144 research outputs found
Discovery of optical candidate supernova remnants in Sagittarius
During an [O III] survey for planetary nebulae, we identified a region in
Sagittarius containing several candidate Supernova Remnants and obtained deep
optical narrow-band images and spectra to explore their nature. The images of
the unstudied area have been obtained in the light of Halpha+[N II], [S II] and
[O III]. The resulting mosaic covers an area of 1.4x1.0 deg^2 where filamentary
and diffuse emission was discovered, suggesting the existence of more than one
supernova remnants (SNRs) in the area. Deep long slit spectra were also taken
of eight different regions. Both the flux calibrated images and the spectra
show that the emission from the filamentary structures originates from
shock-heated gas, while the photo-ionization mechanism is responsible for the
diffuse emission. Part of the optical emission is found to be correlated with
the radio at 4850 MHz suggesting their association, while the WISE infrared
emission found in the area at 12 and 22 micron marginally correlates with the
optical. The presence of the [O III] emission line in one of the candidate SNRs
suggests shock velocities into the interstellar "clouds" between 120 and 200
km/s, while the absence in the other indicates slower shock velocities. For all
candidate remnants the [S II] 6716/6731 ratio indicates electron densities
below 240 cm^{-3}, while the Halpha emission has been measured to be between
0.6 to 41x10^{-17} erg/s/cm^2/arcsec^2. The existence of eight pulsars within
1.5deg away from the center of the candidate SNRs also supports the scenario of
many SNRs in the area as well as that the detected optical emission could be
part of a number of supernovae explosions.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
On the structure of phase transition maps for three or more coexisting phases
This paper is partly based on a lecture delivered by the author at the ERC
workshop "Geometric Partial Differential Equations" held in Pisa in September
2012. What is presented here is an expanded version of that lecture.Comment: 23 pages, 6 figure
Mesa-type patterns in the one-dimensional Brusselator and their stability
The Brusselator is a generic reaction-diffusion model for a tri-molecular
chemical reaction. We consider the case when the input and output reactions are
slow. In this limit, we show the existence of -periodic, spatially bi-stable
structures, \emph{mesas}, and study their stability. Using singular
perturbation techniques, we find a threshold for the stability of mesas.
This threshold occurs in the regime where the exponentially small tails of the
localized structures start to interact. By comparing our results with Turing
analysis, we show that in the generic case, a Turing instability is followed by
a slow coarsening process whereby logarithmically many mesas are annihilated
before the system reaches a steady equilibrium state. We also study a
``breather''-type instability of a mesa, which occurs due to a Hopf
bifurcation. Full numerical simulations are shown to confirm the analytical
results.Comment: to appear, Physica
Abundant dust found in intergalactic space
Galactic dust constitutes approximately half of the elements more massive
than helium produced in stellar nucleosynthesis. Notwithstanding the formation
of dust grains in the dense, cool atmospheres of late-type stars, there still
remain huge uncertainties concerning the origin and fate of galactic stardust.
In this paper, we identify the intergalactic medium (i.e. the region between
gravitationally-bound galaxies) as a major sink for galactic dust. We discover
a systematic shift in the colour of background galaxies viewed through the
intergalactic medium of the nearby M81 group. This reddening coincides with
atomic, neutral gas previously detected between the group members. The
dust-to-HI mass ratio is high (1/20) compared to that of the solar neighborhood
(1/120) suggesting that the dust originates from the centre of one or more of
the galaxies in the group. Indeed, M82, which is known to be ejecting dust and
gas in a starburst-driven superwind, is cited as the probable main source.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, 1 table. ApJ Letters in pres
On thermodynamically consistent Stefan problems with variable surface energy
A thermodynamically consistent two-phase Stefan problem with
temperature-dependent surface tension and with or without kinetic undercooling
is studied. It is shown that these problems generate local semiflows in
well-defined state manifolds. If a solution does not exhibit singularities, it
is proved that it exists globally in time and converges towards an equilibrium
of the problem. In addition, stability and instability of equilibria is
studied. In particular, it is shown that multiple spheres of the same radius
are unstable if surface heat capacity is small; however, if kinetic
undercooling is absent, they are stable if surface heat capacity is
sufficiently large.Comment: To appear in Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal. The final publication is
available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00205-015-0938-y. arXiv
admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1101.376
B and I-band optical micro-variability observations of the BL Lac objects S5 2007+777 and 3C371
We have observed S5 2007+777 and 3C371 in the B and I bands for 13 and 8
nights, respectively, during various observing runs in 2001, 2002 and 2004. The
observations resulted in almost evenly sampled light curves, 6-9 hours long. We
do not detect any flares within the observed light curves, but we do observe
small amplitude, significant variations, in both bands, on time scales of hours
and days. The average variability amplitude on time scales of minutes/hours is
2.5% and 1-1.5% in the case of S5 2007+777 and 3C371, respectively. The average
amplitudes increase to 5-12% and 4-6%, respectively, on time scales of days. We
find that the B and I band variations are highly correlated, on both short and
long time scales. During the 2004 observations, which resulted in the longest
light curves, we observe two well defined flux-decay and rising trends in the
light curves of both objects. When the flux decays, we observe significant
delays, with the B band flux decaying faster than the flux in the I band. As a
result, we also observe significant, flux related spectral variations as well.
