117 research outputs found
The Origin of Fe II Emission in AGN
We used a very large set of models of broad emission line (BEL) clouds in AGN
to investigate the formation of the observed Fe II emission lines. We show that
photoionized BEL clouds cannot produce both the observed shape and observed
equivalent width of the 2200-2800A Fe II UV bump unless there is considerable
velocity structure corresponding to a microturbulent velocity parameter v_turb
> 100 km/s for the LOC models used here. This could be either microturbulence
in gas that is confined by some phenomenon such as MHD waves, or a velocity
shear such as in the various models of winds flowing off the surfaces of
accretion disks. The alternative way that we can find to simultaneously match
both the observed shape and equivalent width of the Fe II UV bump is for the Fe
II emission to be the result of collisional excitation in a warm, dense gas.
Such gas would emit very few lines other than Fe II. However, since the
collisionally excited gas would constitute yet another component in an already
complicated picture of the BELR, we prefer the model involving turbulence. In
either model, the strength of Fe II emission relative to the emission lines of
other ions such as Mg II depends as much on other parameters (either v_turb or
the surface area of the collisionally excited gas) as it does on the iron
abundance. Therefore, the measurement of the iron abundance from the FeII
emission in quasars becomes a more difficult problem.Comment: 23 pages. Accepted by Ap
Orbital and physical parameters of eclipsing binaries from the ASAS catalogue -- III. Two new low-mass systems with rapidly evolving spots
We present the results of our spectroscopic and photometric analysis of two
newly discovered low-mass detached eclipsing binaries found in the All-Sky
Automated Survey (ASAS) catalogue: ASAS J093814-0104.4 and ASAS J212954-5620.1.
Using the GIRAFFE instrument on the 1.9-m Radcliffe telescope at SAAO and the
UCLES spectrograph on the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian Telescope, we obtained
high-resolution spectra of both objects and derived their radial velocities
(RVs) at various orbital phases. The RVs of both objects were measured with the
TODCOR technique using synthetic template spectra as references. We also
obtained V and I band photometry using the 1.0-m Elizabeth telescope at SAAO
and the 0.4-m PROMPT instruments located at the CTIO. The orbital and physical
parameters of the systems were derived with PHOEBE and JKTEBOP codes. We
compared our results with several sets of widely-used isochrones. Our
multi-epoch photometric observations demonstrate that both objects show
significant out-of-eclipse modulations, which vary in time. We believe that
this effect is caused by stellar spots, which evolve on time scales of tens of
days. For this reason, we constructed our models on the basis of photometric
observations spanning short time scales (less than a month). Our modeling
indicates that (1) ASAS-09 is a main sequence active system with nearly-twin
components with masses of M1 = 0.771(33) Msun, M2 = 0.768(21) Msun and radii of
R1 = 0.772(12) Rsun and R2 = 0.769(13) Rsun. (2) ASAS-21 is a main sequence
active binary with component masses of M1 = 0.833(17) Msun, M2 = 0.703(13) Msun
and radii of R1 = 0.845(12) Rsun and R2 = 0.718(17) Rsun. Both systems confirm
the characteristic of active low-mass stars, for which the observed radii are
larger and the temperatures lower than predicted by evolutionary models. Other
parameters agree within errors with the models of main sequence stars.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, 7 tables, to appear in A&
Optical photometry and spectroscopy of the 1987A-like supernova 2009mw
We present optical photometric and spectroscopic observations of the
1987A-like supernova (SN) 2009mw. Our and photometry covers
167 days of evolution, including the rise to the light curve maximum, and ends
just after the beginning of the linear tail phase. We compare the observational
properties of SN 2009mw with those of other SNe belonging to the same subgroup,
and find that it shows similarities to several objects. The physical parameters
of the progenitor and the SN are estimated via hydrodynamical modelling,
yielding an explosion energy of foe, a pre-SN mass of , a progenitor radius as and a Ni mass
as . These values indicate that the progenitor of SN
2009mw was a blue supergiant star, similar to the progenitor of SN 1987A. We
examine the host environment of SN 2009mw and find that it emerged from a
population with slightly sub-solar metallicty.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
PROMPT Observations of the Early-Time Optical Afterglow of GRB 060607A
PROMPT (Panchromatic Robotic Optical Monitoring and Polarimetry Telescopes)
observed the early-time optical afterglow of GRB 060607A and obtained a densely
sampled multiwavelength light curve that begins only tens of seconds after the
GRB. Located at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile, PROMPT is
designed to observe the afterglows of gamma-ray bursts using multiple automated
0.4-m telescopes that image simultaneously in many filters when the afterglow
is bright and may be highly variable. The data span the interval from 44
seconds after the GRB trigger to 3.3 hours in the Bgri filters. We observe an
initial peak in the light curve at approximately three minutes, followed by
rebrightenings peaking around 40 minutes and again at 66 minutes. Although our
data overlap with the early Swift gamma-ray and x-ray light curves, we do not
see a correlation between the optical and high-energy flares. We do not find
evidence for spectral evolution throughout the observations. We model the
variations in the light curves and find that the most likely cause of the
rebrightening episodes is a refreshment of the forward shock preceded by a
rapidly fading reverse shock component, although other explanations are
plausible.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, accepted to Ap
Confirmation of the Luminous Blue Variable status of MWC 930
We present spectroscopic and photometric observations of the emission-line
star MWC 930 (V446 Sct) during its long-term optical brightening in 2006--2013.
