252 research outputs found
First detection of thermal radio jets in a sample of proto-brown dwarf candidates
We observed with the JVLA at 3.6 and 1.3 cm a sample of 11 proto-brown dwarf
candidates in Taurus in a search for thermal radio jets driven by the most
embedded brown dwarfs. We detected for the first time four thermal radio jets
in proto-brown dwarf candidates. We compiled data from UKIDSS, 2MASS, Spitzer,
WISE and Herschel to build the Spectral Energy Distribution (SED) of the
objects in our sample, which are similar to typical Class~I SEDs of Young
Stellar Objects (YSOs). The four proto-brown dwarf candidates driving thermal
radio jets also roughly follow the well-known trend of centimeter luminosity
against bolometric luminosity determined for YSOs, assuming they belong to
Taurus, although they present some excess of radio emission compared to the
known relation for YSOs. Nonetheless, we are able to reproduce the flux
densities of the radio jets modeling the centimeter emission of the thermal
radio jets using the same type of models applied to YSOs, but with
corresponding smaller stellar wind velocities and mass-loss rates, and
exploring different possible geometries of the wind or outflow from the star.
Moreover, we also find that the modeled mass outflow rates for the bolometric
luminosities of our objects agree reasonably well with the trends found between
the mass outflow rates and bolometric luminosities of YSOs, which indicates
that, despite the "excess" centimeter emission, the intrinsic properties of
proto-brown dwarfs are consistent with a continuation of those of very low mass
stars to a lower mass range. Overall, our study favors the formation of brown
dwarfs as a scaled-down version of low-mass stars.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, 14 tables, accepted by the Astrophysical Journa
HADES RV Programme with HARPS-N at TNG VI. GJ 3942 b behind dominant activity signals
Short- to mid-term magnetic phenomena on the stellar surface of M-type stars
cannot only resemble the effects of planets in radial velocity data, but also
may hide them. We analyze 145 spectroscopic HARPS-N observations of GJ 3942
taken over the past five years and additional photometry to disentangle stellar
activity effects from genuine Doppler signals as a result of the orbital motion
of the star around the common barycenter with its planet. To achieve this, we
use the common methods of pre-whitening, and treat the correlated red noise by
a first-order moving average term and by Gaussian-process regression following
an MCMC analysis. We identify the rotational period of the star at 16.3 days
and discover a new super-Earth, GJ 3942 b, with an orbital period of 6.9 days
and a minimum mass of 7.1 Me. An additional signal in the periodogram of the
residuals is present but we cannot claim it to be related to a second planet
with sufficient significance at this point. If confirmed, such planet candidate
would have a minimum mass of 6.3 Me and a period of 10.4 days, which might
indicate a 3:2 mean-motion resonance with the inner planet
The HADES RV Programme with HARPS-N@TNG IV. Time resolved analysis of the Ca ii H&K and H{\alpha} chromospheric emission of low-activity early-type M dwarfs
M dwarfs are prime targets for planet search programs, particularly of those
focused on the detection and characterization of rocky planets in the habitable
zone. Understanding their magnetic activity is important because it affects our
ability to detect small planets, and it plays a key role in the
characterization of the stellar environment. We analyze observations of the Ca
II H&K and H{\alpha} lines as diagnostics of chromospheric activity for
low-activity early-type M dwarfs. We analyze the time series of spectra of 71
early-type M dwarfs collected for the HADES project for planet search purposes.
The HARPS-N spectra provide simultaneously the H&K doublet and the H{\alpha}
line. We develop a reduction scheme able to correct the HARPS-N spectra for
instrumental and atmospheric effects, and to provide flux-calibrated spectra in
units of flux at the stellar surface. The H&K and H{\alpha} fluxes are compared
with each other, and their variability is analyzed. We find that the H and K
flux excesses are strongly correlated with each other, while the H{\alpha} flux
excess is generally less correlated with the H&K doublet. We also find that
H{\alpha} emission does not increase monotonically with the H&K line flux,
showing some absorption before being filled in by chromospheric emission when
H&K activity increases. Analyzing the time variability of the emission fluxes,
we derive a tentative estimate of the rotation period (of the order of a few
tens of days) for some of the program stars, and the typical lifetime of
chromospheric active regions (a few stellar rotations). Our results are in good
agreement with previous studies. In particular, we find evidence that the
chromospheres of early-type M dwarfs could be characterized by different
filaments coverage, affecting the formation mechanism of the H{\alpha} line. We
also show that chromospheric structure is likely related to spectral type
The HADES RV Programme with HARPS-N@TNG II. Data treatment and simulations
The distribution of exoplanets around low-mass stars is still not well
understood. Such stars, however, present an excellent opportunity of reaching
down to the rocky and habitable planet domains. The number of current
detections used for statistical purposes is still quite modest and different
surveys, using both photometry and precise radial velocities, are searching for
planets around M dwarfs. Our HARPS-N red dwarf exoplanet survey is aimed at the
detection of new planets around a sample of 78 selected stars, together with
the subsequent characterization of their activity properties. Here we
investigate the survey performance and strategy. From 2700 observed spectra, we
compare the radial velocity determinations of the HARPS-N DRS pipeline and the
HARPS-TERRA code, we calculate the mean activity jitter level, we evaluate the
planet detection expectations, and we address the general question of how to
define the strategy of spectroscopic surveys in order to be most efficient in
the detection of planets. We find that the HARPS-TERRA radial velocities show
less scatter and we calculate a mean activity jitter of 2.3 m/s for our sample.
