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Dive into the research topics where Thomas A. Prince is active.

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Featured researches published by Thomas A. Prince.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 1997

Observations of accreting pulsars

Lars Bildsten; Deepto Chakrabarty; John Chiu; Mark H. Finger; Danny T. Koh; Robert W. Nelson; Thomas A. Prince; B. C. Rubin; D. Matthew Scott; Mark Thomas Stollberg; Brian A. Vaughan; Colleen A. Wilson; Robert B. Wilson

We discuss recent observations of accreting binary pulsars with the all-sky BATSE instrument on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. BATSE has detected and studied nearly half of the known accreting pulsar systems. Continuous timing studies over a two-year period have yielded accurate orbital parameters for 9 of these systems, as well as new insights into long-term accretion torque histories.


The evolution of X‐ray binaries | 1994

Observations of Accreting Pulsars

Thomas A. Prince; Lars Bildsten; Deepto Chakrabarty; Robert B. Wilson; Mark H. Finger

We discuss recent observations of accreting binary pulsars with the all‐sky BATSE instrument on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. BATSE has detected and studied nearly half of the known accreting pulsar systems. Continuous timing studies over a two‐year period have yielded accurate orbital parameters for 9 of these systems, as well as new insights into long‐term accretion torque histories.


computational science and engineering | 2009

Montage: a grid portal and software toolkit for science-grade astronomical image mosaicking

Joseph C. Jacob; Daniel S. Katz; G. Bruce Berriman; John C. Good; Anastasia C. Laity; Ewa Deelman; Carl Kesselman; Gurmeet Singh; Mei Hui Su; Thomas A. Prince; Roy Williams

Montage is a portable software toolkit to construct custom, science-grade mosaics that preserve the astrometry and photometry of astronomical sources. The user specifies the dataset, wavelength, sky location, mosaic size, coordinate system, projection, and spatial sampling. Montage supports massive astronomical datasets that may be stored in distributed archives. Montage can be run on both single- and multi-processor computers, including clusters and grids. Standard grid tools are used to access remote data or run Montage on remote computers. This paper describes the architecture, algorithms, performance, and usage of Montage as both a software toolkit and a grid portal.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

Torque Reversal and Spin-Down of the Accretion-Powered Pulsar 4U 1626-67

Deepto Chakrabarty; Lars Bildsten; John Mace Grunsfeld; Danny T. Koh; Thomas A. Prince; Brian A. Vaughan; Mark H. Finger; D. Matthew Scott; Robert B. Wilson

Over 5 yr of hard X-ray (20-60 keV) monitoring of the 7.66 s accretion-powered pulsar 4U 1626-67 with the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory/BATSE large-area detectors has revealed that the neutron star is now steadily spinning down, in marked contrast to the steady spin-up observed during 1977-1989. This is the second accreting pulsar (the other is GX 1+4) that has shown extended, steady intervals of both spin-up and spin-down. Remarkably, the magnitudes of the spin-up and spin-down torques differ by only 15%, with the neutron star spin changing on a timescale |ν/dot ν| ≈ 5000 yr in both states. The current spin-down rate is itself decreasing on a timescale |dot ν/bar ν| ≈ 26 yr. The long-term timing history shows small-amplitude variations on a 4000 day timescale, which are probably due to variations in the mass transfer rate. The pulsed 20-60 keV emission from 4U 1626-67 is well-fitted by a power-law spectrum with photon index γ = 4.9 and a typical pulsed intensity of 1.5 × 10^(-10) ergs cm^(-2) s^(-1). The low count rates with BATSE prohibited us from constraining the reported 42 minute binary orbit, but we can rule out long-period orbits in the range 2 days lesssim Porb lesssim 900 days. We compare the long-term torque behavior of 4U 1626-67 to other disk-fed accreting pulsars and discuss the implications of our results for the various theories of magnetic accretion torques. The abrupt change in the sign of the torque is difficult to reconcile with the extremely smooth spin-down now observed. The strength of the torque noise in 4U 1626-67, ~10^(-22) Hz^2 s^(-2) Hz^(-1), is the smallest ever measured for an accreting X-ray pulsar, and it is comparable to the timing noise seen in young radio pulsars. We close by pointing out that the core temperature and external torque (the two parameters potentially relevant to internal sources of timing noise) of an accreting neutron star are also comparable to those of young radio pulsars.


international conference on parallel processing | 2005

A comparison of two methods for building astronomical image mosaics on a grid

Daniel S. Katz; Joseph C. Jacob; Ewa Deelman; Carl Kesselman; Gurmeet Singh; Mei-Hui Su; G.B. Berriman; John C. Good; Anastasia C. Laity; Thomas A. Prince

This paper compares two methods for running an application composed of a set of modules on a grid. The set of modules (collectively called Montage) generates large astronomical image mosaics by composing multiple small images. The workflow that describes a particular run of Montage can be expressed as a directed acyclic graph (DAG), or as a short sequence of parallel (MPI) and sequential programs. In the first case, Pegasus can be used to run the workflow. In the second case, a short shell script that calls each program can be run. In this paper, we discuss the Montage modules, the workflow run for a sample job, and the two methods of actually running the workflow. We examine the run time for each method and compare the portions that differ between the two methods.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

Rapid Spin-Up Episodes in the Wind-Fed Accreting Pulsar GX 301-2

Danny T. Koh; Lars Bildsten; Deepto Chakrabarty; Robert W. Nelson; Thomas A. Prince; Brian A. Vaughan; Mark H. Finger; Robert B. Wilson; B. C. Rubin

