2,401 research outputs found
Search for low instability strip variables in the young open cluster NGC 2516
In this paper we revise and complete the photometric survey of the
instability strip of the southern open cluster NGC 2516 published by Antonello
and Mantegazza (1986). No variable stars with amplitudes larger than
were found. However by means of an accurate analysis based on a new statistical
method two groups of small amplitude variables have been disentangled: one with
periods (probably Scuti stars) and one with periods
. The position in the HR diagram and the apparent time-scale may
suggest that the stars of the second group belong to a recently discovered new
class of variables, named Dor variables. They certainly deserve
further study. We also present a comparison between the results of the
photometric survey and the available pointed ROSAT observations of this
cluster.Comment: 7 pages, 2 ps figures. Accepted for P.A.S.
The MACHO Project LMC Variable Star Inventory. VI. The Second-overtone Mode of Cepheid Pulsation From First/Second Overtone (FO/SO) Beat Cepheids
MACHO Project photometry of 45 LMC FO/SO beat Cepheids which pulsate in the
first and second overtone (FO and SOo, respectively) has been analysed to
determine the lightcurve characteristics for the SO mode of Cepheid pulsation.
We predict that singly-periodic SO Cepheids will have nearly sinusoidal
lightcurves; that we will only be able to discern SO Cepheids from fundamental
(F) and (FO) Cepheids for P <= 1.4 days; and that the SO distribution will
overlap the short-period edge of the LMC FO Cepheid period-luminosity relation
(when both are plotted as a function of photometric period).
We also report the discovery of one SO Cepheid candidate,
MACHO*05:03:39.670:04:32, with a photometric period of 0.775961 +/- 0.000019
days and an instrumental amplitude of 0.047 +/- 0.009 mag in V.Comment: 23 pages, 7 Encapsulated PostScript figures. Accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journa
The contribution of microlensing surveys to the distance scale
In the early nineties several teams started large scale systematic surveys of
the Magellanic Clouds and the Galactic Bulge to search for microlensing
effects. As a by product, these groups have created enormous time-series
databases of photometric measurements of stars with a temporal sampling
duration and accuracy which are unprecedented. They provide the opportunity to
test the accuracy of primary distance indicators, such as Cepheids, RRLyrae
stars, the detached eclipsing binaries, or the luminosity of the red clump. We
will review the contribution of the microlensing surveys to the understanding
of the physics of the primary distance indicators, recent differential studies
and direct distance determinations to the Magellanic Clouds and the Galactic
Bulge.Comment: Invited review article to appear in: `Post-Hipparcos Cosmic Candles',
A. Heck & F. Caputo (Eds), Kluwer Academic Publ., Dordrecht, in press. 21
pages; uses Kluwer's crckapb.sty LaTeX style file, enclose
Solutions for 10,000 Eclipsing Binaries in the Bulge Fields of OGLE II Using DEBiL
We have developed a fully-automated pipeline for systematically identifying
and analyzing eclipsing binaries within large datasets of light curves. The
pipeline is made up of multiple tiers which subject the light curves to
increasing levels of scrutiny. After each tier, light curves that did not
conform to a given criteria were filtered out of the pipeline, reducing the
load on the following, more computationally intensive tiers. As a central
component of the pipeline, we created the fully automated Detached Eclipsing
Binary Light curve fitter (DEBiL), which rapidly fits large numbers of light
curves to a simple model. Using the results of DEBiL, light curves of interest
can be flagged for follow-up analysis. As a test case, we analyzed the 218699
light curves within the bulge fields of the OGLE II survey and produced 10862
model fits. We point out a small number of extreme examples as well as
unexpected structure found in several of the population distributions. We
expect this approach to become increasingly important as light curve datasets
continue growing in both size and number.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 36 pages, 15 figures, 5 tables. See
http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/~jdevor/DEBiL.html for high-resolution figures and
further informatio
Experimental search for the LSND anomaly with the ICARUS detector in the CNGS neutrino beam
We report an early result from the ICARUS experiment on the search for nu_mu
to nu_e signal due to the LSND anomaly. The search was performed with the
ICARUS T600 detector located at the Gran Sasso Laboratory, receiving CNGS
neutrinos from CERN at an average energy of about 20 GeV, after a flight path
of about 730 km. The LSND anomaly would manifest as an excess of nu_e events,
characterized by a fast energy oscillation averaging approximately to
sin^2(1.27 Dm^2_new L/ E_nu) = 1/2. The present analysis is based on 1091
neutrino events, which are about 50% of the ICARUS data collected in 2010-2011.