For a general radial velocity survey with limited observing time, the number of
observations per star is key for the detection efficiency. In the case of an
early M-type target sample, we conclude that approximately 50 observations per
star with exposure times of 900 s and precisions of about 1 m/s maximizes the
number of planet detections
The HADES RV Programme with HARPS-N at TNG XI. GJ 685 b: a warm super-Earth around an active M dwarf
Small rocky planets seem to be very abundant around low-mass M-type stars.
Their actual planetary population is however not yet precisely understood.
Currently several surveys aim to expand the statistics with intensive detection
campaigns, both photometric and spectroscopic. We analyse 106 spectroscopic
HARPS-N observations of the active M0-type star GJ 685 taken over the past five
years. We combine these data with photometric measurements from different
observatories to accurately model the stellar rotation and disentangle its
signals from genuine Doppler planetary signals in the RV data. We run an MCMC
analysis on the RV and activity indexes time series to model the planetary and
stellar signals present in the data, applying Gaussian Process regression
technique to deal with the stellar activity signals. We identify three periodic
signals in the RV time series, with periods of 9, 24, and 18 d. Combining the
analyses of the photometry of the star with the activity indexes derived from
the HARPS-N spectra, we identify the 18 d and 9 d signals as activity-related,
corresponding to the stellar rotation period and its first harmonic
respectively. The 24 d signals shows no relations with any activity proxy, so
we identify it as a genuine planetary signal. We find the best-fit model
describing the Doppler signal of the newly-found planet, GJ 685\,b,
corresponding to an orbital period d and a
minimum mass M. We also study a
sample of 70 RV-detected M-dwarf planets, and present new statistical evidence
of a difference in mass distribution between the populations of single- and
multi-planet systems, which can shed new light on the formation mechanisms of
low-mass planets around late-type stars.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Elastic and vibrational properties of alpha and beta-PbO
The structure, electronic and dynamic properties of the two layered alpha
(litharge) and beta (massicot) phases of PbO have been studied by density
functional methods. The role of London dispersion interactions as leading
component of the total interaction energy between layers has been addressed by
using the Grimme's approach, in which new parameters for Pb and O atoms have
been developed. Both gradient corrected and hybrid functionals have been
adopted using Gaussian-type basis sets of polarized triple zeta quality for O
atoms and small core pseudo-potential for the Pb atoms. Basis set superposition
error (BSSE) has been accounted for by the Boys-Bernardi correction to compute
the interlayer separation. Cross check with calculations adopting plane waves
that are BSSE free have also been performed for both structures and vibrational
frequencies. With the new set of proposed Grimme's type parameters structures
and dynamical parameters for both PbO phases are in good agreement with
experimental data.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure
HADES RV Programme with HARPS-N at TNG. VII. Rotation and activity of M-Dwarfs from time-series high-resolution spectroscopy of chromospheric indicators
We aim to investigate the presence of signatures of magnetic cycles and
rotation on a sample of 71 early M-dwarfs from the HADES RV programme using
high-resolution time-series spectroscopy of the Ca II H & K and Halpha
chromospheric activity indicators, the radial velocity series, the parameters
of the cross correlation function and the V-band photometry. We used mainly
HARPS-N spectra, acquired over four years, and add HARPS spectra from the
public ESO database and ASAS photometry light-curves as support data, extending
the baseline of the observations of some stars up to 12 years. We provide
log(R'hk) measurements for all the stars in the sample, cycle length
measurements for 13 stars, rotation periods for 33 stars and we are able to
measure the semi-amplitude of the radial velocity signal induced by rotation in
16 stars. We complement our work with previous results and confirm and refine
the previously reported relationships between the mean level of chromospheric
emission, measured by the log(R'hk), with the rotation period, and with the
measured semi-amplitude of the activity induced radial velocity signal for
early M-dwarfs. We searched for a possible relation between the measured
rotation periods and the lengths of the magnetic cycle, finding a weak
correlation between both quantities. Using previous v sin i measurements we
estimated the inclinations of the star's poles to the line of sight for all the
stars in the sample, and estimate the range of masses of the planets GJ 3998 b
