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Etude de la population stellaire galactique des relevés X du satellite XMM-NewtonHérent, Olivier Motch, Christian. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Thèse doctorat : Astrophysique : Strasbourg 1 : 2006. / Thèse soutenue sur un ensemble de travaux. Titre provenant de l'écran-titre. Bibliogr. 8 p.
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Multiwavelength study of the flaring activity of the supermassive black hole Sgr A* at the center of the Milky Way / Etudes multi-longueurs d'onde de l'activité du trou noir supermassif SGR A* au centre de notre galaxieMossoux, Emmanuelle 29 September 2016 (has links)
Sgr A*, le trou noir supermassif le plus proche de nous, émet une luminosité quiescente très faible ainsi que des éruptions en infrarouge proche (NIR), rayons X et radio. Cette thèse a pour but d'étudier l'effet du passage de DSO/G2 près de Sgr A* sur les éruptions. J'ai utilisé et amélioré trois méthodes pour l'étude en rayons X : les blocs Bayésiens en deux passes pour détecter les éruptions avec une certaine probabilité, le lissage des courbes de lumières pour diminuer le bruit de Poisson et la méthode de Monte Carlo par chaînes de Markov pour l'ajustement des spectres des éruptions. J'ai contraint les paramètres physiques de la source pour une des 3 éruptions détectées en rayons X en 2011 et pour 3 éruptions détectées en rayons X et NIR durant la campagne multi-longueurs d'onde de février-avril 2014. L'activité en rayons X et NIR de février-avril 2014 correspond à celle observée avant le passage de DSO/G2 près de Sgr A*. J'ai calculé le taux d'éruption intrinsèque en rayons X de Sgr A* en 1999-2015 et détecté une plus faible activité à partir du 28 octobre 2013. L'énergie stockée pendant cette période peut expliquer la plus forte activité observée du 30 août au 9 septembre 2014. / Sgr A*, the closest supermassive black hole, is an extremely low luminosity black hole emitting flares in near-infrared (NIR), X-rays and radio. The goal of this Ph.D. is to study the impact of the pericenter passage of the Dusty S-cluster Object DSO/G2 close to Sgr A* on the flaring activity. I used and improved three methods for the study in X-rays: the two-steps Bayesian blocks method to detect flares with a given false detection probability, the light curve smoothing to reduce the Poisson noise and the Monte Carlo Markov chains method for the fitting of the flare spectra. I constrained the physical parameters of the flaring region for one of the three X-ray flares detected in 2011 and for three NIR/X-ray flares detected during the 2014 Feb.-Apr. multiwavelength campaign. The X-ray and NIR activity during the 2014 Feb.-Apr. is not different from those observed before the DSO/G2 pericenter passage. I computed the intrinsic flaring rate in X-rays from Sgr A* in 1999-2015 and I detected a smaller flaring activity beginning on 2013 Oct. 28. The energy saved during this time period could explain the largest activity observed from 2014 Aug. 30 to Sept. 9.
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Energy Calibration of Different Modes of a pn-CCD-camera on board the X-Ray Observatory XMM-NewtonWinroth, Gustaf January 2007 (has links)
<p>The X-ray Multi-mirror Mission, XMM-Newton was launched by the European Space Agency, ESA, in 1999. XMM-Newton carries six cameras, including a silicon pn-junction Charge Coupled Device, or pn-CCD camera. This camera has six operating modes, spatially as well as time resolved. The main objective of this project is to refine the Burst mode energy correction in order to align the measured energy spectra observed in the Burst mode with the spectra taken in the Full Frame mode. An observation of the line-rich supernova remnant called Cassiopeia A is used to evaluate the line positions in each mode such that the energy correction function used for the alignment can be modified accordingly. The analysis further treats the application of the correction on a source with a continuous spectrum, the Crab nebula. Discussion shows how to reduce eventual residuals in the Crab spectrum by modifying the correction function while keeping the alignment of the Cas-A spectra. The final product is an update of the corresponding published calibration file.</p>
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Energy Calibration of Different Modes of a pn-CCD-camera on board the X-Ray Observatory XMM-NewtonWinroth, Gustaf January 2007 (has links)
The X-ray Multi-mirror Mission, XMM-Newton was launched by the European Space Agency, ESA, in 1999. XMM-Newton carries six cameras, including a silicon pn-junction Charge Coupled Device, or pn-CCD camera. This camera has six operating modes, spatially as well as time resolved. The main objective of this project is to refine the Burst mode energy correction in order to align the measured energy spectra observed in the Burst mode with the spectra taken in the Full Frame mode. An observation of the line-rich supernova remnant called Cassiopeia A is used to evaluate the line positions in each mode such that the energy correction function used for the alignment can be modified accordingly. The analysis further treats the application of the correction on a source with a continuous spectrum, the Crab nebula. Discussion shows how to reduce eventual residuals in the Crab spectrum by modifying the correction function while keeping the alignment of the Cas-A spectra. The final product is an update of the corresponding published calibration file.