The accreting pulsar GX 301-2 (P = 680 s) has been observed continuously by the large-area detectors of the Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE) instrument on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory since 1991 April 5. Orbital parameters determined from these data are consistent with previous measurements, with improved accuracy in the current orbital epoch. The most striking features in the pulsar frequency history are two steady and rapid spin-up episodes, with ν˙~(3-5)×10^(-12) Hz s^(-1), each lasting for about 30 days. They probably represent the formation of transient accretion disks in this wind-fed pulsar. Except for these spin-up episodes, there are virtually no net changes in the neutron star spin frequency on long timescales. We suggest that the long-term spin-up trend observed since 1984 (ν˙~2×10^(-13) Hz s^(-1)) may be due entirely to brief (~20 days) spin-up episodes similar to those we have discovered. We assess different accretion models and their ability to explain the orbital phase dependence of the observed flux. In addition to the previously observed preperiastron peak at orbital phase 0.956 +/- 0.022, we also find a smaller peak close to apastron at orbital phase 0.498 +/- 0.057. We show that if the companion stars effective temperature is less than 22,000 K, then it must have a mass M_c < 70 M_⊙ and a radius R_c < 85 R_⊙ so as not to overfill the tidal lobe at periastron. In order not to overflow the Roche lobe at periastron, the corresponding values are M_c < 55 M_⊙ and R_c < 68 R_⊙. These constraints are nearly at odds with the reclassification by Kaper et al. of the companion as a B1 Ia + hypergiant.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

On the Dramatic Spin-up/Spin-down Torque Reversals in Accreting Pulsars

Robert W. Nelson; Lars Bildsten; Deepto Chakrabarty; Mark H. Finger; Danny T. Koh; Thomas A. Prince; B. C. Rubin; D. Mathew Scott; Brian A. Vaughan; Robert B. Wilson

Dramatic torque reversals between spin-up and spin-down have been observed in half of the persistent X-ray pulsars monitored by the BATSE all-sky monitor on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. Theoretical models developed to explain early pulsar timing data can explain spin-down torques via a disk-magnetosphere interaction if the star nearly corotates with the inner accretion disk. To produce the observed BATSE torque reversals, however, these equilibrium models require the disk to alternate between two mass accretion rates, with ˙M5 producing accretion torques of similar magnitude but always of opposite sign. Moreover, in at least one pulsar (GX 114) undergoing secular spin-down, the neutron star spins down faster during brief (~20 day) hard X-ray flares—this is opposite the correlation expected from standard theory, assuming that BATSE pulsed flux increases with mass accretion rate. The 10 day to 10 yr intervals between torque reversals in these systems are much longer than any characteristic magnetic or viscous timescale near the inner disk boundary and are more suggestive of a global disk phenomenon. We discuss possible explanations of the observed torque behavior. Despite the preferred sense of rotation defined by the binary orbit, the BATSE observations are urprisingly consistent with an earlier suggestion for GX 1+4: the disks in these systems somehow alternate between episodes of prograde and retrograde rotation. We are unaware of any mechanism that could produce a stable retrograde disk in a binary undergoing Roche lobe overflow, but such flip-flop behavior does occur in numerical simulations of wind-fed systems. One possibility is that the disks in some of these binaries are fed by an X-ray–excited wind.


Communications of The ACM | 1998

Data-intensive computing and digital libraries

Reagan Moore; Thomas A. Prince; Mark H. Ellisman

How to automate management of the flood of scientific data being collected in astronomical and neuroscience projects.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1997

On the Correlation of Torque and Luminosity in GX 1+4

Deepto Chakrabarty; Lars Bildsten; Mark H. Finger; John Mace Grunsfeld; Danny T. Koh; Robert W. Nelson; Thomas A. Prince; Brian A. Vaughan; Robert B. Wilson

Over 5 years of daily hard X-ray (>20 keV) monitoring of the 2 minute accretion-powered pulsar GX 1+4 with the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory/BATSE large-area detectors has found nearly continuous rapid spin-down, interrupted by a bright 200 day spin-up episode. During spin-down, the torque becomes more negative as the luminosity increases (assuming that the 20-60 keV pulsed flux traces bolometric luminosity), the opposite of what is predicted by standard accretion torque theory. No changes in the shape of the 20-100 keV pulsed energy spectrum were detected, so that a very drastic change in the spectrum below 20 keV or the pulsed fraction would be required to make the 20-60 keV pulsed flux a poor luminosity tracer. These are the first observations that flatly contradict standard magnetic disk accretion theory, and they may have important implications for understanding the spin evolution of X-ray binaries, cataclysmic variables, and protostars. We briefly discuss the possibility that GX 1+4 may be accreting from a retrograde disk during spin-down, as previously suggested.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 1984

Gamma-Ray Imaging with a Rotating Hexagonal Uniformly Redundant Array

W. R. Cook; M. Finger; Thomas A. Prince; E. C. Stone

Laboratory experiments have been performed to demonstrate the capabilities of a ¿-ray imaging system employing a NaI Anger camera and a rotating coded aperture mask. The mask incorporates in its design a new type of hexagonal uniformly redundant array (HURA) which is essentially antisymmetric under 60° rotation. The image formation techniques are described and results are presented that demonstrate the imaging capability of the system for individual and multiple point sources of ¿-ray emission. The results are cornpared to analytical predictions for the imaging and point source localization capabilities of coded aperture systems using continuous detectors.

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S. R. Kulkarni

California Institute of Technology

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Mark H. Finger

Universities Space Research Association

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Deepto Chakrabarty

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Robert B. Wilson

Marshall Space Flight Center

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Russ R. Laher

California Institute of Technology

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Lars Bildsten

Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics

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David Levitan

California Institute of Technology

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Jason A. Surace

California Institute of Technology

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John C. Good

California Institute of Technology

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