Quenched millimetre emission from Cygnus X-1 in a soft X-ray state
(2004)
"Soft X-ray transient" outbursts which are not soft
New Astronomy 9:4 (2004) 249-264
Abstract:
We have accumulated multiwavelength (X-ray, optical, radio) lightcurves for the eight black hole X-ray binaries which have been observed to enter a supposed 'soft X-ray transient' outburst, but remained in the low/hard state throughout the outburst. Comparison of the lightcurve morphologies, spectral behaviour, properties of the quasi-periodic oscillations and the radio jet provides the first study of such objects as a sub-class of X-ray transients. However, rather than assuming that these hard state X-ray transients are different from the 'canonical' soft X-ray transient, we prefer to consider the possibility that new analysis of both soft and hard state X-ray transients in a spectral context will provide a model capable of explaining the outburst mechanisms of (almost) all black hole X-ray binaries. © 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Formation and evolution of S0 galaxies: A SAURON case study of NGC 7332
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 350:1 (2004) 35-46
Abstract:
We present SAURON integral-field observations of the S0 galaxy NGC 7332. Existing broadband ground-based and Hubble Space Telescope (HST) photometry reveals a double-disc structure and a boxy bulge interpreted as a bar viewed close to edge-on. The SAURON two-dimensional stellar kinematic maps confirm the existence of the bar and inner disc but also uncover the presence of a cold counter-rotating stellar component within the central 250 pc. The Hβ and [O III] emission line maps show that the ionized gas has a complex morphology and kinematics, including both a component counter-rotating with respect to the stars and a fainter corotating one. Analysis of the absorption line-strength maps show that NGC 7332 is young everywhere. The presence of a large-scale bar can explain most of those properties, but the fact that we see a significant amount of unsettled gas, together with a few peculiar features in the maps, suggests that NGC 7332 is still evolving. Interactions as well as bar-driven processes must thus have played an important role in the formation and evolution of NGC 7332, and presumably of S0 galaxies in general.The Gemini-North Multi-Object Spectrograph: Performance in imaging, long-slit, and multi-object spectroscopic modes
Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific 116:819 (2004) 425-440