33,680 research outputs found
A search for brown-dwarf like secondaries in cataclysmic variables
We present VTL/ISAAC infrared spectroscopy of a sample of short orbital
period cataclysmic variables which are candidates for harboring substellar
companions. We have detected the KI and NaI absorption lines of the companion
star in VY Aqr. The overall spectral distribution in this system is best fit
with a M9.5 type dwarf spectra, implying a distance of pc. VY Aqr
seems to fall far from the theoretical distribution of secondary star
temperatures around the orbital period minimum. Fitting of the IR spectral
energy distribution (SED) was performed by comparing the observed spectrum with
late-type templates. The application of such a spectral fitting procedure
suggests that the continuum shape in the 1.1-2.5 m spectral region in
short orbital period cataclysmic variables may be an useful indicator of the
companion spectral type. The SED fitting for RZ Leo and CU Vel suggests M5 type
dwarf companions, and distances of 340 110 and 150 50 pc,
respectively. These systems may be placed in the upper evolution branch for
short period cataclysmic variables.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS, 6 pages, 7 figure
The initial conditions of the Universe and holography
We address the initial conditions for an expanding cosmology using the
holographic principle. For the case of a closed model, the old prescription of
Fishler and Susskind, that uses the particle horizon to encode the bulk degrees
of freedom, can be implemented for accelerated models with enough acceleration.
As a bonus we have singularity free bouncing models. The bound is saturated for
co-dimension one branes dominated universes.Comment: Talk presented at the XXVIII Spanish Relativity Meeting E.R.E. 2005,
Oviedo, September 6-10, 2005, to be published by AIP Conference Proceedings,
4 page
Search for brown-dwarf like secondaries in cataclysmic variables II
We have examined VTL/ISAAC 1-2.5 \umum spectroscopy of a sample of short
orbital period cataclysmic variables which are candidates for harboring
substellar companions. We provide descriptions of the infrared spectrum of
\hbox{EI Psc}, \hbox{V834 Cen}, \hbox{WX Cet}, \hbox{VW Hyi}, \hbox{TY PsA} and
\hbox{BW Scl}. Fitting of the IR spectral energy distribution (SED) was
performed by comparing the observed spectrum with late-type templates.
Absorption features of the secondary star were detected in \hbox{EI Psc} and
\hbox{V834 Cen}, consistent with dwarf secondaries of spectral type K 5 1
and M 8 0.5, respectively. In addition, we report the first detection of
the secondary star in \hbox{VW Hyi}. The SED in this case is well matched by an
L 0 2 type secondary contributing 23 per cent to the overall flux at
= 1.15 \umum. This is a surprising result for a system with a
relatively high mass transfer rate. We discuss the implication of our findings
on the current scenarios for cataclysmic variable star evolution.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRA
Nuclear Activity in Circumnuclear Ring Galaxies
We have analyzed the frequency and properties of the nuclear activity in a
sample of galaxies with circumnuclear rings and spirals (CNRs). This sample was
compared with a control sample of galaxies with very similar global properties
but without circumnuclear rings. We discuss the relevance of the results in
regard to the AGN feeding processes and present the following results: (i)
bright companion galaxies seem not to be important for the appearance of CNRs,
which appear to be more related to intrinsic properties of the host galaxies or
to minor merger processes; (ii) the proportion of strong bars in galaxies with
an AGN and a CNR is somewhat higher than the expected ratio of strongly barred
AGN galaxies from the results of Ho and co-workers; (iii) the incidence of
Seyfert activity coeval with CNRs is clearly larger than the rate expected from
the morphological distribution of the host galaxies; (iv) the rate of Sy 2 to
Sy 1 type galaxies with CNRs is about three times larger than the expected
ratio for galaxies without CNRs and is opposite to that predicted by the
geometric paradigm of the classical unified model for AGNs, although it does
support the hy-pothesis that Sy 2 activity is linked to circumnuclear star
formation. The possible selection effects of the sample are discussed, and we
conclude that the detected trends are strong enough to justify high quality
observations of as large as possible sets of galaxies with circumnuclear rings
and their matched control samples.Comment: Submitted to International Journal of Astronomy and Astrophysic
An experimental and simulation study of wax deposition in hydrocarbon pipeline
We cannot provide a copy of this article for copyright reasons.
Hydrocarbon transportation in the deepwater pipelines is affected by the low temperature causing a problem such as wax deposition and hydrate formation. The flow assurance in the deepwater pipelines is very important due to the precipitation of the solid phase of wax on the pipe wall creating blockages and reduces or stops production. There are several mitigation methods were used in the different oil fields around the world to reduce wax deposition such as inhibitors and thermal insulation. This work describes the underlining wax models implemented in OLGA, depending on the experimental data of this study. OLGA software was used to simulate the wax deposition process to predict the behaviour of the wax deposition. A comparison between the experimental wax thickness and the predicted wax thickness was presented. Since simulations based on the default wax parameters did not achieve a complete match with experiments, it was important to find out to what extent tuning of wax parameters was necessary. Three scenarios were created to match the experimental wax thickness, including studying the effect of changing wax porosity in OLGA, changing the crude oil components and the influence of simulation time on wax deposition. The findings of the numerical simulation, after tuning the analogical properties (assumptions), show agreement with the experimental results
XMM-Newton EPIC and OM observation of Nova Centauri 1986 (V842 Cen)
We report the results from the temporal and spectral analysis of an
XMM-Newton observation of Nova Centauri 1986 (V842 Cen). We detect a period at
3.510.4 h in the EPIC data and at 4.00.8 h in the OM data. The X-ray
spectrum is consistent with the emission from an absorbed thin thermal plasma
with a temperature distribution given by an isobaric cooling flow. The maximum
temperature of the cooling flow model is keV. Such a
high temperature can be reached in a shocked region and, given the periodicity
detected, most likely arises in a magnetically-channelled accretion flow
characteristic of intermediate polars. The pulsed fraction of the 3.51 h
modulation decreases with energy as observed in the X-ray light curves of
magnetic CVs, possibly due either to occultation of the accretion column by the
white dwarf body or phase-dependent to absorption. We do not find the 57 s
white dwarf spin period, with a pulse amplitude of 4 mmag, reported by Woudt et
al. (2009) either in the Optical Monitor (OM) data, which are sensitive to
pulse amplitudes 0.03 magnitudes, or the EPIC data, sensitive to
pulse fractions 14 2%.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; MNRAS, accepte
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