The flux-spectral relation is rather complicated, with loop-like structures
forming during the flux evolution. The presence of spectral variations imply
that the observed variability is not caused by geometric effects. On the other
hand, our results are fully consistent with the hypothesis that the observed
variations are caused by perturbations which affect different regions in the
jet of the sources.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Photometric study of selected cataclysmic variables
We present time-resolved photometry of five relatively poorly-studied
cataclysmic variables: V1193 Ori, LQ Peg, LD 317, V795 Her, and MCT 2347-3144.
The observations were made using four 1m-class telescopes for a total of more
than 250 h of observation and almost 16,000 data points. For LQ Peg WHT
spectroscopic data have been analysed as well.
The light curves show a wide range of variability on different time scales
from minutes to months. We detect for the first time a brightness variation of
0.05 mag in amplitude in V1193 Ori on the same timescale as the orbital period,
which we interpret as the result of the irradiation of the secondary. A 20-min
quasi-periodic oscillation is also detected. The mean brightness of the system
has changed by 0.5 mag on a three-month interval, while the flickering was
halved. In LQ Peg a 0.05 mag modulation was revealed with a period of about 3
h. The flickering was much smaller, of the order of 0.025 mag. A possible
quasi-periodic oscillation could exist near 30 min. For this object, the WHT
spectra are single-peaked and do not show any radial-velocity variations. The
data of LD 317 show a decrease in the mean magnitude of the system. No periodic
signal was detected but this is certainly attributable to the very large
flickering observed: between 0.07 and 0.1 mag. For V795 Her, the 2.8-hour
modulation, thought to be a superhump arising from the precession of the disc,
is present. We show that this modulation is not stable in terms of periodicity,
amplitude, and phase. Finally, for MCT 2347-3144, a clear modulation is seen in
a first dataset obtained in October 2002. This modulation is absent in August
2003, when the system was brighter and showed much more flickering.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for pubication by A&
Deep optical observations of the interaction of the SS 433 microquasar jet with the W 50 radio continuum shell
Four mosaics of deep, continuum-subtracted, CCD images have been obtained
over the extensive galactic radio continuum shell, W 50, which surrounds the
remarkable stellar system SS 433. Two of these mosaics in the Halpha+[N II] and
[O III] 5007 A emission lines respectively cover a field of ~2.3 x 2.5 degr^2
which contains all of W 50 but at a low angular resolution of 5 arcsec. The
third and fourth mosaics cover the eastern (in [O III] 5007 A) and western (in
Halpha+[N II]) filamentary nebulosity respectively but at an angular resolution
of 1 arcsec. These observations are supplemented by new low dispersion spectra
and longslit, spatially resolved echelle spectra. The [O III] 5007 A images
show for the first time the distribution of this emission in both the eastern
and western filaments while new Halpha+[N II] emission features are also found
in both of these regions. Approaching flows of faintly emitting material from
the bright eastern filaments of up 100 km/s in radial velocity are detected.
The present observations also suggest that the heliocentric systemic radial
velocity of the whole system is 56+-2 km/s. Furthermore, very deep imagery and
high resolution spectroscopy of a small part of the northern radio ridge of W
50 has revealed for the first time the very faint optical nebulosity associated
with this edge. It is suggested that patchy foreground dust along the ~5 kpc
sightline is inhibiting the detection of all of the optical nebulosity
associated with W 50. The interaction of the microquasar jets of SS 433 with
the W 50 shell is discussed.Comment: 19 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for pubication in MNRA
Qualitative behavior of solutions for thermodynamically consistent Stefan problems with surface tension
The qualitative behavior of a thermodynamically consistent two-phase Stefan
problem with surface tension and with or without kinetic undercooling is
studied. It is shown that these problems generate local semiflows in
well-defined state manifolds. If a solution does not exhibit singularities in a
sense made precise below, it is proved that it exists globally in time and its
orbit is relatively compact. In addition, stability and instability of
equilibria is studied. In particular, it is shown that multiple spheres of the
same radius are unstable, reminiscent of the onset of Ostwald ripening.Comment: 56 pages. Expanded introduction, added references. This revised
version is published in Arch. Ration. Mech. Anal. (207) (2013), 611-66
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