22,998 research outputs found
Magnetic topology and surface differential rotation on the K1 subgiant of the RS CVn system HR 1099
We present here spectropolarimetric observations of the RS CVn system HR 1099
(V711 Tau) secured from 1998 February to 2002 January with the
spectropolarimeter MuSiCoS at the Telescope Bernard Lyot (Observatoire du Pic
du Midi, France). We apply Zeeman-Doppler Imaging and reconstruct brightness
and magnetic surface topologies of the K1 primary subgiant of the system, at
five different epochs. We confirm the presence of large, axisymmetric regions
where the magnetic field is mainly azimuthal, providing further support to the
hypothesis that dynamo processes may be distributed throughout the whole
convective zone in this star. We study the short-term evolution of surface
structures from a comparison of our images with observations secured at
close-by epochs by Donati et al. (2003) at the Anglo-Australian Telescope. We
conclude that the small-scale brightness and magnetic patterns undergo major
changes within a timescale of 4 to 6 weeks, while the largest structures remain
stable over several years. We report the detection of a weak surface
differential rotation (both from brightness and magnetic tracers) indicating
that the equator rotates faster than the pole with a difference in rotation
rate between the pole and the equator about 4 times smaller than that of the
Sun. This result suggests that tidal forces also impact the global dynamic
equilibrium of convective zones in cool active stars.Comment: accepted by MNRA
Modelling and Forecasting the Yield Curve under Model uncertainty
This paper proposes a procedure to investigate the nature and persistence of the forces governing the yield curve and to use the extracted information for forecasting purposes. The latent factors of a model of the Nelson-Siegel type are directly linked to the maturity of the yields through the explicit description of the cross-sectional dynamics of the interest rates. The intertemporal dynamics of the factors is then modeled as driven by long-run forces giving rise to enduring effects, and by medium- and short-run forces producing transitory effects. These forces are re-constructed in real time with a dynamic filter whose embedded feedback control recursively corrects for model uncertainty, including additive and parameter uncertainty and possible equation misspecifications and approximations. This correction sensibly enhances the robustness of the estimates and the accuracy of the out-of-sample forecasts, both at short and long forecast horizons. JEL Classification: G1, E4, C5Frequency decomposition, Model uncertainty, monetary policy, yield curve
Zeeman-Doppler Imaging of Late-Type Stars -- The Surface Magnetic Field of II Peg
Late-type stars in general possess complicated magnetic surface fields which
makes their detection and in particular their modeling and reconstruction
challenging. In this work we present a new Zeeman-Doppler imaging code which is
especially designed for the application to late-type stars. This code uses a
new multi-line cross-correlation technique by means of a principal component
analysis to extract and enhance the quality of individual polarized line
profiles. It implements the full polarized radiative transfer equation and uses
an inversion strategy that can incorporate prior knowledge based on solar
analogies. Moreover, our code utilizes a new regularization scheme which is
based on local maximum entropy to allow a more appropriate reproduction of
complex surface fields as those expected for late-type stars. In a first
application we present Zeeman-Doppler images of II Pegasi which reveal a
surprisingly large scale surface structure with one predominant (unipolar)
magnetic longitude which is mainly radially oriented.Comment: Astronomische Nachrichten / Astronomical Notes Vol. 328, Issue 10, p.
104
CP violation in the B0s system
In this paper the most recent Tevatron results concerning CP violation in the
B0s system are reviewed. These are the measurement of the direct CP asymmetry
in the B0s->K-\pi+ decay performed by CDF and the measurement of \Delta\Gamma_s
and \phi_s performed by D0 in the B0s->J/\psi\phi decay.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figures, Proceedings of the "Flavor Physics and CP
Violation" Conference (FPCP07), May 12-17 2007, Bled, Sloveni
Analytic and numerical models of the 3D multipolar magnetospheres of pre-main sequence stars
Traditionally models of accretion of gas on to T Tauri stars have assumed a
dipole stellar magnetosphere, partly for simplicity, but also due to the lack
of information about their true magnetic field topologies. Before and since the
first magnetic maps of an accreting T Tauri star were published in 2007 a new
generation of magnetospheric accretion models have been developed that
incorporate multipole magnetic fields. Three-dimensional models of the
large-scale stellar magnetosphere with an observed degree of complexity have
been produced via numerical field extrapolation from observationally derived T
Tauri magnetic maps. Likewise, analytic and magnetohydrodynamic models with
multipolar stellar magnetic fields have been produced. In this conference
review article we compare and contrast the numerical field extrapolation and
analytic approaches, and argue that the large-scale magnetospheres of some (but
not all) accreting T Tauri stars can be well described by tilted dipole plus
tilted octupole field components. We further argue that the longitudinal field
curve, whether derived from accretion related emission lines, or from
photospheric absorption lines, provides poor constrains on the large-scale
magnetic field topology and that detailed modeling of the rotationally
modulated Stokes V signal is required to recover the true field complexity. We
conclude by examining the advantages, disadvantages and limitations of both the
field extrapolation and analytic approaches, and also those of
magnetohydrodynamic models.Comment: 19 pages, accepted refereed invited conference review for the
proceedings of the 7th Potsdam thinkshop: magnetic fields in stars and
exoplanets. Some figures reduced resolutio
Magnetic fields and differential rotation on the pre-main sequence I: The early-G star HD 141943 - brightness and magnetic topologies
Spectroscopic and spectropolarimetric observations of the pre-main sequence
early-G star HD 141943 were obtained at four observing epochs (in 2006, 2007,
2009 and 2010). The observations were undertaken at the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian
Telescope using the UCLES echelle spectrograph and the SEMPOL
spectropolarimeter visitor instrument. Brightness and surface magnetic field
topologies were reconstructed for the star using the technique of least-squares
deconvolution to increase the signal-to-noise of the data.
The reconstructed brightness maps show that HD 141943 had a weak polar spot
and a significant amount of low latitude features, with little change in the
latitude distribution of the spots over the 4 years of observations. The
surface magnetic field was reconstructed at three of the epochs from a high
order (l <= 30) spherical harmonic expansion of the spectropolarimetric
observations. The reconstructed magnetic topologies show that in 2007 and 2010
the surface magnetic field was reasonably balanced between poloidal and
toroidal components. However we find tentative evidence of a change in the
poloidal/toroidal ratio in 2009 with the poloidal component becoming more
dominant. At all epochs the radial magnetic field is predominantly
non-axisymmetric while the azimuthal field is predominantly axisymmetric with a
ring of positive azimuthal field around the pole similar to that seen on other
active stars.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures, accepted by MNRA
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