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- Astrophysics (7)
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Articles 1 - 28 of 28
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters. Vi. Ngc 6366: A Heavily Stripped Galactic Globular Cluster, Nathaniel E. Q. Paust, Antonio Aparicio, Giampaolo Piotto, I. Neill Reid, Jay Anderson, Ata Sarajedini, Luigi R. Bedin, Brian Chaboyer
The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters. Vi. Ngc 6366: A Heavily Stripped Galactic Globular Cluster, Nathaniel E. Q. Paust, Antonio Aparicio, Giampaolo Piotto, I. Neill Reid, Jay Anderson, Ata Sarajedini, Luigi R. Bedin, Brian Chaboyer
Dartmouth Scholarship
We have used observations obtained as part of the Hubble Space Telescope/ACS Survey of Galactic globular clusters (GCs) to construct a color-magnitude diagram for the bulge cluster, NGC 6366. The luminosity function derived from those data extends to M F606W ~ 9, or masses of ~0.3 M ☉. Unlike most GCs, the mass function peaks near the main-sequence turnoff with significantly fewer low-mass stars even after correction for completeness and mass segregation. Using a multimass King model, we extrapolate the global cluster behavior and find the global mass function to be poorly matched by a power law, with …
Direct Distance Measurement To The Dusty White Dwarf Gd 362, Mukremin Kilic, John R. Thorstensen, D. Koester
Direct Distance Measurement To The Dusty White Dwarf Gd 362, Mukremin Kilic, John R. Thorstensen, D. Koester
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present trigonometric parallax observations of GD 362 obtained over seven epochs using the MDM 2.4m Hiltner Telescope. The existence of a dust disk around this possibly massive white dwarf makes it an interesting target for parallax observations. The measured parallax for GD 362 places it at a distance of 50.6 pc, which implies that its radius and mass are ~ 0.0106 Rsun and 0.71 Msun, respectively. GD 362 is not as massive as initially thought (1.2Msun). Our results are entirely consistent with the distance and mass estimates (52.2 pc and 0.73 Msun) by Zuckerman et al., who demonstrated that …
Statistics Of Auroral Langmuir Waves, M. Samara, J. Labelle, I. H. Cairns
Statistics Of Auroral Langmuir Waves, M. Samara, J. Labelle, I. H. Cairns
Dartmouth Scholarship
The Physics of Auroral Zone Electrons II (PHAZE II) sounding rocket was launched in February 1997 into active pre-midnight aurora. The resulting high frequency wave data are dominated by Langmuir waves. Consistent with many previous observations the Langmuir waves are sporadic, occurring in bursts lasting up to a few hundred ms. We compute statistics of the electric field amplitudes of these Langmuir waves, with two results. First, the shape of the distribution of running averages of the electric field amplitudes remains approximately stationary for a large range of widths of running average less than ~0.3 ms and for a large …
Metallicity Analysis Of Macho Galactic Bulge Rr0 Lyrae Stars From Their Light Curves, Andrea Kunder, Brian Chaboyer
Metallicity Analysis Of Macho Galactic Bulge Rr0 Lyrae Stars From Their Light Curves, Andrea Kunder, Brian Chaboyer
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present metallicities of 2690 RR0 Lyrae stars observed toward the MACHO Survey fields in the Galactic bulge. These [Fe/H] values are based upon an empirically-calibrated relationship that uses the Fourier coefficients of the light curve and are accurate to ±0.2 dex. The majority of the RR0 Lyrae stars in our sample are located in the Galactic bulge, but 255 RR0 stars are associated with the Sagittarius (Sgr) dwarf galaxy. We find that the RR0 Lyrae stars that belong to the Galactic bulge have average metallicities [Fe/H] = -1.25, with a broad metallicity range from [Fe/H] = -2.26 to -0.15. …
