Previous detections of individual astrophysical sources of neutrinos are limited to the Sun and the supernova 1987A, whereas the origins of the diffuse flux of high-energy cosmic neutrinos remain unidentified. On 22 September 2017, we detected a high-energy neutrino, IceCube-170922A, with an energy of ~290 tera-electron volts. Its arrival direction was consistent with the location of a known γ-ray blazar, TXS 0506+056, observed to be in a flaring state. An extensive multiwavelength campaign followed, ranging from radio frequencies to γ-rays. These observations characterize the variability and energetics of the blazar and include the detection of TXS 0506+056 in very-high-energy γ-rays. This observation of a neutrino in spatial coincidence with a γ-ray-emitting blazar during an active phase suggests that blazars may be a source of high-energy neutrinos.
We measure the morphology-density relation ( MDR) and morphology-radius relation (MRR) for galaxies in seven z $ 1 clusters that have been observed with the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) on board the Hubble Space Telescope. Simulations and independent comparisons of our visually derived morphologies indicate that ACS allows one to distinguish between E, S0, and spiral morphologies down to z 850 ¼ 24, corresponding to L /L Ã ¼ 0:21 and 0.30 at z ¼ 0:83 and 1.24, respectively. We adopt density and radius estimation methods that match those used at lower redshift in order to study the evolution of the MDR and MRR. We detect a change in the MDR between 0:8 < z < 1:2 and that observed at z $ 0, consistent with recent work; specifically, the growth in the bulge-dominated galaxy fraction, f EþS0 , with increasing density proceeds less rapidly at z $ 1 than it does at z $ 0. At z $ 1 and AE ! 500 galaxies Mpc À2 , we find h f EþS0 i ¼ 0:72 AE 0:10. At z $ 0, an E+S0 population fraction of this magnitude occurs at densities about 5 times smaller. The evolution in the MDR is confined to densities AE k 40 galaxies Mpc À2 and appears to be primarily due to a deficit of S0 galaxies and an excess of Sp+Irr galaxies relative to the local galaxy population. The f E -density relation exhibits no significant evolution between z ¼ 1 and 0. We find mild evidence to suggest that the MDR is dependent on the bolometric X-ray luminosity of the intracluster medium. Implications for the evolution of the disk galaxy population in dense regions are discussed in the context of these observations.
We analyze deep multicolor Advanced Camera images of the largest known gravitational lens, A1689. Radial and tangential arcs delineate the critical curves in unprecedented detail, and many small counterimages are found near the center of mass. We construct a flexible light deflection field to predict the appearance and positions of counterimages. The model is refined as new counterimages are identified and incorporated to improve the model, yielding a total of 106 images of 30 multiply lensed background galaxies, spanning a wide redshift range, 1:0 < z < 5:5. The resulting mass map is more circular in projection than the clumpy distribution of cluster galaxies, and the light is more concentrated than the mass within r < 50 kpc h À1 . The projected mass profile flattens steadily toward the center with a shallow mean slope of dlog AE=dlog r ' À0:55 AE 0:1, over the observed range r < 250 kpc h À1 , matching well an NFW profile, but with a relatively high concentration, C vir ¼ 8:2 þ2:1 À1:8 . A softened isothermal profile (r core ¼ 20 AE 2 00 ) is not conclusively excluded, illustrating that lensing constrains only projected quantities. Regarding cosmology, we clearly detect the purely geometric increase of bend angles with redshift. The dependence on the cosmological parameters is weak owing to the proximity of A1689, z ¼ 0:18, constraining the locus, M þ Ã 1:2. This consistency with standard cosmology provides independent support for our model, because the redshift information is not required to derive an accurate mass map. Similarly, the relative fluxes of the multiple images are reproduced well by our best-fitting lens model.
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