568 research outputs found
H-alpha Emission Variability in the gamma-ray Binary LS I +61 303
LS I +61 303 is an exceptionally rare example of a high mass X-ray binary
(HMXB) that also exhibits MeV-TeV emission, making it one of only a handful of
"gamma-ray binaries". Here we present H-alpha spectra that show strong
variability during the 26.5 day orbital period and over decadal time scales. We
detect evidence of a spiral density wave in the Be circumstellar disk over part
of the orbit. The H-alpha line profile also exhibits a dramatic emission burst
shortly before apastron, observed as a redshifted shoulder in the line profile,
as the compact source moves almost directly away from the observer. We
investigate several possible origins for this red shoulder, including an
accretion disk, mass transfer stream, and a compact pulsar wind nebula that
forms via a shock between the Be star's wind and the relativistic pulsar wind.Comment: Accepted to Ap
Galactic Structure Toward the Carina Tangent
This investigation presents a photometric study of the Galactic structure
toward the Carina arm tangent. The field is located between 280 deg and 286 deg
galactic longitude and -4 deg to 4 deg galactic latitude. All currently
available uvbybeta data is used to obtain homogeneous color excesses and
distances for more than 260 stars of spectral types O to G. We present revised
distances and average extinction for the open clusters and cluster candidates
NGC 3293, NGC 3114, Loden 46 and Loden 112. The cluster candidate Loden 112
appears to be a very compact group at a true distance modulus of 11.06 +\- 0.11
(s.e.) (1629 +84,-80 pc), significantly closer than previous estimates. We
found other OB stars at that same distance and, based on their proper motions,
suggest a new OB association at coordinates 282 deg < l < 285 deg, -2 deg < b <
2 deg. Utilizing BV photometry and spectral classification of the known O-type
stars in the very young open cluster Wd 2 we provide a new distance estimate of
14.13 +\-0.16 (s.e.) (6698 +512,-475 pc), in excellent agreement with recent
distance determinations to the giant molecular structures in this direction. We
also discuss a possible connection between the HII region RCW 45 and the
highly-reddened B+ star CPD -55 3036 and provide a revised distance for the
luminous blue variable HR Car.Comment: accepted to PAS
Contact Discontinuities in Models of Contact Binaries Undergoing Thermal Relaxation Oscillations
In this paper we pursue the suggestion by Shu, Lubow & Anderson (1979) and
Wang (1995) that contact discontinuity (DSC) may exist in the secondary in the
expansion TRO (thermal relaxation oscillation) state. It is demonstrated that
there is a mass exchange instability in some range of mass ratio for the two
components. We show that the assumption of {\it constant} volume of the
secondary should be relaxed in DSC model. For {\it all} mass ratio the
secondary alway satisfies the condition that no mass flow returns to the
primary through the inner Lagrangian point. The secondary will expand in order
to equilibrate the interaction between the common convective envelope and the
secondary. The contact discontinuity in contact binary undergoing thermal
relaxation does not violate the second law of thermodynamics. The maintaining
condition of contact discontinuity is derived in the time-dependent model. It
is desired to improve the TRO model with the advanced contact discontinuity
layer in future detailed calculations.Comment: 5 pages in emulateapj, 1 figur
The removal of thermally aged films of triacylglycerides by surfactant solutions
Thermal ageing of triacylglycerides (TAG) at high temperatures produces films which resist removal using aqueous surfactant solutions. We used a mass loss method to investigate the removal of thermally aged TAG films from hard surfaces using aqueous solutions of surfactants of different charge types. It was found that cationic surfactants are most effective at high pH, whereas anionics are most effective at low pH and a non-ionic surfactant is most effective at intermediate pH. We showed that the TAG film removal process occurs in several stages. In the first ‘‘lag phase’’ no TAG removal occurs; the surfactant first partitions into the thermally aged film. In the second stage, the TAG film containing surfactant was removed by solubilisation into micelles in the aqueous solution. The effects of pH and surfactant charge on the TAG removal process correlate with the effects of these variables on the extent of surfactant partitioning to the TAG film and on the maximum extent of TAG solubilisation within the micelles. Additionally, we showed how the TAG removal is enhanced by the addition of amphiphilic additives such as alcohols which act as co-surfactants. The study demonstrates that aqueous surfactant solutions provide a viable and more benign alternative to current methods for the removal of thermally aged TAG films
Tomographic Separation of Composite Spectra. IX. The Massive Close Binary HD 115071
We present the first orbital elements for the massive close binary, HD
115071, a double-lined spectroscopic binary in a circular orbit with a period
