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Search for Pulsations from a Nearby Millisecond Pulsar and Wasilewski 49: Mirror for a Hidden Seyfert 1 Nucleus

机译:从附近的毫秒pulsar和Wasilewski寻找脉动49:隐藏的seyfert 1核的镜子

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Five studies are reported in this final report. The recently discovered 5.3 ms pulsar J10125307 at a distance of 520 pc is in an area of the sky which is particularly deficient in absorbing gas. The column density along the line of sight is less than 7.5 x 10(exp 19) CM(exp -2) which facilitates soft X-ray observations. Halpern reported a possible ROSAT Position Sensitive Proportional Counter (PSPC) detection of the pulsar in a serendipitous, off-axis observation. We have now confirmed the X-ray emission of PSR J1012,5307 in a 23 ksec observation with the ROSAT High Resolution Imager (HRI). A point source is detected within 3" of the radio position. Its count rate of 1.6 /- 0.3 x 10(exp -3) s(exp -1) corresponds to an unabsorbed 0. 1-2.4 keV flux of 6.4 x 10(exp -14) ergs cm(exp -2) s(exp -1), similar to that reported previously. This counts-to-flux conversion is valid for N(sub H) = 5 x 10(exp 19) cm(exp -2), and either a power-law spectrum of photon index 2.5 or a blackbody of kT = 0.1 keV. The implied X-ray luminosity of 2.0 x 10(exp 30) ergs s(exp -1) is 5 X 10(exp -4) of the pulsar's spin-down power dot-E, and similar to that of the nearest millisecond pulsar J0437-4715, which is nearly a twin of J10125307 in P dot-E. We subjected the 37 photons (and 13 background counts) within the source region to a pulsar search, but no evidence for pulsation was found. The pulsar apparently emits over a large fraction of its rotation cycle, and the absence of sharp modulation can be taken as evidence for surface thermal emission, as is favored for PSR J0437-4715, rather than magnetospheric X-ray emission which is apparent in the sharp pulses of the much more energetic millisecond pulsar B1821-24. A further test of this interpretation will be made with a longer ROSAT observation, which will increase the number of photons collected by a factor of 5, and permit a more sensitive examination of the light curve for modulation due to emission from heated polar caps. If found, such modulation will be further evidence that surface reheating by the impact of particles accelerated along open fiel;d lines operates in these approximately 10(exp -9) year old pulsars. In a second study, a new AM Her star serendipitously in a 25 day observation was detected with the EUVE satellite. A coherent period of 85.82 min is present in the EUVE Deep Survey imager light curve of this source. A spectroscopic optical identification is made with a 19th magnitude blue star that has H and He emission lines, and broad cyclotron humps typical of a magnetic cataclysmic variable. A lower limit to the polar magnetic field of 50 MG is estimated from the spacing of the cyclotron harmonics. EUVE J0425.6-5714 is also detected in archival ROSAT HRI observations spanning two months, and its stable and highly structured light curve permits us to fit a coherent ephemeris linking the ROSAT and EUVE data over a 1.3 yr gap. The derived period is 85.82107 /- 0.00020 min, and the ephemeris should be accurate to 0.1 cycles until the year 2005. A narrow but partial X-ray eclipse suggests that this object belongs to the group of AM Her stars whose viewing geometry is such that the accretion stream periodically occults the soft X-ray emitting accretion spot on the surface of the white dwarf. A non-detection of hard X-rays from ASCA observations that are contemporaneous with the ROSAT HRI shows that the soft X-rays must dominate by at least an order of magnitude, which is consistent with a known trend among AM Her stars with large magnetic field. This object should not be confused with the Seyfert galaxy IH 0419-577 (= LB 1727), another X-ray/EUV source which lies only 3'95 away, and was the principal target of these monitoring observations. In a third report; the identity of the persistent high-energy (> 100 MeV) gamma-ray sources in the Galaxy, still largely a mystery is investigated. The second installment of the EGRET (2EG) lists a total of 128 sources, of which 51 are likely or possibly identified with AGNs, five with rotation-powered pulsars, and one is the LMC. There are 71 unidentified sources, of which 33, or almost half, lie in the narrow band of absolute value of b < 10 degrees along the Galactic plane. This excess of low-latitude sources must, therefore, constitute a Galactic population that is either similar to the already identified gamma-ray pulsars, or an entirely new class of gamma-ray emitters associated with the disk population. We are continuing our program, begun in A06, that is aimed at intermediate-latitude sources, arguing that X-ray detection of them is the most plausible method of identifying the Galactic population. The sources at high latitude must statistically be mostly AGNS, and are more straightforwardly identified through radio and optical means. For the fourth report, identification of the EGRET Source the identity of the persistent, high-energy gamma-ray sources in the Galactic plane is a mystery. The most likely scenario is a population of middle-aged pulsars, many of which could be radio quiet like Geminga. We have an ongoing program of ROSAT, VLA, and optical observations of selected EGRET error circles at intermediate Galactic latitude. For one of these fields, at (l, b) = (106 degrees, 3), our complete census of X-ray and radio sources, reveals a remarkable association between a radio shell with unique properties, and a complete census of X-ray and radio sources reveals a remarkable association between a radio shell with unique properties, and a compact X-ray source. Further observations are needed to determine whether or not this source has a hard X-ray spectrum like that of other gamma ray pulsars and, ideally, to find its pulsations. A fifth report reviews, Wasilewski 49, an interacting pair of Seyfert galaxies at z = 0.063, one of which contains a hidden Seyfert I nucleus as evidenced by broad wings on its Balmer lines.

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