A Catalog Of Outer Ejecta Knots In The Cassiopeia A Supernova Remnant, Molly C. Hammell, Robert A. Fesen
A Catalog Of Outer Ejecta Knots In The Cassiopeia A Supernova Remnant, Molly C. Hammell, Robert A. Fesen
Dartmouth Scholarship
Hubble Space Telescope images of the core-collapse supernova remnant Cassiopeia A are used to identify high-velocity knots of ejecta located outside the remnant's main emission shell of expanding debris. These ejecta fragments are found near or ahead of the remnant's forward shock front and mostly lie from 120'' to 300'' in radial distance from the remnant's center of expansion. Filter flux ratios when correlated with published spectra show that these knots can be divided into three emission classes: (1) knots dominated by [N II] λλ6548, 6583 emissions, (2) knots dominated by [O II] λλ7319, 7330 emissions, and (3) …
Parallax And Distance Estimates For Twelve Cataclysmic Variable Stars, John R. Thorstensen, Sébastien Lépine, Michael Shara
Parallax And Distance Estimates For Twelve Cataclysmic Variable Stars, John R. Thorstensen, Sébastien Lépine, Michael Shara
Dartmouth Scholarship
We report parallax and distance estimates for 12 more cataclysmic binaries and related objects observed with the 2.4 m Hiltner telescope at MDM Observatory. The final parallax accuracy is typically ~1 mas. Notable results include distances for V396 Hya (CE 315), a helium double degenerate with a relatively long orbital period, and for MQ Dra (SDSSJ155331+551615), a magnetic system with a very low accretion rate. We find that the Z Cam star KT Persei is physically paired with a K main-sequence star lying 15 arcsec away. Several of the targets have distance estimates in the literature that are based on …
The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters. Iii. The Double Subgiant Branch Of Ngc 1851, A. P. Milone, L. R. Bedin, G. Piotto, J. Anderson, I. R. King, A. Sarajedini, A. Dotter, B. Chaboyer, A. Marin Franch, S. Majewski, A. Aparicio, M. Hempel, N. E.Q Paust, I. N. Reid, A. Rosenberg, M. Siegel
The Acs Survey Of Galactic Globular Clusters. Iii. The Double Subgiant Branch Of Ngc 1851, A. P. Milone, L. R. Bedin, G. Piotto, J. Anderson, I. R. King, A. Sarajedini, A. Dotter, B. Chaboyer, A. Marin Franch, S. Majewski, A. Aparicio, M. Hempel, N. E.Q Paust, I. N. Reid, A. Rosenberg, M. Siegel
Dartmouth Scholarship
Photometry with the Hubble Space Telescope Advanced Camera for Surveys (HST ACS) reveals that the subgiant branch (SGB) of the globular cluster NGC 1851 splits into two well-defined branches. If the split is due only to an age effect, the two SGBs would imply two star formation episodes separated by ~1 Gyr. We discuss other anomalies in NGC 1851 that could be interpreted in terms of a double stellar population. Finally, we compare the case of NGC 1851 with the other two globulars known to host multiple stellar populations, and show that all three clusters differ in several important …
The Evolution Of Late‐Time Optical Emission From Sn 1986j, Dan Milisavljevic, Robert A. Fesen, Bruno Leibundgut, Robert P. Kirshner
The Evolution Of Late‐Time Optical Emission From Sn 1986j, Dan Milisavljevic, Robert A. Fesen, Bruno Leibundgut, Robert P. Kirshner
