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Point source

About: Point source is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 5077 publications have been published within this topic receiving 94091 citations.


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TL;DR: In this article, a transmission and reflection matrices (TRM) method for a layered porous half-space subject to a point force or a fluid point source is developed. But the authors focus on the point force and the point fluid source in both the frequency domain and the time domain.
Abstract: The focus of this contribution is to develop a transmission and reflection matrices (TRM) method for a layered porous half-space subject to a point force or a fluid point source. Applying the Hankel and the Fourier transformation, the general solutions for the displacements, stresses and pore pressure are derived from the potentials for the solid skeleton and the pore fluid as well as the governing equations of Biot’s theory. The transmission and reflection matrices (TRM) for each interface are obtained by using the general solutions as well as the continuity conditions at the interface. The TRM method for the layered porous medium is developed on the basis of the transmission and reflection matrices (TRM) and the boundary conditions as well as the source terms for the point force or the fluid point source. The fundamental solutions of the point force and the point fluid source in both the frequency domain and the time domain are obtained by using the proposed TRM method. Some numerical examples are given in the paper.

86 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this article, the authors carried out a series of joint spectral fits of the ASCA and ROSAT data and found that the major contributor of the XRB must be a single population with similar flat spectra.
Abstract: The X-ray background (XRB) from 0.1 to 7 keV has been studied using high spectral and spatial resolution data from the ASCA SIS and ROSAT PSPC. Analysing both the diffuse background radiation and resolved sources, we have carried out a series of joint spectral fits of the ASCA and ROSAT data. The spectrum of the XRB can be fit well by a single power-law from 1 to 7 keV; overall, the photon index of the power-law model ranges from 1.4 to 1.5, and no obvious excess is found between 1 and 3 keV. Below 1 keV, the models become more complicated and involve a mixture of extragalactic and Galactic sources. As some of the extragalactic contributions should be from point sources, we have examined the ASCA and ROSAT spectra of resolved sources individually: a stellar source having a well-fit thermal spectrum and two AGNs having a much steeper power-law spectrum (with photon index of about 3); the accumulated spectrum of other non-stellar sources resolved by ROSAT also has a steeper-than-average spectrum. Fitting the XRB spectrum observed by ASCA and the accumulated point source spectrum by ROSAT together by varying the contribution from steep spectrum sources, such as quasars, to the background, we find that they contribute less than 30 per cent in the 0.5--2 keV band and drop to below 10 per cent over 2--10 keV. This fraction is provided by sources brighter than a few times $10^{-15}$ \ergpercmpers (in the 0.5--2 keV band). Constrained by our spectral fitting results, the major contributor of the XRB must be a single population with similar flat spectra.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors point out that if the Galactic messengers are neutrons, then those with energies below an EeV will decay in flight, providing a flux of cosmic antineutrinos above a TeV which is observable at a kilometer-scale neutrino observatory.

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe the generation of single-band point source catalogues from submillimetre Herschel-SPIRE observations taken as part of the Science Demonstration Phase of the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES).
Abstract: We describe the generation of single-band point source catalogues from submillimetre Herschel-SPIRE observations taken as part of the Science Demonstration Phase of the Herschel Multi-tiered Extragalactic Survey (HerMES). Flux densities are found by means of peak finding and the fitting of a Gaussian point-response function. With highly confused images, careful checks must be made on the completeness and flux-density accuracy of the detected sources. This is done by injecting artificial sources into the images and analysing the resulting catalogues. Measured flux densities at which 50 per cent of injected sources result in good detections at (250, 350 and 500) mu m range from (11.6, 13.2 and 13.1) to (25.7, 27.1 and 35.8) mJy, depending on the depth of the observation (where a good detection is taken to be one with positional offset less than one full-width half-maximum of the point-response function, and with the measured flux density within a factor of 2 of the flux density of the injected source). This paper acts as a reference for the 2010 July HerMES public data release.

86 citations

01 May 2000
TL;DR: In this paper, an X-ray point source near the center of the 300-year old Cas A supernova remnant was detected in the Chandra/HRC data and the spectral properties and the timing limits of the point source were analyzed.
Abstract: The spectacular ii —rst light ˇˇ observation by the Chandra X-Ray Observatory revealed an X-ray point source near the center of the 300 yr old Cas A supernova remnant. We present an analysis of the public X-ray spectral and timing data. No coherent pulsations were detected in the Chandra/HRC data. The 3 p upper limit on the pulsed fraction is less than 35% for P ( 20 ms. The Chandra/ACIS spectrum of the point source may be —tted with an ideal blackbody (kT \ 0.5 keV) or with blackbody models modi—ed by the presence of a neutron star atmosphere (kT \ 0.25¨0.35 keV), but the temperature is higher and the inferred emitting area lower than expected for a 300 yr old neutron star according to standard cooling models. The spectrum may also be —tted with a power-law model (photon index ! \ 2.8¨3.6). Both the spectral properties and the timing limits of the point source are inconsistent with a young Crab-like pulsar but are quite similar to the properties of the anomalous X-ray pulsars. The spectral parameters are also very similar to those of the other radio-quiet X-ray point sources in the supernova remnants Pup A, RCW 103, and PKS 1209(52. Current limits on an optical counterpart for the Cas A point source rule out models that invoke fallback accretion onto a compact object if fallback disk properties are similar to those in quiescent low-mass X-ray binaries. However, the optical limits are mar- ginally consistent with plausible alternative assumptions for a fallback disk. In this case, accreting neutron star models can explain the X-ray data, but an accreting black hole model is not promising. Subject headings: accretion, accretion disksblack hole physicsstars: neutron ¨ supernovae: individual (Cassiopeia A) ¨ supernova remnantsX-rays: stars

86 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202350
2022133
2021103
2020135
2019123
2018133