Advanced Analysis of Night Sky Background Light for SSTCAM
Sissa Medialab Srl (2023) 218
Constraints on axionlike particles from a combined analysis of three flaring Fermi flat-spectrum radio quasars
Physical Review D American Physical Society 107:8 (2023) 83027
Abstract:
Many theories beyond the Standard Model of particle physics predict the existence of axionlike particles (ALPs) that mix with photons in the presence of a magnetic field. Searching for the effects of ALP-photon mixing in gamma-ray observations of blazars has provided some of the strongest constraints on ALP parameter space so far. Previously, only individual sources have been analyzed. We perform a combined analysis on Fermi Large Area Telescope data of three bright flaring flat-spectrum radio quasars, with the blazar jets themselves as the dominant mixing region. For the first time, we include a full treatment of photon-photon dispersion within the jet and account for the uncertainty in our B-field model by leaving the field strength free in the fitting. Overall, we find no evidence for ALPs but are able to exclude the ALP parameters 5 neV≲ma≲200 neV and gaγ≳5×10-12 GeV-1 with 95% confidence.Mass measurements and 3D orbital geometry of PSR J1933$-$6211
(2023)
The Black Hole Candidate Swift J1728.9–3613 and the Supernova Remnant G351.9–0.9
The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 947:1 (2023) 38-38
Abstract:
A number of neutron stars have been observed within the remnants of the core-collapse supernova explosions that created them. In contrast, black holes are not yet clearly associated with supernova remnants (SNRs). Indeed, some observations suggest that black holes are “born in the dark,” i.e., without a supernova explosion. Herein, we present a multiwavelength analysis of the X-ray transient Swift J1728.9−3613, based on observations made with Chandra, ESO-VISTA, MeerKAT, NICER, NuSTAR, Swift, and XMM-Newton. Three independent diagnostics indicate that the system likely harbors a black hole primary. Infrared imaging signals a massive companion star that is broadly consistent with an A or B spectral type. Most importantly, the X-ray binary lies within the central region of the cataloged SNR G351.9−0.9. Our deep MeerKAT image at 1.28 GHz signals that the remnant is in the Sedov phase; this fact and the nondetection of the soft X-ray emission expected from such a remnant argue that it lies at a distance that could coincide with the black hole. Utilizing a formal measurement of the distance to Swift J1728.9−3613 ( d = 8.4 ± 0.8 kpc), a lower limit on the distance to G351.9−0.9 ( d ≥ 7.5 kpc), and the number and distribution of black holes and SNRs within the Milky Way, extensive simulations suggest that the probability of a chance superposition is <1.7% (99.7% credible interval). The discovery of a black hole within an SNR would support numerical simulations that produce black holes and remnants, and thus provide clear observational evidence of distinct black hole formation channels. We discuss the robustness of our analysis and some challenges to this interpretationIXPE Observations of the Quintessential Wind-accreting X-Ray Pulsar Vela X-1
The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 947:2 (2023) l20