96 research outputs found
Seismic study of stellar convective cores
It has been shown that a discontinuity in the derivatives of the sound speed
at the edge of the convective regions inside a star gives rise to a
characteristic oscillatory signal in the frequencies of stellar oscillations.
This oscillatory signal has been suggested as a means to study the base of the
outer convection zone in low mass stars and possibly the outer edge of the
convective core in high mass stars. Using stellar models we show that because
of a phenomenon similar to aliasing in Fourier transform, it may not be
possible to use this signal to detect the convective core. Nevertheless, it may
be possible to determine the size of convective cores using the frequency
separation \nu_{n+1,l}-\nu_{n,l}.Comment: Accepted for publication in A &
Coexistence of halloysite and kaolinite: a study on the genesis of kaolin clays of Campo Alegre Basin, Santa Catarina State, Brazil
Kaolin at Campo Alegre Basin, Santa Catarina State, Brazilwas formed from alteration of volcanic acid rocks. Halloysite
clays dominate the clay fraction of the matrix of the kaolin body, whereas a poorly crystalline kaolinite is abundant
in veins. Some primary blocky structures have high amounts of illite, in one mine, but in general, only low contents
of illite-smectite, illite, chlorite-vermiculite, vermiculite and quartz were identified in the clay fraction of the samples.
Toward the top of the mines, hematite and lepidocrocite appear in horizontal red and ochre colored levels and the amount
of kaolinite increases compared to halloysite. The vertical zoning of alteration levels, the changes in mineralogy, the
positive correlation between depth and Cation Exchange Capacity of the clays, the preservation of different types of
rock textures in the kaolin bodies, the dominant tube morphology of the halloysite clays indicate a supergene genesis
for the deposits. Criteria to distinguish between supergene and hypogene kaolin are discussed. Transmission Electron
Microscopy of the cross sections of halloysite tubes showed polygonal forms that are ascribed to be transitional between
kaolinite and halloysite. It is proposed that some of the kaolinite of these deposits be inherited from the dehydration of
halloysite tubes
Gravitational settling in pulsating subdwarf B stars and their progenitors
Diffusion of atoms can be important during quiescent phases of stellar
evolution. Particularly in the very thin inert envelopes of subdwarf B stars,
diffusive movements will considerably change the envelope structure and the
surface abundances on a short timescale. Also, the subdwarfs will inherit the
effects of diffusion in their direct progenitors, namely giants near the tip of
the red giant branch. This will influence the global evolution and the
pulsational properties of subdwarf B stars. We investigate the impact of
gravitational settling, thermal diffusion and concentration diffusion on the
evolution and pulsations of subdwarf B stars. Our diffusive stellar models are
compared with models evolved without diffusion. We constructed subdwarf B
models with a mass of 0.465 Msun from a 1 and 3 Msun ZAMS progenitor. The low
mass star ignited helium in an energetic flash, while the intermediate mass
star started helium fusion gently. For each progenitor type we computed series
with and without atomic diffusion. Atomic diffusion in red giants causes the
helium core mass at the onset of helium ignition to be larger. We find an
increase of 0.0015 Msun for the 1 Msun model and 0.0036 Msun for the 3 Msun
model. The effects on the red giant surface abundances are small after the
first dredge up. The evolutionary tracks of the diffusive subdwarf B models are
shifted to lower surface gravities and effective temperatures due to outward
diffusion of hydrogen. This affects both the frequencies of the excited modes
and the overall frequency spectrum. Especially the structure and pulsations of
the post-non-degenerate sdB star are drastically altered, proving that atomic
diffusion cannot be ignored in these stars.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Helioseismic analysis of the hydrogen partition function in the solar interior
The difference in the adiabatic gradient gamma_1 between inverted solar data
and solar models is analyzed. To obtain deeper insight into the issues of
plasma physics, the so-called ``intrinsic'' difference in gamma_1 is extracted,
that is, the difference due to the change in the equation of state alone. Our
method uses reference models based on two equations of state currently used in
solar modeling, the Mihalas-Hummer-Dappen (MHD) equation of state, and the OPAL
equation of state (developed at Livermore). Solar oscillation frequencies from
the SOI/MDI instrument on board the SOHO spacecraft during its first 144 days
in operation are used. Our results confirm the existence of a subtle effect of
the excited states in hydrogen that was previously studied only theoretically
(Nayfonov & Dappen 1998). The effect stems from internal partition function of
hydrogen, as used in the MHD equation of state. Although it is a pure-hydrogen
effect, it takes place in somewhat deeper layers of the Sun, where more than
90% of hydrogen is ionized, and where the second ionization zone of helium is
located. Therefore, the effect will have to be taken into account in reliable
helioseismic determinations of the astrophysically relevant helium-abundance of
the solar convection zone.Comment: 30 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. Revised version submitted to Ap
Third Dredge-up in Low Mass Stars: Solving the LMC Carbon Star Mystery
A long standing problem with asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star models has
been their inability to produce the low-luminosity carbon stars in the Large
and Small Magellanic Clouds. Dredge-up must begin earlier and extend deeper. We
find this for the first time in our models of LMC metallicity. Such features
are not found in our models of SMC metallicity. The fully implicit and
simultaneous stellar evolution code STARS has been used to calculate the
evolution of AGB stars with metallicities of Z=0.008 and Z=0.004, corresponding
to the observed metallicities of the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds,