of 2.73135 +/- 0.00003 days. The orbital semiamplitudes indicate a mass ratio
of M_2/M_1 = 0.58 +/- 0.02 and yet the stars have similar luminosities. We used
a Doppler tomography algorithm to reconstruct the individual component optical
spectra, and we applied well known criteria to arrive at classifications of
O9.5 V and B0.2 III for the primary and secondary, respectively. We present
models of the Hipparcos light curve of the ellipsoidal variations caused by the
tidal distortion of the secondary, and the best fit model for a Roche-filling
secondary occurs for an inclination of i = 48.7 +/- 2.1 degrees. The resulting
masses are 11.6 +/- 1.1 and 6.7 +/- 0.7 solar masses for the primary and
secondary, respectively, so that both stars are very overluminous for their
mass. The system is one of only a few known semi-detached, Algol-type binaries
that contain O-stars. We suggest that the binary has recently emerged from
extensive mass transfer (possibly through a delayed contact and common envelope
process).Comment: Submitted to Ap
Chemical evolution of the Small Magellanic Cloud based on planetary nebulae
We investigate the chemical evolution of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC)
based on abundance data of planetary nebulae (PNe). The main goal is to
investigate the time evolution of the oxygen abundance in this galaxy by
deriving an age-metallicity relation. Such a relation is of fundamental
importance as an observational constraint of chemical evolution models of the
SMC. We have used high quality PNe data in order to derive the properties of
the progenitor stars, so that the stellar ages could be estimated. We collected
a large number of measured spectral fluxes for each nebula, and derived
accurate physical parameters and nebular abundances. New spectral data for a
sample of SMC PNe obtained between 1999 and 2002 are also presented. These data
are used together with data available in the literature to improve the accuracy
of the fluxes for each spectral line. We obtained accurate chemical abundances
for PNe in the Small Magellanic Cloud, which can be useful as tools in the
study of the chemical evolution of this galaxy and of Local Group galaxies. We
present the resulting oxygen versus age diagram and a similar relation
involving the [Fe/H] metallicity based on a correlation with stellar data. We
discuss the implications of the derived age-metallicity relation for the SMC
formation, in particular by suggesting a star formation burst in the last 2-3
Gyr.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Highly absorbed X-ray binaries in the Small Magellanic Cloud
Many of the high mass X-ray binaries (HMXRBs) discovered in recent years in
our Galaxy are characterized by a high absorption, most likely intrinsic to the
system, which hampers their detection at the softest X-ray energies. We have
undertaken a search for highly-absorbed X-ray sources in the Small Magellanic
Cloud (SMC) with a systematic analysis of 62 XMM-Newton SMC observations. We
obtained a sample of 30 sources showing evidence for an equivalent hydrogen
column density larger than 3x10^23 cm^-2. Five of these sources are clearly
identified as HMXRBs: four were already known (including three X-ray pulsars)
and one, XMM J005605.8-720012, reported here for the first time. For the
latter, we present optical spectroscopy confirming the association with a Be
star in the SMC. The other sources in our sample have optical counterparts
fainter than magnitude ~16 in the V band, and many of them have possible NIR
counterparts consistent with highly reddened early type stars in the SMC. While
their number is broadly consistent with the expected population of background
highly-absorbed active galactic nuclei, a few of them could be HMXRBs in which
an early type companion is severely reddened by local material.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication by Astronomy
& Astrophysic
The Spitzer Survey of the Small Magellanic Cloud: S3MC Imaging and Photometry in the Mid- and Far-Infrared Wavebands
We present the initial results from the Spitzer Survey of the Small
Magellanic Cloud (S3MC), which imaged the star-forming body of the Small
Magellanic Cloud (SMC) in all seven MIPS and IRAC wavebands. We find that the
F_8/F_24 ratio (an estimate of PAH abundance) has large spatial variations and
takes a wide range of values that are unrelated to metallicity but
anticorrelated with 24 um brightness and F_24/F_70 ratio. This suggests that
photodestruction is primarily responsible for the low abundance of PAHs
observed in star-forming low-metallicity galaxies. We use the S3MC images to
compile a photometric catalog of ~400,000 mid- and far-infrared point sources
in the SMC. The sources detected at the longest wavelengths fall into four main
categories: 1) bright 5.8 um sources with very faint optical counterparts and
very red mid-infrared colors ([5.8]-[8.0]>1.2), which we identify as YSOs. 2)
Bright mid-infrared sources with mildly red colors (0.16<[5.8]-[8.0]<0.6),
identified as carbon stars. 3) Bright mid-infrared sources with neutral colors
and bright optical counterparts, corresponding to oxygen-rich evolved stars.
