicz, P., Bissaldi, E., Briggs, M. S., Connaughton, V., Greiner, J., van der Horst, A. J., Kanbach, G., Rau, A., Bhat, P. N., Diehl, R., von Kienlin, A., Kippen, R. M., Meegan, C. A., Paciesas, W. S., Preece, R. D., and Wilson-Hodge, C.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
In the last four decades it has been observed that solar flares show quasi-periodic pulsations (QPPs) from the lowest, i.e. radio, to the highest, i.e. gamma-ray, part of the electromagnetic spectrum. To this day, it is still unclear which mechanism creates such QPPs. In this paper, we analyze four bright solar flares which show compelling signatures of quasi-periodic behavior and were observed with the Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (\gbm) onboard the Fermi satellite. Because GBM covers over 3 decades in energy (8 keV to 40 MeV) it can be a key instrument to understand the physical processes which drive solar flares. We tested for periodicity in the time series of the solar flares observed by GBM by applying a classical periodogram analysis. However, contrary to previous authors, we did not detrend the raw light curve before creating the power spectral density spectrum (PSD). To assess the significance of the frequencies we made use of a method which is commonly applied for X-ray binaries and Seyfert galaxies. This technique takes into account the underlying continuum of the PSD which for all of these sources has a P(f) ~ f^{-\alpha} dependence and is typically labeled red-noise. We checked the reliability of this technique by applying it to a solar flare which was observed by the Reuven Ramaty High-Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) which contains, besides any potential periodicity from the Sun, a 4 s rotational period due to the rotation of the spacecraft around its axis. While we do not find an intrinsic solar quasi-periodic pulsation we do reproduce the instrumental periodicity. Moreover, with the method adopted here, we do not detect significant QPPs in the four bright solar flares observed by GBM. We stress that for the purpose of such kind of analyses it is of uttermost importance to appropriately account for the red-noise component in the PSD of these astrophysical sources., Comment: accepted by A&A
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- 2011
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18. Rest-frame properties of 32 gamma-ray bursts observed by the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor
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Gruber, D., Greiner, J., von Kienlin, A., Rau, A., Briggs, M. S., Connaughton, V., Goldstein, A., van der Horst, A. J., Nardini, M., Bhat, P. N., Bissaldi, E., Burgess, J. M., Chaplin, V. L., Diehl, R., Fishman, G. J., Fitzpatrick, G., Foley, S., Gibby, M. H., Giles, M. M., Guiriec, S., Kippen, R. M., Kouveliotou, C., Lin, L., McBreen, S., Meegan, C. A., E., F. Olivares, Paciesas, W. S., Preece, R. D., Tierney, D., and Wilson-Hodge, C.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Aims: In this paper we study the main spectral and temporal properties of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) observed by Fermi/GBM. We investigate these key properties of GRBs in the rest-frame of the progenitor and test for possible intra-parameter correlations to better understand the intrinsic nature of these events. Methods: Our sample comprises 32 GRBs with measured redshift that were observed by GBM until August 2010. 28 of them belong to the long-duration population and 4 events were classified as short/hard bursts. For all of these events we derive, where possible, the intrinsic peak energy in the $\nu F_{\nu}$ spectrum (\eprest), the duration in the rest-frame, defined as the time in which 90% of the burst fluence was observed (\tninetyrest) and the isotropic equivalent bolometric energy (\eiso). Results: The distribution of \eprest has mean and median values of 1.1 MeV and 750 keV, respectively. A log-normal fit to the sample of long bursts peaks at ~800 keV. No high-\ep population is found but the distribution is biased against low \ep values. We find the lowest possible \ep that GBM can recover to be ~ 15 keV. The \tninetyrest distribution of long GRBs peaks at ~10 s. The distribution of \eiso has mean and median values of $8.9\times 10^{52}$ erg and $8.2 \times 10^{52}$ erg, respectively. We confirm the tight correlation between \eprest and \eiso (Amati relation) and the one between \eprest and the 1-s peak luminosity ($L_p$) (Yonetoku relation). Additionally, we observe a parameter reconstruction effect, i.e. the low-energy power law index $\alpha$ gets softer when \ep is located at the lower end of the detector energy range. Moreover, we do not find any significant cosmic evolution of neither \eprest nor \tninetyrest., Comment: accepted by A&A
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- 2011
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19. Fermi/GBM observations of the ultra-long GRB 091024: A burst with an optical flash
