3,463 research outputs found

    Particle decay branching ratios for states of astrophysical importance in 19Ne

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    We have measured proton and alpha-particle branching ratios of excited states in 19Ne formed using the 19F(3He,t) reaction at a beam energy of 25 MeV. These ratios have a large impact on the astrophysical reaction rates of 15O(alpha,gamma), 18F(p,gamma) and 18F(p,alpha), which are of interest in understanding energy generation in x-ray bursts and in interpreting anticipated gamma-ray observations of novae. We detect decay protons and alpha-particles using a silicon detector array in coincidence with tritons measured in the focal plane detector of our Enge split-pole spectrograph. The silicon array consists of five strip detectors of the type used in the Louvain-Edinburgh Detector Array, subtending angles from 130 degrees to 165 degrees with approximately 14% lab efficiency. The correlation angular distributions give additional confidence in some prior spin-parity assignments that were based on gamma branchings. We measure Gamma_p/Gamma=0.387+-0.016 for the 665 keV proton resonance, which agrees well with the direct measurement of Bardayan et al.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables. Prepared using RevTex 4 and BibTex. Further minor revisions, incl. fig. 1 font size increase, 1 table removal, and minor changes to the tex

    The pulsating DA white dwarf star EC 14012-1446: results from four epochs of time-resolved photometry

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    The pulsating DA white dwarfs are the coolest degenerate stars that undergo self-driven oscillations. Understanding their interior structure will help to understand the previous evolution of the star. To this end, we report the analysis of more than 200 h of time-resolved CCD photometry of the pulsating DA white dwarf star EC 14012-1446 acquired during four observing epochs in three different years, including a coordinated three-site campaign. A total of 19 independent frequencies in the star's light variations together with 148 combination signals up to fifth order could be detected. We are unable to obtain the period spacing of the normal modes and therefore a mass estimate of the star, but we infer a fairly short rotation period of 0.61 +/- 0.03 d, assuming the rotationally split modes are l=1. The pulsation modes of the star undergo amplitude and frequency variations, in the sense that modes with higher radial overtone show more pronounced variability and that amplitude changes are always accompanied by frequency variations. Most of the second-order combination frequencies detected have amplitudes that are a function of their parent mode amplitudes, but we found a few cases of possible resonantly excited modes. We point out the complications in the analysis and interpretation of data sets of pulsating white dwarfs that are affected by combination frequencies of the form f_A+f_B-f_C intruding into the frequency range of the independent modes.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 6 tables. MNRAS, in pres

    Constraining the near-core rotation of the gamma Doradus star 43 Cygni using BRITE-Constellation data

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    Photometric time series of the γ\gamma Dor star 43 Cyg obtained with the BRITE-Constellation nano-satellites allow us to study its pulsational properties in detail and to constrain its interior structure. We aim to find a g-mode period spacing pattern that allows us to determine the near-core rotation rate of 43 Cyg and redetermine the star's fundamental atmospheric parameters and chemical composition. We conducted a frequency analysis using the 156-days long data set obtained with the BRITE-Toronto satellite and employed a suite of MESA/GYRE models to derive the mode identification, asymptotic period spacing and near-core rotation rate. We also used high-resolution, high signal-to-noise ratio spectroscopic data obtained at the 1.2m Mercator telescope with the HERMES spectrograph to redetermine the fundamental atmospheric parameters and chemical composition of 43 Cyg using the software Spectroscopy Made Easy (SME). We detected 43 intrinsic pulsation frequencies and identified 18 of them to be part of a period spacing pattern consisting of prograde dipole modes with an asymptotic period spacing ΔΠl=1\Delta \Pi_{l=1} of 2970570+700s2970^{+700}_{-570} \rm s. The near-core rotation rate was determined to be frot=0.560.14+0.12d1f_{\rm rot} = 0.56^{+0.12}_{-0.14}\,\rm d^{-1}. The atmosphere of 43 Cyg shows solar chemical composition at an effective temperature of 7150 ±\pm 150 K, a log g of 4.2 ±\pm 0.6 dex and a projected rotational velocity, vsiniv {\rm sin}i, of 44 ±\pm 4 kms1^{-1}. The morphology of the observed period spacing patterns shows indications of the presence of a significant chemical gradient in the stellar interior.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted by A&

    A BRITE view on the massive O-type supergiant V973 Scorpii: Hints towards internal gravity waves or subsurface convection zones

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    Stochastically-triggered photospheric light variations reaching \sim4040 mmag peak-to-valley amplitudes have been detected in the O8Iaf supergiant V973 Scorpii as the outcome of two months of high-precision time-resolved photometric observations with the BRIght Target Explorer (BRITE) nanosatellites. The amplitude spectrum of the time series photometry exhibits a pronounced broad bump in the low-frequency regime (\lesssim0.90.9 d1^{-1}) where several prominent frequencies are detected. A time-frequency analysis of the observations reveals typical mode lifetimes of the order of 5105-10 days. The overall features of the observed brightness amplitude spectrum of V973 Sco match well with those extrapolated from two-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations of convectively-driven internal gravity waves randomly excited from deep in the convective cores of massive stars. An alternative or additional possible source of excitation from a subsurface convection zone needs to be explored in future theoretical investigations.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, 3 tables; Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS), in pres

    Light-curve instabilities of Beta Lyrae observed by the BRITE satellites

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    Photometric instabilities of β\beta Lyr were observed in 2016 by two red-filter BRITE satellites over more than 10 revolutions of the binary, with \sim100-minute sampling. Analysis of the time series shows that flares or fading events take place typically 3 to 5 times per binary orbit. The amplitudes of the disturbances (relative to the mean light curve, in units of the maximum out-of-eclipse light-flux, f.u.) are characterized by a Gaussian distribution with σ=0.0130±0.0004\sigma=0.0130\pm0.0004 f.u. Most of the disturbances appear to be random, with a tendency to remain for one or a few orbital revolutions, sometimes changing from brightening to fading or the reverse. Phases just preceding the center of the deeper eclipse showed the most scatter while phases around secondary eclipse were the quietest. This implies that the invisible companion is the most likely source of the instabilities. Wavelet transform analysis showed domination of the variability scales at phase intervals 0.050.30.05-0.3 (0.65--4 d), with the shorter (longer) scales dominating in numbers (variability power) in this range. The series can be well described as a stochastic Gaussian process with the signal at short timescales showing a slightly stronger correlation than red noise. The signal de-correlation timescale τ=(0.068±0.018)\tau=(0.068\pm0.018) in phase or (0.88±0.23)(0.88\pm0.23)~d appears to follow the same dependence on the accretor mass as that observed for AGN and QSO masses 5--9 orders of magnitude larger than the β\beta~Lyr torus-hidden component.Comment: 28 pages, 10 figures, accepted by AJ: 3 May 201
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