7,940 research outputs found
High-velocity collimated outflows in planetary nebulae: NGC 6337, He 2-186, and K 4-47
We have obtained narrow-band images and high-resolution spectra of the
planetary nebulae NGC 6337, He 2-186, and K 4-47, with the aim of investigating
the relation between their main morphological components and several
low-ionization features present in these nebulae. The data suggest that NGC
6337 is a bipolar PN seen almost pole on, with polar velocities higher than 200
km/s. The bright inner ring of the nebula is interpreted to be the "equatorial"
density enhancement. It contains a number of low-ionization knots and outward
tails that we ascribe to dynamical instabilities leading to fragmentation of
the ring or transient density enhancements due to the interaction of the
ionization front with previous density fluctuations in the ISM. The lobes show
a pronounced point-symmetric morphology and two peculiar low-ionization
filaments whose nature remains unclear. The most notable characteristic of He
2-186 is the presence of two high-velocity (higher than 135 km/s) knots from
which an S-shaped lane of emission departs toward the central star. K 4-47 is
composed of a compact core and two high-velocity, low-ionization blobs. We
interpret the substantial broadening of line emission from the blobs as a
signature of bow shocks, and using the modeling of Hartigan, Raymond, & Hartman
(1987), we derive a shock velocity of 150 km/s and a mild inclination of the
outflow on the plane of the sky. We discuss possible scenarios for the
formation of these nebulae and their low-ionization features. In particular,
the morphology of K 4-47 hardly fits into any of the usually adopted mass-loss
geometries for single AGB stars. Finally, we discuss the possibility that
point-symmetric morphologies in the lobes of NGC 6337 and the knots of He 2-186
are the result of precessing outflows from the central stars.Comment: 16 pages plus 7 figures, ApJ accepted. Also available at
http://www.iac.es/publicaciones/preprints.htm
Discovery in IC10 of the farthest known symbiotic star
We report the discovery of the first known symbiotic star in IC10, a
starburst galaxy belonging to the Local Group, at a distance of ~750kpc. The
symbiotic star was identified during a survey of emission-line objects. It
shines at V = 24.62+-0.04, V - R_C = 2.77+-0.05 and R_C - I_C = 2.39+-0.02 and
suffers from E(B-V) = 0.85+-0.05 reddening. The spectrum of the cool component
well matches that of solar neighborhood M8III giants. The observed emission
lines belong to Balmer series, [SII], [NII] and [OIII]. They suggest a low
electronic density, negligible optical depth effects and 35,000K < T_eff <
90,000K for the ionizing source. The spectrum of the new symbiotic star in IC10
is an almost perfect copy of that of Hen 2-147, a well known Galactic symbiotic
star and Mira.Comment: 5 pages including 3 figures. MNRAS Letters accepted. Also available
at http://pessoais.ov.ufrj.br/denise
A hydrodynamical study of multiple-shell planetary nebulae. III. Expansion properties and internal kinematics: Theory versus observation
We present the result of a study on the expansion properties and internal
kinematics of round/elliptical planetary nebulae of the Milky Way disk, the
halo, and of the globular cluster M15. The purpose of this study is to
considerably enlarge the small sample of nebulae with precisely determined
expansion properties. To this aim, we selected a representative sample of
objects with different evolutionary stages and metallicities and conducted
high-resolution echelle spectroscopy. In most cases, we succeeded in detecting
the weak signals from the outer nebular shell which are attached to the main
line emission from the bright nebular rim. Next to the measurement of the
motion of the rim gas by decomposition of the main line components into
Gaussians, we were able to measure separately, for most objects for the first
time, the gas velocity immediately behind the leading shock of the shell, i.e.
the post-shock velocity. We more than doubled the number of objects for which
the velocities of both rim and shell are known and confirm that the overall
expansion of planetary nebulae is accelerating with time. There are, however,
differences between the expansion behaviour of the shell and the rim. This
observed distinct velocity evolution of both rim and shell is explained by
radiation-hydrodynamics simulations, at least qualitatively. Because of the
time-dependent boundary conditions, a planetary nebula will never evolve into a
simple self-similar expansion. Also the metal-poor objects behave as theory
predicts: The post-shock velocities are higher and the rim flow velocities are
equal or even lower compared to disk objects at similar evolutionary stage. We
detected, for the first time, in some objects an asymmetric expansion
behaviour: The relative expansions between rim and shell appear to be different
for the receding and approaching parts of the nebular envelope.Comment: 32 pages, 19 Figures; accepted for publication in "Astronomical Notes
/ Astronomische Nachrichten
Spatially resolved physical and chemical properties of the planetary nebula NGC 3242
Optical integral-field spectroscopy was used to investigate the planetary
nebula NGC 3242. We analysed the main morphological components of this source,
including its knots, but not the halo. In addition to revealing the properties
ofthe physical and chemical nature of this nebula, we also provided reliable
spatially resolved constraints that can be used for future photoionisation
modelling of the nebula. The latter is ultimately necessary to obtain a fully
self-consistent 3D picture of the physical and chemical properties of the
object. The observations were obtained with the VIMOS instrument attached to
VLT-UT3. Maps and values for specific morphological zones for the detected
emission-lines were obtained and analysed with routines developed by the
authors to derive physical and chemical conditions of the ionised gas in a 2D
fashion. We obtained spatially resolved maps and mean values of the electron
densities, temperatures, and chemical abundances, for specific morphological
structures in NGC 3242. These results show the pixel-to-pixel variations of the
the small- and large-scale structures of the source. These diagnostic maps
provide information free from the biases introduced by traditional single
long-slit observations. In general, our results are consistent with a uniform
abundance distribution for the object, whether we look at abundance maps or
integrated fluxes from specified morphological structures. The results indicate
that special care should be taken with the calibration of the data and that
only data with extremely good signal-to-noise ratio and spectral coverage
should be used to ensure the detection of possible spatial variations.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Real-time prediction with U.K. monetary aggregates in the presence of model uncertainty
A popular account for the demise of the U.K.’s monetary targeting regime in the 1980s blames the fluctuating predictive relationships between broad money and inflation and real output growth. Yet ex post policy analysis based on heavily revised data suggests no fluctuations in the predictive content of money. In this paper, we investigate the predictive relationships for inflation and output growth using both real-time and heavily revised data. We consider a large set of recursively estimated vector autoregressive (VAR) and vector error correction models (VECM). These models differ in terms of lag length and the number of cointegrating relationships. We use Bayesian model averaging (BMA) to demonstrate that real-time monetary policymakers faced considerable model uncertainty. The in-sample predictive content of money fluctuated during the 1980s as a result of data revisions in the presence of model uncertainty. This feature is only apparent with real-time data as heavily revised data obscure these fluctuations. Out-of-sample predictive evaluations rarely suggest that money matters for either inflation or real output. We conclude that both data revisions and model uncertainty contributed to the demise of the U.K.’s monetary targeting regime
CHANTI: a Fast and Efficient Charged Particle Veto Detector for the NA62 Experiment at CERN
The design, construction and test of a charged particle detector made of
scintillation counters read by Silicon Photomultipliers (SiPM) is described.
The detector, which operates in vacuum and is used as a veto counter in the
NA62 experiment at CERN, has a single channel time resolution of 1.14 ns, a
spatial resolution of ~2.5 mm and an efficiency very close to 1 for penetrating
charged particles
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