3,160 research outputs found
Chemical signatures of planets: beyond solar-twins
Elemental abundance studies of solar twin stars suggest that the solar
chemical composition contains signatures of the formation of terrestrial
planets in the solar system, namely small but significant depletions of the
refractory elements. To test this hypothesis, we study stars which, compared to
solar twins, have less massive convective envelopes (therefore increasing the
amplitude of the predicted effect) or are, arguably, more likely to host
planets (thus increasing the frequency of signature detections). We measure
relative atmospheric parameters and elemental abundances of a late-F type dwarf
sample (52 stars) and a sample of metal-rich solar analogs (59 stars). We
detect refractory-element depletions with amplitudes up to about 0.15 dex. The
distribution of depletion amplitudes for stars known to host gas giant planets
is not different from that of the rest of stars. The maximum amplitude of
depletion increases with effective temperature from 5650 K to 5950 K, while it
appears to be constant for warmer stars (up to 6300 K). The depletions observed
in solar twin stars have a maximum amplitude that is very similar to that seen
here for both of our samples. Gas giant planet formation alone cannot explain
the observed distributions of refractory-element depletions, leaving the
formation of rocky material as a more likely explanation of our observations.
More rocky material is necessary to explain the data of solar twins than
metal-rich stars, and less for warm stars. However, the sizes of the stars'
convective envelopes at the time of planet formation could be regulating these
amplitudes. Our results could be explained if disk lifetimes were shorter in
more massive stars, as independent observations indeed seem to suggest.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics, in press. Full tables available in the
source downloa
Atomic data from the Iron Project. LXIV. Radiative transition rates and collision strengths for Ca II
This work reports radiative transition rates and electron impact excitation
rate coefficients for levels of the n= 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 configurations of Ca
II. The radiative data were computed using the Thomas-Fermi-Dirac central
potential method in the frozen core approximation and includes the polarization
interaction between the valence electron and the core using a model potential.
This method allows for configuration interactions (CI) and relativistic effects
in the Breit-Pauli formalism. Collision strengths in LS-coupling were
calculated in the close coupling approximation with the R-matrix method. Then,
fine structure collision strengths were obtained by means of the
intermediate-coupling frame transformation (ICFT) method which accounts for
spin-orbit coupling effects. We present extensive comparisons with the most
recent calculations and measurements for Ca II as well as a comparison between
the core polarization results and the "unpolarized" values. We find that core
polarization affects the computed lifetimes by up to 20%. Our results are in
very close agreement with recent measurements for the lifetimes of metastable
levels. The present collision strengths were integrated over a Maxwellian
distribution of electron energies and the resulting effective collision
strengths are given for a wide range of temperatures. Our effective collision
strengths for the resonance transitions are within ~11% from previous values
derived from experimental measurements, but disagree with latter computations
using the distorted wave approximation.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. The atomic data from this work, including energy
levels, A-values, and effective collision strengths, is available in
electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr
(130.79.128.5) or via http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/qcat?J/A+A
A possible signature of terrestrial planet formation in the chemical composition of solar analogs
Recent studies have shown that the elemental abundances in the Sun are
anomalous when compared to most (about 85%) nearby solar twin stars. Compared
to its twins, the Sun exhibits a deficiency of refractory elements (those with
condensation temperatures Tc>900K) relative to volatiles (Tc<900K). This
finding is speculated to be a signature of the planet formation that occurred
more efficiently around the Sun compared with the majority of solar twins.