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Gruber, D., Krühler, T., Foley, S., Nardini, M., Burlon, D., Rau, A., Bissaldi, E., von Kienlin, A., McBreen, S., Greiner, J., Bhat, P. N., Briggs, M. S., Burgess, J. M., Chaplin, V. L., Connaughton, V., Diehl, R., Fishman, G. J., Gibby, M. H., Giles, M. M., Goldstein, A., Guiriec, S., van der Horst, A. J., Kippen, R. M., Kouveliotou, C., Lin, L., Meegan, C. A., Paciesas, W. S., Preece, R. D., Tierney, D., and Wilson-Hodge, C.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper we examine gamma-ray and optical data of GRB 091024, a gamma-ray burst (GRB) with an extremely long duration of T90~1020 s, as observed with the Fermi Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (GBM). We present spectral analysis of all three distinct emission episodes using data from Fermi/GBM. Because of the long nature of this event, many ground-based optical telescopes slewed to its location within a few minutes and thus were able to observe the GRB during its active period. We compare the optical and gamma-ray light curves. Furthermore, we estimate a lower limit on the bulk Lorentz factor from the variability and spectrum of the GBM light curve and compare it with that obtained from the peak time of the forward shock of the optical afterglow. From the spectral analysis we note that, despite its unusually long duration, this burst is similar to other long GRBs, i.e. there is spectral evolution (both the peak energy and the spectral index vary with time) and spectral lags are measured. We find that the optical light curve is highly anti-correlated to the prompt gamma-ray emission, with the optical emission reaching the maximum during an epoch of quiescence in the prompt emission. We interpret this behavior as the reverse shock (optical flash), expected in the internal-external shock model of GRB emission but observed only in a handful of GRBs so far. The lower limit on the initial Lorentz factor deduced from the variability time scale ($\Gamma_{min}=195_{-110}^+{90}$)is consistent within the error to the one obtained using the peak time of the forward shock ($\Gamma_0=120$) and is also consistent with Lorentz factors of other long GRBs., Comment: accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2011
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20. The First Pulse of the Extremely Bright GRB 130427A: A Test Lab for Synchrotron Shocks
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Preece, R, Burgess, J Michael, von Kienlin, A, Bhat, PN, Briggs, MS, Byrne, D, Chaplin, V, Cleveland, W, Collazzi, AC, Connaughton, V, Diekmann, A, Fitzpatrick, G, Foley, S, Gibby, M, Giles, M, Goldstein, A, Greiner, J, Gruber, D, Jenke, P, Kippen, RM, Kouveliotou, C, McBreen, S, Meegan, C, Paciesas, WS, Pelassa, V, Tierney, D, van der Horst, AJ, Wilson-Hodge, C, Xiong, S, Younes, G, Yu, H-F, Ackermann, M, Ajello, M, Axelsson, M, Baldini, L, Barbiellini, G, Baring, MG, Bastieri, D, Bellazzini, R, Bissaldi, E, Bonamente, E, Bregeon, J, Brigida, M, Bruel, P, Buehler, R, Buson, S, Caliandro, GA, Cameron, RA, Caraveo, PA, Cecchi, C, Charles, E, Chekhtman, A, Chiang, J, Chiaro, G, Ciprini, S, Claus, R, Cohen-Tanugi, J, Cominsky, LR, Conrad, J, D'Ammando, F, de Angelis, A, de Palma, F, Dermer, CD, Desiante, R, Digel, SW, Di Venere, L, Drell, PS, Drlica-Wagner, A, Favuzzi, C, Franckowiak, A, Fukazawa, Y, Fusco, P, Gargano, F, Gehrels, N, Germani, S, Giglietto, N, Giordano, F, Giroletti, M, Godfrey, G, Granot, J, Grenier, IA, Guiriec, S, Hadasch, D, Hanabata, Y, Harding, AK, Hayashida, M, Iyyani, S, Jogler, T, Jóhannesson, G, Kawano, T, Knödlseder, J, Kocevski, D, Kuss, M, Lande, J, Larsson, J, Larsson, S, Latronico, L, Longo, F, Loparco, F, and Lovellette, MN
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astro-ph.HE ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Gamma-ray burst (GRB) 130427A is one of the most energetic GRBs ever observed. The initial pulse up to 2.5 seconds is possibly the brightest well-isolated pulse observed to date. A fine time resolution spectral analysis shows power-law decays of the peak energy from the onset of the pulse, consistent with models of internal synchrotron shock pulses. However, a strongly correlated power-law behavior is observed between the luminosity and the spectral peak energy that is inconsistent with curvature effects arising in the relativistic outflow. It is difficult for any of the existing models to account for all of the observed spectral and temporal behaviors simultaneously.
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- 2014
21. Pure spin currents induced by spin-dependent scattering processes in SiGe quantum well structures
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Ganichev, S. D., Danilov, S. N., Bel'kov, V. V., Giglberger, S., Tarasenko, S. A., Ivchenko, E. L., Weiss, D., Jantsch, W., Schaeffler, F., Gruber, D., and Prettl, W.