and c (2.5 - 4.9 Mearth and 6.3 - 12.5 Mearth), GJ 625 b (2.82 Mearth), GJ 3942
b (7.1 - 10.0 Mearth) and GJ 15A b (3.1 - 3.3 Mearth), assuming their orbits
are coplanar with the stellar rotation.Comment: 19 pages, 16 figures, 10 table
Acceleration of generalized hypergeometric functions through precise remainder asymptotics
We express the asymptotics of the remainders of the partial sums {s_n} of the
generalized hypergeometric function q+1_F_q through an inverse power series z^n
n^l \sum_k c_k/n^k, where the exponent l and the asymptotic coefficients {c_k}
may be recursively computed to any desired order from the hypergeometric
parameters and argument. From this we derive a new series acceleration
technique that can be applied to any such function, even with complex
parameters and at the branch point z=1. For moderate parameters (up to
approximately ten) a C implementation at fixed precision is very effective at
computing these functions; for larger parameters an implementation in higher
than machine precision would be needed. Even for larger parameters, however,
our C implementation is able to correctly determine whether or not it has
converged; and when it converges, its estimate of its error is accurate.Comment: 36 pages, 6 figures, LaTeX2e. Fixed sign error in Eq. (2.28), added
several references, added comparison to other methods, and added discussion
of recursion stabilit
On ant-like Synemosyna Hentz, 1846 spiders from Bolivia, with indirect evidence for polymorphic mimicry complexes (Araneae: Salticidae: Simonellini)
Three species of Synemosyna Hentz, 1846 were recorded during a survey in five Bolivian forest ecoregions: S. aurantiaca (Mello-Leitão, 1917), S. myrmeciaeformis (Taczanowski, 1871) and S. nicaraguaensis Cutler, 1993. Synemosyna aurantiaca and S. nicaraguaensis are recorded for Bolivia for the first time and the previously unknown male of S. nicaraguaensis is described and illustrated. The habitus and the genitalia of the female of S. myrmeciaeformis are illustrated for the first time. Synemosyna aurantiaca occurs in semi-deciduous forests south of 18° S and S. myrmeciaeformis in the Bolivian Yungas forest and ecoregions of the Amazon biome north of 16° S. Synemosyna nicaraguaensis is possibly an Andean species that enters into the moist Isthmian forests of Central America. Several potential mimicry complexes with two broad patterns were observed: sex-specific polychromatic mimicry (S. nicaraguaensis), and transformational mimicry involving smaller orange and larger brown to dark-brown forms (S. aurantiaca and S. myrmeciaeformis).Fil: Perger, Robert. Colección Boliviana de Fauna; BoliviaFil: Rubio, Gonzalo Daniel. Instituto Nacional de Tecnologia Agropecuaria. Centro Regional Misiones. Estacion Experimental Agropecuaria Cerro Azul.; Argentina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Nordeste; ArgentinaFil: Haddad, Charles R.. University of the Free State; Sudáfric
Near-infrared proper motions and spectroscopy of infrared excess sources at the Galactic Center
There are a number of faint compact infrared excess sources in the central
stellar cluster of the Milky Way. Their nature and origin is unclear. In
addition to several isolated objects of this kind we find a small but dense
cluster of co-moving sources (IRS13N) about 3" west of SgrA* just 0.5" north of
the bright IRS13E cluster of WR and O-type stars. Based on their color and
brightness, there are two main possibilities: (1) they may be dust embedded
stars older than few Myr, or (2) extremely young, dusty stars with ages less
than 1Myr. We present fist H- and Ks-band identifications or proper motions of
the IRS13N members, the high velocity dusty S-cluster object (DSO), and other
infrared excess sources in the central field. We also present results of NIR H-
and Ks-band ESO-SINFONI integral field spectroscopy of ISR13N. We show that
within the uncertainties, the proper motions of the IRS13N sources in Ks- and
L'-band are identical. This indicates that the bright L'-band IRS13N sources
are indeed dust enshrouded stars rather than core-less dust clouds. The proper
motions show that the IRS13N sources are not strongly gravitationally bound to
each other implying that they have been formed recently. We also present a
first H- and Ks-band identification as well as proper motions and HKsL'-colors
of a fast moving DSO which was recently found in the cluster of high speed
S-stars that surround the super-massive black hole Sagittarius A* (SgrA*). Most
of the compact L'-band excess emission sources have a compact H- or Ks-band
counterpart and therefore are likely stars with dust shells or disks. Our new
results and orbital analysis from our previous work favor the hypothesis that
the infrared excess IRS13N members and other dusty sources close to SgrA* are
very young dusty stars and that star formation at the GC is a continuously
ongoing process.Comment: 20 pages, 18 figures, 4 tables plus appendix with 16 figures and 3
tables accepted by A&
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