And, 4) unreddened early B stars (B3 to O9) with a large 24 um excess. This
excess is reminiscent of debris disks, and is detected in only a small fraction
of these stars (<5%). The majority of the brightest infrared point sources in
the SMC fall into groups one to three. We use this photometric information to
produce a catalog of 282 bright YSOs in the SMC with a very low level of
contamination (~7%).Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. Given the
draconian figure file-size limits implemented in astro-ph, readers are
encouraged to download the manuscript with full quality images from
http://celestial.berkeley.edu/spitzer/publications/s3mcsurvey.pd
Equipotential Surfaces and Lagrangian points in Non-synchronous, Eccentric Binary and Planetary Systems
We investigate the existence and properties of equipotential surfaces and
Lagrangian points in non-synchronous, eccentric binary star and planetary
systems under the assumption of quasi-static equilibrium. We adopt a binary
potential that accounts for non-synchronous rotation and eccentric orbits, and
calculate the positions of the Lagrangian points as functions of the mass
ratio, the degree of asynchronism, the orbital eccentricity, and the position
of the stars or planets in their relative orbit. We find that the geometry of
the equipotential surfaces may facilitate non-conservative mass transfer in
non-synchronous, eccentric binary star and planetary systems, especially if the
component stars or planets are rotating super-synchronously at the periastron
of their relative orbit. We also calculate the volume-equivalent radius of the
Roche lobe as a function of the four parameters mentioned above. Contrary to
common practice, we find that replacing the radius of a circular orbit in the
fitting formula of Eggleton (1983) with the instantaneous distance between the
components of eccentric binary or planetary systems does not always lead to a
good approximation to the volume-equivalent radius of the Roche-lobe. We
therefore provide generalized analytic fitting formulae for the
volume-equivalent Roche lobe radius appropriate for non-synchronous, eccentric
binary star and planetary systems. These formulae are accurate to better than
1% throughout the relevant 2-dimensional parameter space that covers a dynamic
range of 16 and 6 orders of magnitude in the two dimensions.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, 2 Tables, Accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
uvby-Hbeta CCD photometry and membership segregation of the open cluster NGC 2548; Gaps in the Main Sequence of open clusters
Deep CCD photometry in the uvby-Hbeta intermediate-band system is presented
for the cluster NGC 2548 (M 48). A complete membership analysis based on
astrometric and photometric criteria is applied. The photometric analysis of a
selected sample of stars yields a reddening value of E(b-y)=0.06\pm0.03, a
distance modulus of V_0-M_V=9.3\pm0.5 (725 pc) and a metallicity of [Fe/H]=
-0.24\pm0.27. Through isochrone fitting we find an age of log t = 8.6\pm0.1
(400 Myr). Our optical photometry and JHK from 2MASS are combined to derive
effective temperatures of cluster member stars. The effective temperature
distribution along the main sequence of the cluster shows several gaps. A test
to study the significance of these gaps in the main sequence of the HR diagram
has been applied. The method is also applied to several other open clusters
(Pleiades, Hyades, NGC 1817 and M 67) to construct a sequence of metallicities
and ages. The comparison of the results of each cluster gives four gaps with
high significance (one of them, centred at 4900 K, has not been previously
reported).Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, A&A in press. Corrected typos on Table
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