588,888 research outputs found
Kuiper Binary Object Formation
It has been observed that binary Kuiper Belt Objects (KBOs) exist contrary to
theoretical expectations. Their creation presents problems to most current
models. However, the inclusion of a third body (for example, one of the outer
planets) may provide the conditions necessary for the formation of these
objects. The presence of a third massive body not only helps to clear the
primordial Kuiper Belt but can also result in long lived binary Kuiper belt
objects. The gravitational interaction between the KBOs and the third body
causes one of four effects; scattering into the Oort cloud, collisions with the
growing protoplanets, formation of binary pairs, or creation of a single Kuiper
belt object. Additionally, the initial location of the progenitors of the
Kuiper belt objects also has a significant effect on binary formation
The Fate of Binaries in the Galactic Center: The Mundane and the Exotic
The Galactic Center (GC) is dominated by the gravity of a super-massive black
hole (SMBH), Sagittarius A, and is suspected to contain a sizable
population of binary stars. Such binaries form hierarchical triples with the
SMBH, undergoing Eccentric Kozai-Lidov (EKL) evolution, which can lead to high
eccentricity excitations for the binary companions' mutual orbit. This effect
can lead to stellar collisions or Roche-lobe crossings, as well as orbital
shrinking due to tidal dissipation. In this work we investigate the dynamical
and stellar evolution of such binary systems, especially with regards to the
binaries' post-main-sequence evolution. We find that the majority of binaries
(~75%) is eventually separated into single stars, while the remaining binaries
(~25%) undergo phases of common-envelope evolution and/or stellar mergers.
These objects can produce a number of different exotic outcomes, including
rejuvenated stars, G2-like infrared-excess objects, stripped giant stars, Type
Ia supernovae (SNe), cataclysmic variables (CVs), symbiotic binaries (SBs), or
compact object binaries. We estimate that, within a sphere of 250 Mpc radius,
about 7.5 to 15 Type Ia SNe per year should occur in galactic nuclei due to
this mechanism, potentially detectable by ZTF and ASAS-SN. Likewise we estimate
that, within a sphere of 1 Gpc volume, about 10 to 20 compact object
binaries form per year that could become gravitational wave sources. Based on
results of EKL-driven compact object binary mergers in galactic nuclei by Hoang
at al. (2018), this compact object binary formation rate translates to about 15
to 30 events per year detectable by Advanced LIGO.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, accepted by Ap
The binary gravitational lens and its extreme cases
The transition of the binary gravitational lens from the equal mass case to
small (planetary) mass ratios q is studied. It is shown how the limit of a
(pure shear) Chang-Refsdal lens is approached, under what conditions the
Chang-Refsdal approximation is valid, and how the 3 different topologies of the
critical curves and caustics for a binary lens are mapped onto the 2 different
topologies for a Chang-Refsdal lens with pure shear. It is shown that for wide
binaries, the lensing in the vicinity of both lens objects can be described by
a Taylor-expansion of the deflection term due to the other object, where the
Chang-Refsdal approximation corresponds to a truncation of this series. For
close binaries, only the vicinity of the secondary, less massive, object can be
described in this way. However, for image distances much larger than the
separation of the lens objects, any binary lens can be approximated by means of
multipole expansion, where the first non-trivial term is the quadrupole term.
It is shown that an ambiguity exists between wide and close binary lenses,
where the shear at one of the objects due to the other object for the wide
binary is equal to the absolute value of the eigenvalues of the quadrupole
moment for the close binary. This analysis provides the basis for a
classification of binary lens microlensing events, especially of planetary
events, and an understanding of present ambiguities.Comment: 20 pages in LaTeX2e format with 9 embedded PostScript figures;
figures modified and embedded; accepted for publication in A&
Region-DH: Region-based Deep Hashing for Multi-Instance Aware Image Retrieval
This paper introduces an instance-aware hashing approach Region-DH for large-scale multi-label image retrieval. The accurate object bounds can significantly increase the hashing performance of instance features. We design a unified deep neural network that simultaneously localizes and recognizes objects while learning the hash functions for binary codes. Region-DH focuses on recognizing objects and building compact binary codes that represent more foreground patterns. Region-DH can flexibly be used with existing deep neural networks or more complex object detectors for image hashing. Extensive experiments are performed on benchmark datasets and show the efficacy and robustness of the proposed Region-DH model
Object DUO 2: A New Binary Lens Candidate
We present the light curve of an unusual variable object, DUO 2, detected
during the search for microlensing events by the DUO project. The star remained
stable for more than 150 days before it brightened by more than two magnitudes
in 6 days in the B and R bands. The light curves are achromatic during the
variability. We consider possible explanations of the photometric behavior,
with particular emphasis on the binary lens interpretation of the event. The
masses of the lenses are quite small, with the companion possibly in the range
of a brown dwarf or even a few times of Jupiter. We report evidence of blending
of the source by a companion through the first detection of shift in the light
centroid among all the microlensing experiments. This shift sets a lower limit
of on the separation between the stars. The best lens
model obtained requires moderate blending, which was what motivated us to check
the centroid shift that was subsequently found. The best lens model predicts a
separation of between the two blended stars. This prediction
was recently tested using two CCD images taken under good seeing conditions.
Both images show two components. Their separation and position angle are in
good agreement with our model.Comment: uuencoded, compressed PostScript, 4 pages, 4 figures (in text).
Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letter
Binary object recognition system on FPGA with bSOM
Tri-state Self Organizing Map (bSOM), which takes binary inputs and maintains tri-state weights, has been used for classification rather than clustering in this paper. The major contribution here is the demonstration of the potential use of the modified bSOM in security surveillance, as a recognition system on FPGA
Binary-induced collapse of a compact, collisionless cluster
We improve and extend Shapiro's model of a relativistic, compact object which
is stable in isolation but is driven dynamically unstable by the tidal field of
a binary companion. Our compact object consists of a dense swarm of test
particles moving in randomly-oriented, initially circular, relativistic orbits
about a nonrotating black hole. The binary companion is a distant, slowly
inspiraling point mass. The tidal field of the companion is treated as a small
perturbation on the background Schwarzschild geometry near the hole; the
resulting metric is determined by solving the perturbation equations of Regge
and Wheeler and Zerilli in the quasi-static limit. The perturbed spacetime
supports Bekenstein's conjecture that the horizon area of a near-equilibrium
black hole is an adiabatic invariant. We follow the evolution of the system and
confirm that gravitational collapse can be induced in a compact collisionless
cluster by the tidal field of a binary companion.Comment: 9 Latex pages, 14 postscript figure
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