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Evaluation of Flux and Timing Calibration of the XMM-Newton EPIC-MOS Cameras in Timing ModeLarsson, John-Olov January 2008 (has links)
XMM-Newton is a X-ray telescope launched december 1999, by the European Space Agency, ESA. On board XMM-Newton are two EPIC-MOS X-ray detectors. The detectors are build by Charged Coupled Devices (CCDs), of Metal Oxide Semi-conductor type. The EPIC-MOS cameras have four science operating modes. This project aims to evaluate the calibration for one of these four modes, the timing mode. The evaluation is divided into two parts. The first part is the evaluation of the flux calibration, performed by analysing various observation made in timing mode. The second part is the evaluation of timing properties by performing timing analysis of XMM-Newton observations of the Crab nebula compared to observations made in the radio wavelengths.
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X-ray Analysis of a Complete Sample of Giga-Hertz Peaked Spectrum GalaxiesTengstrand, Olof January 2008 (has links)
<p>This thesis investigates the X-ray properties of the entire Stanghellini et al. (1998) complete sample of GHz Peaked Spectrum galaxies with redshift lower than 1. In total 19 sources are included mainly from observations made by the European space telescope, XMM-Newton. Out of these the analysis of seven "new" observations made between 2006 and 2008 are throughout described. Data from the new observations shows consistency with already analysed data. As a new result a tentative discovery of a bi-modal structure in the X-ray to radio luminosity ratio within the sample is presented.</p>
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Evaluation of Flux and Timing Calibration of the XMM-Newton EPIC-MOS Cameras in Timing ModeLarsson, John-Olov January 2008 (has links)
<p>XMM-Newton is a X-ray telescope launched december 1999, by the European Space Agency, ESA. On board XMM-Newton are two EPIC-MOS X-ray detectors. The detectors are build by Charged Coupled Devices (CCDs), of Metal Oxide Semi-conductor type. The EPIC-MOS cameras have four science operating modes. This project aims to evaluate the calibration for one of these four modes, the timing mode.</p><p>The evaluation is divided into two parts. The first part is the evaluation of the flux calibration, performed by analysing various observation made in timing mode. The second part is the evaluation of timing properties by performing timing analysis of XMM-Newton observations of the Crab nebula compared to observations made in the radio wavelengths.</p>
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Caractéristiques X des amas de galaxies distants et application à la contrainte des paramètres cosmologiques.Vauclair, Sébastien 24 September 2004 (has links) (PDF)
L'observation des amas de galaxies dans le domaine des rayons X permet, d'une part de les étudier individuellement gràce à la capacité de spectro-imagerie haute-précision des instruments de dernière génération tels qu'XMM-Newton et Chandra, d'autre part, de les détecter jusqu'à de très grandes distances, ce qui permet de tester les phénomènes d'évolution. Ces objets ont un intéret cosmologique particulier puisqu'ils sont les plus massifs de l'Univers et qu'ils se sont formés tardivelent par l'effondrementdes zones denses sous l'effet de leur propre gravité. Ce processus dépend principalement de la densité de matière globale de l'Univers...
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X-ray Analysis of a Complete Sample of Giga-Hertz Peaked Spectrum GalaxiesTengstrand, Olof January 2008 (has links)
This thesis investigates the X-ray properties of the entire Stanghellini et al. (1998) complete sample of GHz Peaked Spectrum galaxies with redshift lower than 1. In total 19 sources are included mainly from observations made by the European space telescope, XMM-Newton. Out of these the analysis of seven "new" observations made between 2006 and 2008 are throughout described. Data from the new observations shows consistency with already analysed data. As a new result a tentative discovery of a bi-modal structure in the X-ray to radio luminosity ratio within the sample is presented.
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X-ray observations of the young pulsar wind nebula G21.5–0.9 and the evolved pulsar wind nebulae CTB 87 (G74.9+1.2) and G63.7+1.1Matheson, Heather January 2015 (has links)
Pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe), nebulae harbouring a rotation-powered neutron star that was born in a supernova, provide opportunities to study highly relativistic pulsar winds and their interaction with the surrounding medium. Particularly interesting are PWNe that do not show any sign of the expected surrounding SNR shell and were thought to be born in subenergetic explosions or with unusual progenitors. The detection of a shell around one such PWN suggested that shells are indeed produced but may be faint due to unseen shocked ejecta, a low density environment, and/or a young age that has not yet allowed the shell to brighten and become visible.
Here, by using observational X-ray data from modern telescopes with excellent spatial and energy resolution (Chandra and XMM-Newton), we target PWNe that do not have prominent SNR shells, and are known to be in varied environments, to further explore the characteristics of this growing, but poorly explored, class of PWNe. By combining imaging and spectroscopic results, we study the morphology of the PWNe, search for thermal emission from shock-heated material, investigate the energetics of the nebulae, and search for candidates for the neutron stars powering the nebulae.
We find that while the faint shell surrounding G21.5–0.9 can be explained as a young PWN evolving in a low density medium, CTB 87 (G74.9+1.2) appears to be in an advanced stage of evolution, and G63.7+1.1 appears to be both in an advanced stage of evolution and in a dense environment. By performing spatially resolved spectroscopy, we have shown how the spectral characteristics vary across the PWNe, and note that more data will place better constraints on possible thermal emission in these remnants. The imaging portion of these studies has revealed intriguing large-scale morphologies for CTB 87 and G63.7+1.1, as well as a torus-jet structure in CTB 87 and neutron star candidates in both CTB 87 and G63.7+1.1. We conclude that both CTB 87 and G63.7+1.1 are likely interacting with the supernova remnant reverse shock, and CTB 87 may be additionally influenced by the motion of its neutron star.
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