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
We show that spin-dependent electron-phonon interaction in the energy relaxation of a two-dimensional electron gas results in equal and oppositely directed currents in the spin-up and spin-down subbands yielding a pure spin current. In our experiments on SiGe heterostructures the pure spin current is converted into an electric current applying a magnetic field that lifts the cancellation of the two partial charge flows. A microscopic theory of this effect, taking account of the asymmetry of the relaxation process, is developed being in a good agreement with the experimental data., Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures
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- 2006
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22. 2-10 keV luminosity of high-mass binaries as a gauge of ongoing star-formation rate
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Persic, M., Rephaeli, Y., Braito, V., Cappi, M., Della Ceca, R., Franceschini, A., and Gruber, D. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Based on recent work on spectral decomposition of the emission of star-forming galaxies, we assess whether the integrated 2-10 keV emission from high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs), L_{2-10}^{HMXB}, can be used as a reliable estimator of ongoing star formation rate (SFR). Using a sample of 46 local (z < 0.1) star forming galaxies, and spectral modeling of ASCA, BeppoSAX, and XMM-Newton data, we demonstrate the existence of a linear SFR-L_{2-10}^{HMXB} relation which holds over ~5 decades in X-ray luminosity and SFR. The total 2-10 keV luminosity is not a precise SFR indicator because at low SFR (i.e., in normal and moderately-starbursting galaxies) it is substantially affected by the emission of low-mass X-ray binaries, which do not trace the current SFR due to their long evolution lifetimes, while at very high SFR (i.e., for very luminous FIR-selected galaxies) it is frequently affected by the presence of strongly obscured AGNs. The availability of purely SB-powered galaxies - whose 2-10 keV emission is mainly due to HMXBs - allows us to properly calibrate the SFR-L_{2-10}^{HMXB} relation. The SFR-L_{2-10}^{HMXB} relation holds also for distant (z ~ 1) galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field North sample, for which we lack spectral information, but whose SFR can be estimated from deep radio data. If confirmed by more detailed observations, it may be possible to use the deduced relation to identify distant galaxies that are X-ray overluminous for their (independently estimated) SFR, and are therefore likely to hide strongly absorbed AGNs., Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, in press (15 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables)
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- 2004
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23. Magnetic Fields of Accreting X-Ray Pulsars with the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer
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Coburn, W., Heindl, W. A., Rothschild, R. E., Gruber, D. E., Kreykenbohm, I., Wilms, J., Kretschmar, P., and Staubert, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using a consistent set of models, we parameterized the X-ray spectra of all accreting pulsars in the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer database which exhibit Cyclotron Resonance Scattering Features (CRSFs, or cyclotron lines). These sources in our sample are Her X-1, 4U 0115+63, Cen X-3, 4U 1626-67, XTE J1946-274, Vela X-1, 4U 1907+09, 4U 1538-52, GX 301-2, and 4U 0352+309 (X Per). We searched for correlations among the spectral parameters, concentrating on how the cyclotron line energy relates to the continuum and therefore how the neutron star B-field influences the X-Ray emission. As expected, we found a correlation between the CRSF energy and the spectral cutoff energy. However, with our consistent set of fits we found that the relationship is more complex than what has been reported previously. Also, we found that not only does the width of the cyclotron line correlate with the energy (as suggested by theory), but that the width scaled by the energy correlates with the depth of the feature. We discuss the implications of these results, including the possibility that accretion directly affects the relative alignment of the neutron star spin and dipole axes. Lastly, we comment on the current state of fitting phenomenological models to spectra in the RXTE/BeppoSAX era and the need for better theoretical models of the X-Ray continua of accreting pulsars., Comment: 36 Pages, 9 Figures, 9 Tables, ApJ in press
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- 2002
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24. Discovery of a Cyclotron Resonance Scattering Feature in the X-ray Spectrum of XTE J1946+274
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Heindl, W. A., Coburn, W., Gruber, D. E., Rothschild, R. E., Kreykenbohm, I., Wilms, J., and Staubert, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations of the transient accreting pulsar XTE J1946+274 made with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer during the course of the 1998 September-November outburst, reveal a cyclotron resonance scattering feature (or "cyclotron line") in the hard X-ray spectrum near 35 keV. We determine a centroid energy of 36.2 +0.5/-0.7 keV, which implies a magnetic field strength of 3.1(1+z)x10^12 G, where z is the gravitational redshift of the scattering region. The optical depth, Tau = 0.33 +0.07/-0.06, and width, sigma = 3.37 +0.92/-0.75 keV, are typical of known cyclotron lines in other pulsars. This discovery makes XTE J1946+274 one of thirteen pulsars with securely detected cyclotron lines resulting in direct magnetic field measurements., Comment: Five pages including four postscript figures and two tables. Uses emulateapj5. Published in ApJ Letters: http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-bib_query?bibcode=2001ApJ...563L..35H
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- 2001
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25. Stability of the Cyclotron Resonance Scattering Feature in Her X-1 with RXTE