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present late-time optical images and spectra of the Type IIn supernova SN 1986J. HST ACS/WFC images obtained in 2003 February show it to be still relatively bright, with mF606W = 21.4 and mF814W = 20.0 mag. Compared to 1994 December HST WFPC2 images, SN 1986J shows a decline of only <1 mag in brightness over 8 years. Ground-based spectra taken in 1989, 1991, and 2007 show a 50% decline in Hα emission between 1989 and 1991, and an order of magnitude drop between 1991 and 2007, along with the disappearance of He I line emissions during the period 1991-2007. The object's [O I] λλ6300, 6364, [O II] λλ7319, 7330 and [O III] λλ4959, 5007 emission lines show two prominent peaks near –1000 and –3500 km s−1, with the more blueshifted component declining significantly in strength between 1991 and 2007. The observed spectral evolution suggests two different origins for SN 1986J's late-time optical emission: dense, shock-heated circumstellar material, which gave rise to the initially bright Hα, He I, and [N II] λ5755 …1>
The Dartmouth Stellar Evolution Database, Aaron Dotter, Brian Chaboyer, Darko Jevremović, Veselin Kostov
The Dartmouth Stellar Evolution Database, Aaron Dotter, Brian Chaboyer, Darko Jevremović, Veselin Kostov
Dartmouth Scholarship
The ever-expanding depth and quality of photometric and spectroscopic observations of stellar populations increase the need for theoretical models in regions of age-composition parameter space that are largely unexplored at present. Stellar evolution models that employ the most advanced physics and cover a wide range of compositions are needed to extract the most information from current observations of both resolved and unresolved stellar populations. The Dartmouth Stellar Evolution Database is a collection of stellar evolution tracks and isochrones that spans a range of [Fe/H] from –2.5 to +0.5, [α/Fe] from –0.2 to +0.8 (for [Fe/H] ≤ 0) or +0.2 (for …
Globular Clusters In The Outer Galactic Halo: Am-1 And Palomar 14, Aaron Dotter, Ata Sarajedini, Soung-Chul Yang
Globular Clusters In The Outer Galactic Halo: Am-1 And Palomar 14, Aaron Dotter, Ata Sarajedini, Soung-Chul Yang
Dartmouth Scholarship
AM-1, at ~120 kpc, and Palomar 14 (Pal 14), at ~70 kpc, are two of the most distant Galactic globular clusters (GCs) known. We present Hubble Space Telescope Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 photometry of AM-1 and Pal 14 that reveals unprecedented depth and detail in the color-magnitude diagrams of these two clusters. Absolute and relative age measurements confirm that both are younger than the inner halo GC M 3 by 1.5-2 Gyr assuming all three clusters have similar compositions. Thus AM-1 and Pal 14 join Pal 3, Pal 4, and Eridanus as distant GCs with red horizontal branches (HBs) …
A Multiwavelength Analysis Of The Halo Planetary Nebula Dddm‐1, R. B. C. Henry, K. B. Kwitter, R. J. Dufour, J. N. Skinner
A Multiwavelength Analysis Of The Halo Planetary Nebula Dddm‐1, R. B. C. Henry, K. B. Kwitter, R. J. Dufour, J. N. Skinner
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present new HST optical imagery as well as new UV and IR spectroscopic data obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope and Spitzer Space Telescope, respectively, of the halo planetary nebula DdDm-1. For the first time we present a resolved image of this object, which indicates that the morphology of DdDm-1 can be described as two orthogonal elliptical components in the central part surrounded by an extended halo. The extent of the emission is somewhat larger than was previously reported in the literature. We combine the spectral data with our own previously published optical measurements to derive nebular abundances …
Ages And Metallicities Of Early-Type Void Galaxies From Line Strength Measurements, Gary Wegner, Norman A. Grogin
Ages And Metallicities Of Early-Type Void Galaxies From Line Strength Measurements, Gary Wegner, Norman A. Grogin
