688,568 research outputs found
Four new HgMn stars: HD 18104, HD 30085, HD 32867, HD 53588
We have detected four new HgMn stars, while monitoring a sample of apparently
slowly rotating superficially normal bright late B and early A stars in the
northern hemisphere. Important classification lines of Hg II and Mn II are
found as conspicuous features in the high resolution SOPHIE spectra of these
stars (R = 75000). Several lines of Hg II, Mn II and Fe II have been
synthesized using model atmospheres and the spectrum synthesis code SYNSPEC48
including hyperfine structure of various isotopes when relevant. These
synthetic spectra have been compared to high resolution high signal-to-noise
observations of these stars in order to derive abundances of these key
elements. The four stars are found to have distinct enhancements of Hg and Mn
which show that these stars are not superficially normal B and A stars, but
actually are new HgMn stars and should reclassified as such.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted in A&
Variability of the HeI5876 A line in early type chemically peculiar stars
Chemically peculiar stars present spectral and photometric variability with a
single period. In the oblique rotator model, the non homogeneous distribution
of elements on the stellar surface is at the origin of the observed variations.
As to helium weak stars, it has been suggested that photometric and helium line
equivalent width variations are out of phase. To understand the behaviour of
helium in CP stars, we have obtained time resolved spectra of the HeI5876 A
line for a sample of 16 chemically peculiar stars in the spectral range B3 --
A1 and belonging to different sub-groups. The HeI5876 A line is too weak to be
measured in the spectra of the stars HD 24155, HD 41269, and HD 220825. No
variation of the equivalent width of the selected He line has been revealed in
the stars HD 22920, HD 24587, HD 36589, HD 49606, and HD 209515. The equivalent
width variation of the HeI5876 A line is in phase with the photometric
variability for the stars HD 43819, HD 171247 and HD 176582. On the contrary it
is out of phase for the stars HD 28843, HD 182255 and HD 223640. No clear
relation has been found for the stars HD 26571 and HD 177003.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures. 1998, A&AS in pres
Newly-Discovered Planets Orbiting HD~5319, HD~11506, HD~75784 and HD~10442 from the N2K Consortium
Initially designed to discover short-period planets, the N2K campaign has
since evolved to discover new worlds at large separations from their host
stars. Detecting such worlds will help determine the giant planet occurrence at
semi-major axes beyond the ice line, where gas giants are thought to mostly
form. Here we report four newly-discovered gas giant planets (with minimum
masses ranging from 0.4 to 2.1 MJup) orbiting stars monitored as part of the
N2K program. Two of these planets orbit stars already known to host planets: HD
5319 and HD 11506. The remaining discoveries reside in previously-unknown
planetary systems: HD 10442 and HD 75784. The refined orbital period of the
inner planet orbiting HD 5319 is 641 days. The newly-discovered outer planet
orbits in 886 days. The large masses combined with the proximity to a 4:3 mean
motion resonance make this system a challenge to explain with current formation
and migration theories. HD 11506 has one confirmed planet, and here we confirm
a second. The outer planet has an orbital period of 1627.5 days, and the
newly-discovered inner planet orbits in 223.6 days. A planet has also been
discovered orbiting HD 75784 with an orbital period of 341.7 days. There is
evidence for a longer period signal; however, several more years of
observations are needed to put tight constraints on the Keplerian parameters
for the outer planet. Lastly, an additional planet has been detected orbiting
HD 10442 with a period of 1043 days.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Chemical composition of A--F type post-AGB candidates
An abundance analysis has been conducted for a sample of nine post-AGB
candidate stars; eight of them have not been explored before. We find four very
promising objects like HD 105262, HD 53300 and CpD among them. We
find strong evidence of dust-gas separation through selective depletion of
refractive elements in HD 105262. The same effect is also observed in HD 53300,
CpD and HD 114855 although abundance peculiarities are relatively
smaller for the last two stars. We find strong enrichment of nitrogen for HD
725, HD 842, HD 1457, HD 9233 and HD 61227 but no further evidence to support
their post-AGB nature. We have compared the observed [N/C] ratios of these
stars with the predictions of evolutionary models which include the rotation
induced mixing.Comment: Accepted in MNRAS, 18 pages, 12 figure
Global dynamics and stability limits for planetary systems around HD 12661, HD 38529, HD 37124 and HD 160691
In order to distinguish between regular and chaotic planetary orbits we apply
a new technique called MEGNO in a wide neighbourhood of orbital parameters
determined using standard two-body Keplerian fits for HD 12661, HD 38529, HD
37124 and HD 160691 planetary systems. We show that the currently announced
orbital parameters place these systems in very different situations from the
point of view of dynamical stability. While HD 38529 and HD 37124 are located
within large stability zones in the phase space around their determined orbits,
the preliminary orbits in HD 160691 are highly unstable. The orbital parameters
of the HD 12661 planets are located in a border region between stable and
unstable dynamical regimes, so while its currently determined orbital
parameters produce stable regular orbits, a minor change within the margin of
error of just one parameter may result in a chaotic dynamical system.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted ApJ, revised version following the