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Gruber, D. E., Heindl, W. A., Rothschild, R. E., Coburn, W., Staubert, R., Kreykenbohm, I., and Wilms, J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Five observations of the hard X-ray spectrum of Her X-1 from \xte show that the $\sim 41$ keV energy of the cyclotron scattering line is constant within statistics of a few percent per observtion. Comparison with other observations over many years indicates strongly that the centroid energy of this absorption line has increased some time between 1991 and 1993 by 23%, from 34 keV to 41 keV. Moreover, the cutoff energy of the spectral continuum increased at the same time from 16 keV to 20 keV, which is, within the statistical error of 5%, in direct proportion to the centroid. This may be a sign thatboth these characteristics of the spectrum are controlled in the same way by the magnetic field strength in the region of scattering., Comment: 30 page, 5 figures
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- 2001
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26. Studies of Hard X-ray Tails in Z sources with RXTE/HEXTE
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D'Amico, F., Heindl, W. A., Rothschild, R. E., and Gruber, D. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report RXTE results of spectral analyses of three (Sco X-1, GX 349+2, and Cyg X-2) out of the 6 known Z sources, with emphasis in the hard X-ray emission. No hard X-ray tails were found for Cyg X-2 (< 8.4E-5 photons cm**-2 s**-1, 50-100 keV, 3 sigma) and for GX 349+2 (< 7.9E-5 photons cm**-2 s**-1, 50-100 keV, 3 sigma). For Sco X-1 a variable hard X-ray tail (with an average flux of 2.0E-3 photons cm**-2 s**-1, 50-100 keV) has already been reported. We compare our results to reported detections of a hard component in the spectrum of Cyg X-2 and GX 349+2. We argue that, taking into account all the results on detections of hard X-ray tails in Sco X-1 and GX 349+2, the appearance of such a component is correlated with the brightness of the thermal component., Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure; To appear in "Gamma-Ray Astrophysics", AIP Conference Proceedings of the Gamma 2001 Symposium (N. Gehrels, C. Shrader, and S. Ritz, eds)
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- 2001
27. HEXTE Studies of Sco X-1 Spectra: Detections of Hard X-Ray Tails Beyond 200 keV
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D'Amico, F., Heindl, W. A., Rothschild, R. E., Peterson, L. E., Gruber, D. E., Pelling, M., and Tomsick, J. A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Using the HEXTE experiment on-board the RXTE satellite, we performed a search for hard X-ray tails in Sco X-1 spectra. We found strong evidence for the presence of such a non-thermal component on several occasions. Using the PCA/RXTE we were able to track the position of the source along the Z diagram, and we observed that the presence of the hard X-ray tail is not confined to a particular region. However, we found a correlation between the power law index of the non-thermal component and the position of the source in the Z diagram, suggesting that the hard X-ray spectrum (i.e., E > 50 keV) becomes flatter as the mass accretion rate increases. We were also able to study the temporal variation of the appearance/absence of the hard X-ray component. With our derived luminosities, we were also able to test the idea that X-ray luminosities can be used to distinguish between X-ray binary systems containing neutron stars and black holes., Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; Presented at the 33rd COSPAR Scientific Assembly (Warsaw, Poland, 2000 July); Accepted for publication in Advances in Space Research
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- 2001
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28. Discovery of a Cyclotron Resonant Scattering Feature in the RXTE Spectrum of 4U 0352+309 (X Per)
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Coburn, W., Heindl, W. A., Gruber, D. E., Rothschild, R. E., Staubert, R., Wilms, J., and Kreykenbohm, I.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have discovered a ~29 keV Cyclotron Resonant Scattering Feature (CRSF) in the X-Ray spectrum of 4U 0352+309 (X Per) using observations taken with the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer. 4U 0352+309 is a persistent low luminosity (L_x = 4.2x10^34 ergs/s) X-ray pulsar, with a 837 s period and which accretes material from the Be star X Per. The X-Ray spectrum, unusual when compared to brighter accreting pulsars, may be due to the low mass accretion rate and could be typical of the new class of persistent low luminosity Be/X-Ray binary pulsars. We attempted spectral fits with continuum models used historically for 4U 0352+309, and found that all were improved by the addition of a CRSF at ~29 keV. The model that best fit the observations is a combination of a 1.45+/-0.02 keV blackbody with a 5.4x10^8 cm^2 area, and a power-law with a 1.83+/-0.03 photon index modified by the CRSF. In these fits the CRSF energy is 28.6+1.5-1.7 keV, implying a magnetic field strength of 2.5(1+z)x10^12 G in the scattering region (where z is the gravitational redshift). Phase resolved analysis shows that the blackbody and cyclotron line energies are consistent with being constant through the pulse., Comment: 34 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, Accepted by ApJ
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- 2001
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29. HEXTE Detections of Hard X-Ray Tails in Sco X-1
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D'Amico, F., Heindl, W. A., Rothschild, R. E., and Gruber, D. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the detection of a non-thermal hard X-ray component from Sco X-1 based upon the analysis of 20-220 keV spectra obtained with the HEXTE experiment on-board the RXTE satellite. We find that the addition of a power-law component to a thermal bremsstrahlung model is required to achieve a good fit in 5 of 16 observations analyzed. Using PCA data we were able to track the movement of the source along the Z diagram, and we found that the presence of the hard X-ray tail is not confined to a specific Z position. However, we do observe an indication that the power law index hardens with increasing mass accretion rate, as indicated from the position on the Z diagram. We find that the derived non-thermal luminosities are at order of 10% of that derived for the brightest of the atoll sources., Comment: 15 pages, 1 ps figure ; uses aastex.cls ; accepted for publication in ApJL