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present spectroscopic observations of 26 galaxies of type E and S0, based on their blue morphologies, located in voids by the study of Grogin & Geller in 1999. Measurements of redshift, velocity dispersion, and four Lick line indices, Mg b , Fe5270, Fe5335, and Hβ with their errors are given for all of these galaxies, along with Hβ, [O III], Hα, and [N II] emission line strengths for a subset of these objects. These sources are brighter than M* for low-density regions and tend to be bluer than their counterpart early-type objects in high-density regions. Using the models …
Large Scale Structure As A Probe Of Gravitational Slip, Scott F. Daniel, Robert R. Caldwell, Asantha Cooray, Alessandro Melchiorri
Large Scale Structure As A Probe Of Gravitational Slip, Scott F. Daniel, Robert R. Caldwell, Asantha Cooray, Alessandro Melchiorri
Dartmouth Scholarship
A new time-dependent, scale-independent parameter, ϖ, is employed in a phenomenological model of the deviation from general relativity in which the Newtonian and longitudinal gravitational potentials slip apart on cosmological scales as dark energy, assumed to be arising from a new theory of gravitation, appears to dominate the Universe. A comparison is presented between ϖ and other parametrized post-Friedmannian models in the literature. The effect of ϖ on the cosmic microwave background anisotropy spectrum, the growth of large-scale structure, the galaxy weak-lensing correlation function, and cross correlations of cosmic microwave background anisotropy with galaxy clustering are illustrated. Cosmological models with …
Deep Advanced Camera For Surveys Imaging In The Globular Cluster Ngc 6397: The Cluster Color-Magnitude Diagram And Luminosity Function, Harvey B. Richer, Aaron Dotter, Jarrod Hurley, Jay Anderson
Deep Advanced Camera For Surveys Imaging In The Globular Cluster Ngc 6397: The Cluster Color-Magnitude Diagram And Luminosity Function, Harvey B. Richer, Aaron Dotter, Jarrod Hurley, Jay Anderson
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present the color-magnitude diagram (CMD) from deep Hubble Space Telescope imaging in the globular cluster NGC 6397. The Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) was used for 126 orbits to image a single field in two colors (F814W, F606W) 5' SE of the cluster center. The field observed overlaps that of archival WFPC2 data from 1994 and 1997 which were used to proper motion (PM) clean the data. Applying the PM corrections produces a remarkably clean CMD which reveals a number of features never seen before in a globular cluster CMD. In our field, the main-sequence stars appeared to terminate …
The Rapidly Flaring Afterglow Of The Very Bright And Energetic Grb 070125, Adria C. Updike, Josh B. Haislip, Melissa C. Nysewander, Andrew S. Fruchter, D. Alexander Kann, Sylvio Klose, Peter A. Milne, G. Grant Williams, Weikang Zheng, Carl W. Hergenrother, Jason X. Prochaska, Jules P. Halpern, Nestor Mirabal, John R. Thorstensen
The Rapidly Flaring Afterglow Of The Very Bright And Energetic Grb 070125, Adria C. Updike, Josh B. Haislip, Melissa C. Nysewander, Andrew S. Fruchter, D. Alexander Kann, Sylvio Klose, Peter A. Milne, G. Grant Williams, Weikang Zheng, Carl W. Hergenrother, Jason X. Prochaska, Jules P. Halpern, Nestor Mirabal, John R. Thorstensen
Dartmouth Scholarship
We report on multiwavelength observations, ranging from X-ray to radio wave bands, of the IPN-localized gamma-ray burst GRB 070125. Spectroscopic observations reveal the presence of absorption lines due to O I, Si II, and C IV, implying a likely redshift of z = 1.547. The well-sampled light curves, in particular from 0.5 to 4 days after the burst, suggest a jet break at 3.7 days, corresponding to a jet opening angle of ~7.0°, and implying an intrinsic GRB energy in the 1-10,000 keV band of around Eγ = (6.3–6.9) × 1051 ergs (based on the fluences measured by …