respecitively. Third dredge-up occurs in stars of 1Msol and above and carbon
stars were found for models between 1Msol and 3Msol. We use the detailed models
as input physics for a population synthesis code and generate carbon star
luminosity functions. We now find that we are able to reproduce the carbon star
luminosity function of the LMC without any manipulation of our models. The SMC
carbon star luminosity function still cannot be produced from our detailed
models unless the minimum core mass for third dredge-up is reduced by 0.06Msol.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
The evolution of low-metallicity asymptotic giant branch stars and the formation of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars
We investigate the behaviour of asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars between
metallicities Z = 10-4 and Z = 10-8 . We determine which stars undergo an
episode of flash-driven mixing, where protons are ingested into the intershell
convection zone, as they enter the thermally pulsing AGB phase and which
undergo third dredge-up. We find that flash-driven mixing does not occur above
a metallicity of Z = 10-5 for any mass of star and that stars above 2 M do not
experience this phenomenon at any metallicity. We find carbon ingestion (CI),
the mixing of carbon into the tail of hydrogen burning region, occurs in the
mass range 2 M to around 4 M . We suggest that CI may be a weak version of the
flash-driven mechanism. We also investigate the effects of convective
overshooting on the behaviour of these objects. Our models struggle to explain
the frequency of CEMP stars that have both significant carbon and nitrogen
enhancement. Carbon can be enhanced through flash-driven mixing, CI or just
third dredge up. Nitrogen can be enhanced through hot bottom burning and the
occurrence of hot dredge-up also converts carbon into nitrogen. The C/N ratio
may be a good indicator of the mass of the primary AGB stars.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, 1 table, accepted by MNRA
Optoacoustic solitons in Bragg gratings
Optical gap solitons, which exist due to a balance of nonlinearity and
dispersion due to a Bragg grating, can couple to acoustic waves through
electrostriction. This gives rise to a new species of ``gap-acoustic'' solitons
(GASs), for which we find exact analytic solutions. The GAS consists of an
optical pulse similar to the optical gap soliton, dressed by an accompanying
phonon pulse. Close to the speed of sound, the phonon component is large. In
subsonic (supersonic) solitons, the phonon pulse is a positive (negative)
density variation. Coupling to the acoustic field damps the solitons'
oscillatory instability, and gives rise to a distinct instability for
supersonic solitons, which may make the GAS decelerate and change direction,
ultimately making the soliton subsonic.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
Lithium abundances in CEMP stars
Carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars are believed to show the chemical
imprints of more massive stars (M > 0.8 Msun) that are now extinct. In
particular, it is expected that the observed abundance of Li should deviate in
these stars from the standard Spite lithium plateau. We study here a sample of
11 metal-poor stars and a double-lined spectroscopic binary with -1.8 <[Fe/H]<
-3.3 observed with VLT/UVES spectrograph. Among these 12 metal-poor stars,
there are 8 CEMP stars for which we measure or constrain the Li abundance. In
contrast to previous arguments, we demonstrate that an appropriate regime of
dilution permits the existence of "Li-Spite plateau and C-rich" stars, whereas
some of the "Li-depleted and C-rich" stars call for an unidentified additional
depletion mechanism that cannot be explained by dilution alone. We find
evidence that rotation is related to the Li depletion in some CEMP stars.
Additionally, we report on a newly recognized double-lined spectroscopic binary
star in our sample. For this star, we develop a new technique from which
estimates of stellar parameters and luminosity ratios can be derived based on a
high-resolution spectrum alone, without the need for input from evolutionary
models.Comment: 62 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
A seismic approach to testing different formation channels of subdwarf B stars
There are many unknowns in the formation of subdwarf B stars. Different
formation channels are considered to be possible and to lead to a variety of
helium-burning subdwarfs. All seismic models to date, however, assume that a
subdwarf B star is a post-helium-flash-core surrounded by a thin inert layer of
hydrogen. We examine an alternative formation channel, in which the subdwarf B
star originates from a massive (>~2 Msun) red giant with a non-degenerate
helium-core. Although these subdwarfs may evolve through the same region of the
log g-Teff diagram as the canonical post-flash subdwarfs, their interior
structure is rather different. We examine how this difference affects their
pulsation modes and whether it can be observed.
Using detailed stellar evolution calculations we construct subdwarf B models
from both formation channels. The iron accumulation in the driving region due
to diffusion, which causes the excitation of the modes, is approximated by a
Gaussian function. The pulsation modes and frequencies are calculated with a
non-adiabatic pulsation code. A detailed comparison of two subdwarf B models
from different channels, but with the same log g and Teff, shows that their
mode excitation is different. The excited frequencies are lower for the
post-flash than for the post-non-degenerate subdwarf B star. This is mainly due
to the differing chemical composition of the stellar envelope. A more general
comparison between two grids of models shows that the excited frequencies of
most post-non-degenerate subdwarfs cannot be well-matched with the frequencies
of post-flash subdwarfs. In the rare event that an acceptable seismic match is
found, additional information, such as mode identification and log g and Teff
determinations, allows us to distinguish between the two formation channels.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in A&
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