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- 2000
30. RXTE Studies of Cyclotron Lines in Accreting Pulsars
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Heindl, W. A., Coburn, W., Gruber, D. E., Pelling, M., Rothschild, R. E., Kretschmar, P., Kreykenbohm, I., Wilms, J., Pottschmidt, K., and Staubert, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper, we summarize the RXTE measurements of cyclotron resonance scattering features in 8 accreting pulsars. The wide bandpass and modest resolution of the RXTE instruments make them ideal for measuring these generally broad features. In particular, the high energy response of HEXTE provides a window for discovery of new lines not detectable with proportional counters such as Ginga or the PCA alone., Comment: 5 pages. To appear in "Proceedings of the 5th Compton Symposium"
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- 2000
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31. Multiple Cyclotron Lines in the Spectrum of 4U 0115+63
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Heindl, W. A., Coburn, W., Gruber, D. E., Pelling, M., Rothschild, R. E., Wilms, J., Pottschmidt, K., and Staubert, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report phase resolved spectroscopy of the transient accreting pulsar, 4U0115+63. For the first time, more than two cylotron resonance scattering features are detected in the spectrum of an X-ray pulsar. The shape of the fundamental line appears to be complex, and this is in agreement with predictions of Monte-Carlo models. As in other pulsars, the line energies and optical depths are strong functions of pulse phase. One possible model for this is an offset of the dipole of the neutron star magnetic field., Comment: 5 pages. To appear in "Proceedings of the 5th Compton Symposium"
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- 2000
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32. The 1999 Hercules X-1 Anomalous Low State
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Coburn, W., Heindl, W. A., Wilms, J., Gruber, D. E., Staubert, R., Rothschild, R. E., Postnov, K. A., Shakura, N., Risse, P., Kreykenbohm, I., and Pelling, M. R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A failed main-on in the 35d cycle of Her X-1 was observed with the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) on 1999 April 26. Exceptions to the normal 35d cycle have been seen only twice before; in 1983 and again 1993. We present timing and spectral results of this latest Anomalous Low State (ALS) along with comparisons to the main-on and normal low states. Pulsations were observed in the 3-18 keV band with a fractional RMS variation of (0.037+-0.003). Spectral analysis indicates that the ALS spectrum has the same shape as the main-on but is modified by heavy absorption and scattering. We find that 70% of the observed emission has passed through a cold absorber (N_H=5.0x10^{23}cm^{-2}). This partially absorbing spectral fit can be applied to the normal low state with similar results. We find that the ALS observations may be interpreted as a decrease in inclination of the accretion disk causing the central X-Ray source to be obscured over the entire 35d cycle., Comment: revised text, 6 revised figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
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- 1999
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33. Disappearing Pulses in Vela X-1
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Kretschmar, P., Kreykenbohm, I., Wilms, J., Staubert, R., Heindl, W. A., Gruber, D. E., and Rothschild, R. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results from a 20 h RXTE observation of Vela X-1, ncluding a peculiar low state of a few hours duration, during which the pulsation of the X-ray emission ceased, while significant non-pulsed emission remained. This ``quiescent state'' was preceded by a ``normal state'' without any unusual signs and followed by a ``high state'' of several hours of increased activity with strong, flaring pulsations. while there is clear spectral evolution from the normal state to the low state, the spectra of the following high state are surprisingly similar to those of the low state., Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of the 5th Compton Symposium, AIP, in press
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- 1999
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34. Discovery of a Third Harmonic Cyclotron Resonance Scattering Feature in the X-ray Spectrum of 4U 0115+63
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Heindl, W. A., Coburn, W., Gruber, D. E., Pelling, M. R., Rothschild, R. E., Wilms, J., Pottschmidt, K., and Staubert, R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have discovered a third harmonic cyclotron resonance scattering feature (CRSF) in observations of the recent outburst of 4U 0115+63 with the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). The spectrum in a narrow pulse phase range shows CRSFs at 12.40+0.65/-0.35, 21.45+0.25/-0.38, and 33.56+0.70/-0.90 keV. With centroid energy ratios to the fundamental of 1.73+/-0.08 and 2.71+/-0.13, the CRSFs are not harmonically spaced. Strong variability of the continuum and CRSFs with pulse phase indicate a complex emission geometry near the neutron star polar cap. In addition, one RXTE observation, which spanned periastron passage, revealed a strong 2 mHz quasi-periodic oscillation (QPO). This is slower by two orders of magnitude than the beat-frequency QPO expected in this system and slower by a factor of more than 5 compared with other QPOs seen in accreting X-ray pulsars., Comment: To appear in The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 4 pages, 5 figures. Uses "emulateapj.sty". Revised version includes new figures and additions to the analysis