referee's repor
Leukocyte telomere shortening in Huntington's disease
Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disease caused by an expanded CAG repeat. Though symptom onset commonly occurs at midlife and inversely correlates with the CAG repeat expansion, age at clinical onset and progression rate are variable. In the present study we investigated the relationship between leukocyte telomere length (LTL) and HD development. LTL was measured by real-time PCR in manifest HD patients (HD, n = 62), pre-manifest HD patients (pre-HD, n = 38), and age-matched controls (n = 76). Significant LTL differences were observed between the three groups (p < .0001), with LTL values in the order: HD < pre-HD < controls. The relationship between LTL and age was different in the three groups. An inverse relationship between mean LTL and CAG repeat number was found in the pre-HD (p = .03). The overall data seem to indicate that after age 30 years, LT begins to shorten markedly in pre-HD patients according to CAG number and increasing age, up to the values observed in HD. This very suggestive picture allowed us to hypothesize that in pre-manifest HD, LTL could be a measure of time to clinical HD onset. The possible use of LTL as a reliable biomarker to track HD development and progression was evaluated and discussed
Discovery of Reflection Nebulosity Around Five Vega-like Stars
Coronagraphic optical observations of six Vega-like stars reveal reflection
nebulosities, five of which were previously unknown. The nebulosities
illuminated by HD 4881, HD 23362, HD 23680, HD 26676, and HD 49662 resemble
that of the Pleiades, indicating an interstellar origin for dust grains. The
reflection nebulosity around HD 123160 has a double-arm morphology, but no
disk-like feature is seen as close as 2.5 arcsec from the star in K-band
adaptive optics data. We demonstrate that uniform density dust clouds
surrounding HD 23362, HD 23680 and HD 123160 can account for the observed
12-100 micron spectral energy distributions. For HD 4881, HD 26676, and HD
49662 an additional emission source, such as from a circumstellar disk or
non-equilibrium grain heating, is required to fit the 12-25 micron data. These
results indicate that in some cases, particularly for Vega-like stars located
beyond the Local Bubble (>100 pc), the dust responsible for excess thermal
emission may originate from the interstellar medium rather than from a
planetary debris system.Comment: The Astrophysical Journal, in press for March, 2002 (32 pages, 13
figures
The metal-rich nature of stars with planets
With the goal of confirming the metallicity "excess" present in stars with
planetary-mass companions, we present in this paper a high-precision
spectroscopic study of a sample of dwarfs included in the CORALIE extrasolar
planet survey. The targets were chosen according to the basic criteria that 1)
they formed part of a limited volume and 2) they did not present the signature
of a planetary host companion. A few stars with planets were also observed and
analysed; namely, HD 6434, HD 13445, HD 16141, HD 17051, HD 19994, HD 22049, HD
28185, HD 38529, HD 52265, HD 190228, HD 210277 and HD 217107. For some of
these objects there had been no previous spectroscopic studies. The
spectroscopic analysis was done using the same technique as in previous work on
the metallicity of stars with planets, thereby permitting a direct comparison
of the results. The work described in this paper thus represents the first
uniform and unbiased comparison between stars with and without planetary-mass
companions in a volume-limited sample. The results show that 1) stars with
planets are significantly metal-rich, and 2) that the source of the metallicity
is most probably "primordial". The results presented here may impose serious
constraints on planetary system formation and evolution models.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures, A&A in pres
Mid-IR observations of circumstellar disks -- Part III: A mixed sample of PMS stars and Vega-type objects
We present new mid-infrared spectra for a sample of 15 targets (1 FU Orionis
object, 4 Herbig Ae stars, 5 T Tauri stars and 5 Vega type stars), obtained
with the TIMMI2 camera at La Silla Observatory (ESO). Three targets are members
of the beta Pic moving group (HD 155555, HD 181296 and HD 319139). PAH bands
are observed towards the T Tauri star HD 34700 and the Herbig Ae star PDS 144
N. For HD 34700, the band profiles indicate processed PAHs. The spectrum of the
Vega-type object eta Corvi (HD 109085), for which a resolved disk at sub-mm
wavelengths is known, is entirely stellar between 8--13 micron. Similarly, no
indication for circumstellar matter at mid-infrared wavelengths is found
towards the Vega-like stars HD 3003, HD 80951, HD 181296 and, surprisingly, the
T Tauri system HD 155555.
The silicate emission features of the remaining eight sources are modelled
with a mixture of silicates of different grain sizes and composition.
Unprocessed dust dominates FU Ori, HD 143006 and CD-43 344. Large amorphous
grains are the main dust component around HD 190073, HD 319139, KK Oph and PDS
144 S. Both small grains and crystalline dust is found for the Vega-type HD
123356, with a dominance of small amorphous grains. We show that the infrared
emission of the binary HD 123356 is dominated by its late-type secondary, but
optical spectroscopy is still required to confirm the age of the system and the
spectral class of the companion. For most targets this is their first
mid-infrared spectroscopic observation. We investigate trends between stellar,
disk and silicate properties and confirm correlations of previous studies.
Several objects present an exciting potential for follow-up high-resolution
disk studies.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
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