547 research outputs found
Evaluating irreversible social harms
In this paper we investigate how irreversible social harms should be evaluated from an ethical perspective. First, we define a general notion of irreversibility, drawing on discussions in ecology and economics. This notion is relational in the sense that 'irreversibility' is always 'irreversibility for a certain party'. We also note that a change may be more or less difficult to reverse, with full reversibility and irreversibility as two extremes. Second, we examine what can make an irreversible change a harm, and why these kinds of harms have particular ethical significance. Here we draw on discussions from ethics, particularly regarding the Capability Approach. We also show how our notion of irreversibility connects to, and can add to, discussions in the fields of development studies and disaster management, particularly on the concept of resilience. Third, we suggest how potentially irreversible harms can be recognised and dealt with in policy-making. Finally, we show how our framework can be applied by evaluating the land acquisition process of two biofuel producers in Tanzania
2MASS J05162881+2607387: A New Low-Mass Double-Lined Eclipsing Binary
We show that the star known as 2MASS J05162881+2607387 (hereafter J0516) is a
double-lined eclipsing binary with nearly identical low-mass components. The
spectroscopic elements derived from 18 spectra obtained with the High
Resolution Spectrograph on the Hobby-Eberly Telescope during the Fall of 2005
are K_1=88.45 +/- 0.48 km/s and K_2=90.43 +/- 0.60 km/s, resulting in a mass
ratio of$q=K_1/K_2 = 0.978 +/- 0.018 and minimum masses of M_1 sin^{3}i=0.775
+/- 0.016 solar masses and M_2 sin^{3}i=0.759 +/- 0.012 solar masses,
respectively. We have extensive differential photometry of J0516 obtained over
several nights between 2004 January-March (epoch 1) and 2004 October-2005
January plus 2006 January (epoch 2) using the 1m telescope at the Mount Laguna
Observatory. The source was roughly 0.1 mag brighter in all three bandpasses
during epoch 1 when compared to epoch 2. Also, phased light curves from epoch 1
show considerable out-of-eclipse variability, presumably due to bright spots on
one or both stars. In contrast, the phased light curves from epoch 2 show
little out-of-eclipse variability. The light curves from epoch 2 and the radial
velocity curves were analyzed using our ELC code with updated model atmospheres
for low-mass stars. We find the following: M_1=0.787 +/- 0.012 solar masses,
R_1=0.788 +/- 0.015 solar radii, M_2=0.770 +/- 0.009 solar masses, and
R_2=0.817 +/- 0.010 solar radii. The stars in J0516 have radii that are
significantly larger than model predictions for their masses, similar to what
is seen in a handful of other well-studied low-mass double-lined eclipsing
binaries. We compiled all recent mass and radius determinations from low-mass
binaries and determine an empirical mass-radius relation of the form R = 0.0324
+ 0.9343M + 0.0374M^2, where the quantities are in solar units.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures (Figure 1 has degraded quality), to appear in
Ap
A Photometric Technique to Search for Be Stars in Open Clusters
We describe a technique to identify Be stars in open clusters using Stromgren
b, y, and narrow-band Halpha photometry. We first identify the B-type stars of
the cluster using a theoretical isochrone fit to the (b-y, y) color-magnitude
diagram. The strongest Be stars are easily identified in a (b-y, y-Halpha)
color-color diagram, but those with weaker Halpha emission (classified as
possible Be star detections) may be confused with evolved or foreground stars.