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- 1999
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35. The Spectrum of Diffuse Cosmic Hard X-Rays Measured with HEAO-1
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Gruber, D. E., Matteson, J. L., Peterson, L. E., and Jung, G. V.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The spectrum of the diffuse isotropic component of cosmic X-rays over the 13-180 keV range was determined by the UCSD/MIT Hard X-Ray and Gamma-Ray instrument (HEAO A4) on the High Energy Astronomical Observatory-1 (HEAO-1). The instrument consists of a complex of actively shielded and collimated scintillation counters, including the Low Energy Detector set from which the data reported here were obtained. These data join smoothly with the spectrum at lower energies reported by the GSFC HEAO A2 instrument and with that measured to 400 keV by the HEAO A4 Medium Energy Detectors. The HEAO data set also joins the recent results from COMPTEL on the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory in the 1-10 MeV range, which failed to confirm the existence of an "MeV bump" in this range. Although the spectrum over the entire range 3 keV < E < 100 GeV can be fit by a simple empirical analytic expression, the origin is likely due to a number of distinct source components. The prevailing idea for the origin is that the hard X-ray spectrum is due to X-rays from various AGN components, particularly Seyfert galaxies extending to cosmological distances, and that the low energy gamma-rays may be due to emission from type 1a Supernovae, also integrated to cosmological distances. The higher energy gamma-ray spectrum defined by EGRET, also on the CGRO, may be due to unresolved gamma-ray emitting blazars. Models of production by these source components, extrapolated to the present epoch, must reproduce the observationally derived spectrum., Comment: LaTeX, 16pp, 3figs
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- 1999
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36. Evolution of spectral parameters during a pre-eclipse dip of Her X-1
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Stelzer, B., Wilms, J., Staubert, R., Gruber, D., and Rothschild, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on a pre-eclipse dip of the X-ray binary Her X-1 observed by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) in July 1996. We present the evolution of the spectral parameters in the 3-18 keV range with a temporal resolution of 16 s and show that the varying flux of the spectrum can be interpreted solely by a time varying column density. We also find that the lightcurve is characterized by symmetric substructures with recurrence time of a few minutes that can be successfully modeled by Gaussian profiles., Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 1998
37. Vela X-1 as seen by RXTE
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Kreykenbohm, I., Kretschmar, P., Wilms, J., Staubert, R., Kendziorra, E., Gruber, D. E., Heindl, W. A., and Rothschild, R. R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results from four observations of the accreting X-ray pulsar Vela X-1 with RXTE in 1996 February. The light curves show strong pulse to pulse variations, while the average pulse profiles are quite stable, similar to previous results. Below 5keV the pulse profiles display a complex, 5-peaked structure with a transition to a simple, double peak above about 15keV. We analyze phase-averaged, phase-resolved, and on-pulse minus off-pulse spectra. The best spectral fits were obtained using continuum models with a smooth high-energy turnover. In contrast, the commonly used power law with exponential cutoff introduced artificial features in the fit residuals. Using a power law with a Fermi-Dirac cutoff modified by photoelectric absorption and an iron line, the best fit spectra are still unacceptable. We interpret large deviations around 25 and 55keV as fundamental and second harmonic cyclotron absorption lines. If this result holds true, the ratio of the line energies seems to be larger than 2. Phase resolved spectra show that the cyclotron lines are strongest on the main pulse while they are barely visible outside the pulses., Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics, in press, also available at http://astro.uni-tuebingen.de/publications/preprints1998.html
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- 1998
38. Observation of Cen A by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
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Rothschild, R. E., Band, D. L., Blanco, P. R., Gruber, D. E., Heindl, W. A., MacDonald, D. R., Marsden, D. C., Jahoda, K., Pierce, D., Madejski, G., Elvis, M., Schwartz, D. A., Remillard, R., Zdziarski, A. A., Done, C., and Svensson, R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer made a short (10 ks) observation of the radio galaxy Centaurus A on 14 August 1996. Analysis of the combined 2.5-240 keV spectrum has revealed a heavily absorbed(NH=9.42+/-0.24 e22 cm-2) primary power law (index=1.86+/-0.015) and an iron line due to fluorescence of cold matter (EW=162+/-25 eV). Flux from either a jet, primary flux scattered into the line of sight, or primary flux seen through a partial absorber was not required. The iron line width is unresolved at the 95% confidence level (sigma < 0.54 keV). No significant variability in the iron line flux is seen from measurements over the last two decades, while the overall continuum flux varied by more than a factor of four, which implies that the line emission region is distant from that of the primary emission. While radio-quiet Seyfert galaxies exhibit spectral components attributable to Compton reflection from cold matter, Cen A reveals no such component (exposed solid angle ratio < 0.09). This supports unified models of active galaxies that have little difference between Seyfert 2 and low luminosity radio galaxies, Comment: 24 pages, 3 figures, accepted to The Astrophysical Journal
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- 1998
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39. Discovery of a New 89 Second X-ray Pulsar XTE J1906+09