Based on our earlier data we suggested that the object has features found in
Luminous Blue Variables (LBV), such as a high luminosity (~3 10^5 Lsun, a low
wind terminal velocity (~ 140 km/s), and a tendency to show strong brightness
variations (~1 mag over 20 years). For the last ~7 years it has been exhibiting
a continuous optical and near-IR brightening along with a change of the
emission-line spectrum appearance and cooling of the star's photosphere. We
present the object's --band light curve, analyze the spectral variations,
and compare the observed properties with those of other recognized Galactic
LBVs, such as AG Car and HR Car. Overall we conclude the MWC 930 is a bona fide
Galactic LBV that is currently in the middle of an S Dor cycle.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
The CHilean Automatic Supernova sEarch (CHASE)
The CHASE project started in 2007 with the aim of providing young southern
supernovae (SNe) to the Carnegie Supernova Project (CSP) and Millennium Center
for Supernova Studies (MCSS) follow-up programs. So far CHASE has discovered 33
SNe with an average of more than 2.5 SNe per month in 2008. In addition to the
search we are carrying out a follow-up program targeting bright SNe. Our fully
automated data reduction allows us to follow the evolution on the light curve
in real time, triggering further observations if something potentially
interesting is detectedComment: 4 pages, 2 figures, conference proceedin
The warm, the excited, and the molecular gas: GRB 121024A shining through its star-forming galaxy
We present the first reported case of the simultaneous metallicity
determination of a gamma-ray burst (GRB) host galaxy, from both afterglow
absorption lines as well as strong emission-line diagnostics. Using
spectroscopic and imaging observations of the afterglow and host of the
long-duration Swift GRB121024A at z = 2.30, we give one of the most complete
views of a GRB host/environment to date. We observe a strong damped Ly-alpha
absorber (DLA) with a hydrogen column density of log N(HI) = 21.88 +/- 0.10, H2
absorption in the Lyman-Werner bands (molecular fraction of log(f)~ -1.4;
fourth solid detection of molecular hydrogen in a GRB-DLA), the nebular
emission lines H-alpha, H-beta, [O II], [O III] and [N II], as well as metal
absorption lines. We find a GRB host galaxy that is highly star-forming (SFR ~
40 solar masses/yr ), with a dust-corrected metallicity along the line of sight
of [Zn/H]corr = -0.6 +/- 0.2 ([O/H] ~ -0.3 from emission lines), and a
depletion factor [Zn/Fe] = 0.85 +/- 0.04. The molecular gas is separated by 400
km/s (and 1-3 kpc) from the gas that is photoexcited by the GRB. This implies a
fairly massive host, in agreement with the derived stellar mass of
log(M/M_solar ) = 9.9+/- 0.2. We dissect the host galaxy by characterising its
molecular component, the excited gas, and the line-emitting star-forming
regions. The extinction curve for the line of sight is found to be unusually
flat (Rv ~15). We discuss the possibility of an anomalous grain size
distributions. We furthermore discuss the different metallicity determinations
from both absorption and emission lines, which gives consistent results for the
line of sight to GRB 121024A.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted by MNRA
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