8,854 research outputs found
Astrometric-spectroscopic determination of the absolute masses of the HgMn binary star Phi Herculis
The Mercury-Manganese star Phi Her is a well known spectroscopic binary that
has been the subject of a recent study by Zavala et al. (2006), in which they
resolved the companion using long-baseline interferometry. The total mass of
the binary is now fairly well established, but the combination of the
spectroscopy with the astrometry has not resulted in individual masses
consistent with the spectral types of the components. The motion of the center
of light of Phi Her was clearly detected by the Hipparcos satellite. Here we
make use of the Hipparcos intermediate data (`abscissa residuals') and show
that by combining them in an optimal fashion with the interferometry the
individual masses can be obtained reliably using only astrometry. We re-examine
and then incorporate existing radial-velocity measurements into the orbital
solution, obtaining improved masses of 3.05 +/- 0.24 M_Sun and 1.614 +/- 0.066
M_Sun that are consistent with the theoretical mass-luminosity relation from
recent stellar evolution models. These mass determinations provide important
information for the understanding of the nature of this peculiar class of
stars.Comment: Total of 18 pages including figures and tables, in emulateapj format.
To appear in The Astronomical Journal, June 2007 issu
Extremely metal-poor stars from the SDSS
We give a progress report about the activities within the CIFIST Team related
to the search for extremely metal-poor stars in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey's
spectroscopic catalog. So far the search has provided 25 candidates with
metallicities around or smaller -3. For 15 candidates high resolution
spectroscopy with UVES at the VLT has confirmed their extremely metal-poor
status. Work is under way to extend the search to the SDSS's photometric
catalog by augmenting the SDSS photometry, and by gauging the capabilities of
X-shooter when going to significantly fainter targets.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, Proceedings paper of the conference "A stellar
journey: A symposium in celebration of Bengt Gustafsson's 65th birthday
Exact time evolution and master equations for the damped harmonic oscillator
Using the exact path integral solution for the damped harmonic oscillator it
is shown that in general there does not exist an exact dissipative Liouville
operator describing the dynamics of the oscillator for arbitrary initial bath
preparations. Exact non-stationary Liouville operators can be found only for
particular preparations. Three physically meaningful examples are examined. An
exact new master equation is derived for thermal initial conditions. Second,
the Liouville operator governing the time-evolution of equilibrium correlations
is obtained. Third, factorizing initial conditions are studied. Additionally,
one can show that there are approximate Liouville operators independent of the
initial preparation describing the long time dynamics under appropriate
conditions. The general form of these approximate master equations is derived
and the coefficients are determined for special cases of the bath spectral
density including the Ohmic, Drude and weak coupling cases. The connection with
earlier work is discussed.Comment: to be published in Phys. Rev.
The HgMn Binary Star Phi Herculis: Detection and Properties of the Secondary and Revision of the Elemental Abundances of the Primary
Observations of the Mercury-Manganese star Phi Herculis with the Navy
Prototype Optical Interferometer (NPOI) conclusively reveal the previously
unseen companion in this single-lined binary system. The NPOI data were used to
predict a spectral type of A8V for the secondary star Phi Her B. This
prediction was subsequently confirmed by spectroscopic observations obtained at
the Dominion Astrophysical Observatory. Phi Her B is rotating at 50 +/-3
km/sec, in contrast to the 8 km/sec lines of Phi Her A. Recognizing the lines
from the secondary permits one to separate them from those of the primary. The
abundance analysis of Phi Her A shows an abundance pattern similar to those of
other HgMn stars with Al being very underabundant and Sc, Cr, Mn, Zn, Ga, Sr,
Y, Zr, Ba, Ce, and Hg being very overabundant.Comment: Accepted to ApJ, 45 pages, 11 figure
LOTIS, Super-LOTIS, Sloan Digital Sky Survey, and Tautenburg Observations of GRB 010921
We present multi-instrument optical observations of the High Energy Transient Explorer (HETE-2) and In-terplanetary Network error box of GRB 010921. This event was the ïŹrst gamma-ray burst (GRB) partly localized by HETE-2 that has resulted in the detection of an optical afterglow. In this Letter, we report the earliest known observations of the GRB 010921 ïŹeld, taken with the 0.11 m Livermore Optical Transient Imaging System (LOTIS) telescope, and the earliest known detection of the GRB 010921 optical afterglow, using the 0.5 m Sloan Digital Sky Survey Photometric Telescope (SDSS PT). Observations with the LOTIS telescope began during a routine sky patrol 52 minutes after the burst. Observations were made with the SDSS PT, the 0.6 m Super-LOTIS telescope, and the 1.34 m Tautenburg Schmidt telescope 21.3, 21.8, and 37.5 hr, respectively, after the GRB. In addition, the host galaxy was observed with the US Naval Observatory Flagstaff Station 1.0 m telescope 56 days after the burst. We ïŹnd that at later times ( t \u3e1 day after the burst), the optical afterglow exhibited a power-law decline with a slope of α - 1.75 + or - 0.28. However, our earliest observations show that this power-law decline cannot have extended to early times ( t \u3c 0.035 days)
The stellar population histories of early-type galaxies. III. The Coma Cluster
We present stellar population parameters of twelve early-type galaxies (ETGs)
in the Coma Cluster based on spectra obtained using the Low Resolution Imaging
Spectrograph on the Keck II Telescope. Our data allow us to examine in detail
the zero-point and scatter in their stellar population properties. Our ETGs
have SSP-equivalent ages of on average 5-8 Gyr with the models used here, with
the oldest galaxies having ages of ~10 Gyr old. This average age is identical
to the mean age of field ETGs. Our ETGs span a large range in velocity
dispersion but are consistent with being drawn from a population with a single
age. Specifically, ten of the twelve ETGs are consistent within their formal
errors of having the same age, 5.2+/-0.2 Gyr, over a factor of more than 750 in
mass. We therefore find no evidence for downsizing of the stellar populations
of ETGs in the core of the Coma Cluster. We suggest that Coma Cluster ETGs may
have formed the majority of their mass at high redshifts but suffered small but
detectable star formation events at z~0.1-0.3. Previous detections of
'downsizing' from stellar populations of local ETGs may not reflect the same
downsizing seen in lookback studies of RSGs, as the young ages of the local
ETGs represent only a small fraction of their total masses. (abridged)Comment: 49 pages, 20 figures (19 EPS, 1 JPEG). MNRAS, in press. For version
with full resolution of Fig. 1 see
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~sctrager/coma.pdf; for Table 2, see
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~sctrager/coma_table2.pdf; for Table B3, see
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~sctrager/coma_tableB3.pd
Quantum Pair Creation of Soliton Domain Walls
A large body of experimental evidence suggests that the decay of the false
vacuum, accompanied by quantum pair creation of soliton domain walls, can occur
in a variety of condensed matter systems. Examples include nucleation of charge
soliton pairs in density waves [eg. J. H. Miller, Jr. et al., Phys. Rev. Lett.
