41,989 research outputs found
Optical and near-infrared spectrophotometric properties of Long Period Variables and other luminous red stars
Based on a new and large sample of optical and near-infrared spectra obtained
at the Mount Stromlo and Siding Spring Observatories (Lancon & Wood 1998;
Lancon & Wood, in preparation), spectrophotometric properties of cool oxygen-
and carbon-rich Long Period Variables and supergiants are presented.
Temperatures of oxygen-rich stars are assigned by comparison with synthetic
spectra computed from up-to-date oxygen-rich model atmosphere grids. The
existence of reliable optical and near-infrared temperature indicators is
investigated. A narrow relation between the bolometric correction BC(I) and the
broad-band colour I-J is obtained for oxygen-rich cool stars. The ability of
specific near-infrared indices to separate luminosity classes, atmospheric
chemistry or variability subtypes is discussed. Some comments are also given on
extinction effects, water band strengths in Long Period Variables and the
evaluation of 12CO/13CO ratio in red giants.Comment: 14 pages, 21 figures, Latex, accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysics main journal. Also available at
http://www-astro.ulb.ac.be/~ralvarez
Envelope tomography of long-period variable stars: I. The Schwarzschild mechanism and the Balmer emission lines
This paper is the first one in a series devoted to the study of the dynamics
of the atmospheres of long-period variable stars. Results from a two-month-long
monitoring of the Mira variables RT Cyg and X Oph around maximum light with the
ELODIE spectrograph at the Haute-Provence Observatory are presented. The
monitoring covers phases 0.80 to 1.16 for RT Cyg and phases 0.83 to 1.04 for X
Oph. The cross-correlation profile of the spectrum of RT Cyg with a K0 III mask
confirms that the absorption lines of RT Cyg in the optical domain appear
double around maximum light. No line doubling was found in the optical spectrum
of X Oph around maximum light, indicating that this feature is not common to
all long-period variables. This paper also presents the application to RT Cyg
of a new tomographic technique deriving the velocity field across the
atmosphere by cross-correlating the optical spectrum with numerical masks
constructed from synthetic spectra and probing layers of increasing depths.
This technique reveals that both the temporal evolution of the line doubling,
and its variation with depth in the atmosphere of RT Cyg, are consistent with
the ``Schwarzschild scenario''. This scenario relates the temporal evolution of
the red and blue peaks of the double absorption lines to the progression of a
shock wave in the atmosphere. The temporal evolution of the Balmer Halpha, H
beta, Hgamma and Hdelta emission lines around maximum light is also presented
for RT Cyg and X Oph. The velocity variations of Halpha and of the absorption
lines are discussed in the framework of two competing models for the formation
of Balmer emission lines in long-period variable stars.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, Latex, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics main journal. Also available at
http://www-astro.ulb.ac.be/Html/ps.htm
Recognizing the First Radiation Sources Through Their 21-cm Signature
At the beginning of the reionization epoch, radiation sources produce
fluctuations in the redshifted 21-cm background. We show that different types
of sources (such as miniquasars, Pop II and III stars, supernovae, etc.)
produce distinct signatures in the 21-cm signal radial profiles and statistical
fluctuations, through which they can be identified. Further, we show that the
21-cm signal from X-ray emitting sources is much easier to observe than was
expected, due to a previously neglected pumping mechanism.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, accepted by ApJ
Powering AGNs with super-critical black holes
We propose a novel mechanism for powering the central engines of Active
Galactic Nuclei through super-critical (type II) black hole collapse. In this
picture, ~ of material collapsing at relativistic speeds can
trigger a gravitational shock, which can eject a large percentage of the
collapsing matter at relativistic speeds, leaving behind a "light" black hole.
In the presence of a poloidal magnetic field, the plasma collimates along two
jets, and the associated electron synchrotron radiation can easily account for
the observed radio luminosities, sizes and durations of AGN jets. For Lorentz
factors of order 100 and magnetic fields of a few hundred , synchrotron
electrons can shine for yrs, producing jets of sizes of order 100 kpc.
This mechanism may also be relevant for Gamma Ray Bursts and, in the absence of
magnetic field, supernova explosions.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Structure and three-body decay of Be resonances
The complex-rotated hyperspherical adiabatic method is used to study the
decay of low-lying Be resonances into one neutron and two
-particles. We investigate the six resonances above the break-up
threshold and below 6 MeV: , and . The
short-distance properties of each resonance are studied, and the different
angular momentum and parity configurations of the Be and He two-body
substructures are determined. We compute the branching ratio for sequential
decay via the Be ground state which qualitatively is consistent with
measurements. We extract the momentum distributions after decay directly into
the three-body continuum from the large-distance asymptotic structures. The
kinematically complete results are presented as Dalitz plots as well as
projections on given neutron and -energy. The distributions are
discussed and in most cases found to agree with available experimental data.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures. To appear in Physical Review
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