Here we present such photometry plus Halpha spectroscopy of members of the
cluster NGC 3766 to demonstrate the accuracy of our technique. Statistical
results on the relative numbers of Be and B-type stars in additional clusters
will be presented in a future paper.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, 1 table. Accepted by Ap
The Zero Age Main Sequence of WIMP burners
We modify a stellar structure code to estimate the effect upon the main
sequence of the accretion of weakly interacting dark matter onto stars and its
subsequent annihilation. The effect upon the stars depends upon whether the
energy generation rate from dark matter annihilation is large enough to shut
off the nuclear burning in the star. Main sequence WIMP burners look much like
protostars moving on the Hayashi track, although they are in principle
completely stable. We make some brief comments about where such stars could be
found, how they might be observed and more detailed simulations which are
currently in progress. Finally we comment on whether or not it is possible to
link the paradoxically young OB stars found at the galactic centre with WIMP
burners.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figs. Matches published versio
Mass Segregation in the Globular Cluster Palomar 5 and its Tidal Tails
We present the stellar main sequence luminosity function (LF) of the
disrupted, low-mass, low-concentration globular cluster Palomar 5 and its
well-defined tidal tails, which emanate from the cluster as a result of its
tidal interaction with the Milky Way. The results of our deep (B ~ 24.5)
wide-field photometry unequivocally indicate that preferentially fainter stars
were removed from the cluster so that the LF of the cluster's main body
exhibits a significant degree of flattening compared to other globular
clusters. There is clear evidence of mass segregation, which is reflected in a
radial variation of the LFs. The LF of the tidal tails is distinctly enhanced
with faint, low-mass stars. Pal 5 exhibits a binary main sequence, and we
estimate a photometric binary frequency of roughly 10%. Also the binaries show
evidence of mass segregation with more massive binary systems being more
strongly concentrated toward the cluster center.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journa
The Heart of the Matter. About Good Nursing and Telecare
Nurses and ethicists worry that the implementation of care at a distance or telecare will impoverish patient care by taking out âthe heartâ of the clinical work. This means that telecare is feared to induce the neglect of patients, and to possibly hinder the development of a personal relation between nurse and patient. This study aims to analyse whether these worries are warranted by analysing Dutch care practices using telemonitoring in care for chronic patients in the Netherlands. How do clinical practices of nursing change when telecare devices are introduced and what this means for notions and norms of good nursing? The paper concludes that at this point the practices studied do not warrant the fear of negligence and compromised relations. Quite the contrary; in the practices studied, telecare lead to more frequent and more specialised contacts between nurses and patients. The paper concludes by reflecting on the ethical implications of these changes
Improved parameters for extrasolar transiting planets
We present refined values for the physical parameters of transiting
exoplanets, based on a self-consistent and uniform analysis of transit light
curves and the observable properties of the host stars. Previously it has been
difficult to interpret the ensemble properties of transiting exoplanets,
because of the widely different methodologies that have been applied in
individual cases. Furthermore, previous studies often ignored an important
constraint on the mean stellar density that can be derived directly from the
light curve. The main contributions of this work are 1) a critical compilation
and error assessment of all reported values for the effective temperature and
metallicity of the host stars; 2) the application of a consistent methodology
and treatment of errors in modeling the transit light curves; and 3) more
accurate estimates of the stellar mass and radius based on stellar evolution
models, incorporating the photometric constraint on the stellar density. We use
our results to revisit some previously proposed patterns and correlations
within the ensemble. We confirm the mass-period correlation, and we find
evidence for a new pattern within the scatter about this correlation: planets
around metal-poor stars are more massive than those around metal-rich stars at
a given orbital period. Likewise, we confirm the proposed dichotomy of planets
according to their Safronov number, and we find evidence that the systems with
small Safronov numbers are more metal-rich on average. Finally, we confirm the
trend that led to the suggestion that higher-metallicity stars harbor planets
with a greater heavy-element content.Comment: To appear in The Astrophysical Journal. 23 pages in emulateapj
format, including figures and tables. Figures 7, 8, and 9 are low resolution;
higher resolution versions will be available from the journal when published.
Acknowledgement added, and minor changes made to TrES-3 and TrES-4 in the
Appendi
Mass and Angular Momentum Transfer in the Massive Algol Binary RY Persei
We present an investigation of H-alpha emission line variations observed in
the massive Algol binary, RY Per. We give new radial velocity data for the
secondary based upon our optical spectra and for the primary based upon high
dispersion UV spectra. We present revised orbital elements and an estimate of
the primary's projected rotational velocity (which indicates that the primary
is rotating 7 times faster than synchronous). We use a Doppler tomography
algorithm to reconstruct the individual primary and secondary spectra in the
region of H-alpha, and we subtract the latter from each of our observations to
obtain profiles of the primary and its disk alone. Our H-alpha observations of
RY Per show that the mass gaining primary is surrounded by a persistent but
time variable accretion disk. The profile that is observed outside-of-eclipse
has weak, double-peaked emission flanking a deep central absorption, and we
find that these properties can be reproduced by a disk model that includes the
absorption of photospheric light by the band of the disk seen in projection
against the face of the star. We developed a new method to reconstruct the disk
surface density distribution from the ensemble of H-alpha profiles observed
around the orbit, and this method accounts for the effects of disk occultation
by the stellar components, the obscuration of the primary by the disk, and flux
contributions from optically thick disk elements. The resulting surface density
distribution is elongated along the axis joining the stars, in the same way as
seen in hydrodynamical simulations of gas flows that strike the mass gainer
near trailing edge of the star. This type of gas stream configuration is
optimal for the transfer of angular momentum, and we show that rapid rotation
is found in other Algols that have passed through a similar stage.Comment: 39 pages, 12 figures, ApJ in press, 2004 June 20 issu
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