The Nature Of The Ultraluminous Oxygen‐Rich Supernova Remnant In Ngc 4449, Dan Milisavljevic, Robert A. Fesen
The Nature Of The Ultraluminous Oxygen‐Rich Supernova Remnant In Ngc 4449, Dan Milisavljevic, Robert A. Fesen
Dartmouth Scholarship
Optical images and spectra, both ground based and taken by Hubble Space Telescope (HST), of the young, luminous O-rich supernova remnant in the irregular galaxy NGC 4449 are presented. HST images of the remnant and its local region were obtained with the ACS/WFC using filters F435W, F555W, F814W (B, V, and I, respectively), F502N ([O III]), F658N (Hα + [N II]), F660N ([N II]), and F550M (line-free continuum). These images show an unresolved remnant (FWHM < 0.05'') located within a rich cluster of OB stars which itself is enclosed by a nearly complete interstellar shell seen best in Hα + [N II] emission approximately 8'' × 6'' (150 pc × 110 pc ) in size. The remnant and its associated OB cluster are isolated …
Comparing Various Multi-Component Global Heliosphere Models, H.-R. Müller, V. Florinski, J. Heerikhuisen, V. V. Izmodenov
Comparing Various Multi-Component Global Heliosphere Models, H.-R. Müller, V. Florinski, J. Heerikhuisen, V. V. Izmodenov
Dartmouth Scholarship
Modeling of the global heliosphere seeks to investigate the interaction of the solar wind with the partially ionized local interstellar medium. Models that treat neutr al hydrogen self-consistently and in great detail, together with the plasma, but that neglect magnetic fields, constitute a sub-category within global heliospheric models. There are several different modeling strategies used for this sub-category in the literature. Differences and commonalities in the modeling results from different strategies are pointed out.
Spatially Resolved Spectroscopy Of Coma Cluster Early‐Type Galaxies. Iv. Completing The Data Set, E. M. Corsini, G. Wegner, R. P. Saglia, J. Thomas
Spatially Resolved Spectroscopy Of Coma Cluster Early‐Type Galaxies. Iv. Completing The Data Set, E. M. Corsini, G. Wegner, R. P. Saglia, J. Thomas
Dartmouth Scholarship
The long-slit spectra obtained along the minor axis, offset major axis, and diagonal axis are presented for 12 E and S0 galaxies of the Coma Cluster drawn from a magnitude-limited sample studied before. The rotation curves, velocity dispersion profiles, and the H3 and H4 coefficients of the Hermite decomposition of the line-of-sight velocity distribution are derived. The radial profiles of the Hβ, Mg, and Fe line strength indices are measured too. In addition, the surface photometry of the central regions of a subsample of four galaxies recently obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope is presented. The data will …
Comparison Of Birkeland Current Observations During Two Magnetic Cloud Events With Mhd Simulations, H Korth, B J. Anderson, J G. Lyon, M Wiltberger
Comparison Of Birkeland Current Observations During Two Magnetic Cloud Events With Mhd Simulations, H Korth, B J. Anderson, J G. Lyon, M Wiltberger
Dartmouth Scholarship
Low altitude field-aligned current densities ob-
tained from global magnetospheric simulations are compared
with two-dimensional distributions of Birkeland currents at
the topside ionosphere derived from magnetic field observa-
tions by the constellation of Iridium satellites. We present the
analysis of two magnetic cloud events, 17–19 August 2003
and 19–21 March 2001, where the interplanetary magnetic
field (IMF) rotates slowly (∼10◦/h) to avoid time-aliasing in