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Marsden, D., Gruber, D. E., Heindl, W. A., Pelling, M. R., and Rothschild, R. E.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on the discovery of a new pulsating X-ray source during Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer observations of a low galactic latitude field centered at RA (J2000) = 19 hr 05 m 43 s and Dec (J2000) = +08 deg 58 arcmin 48 arcsec. Significant pulsations were detected by both the PCA and HEXTE instruments aboard RXTE at a fundamental period of 89.17 +/- 0.02 seconds, with higher harmonics also visible in the 2-10 keV power spectrum. The folded lightcurve from the source is multiply peaked at lower energies, and changes to single peaked morphology above ~20 keV. The phase averaged spectrum from the source is well fit by strongly absorbed power law or thermal bremsstrahlung spectral models of photon index 1.9 +/- 0.1 or temperature 19.5 +/- 4.6 keV, respectively. The mean neutral hydrogen column density is approximately 10^23 cm^-2, suggesting a distance of >10 kpc to the source and a minimum 2-10 keV X-ray luminosity of 2*10^{35} ergs s^{-1}. By comparison with other pulsars with similar periods and luminosities, we suggest that XTE J1906+09 has a supergiant companion with an underfilled Roche lobe. We speculate further that one of the M stars in a peculiar M star binary system may be the companion., Comment: 14 pages, 2 figures. Accepted by ApJ Letters
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- 1998
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40. In-flight Performance of the High Energy X-ray Timing Experiment on the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer
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Rothschild, R. E., Blanco, P. R., Gruber, D. E., Heindl, W. A., MacDonald, D. R., Marsden, D. C., Pelling, M. R., Wayne, L. R., and Hink, P. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The High Energy X-ray Timing Experiment (HEXTE) is one of three scientific instruments aboard the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE), which was launched on December 30, 1995. RXTE performs timing and spectral studies of bright x-ray sources to determine the physical parameters of these systems. The HEXTE consists of two independent clusters of detectors, each cluster containing four NaI(Tl)/CsI(Na) phoswich scintillation counters sharing a common 1 degree FWHM field of view. The field of view of each cluster is switched on- and off-source to provide near real-time background measurements. The net open area of the eight detectors is 1600 cm2, and each detector covers the energy range 15-250 keV with an average energy resolution of 15.4% at 60 keV. The in-flight performance of the HEXTE is described, the light curve and spectrum of the Crab Nebula/Pulsar is given, and the 15-240 keV spectrum of the weak source, active galaxy MCG 8-11-11 is presented to demonstrate the weak source spectral capabilities of HEXTE., Comment: 30 pages, 14 figures, 4 tables, accepted by Ap. J., to be published in vol 496, March 20, 1998
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- 1997
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41. The X-ray Spectrum of the Plerionic System PSR B1509-58/MSH 15-52
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Marsden, D., Blanco, P. R., Gruber, D. E., Heindl, W. A., Pelling, M. R., Peterson, L. E., Rothschild, R. E., Rots, A. H., Jahoda, K., and Macomb, D. J.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of observations of the PSR B1509$-$58/MSH 15$-$52 system in X-rays ($2-250$ keV) by the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. The spectra of the peak of the pulsed component (radio phase $0.17-0.53$) is fit by a power law of photon index $1.36\pm0.01$, with no evidence of a high energy spectral break seen up to $\sim200$ keV. For the off-pulse spectral component, the spectrum from $2-250$ keV is fit by a power law of photon index $2.215\pm0.005$. An iron emission line at 6.7 keV with an equivalent width of 129 eV improves the fit, but only at a marginal significance. Thermal bremsstrahlung and Raymond-Smith models produce much worse fits to the unpulsed data. The lack of a high energy spectral break in the pulsed emission implies an efficiency of $\geq 3%$ in the conversion of pulsar spindown energy to pulsed X-rays in the system., Comment: Accepted by ApJ Letters, 18 pages, 4 postscript figures
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- 1997
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42. Evidence of X-ray Synchrotron Emission from Electrons Accelerated to 40 TeV in the Supernova Remnant Cassiopeia A
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Allen, G. E., Keohane, J. W., Gotthelf, E. V., Petre, R., Jahoda, K., Rothschild, R. E., Lingenfelter, R. E., Heindl, W. A., Marsden, D., Gruber, D. E., Pelling, M. R., and Blanco, P. R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the 2-60 keV spectrum of the supernova remnant Cassiopeia A measured using the Proportional Counter Array and the High Energy X-ray Timing Experiment on the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer satellite. In addition to the previously reported strong emission-line features produced by thermal plasmas, the broad-band spectrum has a high-energy "tail" that extends to energies at least as high as 120 keV. This tail may be described by a broken power law that has photon indices of 1.8 +0.5/-0.6 and 3.04 +0.15/-0.13 and a break energy of 15.9 +0.3/-0.4 keV. We argue that the high-energy component, which dominates the spectrum above about 10 keV, is produced by synchrotron radiation from electrons that have energies up to at least 40 TeV. This conclusion supports the hypothesis that Galactic cosmic rays are accelerated predominantly in supernova remnants., Comment: 10 pages of text, 3 figures, accepted for Astrophys. J. Letters
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- 1997
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43. Stabilization and Functional Modulation of Microtubules by Microtubule-Associated Protein 4
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Nguyen, H. L., Gruber, D., McGraw, T., Sheetz, M. P., and Bulinski, J. C.
