
Keble Road
Articles
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Dec 13, 2024 |
academic.oup.com | Denys Wilkinson Building |Keble Road |Space science |Abu Dhabi
Low-mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs) are binary systems made up of a compact object, either a black hole (BH) or neutron star (NS), and a low-mass stellar companion. Mass is transferred from the star to the compact object via Roche Lobe overflow through the inner Lagrange point.
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Nov 30, 2024 |
academic.oup.com | Denys Wilkinson Building |Keble Road |Madingley Road
Lyα is the transition to the ground state from the first excited state of hydrogen (the most common element). Resonant scattering of this line by neutral hydrogen greatly impedes its emergence from galaxies, so the fraction of galaxies emitting Lyα is a tracer of the neutral fraction of the intergalactic medium (IGM), and thus the history of reionisation.
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Nov 26, 2024 |
academic.oup.com | Gower Street |Denys Wilkinson Building |Keble Road
The utility of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) in cosmology arises from the fact that they are empirically standardizable candles, and are bright enough to be observed out to redshift .
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Nov 6, 2024 |
academic.oup.com | Denys Wilkinson Building |Keble Road |Kavli IPMU
Much of the progress made so far in cosmological large-scale structure studies has been using tools that are only optimal for the study of Gaussian random fields, such as correlation functions and power spectra. There are good reasons for these: CMB observations have confirmed that the primordial density fluctuations were very close to Gaussian (Komatsu et al. 2003; Planck Collaboration VII 2020).
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Oct 17, 2024 |
academic.oup.com | Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie |Denys Wilkinson Building |Keble Road
The double pulsar system PSR J0737−3039A/B is an extraordinary astrophysical laboratory that offers us a chance to directly probe the magnetic field of an active pulsar. Due to its almost edge-on orbit ( ; Hu et al. 2022; Askew et al. submitted) the 22.7 ms PSR J0737−3039A (‘pulsar A’; Burgay et al. 2003; Kramer et al. 2021a) is eclipsed for approximately 30–40 s every 2.4 h by the magnetosphere of the slower 2.77 s PSR J0737−3039B (‘pulsar B’; Lyne et al. 2004).
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