the magnetic perturbations used to calculate the Birkeland
currents. In the August 2003 event the IMF rotates from
southward to northward while maintaining a negative IMF
By during much of the interval. During the March 2001 …
A New, Bright, Short-Period, Emission Line Binary In Ophiuchus, M. A. Stark, Richard A. Wade, John R. Thorstensen, Christopher S. Peters
A New, Bright, Short-Period, Emission Line Binary In Ophiuchus, M. A. Stark, Richard A. Wade, John R. Thorstensen, Christopher S. Peters
Dartmouth Scholarship
The 11th magnitude star LS IV-08°3 has been classified previously as an OB star in the Luminous Stars survey, or alternatively as a hot subdwarf. It is actually a binary star. We present spectroscopy, spectroscopic orbital elements, and time-series photometry from observations made at the Kitt Peak National Observatory 2.1 m, Steward Observatory 2.3 m, MDM Observatory 1.3 m and 2.4 m, Hobby-Eberly 9.2 m, and Michigan State University 0.6 m telescopes. The star exhibits emission of varying strength in the cores of H and He I absorption lines. Emission is also present at 4686 Å (He II) and near …
De Canum Venaticorum: A Bright, Eclipsing Red Dwarf–White Dwarf Binary, E. J. M. Van Den Besselaar, R. Greimel, L. Morales-Rueda, G. Nelemans, J. R. Thorstensen
De Canum Venaticorum: A Bright, Eclipsing Red Dwarf–White Dwarf Binary, E. J. M. Van Den Besselaar, R. Greimel, L. Morales-Rueda, G. Nelemans, J. R. Thorstensen
Dartmouth Scholarship
Close white dwarf - red dwarf binaries must have gone through a common-envelope phase during their evolution. DE CVn is a detached white dwarf - red dwarf binary with a relatively short (~8.7 hours) orbital period. Its brightness and the presence of eclipses makes this system ideal for a more detailed study. From a study of photometric and spectroscopic observations of DE CVn we derive the system parameters which we discuss in the frame work of common-envelope evolution. Photometric observations of the eclipses are used to determine an accurate ephemeris. From a model fit to an average low-resolution spectrum of …
Optical Imaging And Spectroscopy Of The Galactic Supernova Remnant 3c 58 (G130.7+3.1), Robert Fesen, Gwen Rudie, Alan Hurford, Aljeandro Soto
Optical Imaging And Spectroscopy Of The Galactic Supernova Remnant 3c 58 (G130.7+3.1), Robert Fesen, Gwen Rudie, Alan Hurford, Aljeandro Soto
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present a comprehensive imaging and spectroscopic survey of optical emission knots associated with the young Galactic supernova remnant 3C 58. Hα images show hundreds of clumpy filaments and knots arranged in a complex structure covering a nearly circular area roughly 400'' in diameter. A quite different emission structure is seen in [O III], where the brightest features are less clumpy and largely confined to the remnant's northwest quadrant. Measured radial velocities of over 450 knots reveal two distinct kinematic populations; one with average and peak expansion velocities of 770 and 1100 km s−1, respectively, forming a thick …
Lower Limit To The Scale Of An Effective Quantum Theory Of Gravitation, R. R. Caldwell, Daniel Grin
Lower Limit To The Scale Of An Effective Quantum Theory Of Gravitation, R. R. Caldwell, Daniel Grin
Dartmouth Scholarship
An effective quantum theory of gravitation in which gravity weakens at energies higher than ∼10−3 eV is one way to accommodate the apparent smallness of the cosmological constant. Such a theory predicts departures from the Newtonian inverse-square force law on distances below ∼0.05 mm. However, it is shown that this modification also leads to changes in the long-range behavior of gravity and is inconsistent with observed gravitational lenses.