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- 1998
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44. Creep strain recovery of an in situ spinel-forming refractory castable under loading/unloading compressive creep conditions
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Akbari, B., primary, Gruber, D., additional, Jin, S., additional, and Harmuth, H., additional
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- 2023
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45. Dysphagia in Parkinsonian Syndromes
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Gandor, F., primary, Berger, L., additional, Gruber, D., additional, Warnecke, T., additional, Vogel, A., additional, and Claus, I., additional
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- 2023
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46. Simulation of micro-crack formation in a magnesia spinel refractory during the production process
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Fasching, C., Gruber, D., and Harmuth, H.
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- 2015
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47. A comparison of bleeding patterns and cycle control using two transdermal contraceptive systems: a multicenter, open-label, randomized study
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Gruber, D., Skřivánek, A., Serrani, M., Lanius, V., and Merz, M.
- Published
- 2015
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48. Fermi-LAT Observations of the Gamma-Ray Burst GRB 130427A
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Ackermann, M., Ajello, M., Asano, K., Atwood, W. B., Axelsson, M., Baldini, L., Ballet, J., Barbiellini, G., Baring, M. G., Bastieri, D., Bechtol, K., Bellazzini, R., Bissaldi, E., Bonamente, E., Bregeon, J., Brigida, M., Bruel, P., Buehler, R., Burgess, J. Michael, Buson, S., Caliandro, G. A., Cameron, R. A., Caraveo, P. A., Cecchi, C., Chaplin, V., Charles, E., Chekhtman, A., Cheung, C. C., Chiang, J., Chiaro, G., Ciprini, S., Claus, R., Cleveland, W., Cohen-Tanugi, J., Collazzi, A., Cominsky, L. R., Connaughton, V., Conrad, J., Cutini, S., D'Ammando, F., de Angelis, A., DeKlotz, M., de Palma, F., Dermer, C. D., Desiante, R., Diekmann, A., Di Venere, L., Drell, P. S., Drlica-Wagner, A., Favuzzi, C., Fegan, S. J., Ferrara, E. C., Finke, J., Fitzpatrick, G., Focke, W. B., Franckowiak, A., Fukazawa, Y., Funk, S., Fusco, P., Gargano, F., Gehrels, N., Germani, S., Gibby, M., Giglietto, N., Giles, M., Giordano, F., Giroletti, M., Godfrey, G., Granot, J., Grenier, I. A., Grove, J. E., Gruber, D., Guiriec, S., Hadasch, D., Hanabata, Y., Harding, A. K., Hayashida, M., Hays, E., Horan, D., Hughes, R. E., Inoue, Y., Jogler, T., Jóhannesson, G., Johnson, W. N., Kawano, T., Knödlseder, J., Kocevski, D., Kuss, M., Lande, J., Larsson, S., Latronico, L., Longo, F., Loparco, F., Lovellette, M. N., Lubrano, P., Mayer, M., Mazziotta, M. N., McEnery, J. E., Michelson, P. F., Mizuno, T., Moiseev, A. A., Monzani, M. E., Moretti, E., Morselli, A., Moskalenko, I. V., Murgia, S., Nemmen, R., Nuss, E., Ohno, M., Ohsugi, T., Okumura, A., Omodei, N., Orienti, M., Paneque, D., Pelassa, V., Perkins, J. S., Pesoe-Rollins, M., Petrosian, V., Piron, F., Pivato, G., Porter, T. A., Racusin, J. L, Rainò, S., Rando, R., Razzano, M., Razzaque, S., Reimer, A., Reimer, O., Ritz, S., Roth, M., Ryde, F., Sartori, A., Parkinson, P. M. Saz, Scargle, J. D., Schulz, A., Sgrò, C., Siskind, E. J., Sonbas, E., Spandre, G., Spinelli, P., Tajima, H., Takahashi, H., Thayer, J. G., Thayer, J. A., Thompson, D. J., Tibaldo, L., Tinivella, M., Torres, D. F., Tosti, G., Troja, E., Usher, T. L., Vandenbroucke, J., Vasileiou, V., Vianello, G., Vitale, V., Winer, B. L., Wood, K. S., Yamazaki, R., Younes, G., Yu, H.-F., Zhu, S. J., Bhat, P. N., Briggs, M. S., Byrne, D., Foley, S., Goldstein, A., Jenke, P., Kippen, R. M., Kouveliotou, C., McBreen, S., Meegan, C., Paciesas, W. S., Preece, R., Rau, A., Tierney, D., van der Horst, A. J., von Kienlin, A., Wilson-Hodge, C., Xiong, S., Cusumano, G., La Parola, V., and Cummings, J. R.
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- 2014
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49. Thrombosed postpartum urethral prolapse: 9
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Elmezzi, K., Matthews, H., Stone, G., Fischer, J., and Gruber, D.
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- 2017
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50. Influence of thermal damage occurrence at microstructural scale on the thermomechanical behaviour of magnesia–spinel refractories
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Grasset-Bourdel, R., Alzina, A., Huger, M., Gruber, D., Harmuth, H., and Chotard, T.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
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