Furthermore, within this scenario, it seems more likely that the abundance
patterns found are specifically related to the formation of terrestrial
planets. In this work we analyze abundance results from six large independent
stellar abundance surveys to determine whether they confirm or reject this
observational finding. We show that the elemental abundances derived for solar
analogs in these six studies are consistent with the Tc trend suggested as a
planet formation signature. The same conclusion is reached when those results
are averaged heterogeneously. We also investigate the dependency of the
abundances with first ionization potential (FIP), which correlates well with
Tc. A trend with FIP would suggest a different origin for the abundance
patterns found, but we show that the correlation with Tc is statistically more
significant. We encourage similar investigations of metal-rich solar analogs
and late F-type dwarf stars, for which the hypothesis of a planet formation
signature in the elemental abundances makes very specific predictions. Finally,
we examine a recent paper that claims that the abundance patterns of two stars
hosting super-Earth like planets contradict the planet formation signature
hypothesis. Instead, we find that the chemical compositions of these two stars
are fully compatible with our hypothesis.Comment: To appear in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Stellar Chemical Abundances: In Pursuit of the Highest Achievable Precision
The achievable level of precision on photospheric abundances of stars is a
major limiting factor on investigations of exoplanet host star characteristics,
the chemical histories of star clusters, and the evolution of the Milky Way and
other galaxies. While model-induced errors can be minimized through the
differential analysis of spectrally similar stars, the maximum achievable
precision of this technique has been debated. As a test, we derive differential
abundances of 19 elements from high-quality asteroid-reflected solar spectra
taken using a variety of instruments and conditions. We treat the solar spectra
as being from unknown stars and use the resulting differential abundances,
which are expected to be zero, as a diagnostic of the error in our
measurements. Our results indicate that the relative resolution of the target
and reference spectra is a major consideration, with use of different
instruments to obtain the two spectra leading to errors up to 0.04 dex. Use of
the same instrument at different epochs for the two spectra has a much smaller
effect (~0.007 dex). The asteroid used to obtain the solar standard also has a
negligible effect (~0.006 dex). Assuming that systematic errors from the
stellar model atmospheres have been minimized, as in the case of solar twins,
we confirm that differential chemical abundances can be obtained at sub-0.01
dex precision with due care in the observations, data reduction and abundance
analysis.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ; 13 pages, 6 figures, 7 table
Data reduction in the ITMS system through a data acquisition model with self-adaptive sampling rate
Long pulse or steady state operation of fusion experiments require data acquisition and processing systems that reduce the volume of data involved. The availability of self-adaptive sampling rate systems and the use of real-time lossless data compression techniques can help solve these problems. The former is important for continuous adaptation of sampling frequency for experimental requirements. The latter allows the maintenance of continuous digitization under limited memory conditions. This can be achieved by permanent transmission of compressed data to other systems. The compacted transfer ensures the use of minimum bandwidth. This paper presents an implementation based on intelligent test and measurement system (ITMS), a data acquisition system architecture with multiprocessing capabilities that permits it to adapt the system’s sampling frequency throughout the experiment. The sampling rate can be controlled depending on the experiment’s specific requirements by using an external dc voltage signal or by defining user events through software. The system takes advantage of the high processing capabilities of the ITMS platform to implement a data reduction mechanism based in lossless data compression algorithms which are themselves based in periodic deltas
Temperature dependent charge transport mechanisms in carbon sphere/polymer composites
Carbon spheres (CS) with diameters in the range were prepared
via hydrolysis of a sucrose solution at and later annealed in
at The spheres were highly conducting but difficult to process into
thin films or pressed pellets. In our previous work, composite samples of CS
and the insulating polymer polyethylene oxide (PEO) were prepared and their
charge transport was analyzed in the temperature range
Here, we analyze charge transport in CS coated with a thin polyaniline (PANi)
film doped with hydrochloric acid (HCl), in the same temperature range. The
goal is to study charge transport in the CS using a conducting polymer (PANi)
as a binder and compare with that occurring at CS/PEO. A conductivity maxima
was observed in the CS/PEO composite but was absent in CS/PANi. Our data
analysis shows that variable range hopping of electrons between polymeric
chains in PANi-filled gaps between CS takes on a predominant part in transport
through CS/PANi composites, whereas in CS/PEO composites, electrons travel
through gaps between CS solely by means of direct tunneling. This difference in
transport mechanisms results in different temperature dependences of the
conductivity.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Revisiting the axion bounds from the Galactic white dwarf luminosity function
It has been shown that the shape of the luminosity function of white dwarfs
(WDLF) is a powerful tool to check for the possible existence of DFSZ-axions, a
proposed but not yet detected type of weakly interacting particles. With the
aim of deriving new constraints on the axion mass, we compute in this paper new
theoretical WDLFs on the basis of WD evolving models that incorporate for the
feedback of axions on the thermal structure of the white dwarf. We find that
the impact of the axion emission into the neutrino emission can not be
neglected at high luminosities () and that the axion
emission needs to be incorporated self-consistently into the evolution of the
white dwarfs when dealing with axion masses larger than meV (i.e. axion-electron coupling constant ). We went beyond previous works by including 5 different derivations
of the WDLF in our analysis. Then we have performed -tests to have a
quantitative measure of the assessment between the theoretical WDLFs
---computed under the assumptions of different axion masses and normalization
methods--- and the observed WDLFs of the Galactic disk. While all the WDLF
studied in this work disfavour axion masses in the range suggested by
asteroseismology ( meV; ) lower axion masses can not be discarded from our current knowledge
of the WDLF of the Galactic Disk. A larger set of completely independent
derivations of the WDLF of the galactic disk as well as a detailed study of the
uncertainties of the theoretical WDLFs is needed before quantitative
constraints on the axion-electron coupling constant can be made.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the Journal of
Cosmology and Astroparticle Physic
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