84, 1555 (2000)] and flux soliton pairs in long Josephon junctions. Recently,
Dias and Lemos [J. Math. Phys. 42, 3292 (2001)] have argued that the mass
of the soliton should be interpreted as a line density and a surface density,
respectively, for (2+1)-D and (3+1)-D systems in the expression for the pair
production rate. As the transverse dimensions are increased and the total mass
(energy) becomes large, thermal activation becomes suppressed, so quantum
processes can dominate even at relatively high temperatures. This paper will
discuss both experimental evidence and theoretical arguments for the existence
of high-temperature collective quantum phenomena
LOTIS, Super-LOTIS, SDSS and Tautenburg Observations of GRB 010921
We present multi-instrument optical observations of the High Energy Transient
Explorer (HETE-2)/Interplanetary Network (IPN) error box of GRB 010921. This
event was the first gamma ray burst (GRB) localized by HETE-2 which has
resulted in the detection of an optical afterglow. In this paper we report the
earliest known observations of the GRB010921 field, taken with the 0.11-m
Livermore Optical Transient Imaging System (LOTIS) telescope, and the earliest
known detection of the GRB010921 optical afterglow, using the 0.5-m Sloan
Digital Sky Survey Photometric Telescope (SDSS PT). Observations with the LOTIS
telescope began during a routine sky patrol 52 minutes after the burst.
Observations were made with the SDSS PT, the 0.6-m Super-LOTIS telescope, and
the 1.34-m Tautenburg Schmidt telescope at 21.3, 21.8, and 37.5 hours after the
GRB, respectively. In addition, the host galaxy was observed with the USNOFS
1.0-m telescope 56 days after the burst. We find that at later times (t > 1 day
after the burst), the optical afterglow exhibited a power-law decline with a
slope of . However, our earliest observations show that
this power-law decline can not have extended to early times (t < 0.035 day).Comment: AASTeX v5.x LaTeX 2e, 6 pages with 2 postscript figures, will be
submitted to ApJ Letter
Chemical abundances of distant extremely metal-poor unevolved stars
Aims: The purpose of our study is to determine the chemical composition of a
sample of 16 candidate Extremely Metal-Poor (EMP) dwarf stars, extracted from
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). There are two main purposes: in the first
place to verify the reliability of the metallicity estimates derived from the
SDSS spectra; in the second place to see if the abundance trends found for the
brighter nearer stars studied previously also hold for this sample of fainter,
more distant stars. Methods: We used the UVES at the VLT to obtain
high-resolution spectra of the programme stars. The abundances were determined
by an automatic analysis with the MyGIsFOS code, with the exception of lithium,
for which the abundances were determined from the measured equivalent widths of
the Li I resonance doublet. Results: All candidates are confirmed to be EMP
stars, with [Fe/H]<= -3.0. The chemical composition of the sample of stars is
similar to that of brighter and nearer samples. We measured the lithium
abundance for 12 stars and provide stringent upper limits for three other
stars, for a fourth star the upper limit is not significant, owing to the low
signal-to noise ratio of the spectrum. The "meltdown" of the Spite plateau is
confirmed, but some of the lowest metallicity stars of the sample lie on the
plateau. Conclusions: The concordance of the metallicities derived from
high-resolution spectra and those estimated from the SDSS spectra suggests that
the latter may be used to study the metallicity distribution of the halo. The
abundance pattern suggests that the halo was well mixed for all probed
metallicities and distances. The fact that at the lowest metallicities we find
stars on the Spite plateau suggests that the meltdown depends on at least
another parameter, besides metallicity. (abridged)Comment: A&A in pres
Topological Dislocations and Mixed State of Charge Density Waves
We discuss the possibility of the ``mixed state'' in incommensurate charge
density waves with three-dimensional order. It is shown that the mixed state
can be created by applying an electric field perpendicular to the chains. This
state consists of topological dislocations induced by the external field and is
therefore similar to the mixed states of superfluids (type-II superconductor or
liquid Helium II). However, the peculiar coupling of charge density waves with
the electric field strongly modifies the nature of the mixed state compared to
the conventional superfluids. The field and temperature dependence of the
properties of the mixed state are studied, and some experimental aspects are
discussed.Comment: 10 pages, Revtex format, no figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
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