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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/2014/25256
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| Title: | Jet Propulsion Laboratories in Space: The Production of Astrophysical Jets by Magnetic Accretion Disks, and a Super-Eddington Wind Model for the Early Stages of GROJ1455-40. |
| Authors: | Meir, David L. Lovell, J. E. J. Reynolds, J. E. Jauncey, D. L. Backus, P. R. McCulloch, P. M. Sinclair, M. W. Wilson, W. E. Tzioumis, A. K. Gough, R. G. Ellingsen, S. P. Phillips, C. J. Preston, R. A. Jones, D. L. |
| Issue Date: | 1996 |
| Citation: | Port Douglas, Australia, galaxy redshift, gravitational lenses, redshift system |
| Abstract: | Measurements of the properties of gravitational lenses have the power to tell us what sort of universe we live in. The brightest known radio Einstein ring/gravitational lens PKS 1830-211, whilst obscured by our galaxy at optical wavelengths, has recently provided a lensing galaxy redshift of 0.89 through the detection of a new absorption feature, most likely due to neutral hydrogen in a second redshift system at z=0.19. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2014/25256 |
| Appears in Collections: | JPL TRS 1992+
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