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Featured researches published by Hamburger Sternwarte.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

The HRX-BL Lac sample – Evolution of BL Lac objects

V. Beckmann; O. Wucknitz; Hamburger Sternwarte

The unification of X-ray and radio selected BL Lacs has been an outstanding problem in the blazar research in the past years. Recent investigations have shown that the gap between the two classes can be filled with intermediate objects and that apparently all dierences can be explained by mutual shifts of the peak frequencies of the synchrotron and inverse Compton component of the emission. We study the consequences of this scheme using a new sample of X-ray selected BL Lac objects comprising 104 objects with z < 0:9 and a mean redshift ¯ = 0:34. 77 BL Lacs, of which the redshift could be determined for 64 (83%) objects, form a complete sample. The new data could not confirm our earlier result, drawn from a subsample, that the negative evolution vanishes below a synchrotron peak frequency logpeak= 16:5. The complete sample shows negative evolution at the 2 level (hVe=Vai = 0:42 0:04). We conclude that the observed properties of the HRX BL Lac sample show typical behaviour for X-ray selected BL Lacs. They support an evolutionary model, in which flat-spectrum radio quasars (FSRQ) with high energetic jets evolve towards low frequency peaked (mostly radio-selected) BL Lac objects and later on to high frequency peaked (mostly X-ray selected) BL Lacs.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

Study of extremely reddened AGB stars in the Galactic bulge

F. Jimenez-Esteban; Dieter Engels; Valle de la Viña; Hamburger Sternwarte

Context. Extremely reddened AGB stars lose mass at high rates of >10^-5 Msun/yr. This is the very last stage of AGB evolution, in which stars in the mass range 2.0--4.0 Msun (for solar metallicity) should have been converted to C stars already. The extremely reddened AGB stars in the Galactic bulge are however predominantly O-rich, implying that they might be either low-mass stars or stars at the upper end of the AGB mass range. Aims. To determine the mass range of the most reddened AGB stars in the Galactic bulge. Methods. Using Virtual Observatory tools, we constructed spectral energy distributions of a sample of 37 evolved stars in the Galactic bulge with extremely red IRAS colours. We fitted DUSTY models to the observational data to infer the bolometric fluxes. Applying individual corrections for interstellar extinction and adopting a common distance, we determined luminosities and mass-loss rates, and inferred the progenitor mass range from comparisons with AGB evolutionary models. Results. The observed spectral energy distributions are consistent with a classification as reddened AGB stars, except for two stars, which are proto-planetary nebula candidates. For the AGB stars, we found luminosities in the range 3000--30,000 Lsun and mass-loss rates 10^-5--3x10^-4 Msun/yr. The corresponding mass range is 1.1--6.0 Msun assuming solar metallicity. Conclusions. Contrary to the predictions of the evolutionary models, the luminosity distribution is continuous, with many O-rich AGB stars in the mass range in which they should have been converted into C stars already. We suspect that bulge AGB stars have higher than solar metallicity and therefore may avoid the conversion to C-rich. The presence of low-mass stars in the sample shows that their termination of the AGB evolution also occurs during a final phase of very high mass-loss rate, leading to optically thick circumstellar shells.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 1997

A general and practical method for calculating cosmological distances

Rainer Kayser; Phillip Helbig; T. Schramm; Hamburger Sternwarte


arXiv: Astrophysics | 2000

A search for X-ray emission from Saturn, Uranus and Neptune

J.-U. Ness; Hamburger Sternwarte


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 1998

Microlensing on different timescales in the lightcurves of QSO 0957+561 A,B

J. Pelt; Rudolph E. Schild; S. Refsdal; R. Stabell; Hamburger Sternwarte


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2000

The structure of Algol's corona: a consistent scenario for the X-ray and radio emission

F. Favata; G. Micela; F. Reale; S. Sciortino; Piazza del Parlamento; Hamburger Sternwarte


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 1998

DETECTION OF FURTHER UV-BRIGHT HIGH-REDSHIFT QSOS

D. Reimers; P. M. Rodriguez-Pascual; L. Wisotzki; Hamburger Sternwarte


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 1998

Detection of the lensing galaxy in HE 2149-2745 ?

Sebastian Pedraza Lopez; O. Wucknitz; Lutz Wisotzki; Hamburger Sternwarte


Archive | 1997

The possible discovery of the epoch of He-reionization

D. Reimers; L. Wisotzki; D. Groote; P. M. Rodriguez-Pascual; Willem Wamsteker; Hamburger Sternwarte


arXiv: Astrophysics | 2000

Cool helium-rich white dwarfs from the Hamburg/ESO survey ?;??

S. Friedrich; D. Koester; Norbert Christlieb; D. Reimers; L. Wisotzki; Hamburger Sternwarte

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D. Engels

University of Hamburg

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N. Bade

University of Hamburg

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R. Quast

University of Hamburg

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S. Jordan

University of Tübingen

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