The Extinction Toward The Galactic Bulge From Rr Lyrae Stars, Andrea Kunder, Piotr Popowski, Kem H. Cook, Brian Chaboyer
The Extinction Toward The Galactic Bulge From Rr Lyrae Stars, Andrea Kunder, Piotr Popowski, Kem H. Cook, Brian Chaboyer
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present mean reddenings toward 3525 RR0 Lyrae stars from the Galactic bulge fields of the MACHO Survey. These reddenings are determined using the color at minimum V-band light of the RR0 Lyrae stars themselves and are found to be in general agreement with extinction estimates at the same location obtained from other methods. Using 3256 stars located in the Galactic Bulge, we derive the selective extinction coefficient RV,VR = AV/E(V − R) = 4.3 ± 0.2. This value is what is expected for a standard extinction law with R …
Near Ultraviolet–Infrared Colours Of Red-Sequence Galaxies In Local Clusters, Timothy D. Rawle, Russell J. Smith, John R. Lucey, Michael J. Hudson, Gary A. Wegner
Near Ultraviolet–Infrared Colours Of Red-Sequence Galaxies In Local Clusters, Timothy D. Rawle, Russell J. Smith, John R. Lucey, Michael J. Hudson, Gary A. Wegner
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present GALEX near‐ultraviolet (NUV) and Two‐Micron All‐Sky Survey J‐band photometry for red‐sequence galaxies in local clusters. We define quiescent samples according to a strict emission threshold, removing galaxies with very recent star formation. We analyse the NUV–J colour–magnitude relation (CMR) and find that the intrinsic scatter is an order of magnitude larger than for the analogous optical CMR (∼0.35 rather than 0.05 mag), in agreement with previous studies. Comparing the NUV–J colours with spectroscopically derived stellar population parameters, we find a strong (>5.5σ) correlation with metallicity, only a marginal trend with …
First Results From Ideal 2-D Mhd Reconstruction: Magnetopause Reconnection Event Seen By Cluster, W. L. Teh, B. U. O. Sonnerup
First Results From Ideal 2-D Mhd Reconstruction: Magnetopause Reconnection Event Seen By Cluster, W. L. Teh, B. U. O. Sonnerup
Dartmouth Scholarship
We have applied a new reconstruction method (Sonnerup and Teh, 2008), based on the ideal single-fluid MHD equations in a steady-state, two-dimensional geometry, to a reconnection event observed by the Cluster-3 (C3) space- craft on 5 July 2001, 06:23 UT, at the dawn-side Northern- Hemisphere magnetopause. The event has been previously studied by use of Grad-Shafranov (GS) reconstruction, per- formed in the deHoffmann-Teller frame, and using the as- sumption that the flow effects were either negligible or the flow was aligned with the magnetic field. Our new method allows the reconstruction to be performed in the frame of reference moving …
The Warps Survey. Vii. The Warps‐Ii Cluster Catalog, Donald J. Horner, Eric S. Perlman, Harald Ebeling, Laurence Jones, Caleb A. Scharf, Gary Wegner, Matthew Malkan, Ben Maughan
The Warps Survey. Vii. The Warps‐Ii Cluster Catalog, Donald J. Horner, Eric S. Perlman, Harald Ebeling, Laurence Jones, Caleb A. Scharf, Gary Wegner, Matthew Malkan, Ben Maughan
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present the galaxy cluster catalog from the second, larger phase of the Wide Angle ROSAT Pointed Survey (WARPS), an X-ray selected survey for high-redshift galaxy clusters. WARPS is among the largest deep X-ray cluster surveys and is being used to study the properties and evolution of galaxy clusters. The WARPS-II sample contains 125 clusters serendipitously detected in a survey of 301 ROSAT PSPC pointed observations and covers a sky area of 56.7 deg2. Of these 125 clusters, 53 have not been previously reported in the literature. We have nearly complete spectroscopic follow-up of the clusters, which range …
The Crab Nebula's Dynamical Age As Measured From Its Northern Filamentary Jet, G. C. Rudie, R. A. Fesen, T. Yamada
The Crab Nebula's Dynamical Age As Measured From Its Northern Filamentary Jet, G. C. Rudie, R. A. Fesen, T. Yamada
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present a deep [O III] 4959,5007 image of the northern filamentary jet in the Crab Nebula taken with the 8.2m Subaru telescope. Using this image and an image taken with the KPNO 4m in 1988 (Fesen & Staker 1993), we have computed proper motions for 35 locations in the jet. The results suggest that when compared to the main body of the remnant, the jet experienced less outward acceleration from the central pulsar's rapidly expanding synchrotron nebula. The jet's apparent expansion rate yields an undecelerated explosion date for the Crab Nebula of 1055 plus or minus 24 C.E., a …