Two clear nu_e events have been found, compared with the expectation of 3.7 +/-
0.6 events from conventional sources. Within the range of our observations,
this result is compatible with the absence of a LSND anomaly. At 90% and 99%
confidence levels the limits of 3.4 and 7.3 events corresponding to oscillation
probabilities of 5.4 10^-3 and 1.1 10^-2 are set respectively. The result
strongly limits the window of open options for the LSND anomaly to a narrow
region around (Dm^2, sin^2(2 theta))_new = (0.5 eV^2, 0.005), where there is an
overall agreement (90% CL) between the present ICARUS limit, the published
limits of KARMEN and the published positive signals of LSND and MiniBooNE
Collaborations.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figure
Analysis of a Large Sample of Neutrino-Induced Muons with the ArgoNeuT Detector
ArgoNeuT, or Argon Neutrino Test, is a 170 liter liquid argon time projection
chamber designed to collect neutrino interactions from the NuMI beam at Fermi
National Accelerator Laboratory. ArgoNeuT operated in the NuMI low-energy beam
line directly upstream of the MINOS Near Detector from September 2009 to
February 2010, during which thousands of neutrino and antineutrino events were
collected. The MINOS Near Detector was used to measure muons downstream of
ArgoNeuT. Though ArgoNeuT is primarily an R&D project, the data collected
provide a unique opportunity to measure neutrino cross sections in the 0.1-10
GeV energy range. Fully reconstructing the muon from these interactions is
imperative for these measurements. This paper focuses on the complete kinematic
reconstruction of neutrino-induced through-going muons tracks. Analysis of this
high statistics sample of minimum ionizing tracks demonstrates the reliability
of the geometric and calorimetric reconstruction in the ArgoNeuT detector
Precision measurement of the neutrino velocity with the ICARUS detector in the CNGS beam
During May 2012, the CERN-CNGS neutrino beam has been operated for two weeks
for a total of 1.8 10^17 pot in bunched mode, with a 3 ns narrow width proton
beam bunches, separated by 100 ns. This tightly bunched beam structure allows a
very accurate time of flight measurement of neutrinos from CERN to LNGS on an
event-by-event basis. Both the ICARUS-T600 PMT-DAQ and the CERN-LNGS timing
synchronization have been substantially improved for this campaign, taking
ad-vantage of additional independent GPS receivers, both at CERN and LNGS as
well as of the deployment of the "White Rabbit" protocol both at CERN and LNGS.
The ICARUS-T600 detector has collected 25 beam-associated events; the
corresponding time of flight has been accurately evaluated, using all different
time synchronization paths. The measured neutrino time of flight is compatible
with the arrival of all events with speed equivalent to the one of light: the
difference between the expected value based on the speed of light and the
measured value is tof_c - tof_nu = (0.10 \pm 0.67stat. \pm 2.39syst.) ns. This
result is in agreement with the value previously reported by the ICARUS
collaboration, tof_c - tof_nu = (0.3 \pm 4.9stat. \pm 9.0syst.) ns, but with
improved statistical and systematic errors.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, 1 tabl
Classical Cepheid Pulsation Models. III. The Predictable Scenario
Within the current uncertainties in the treatment of the coupling between
pulsation and convection, limiting amplitude, nonlinear, convective models
appear the only viable approach for providing theoretical predictions about the
intrinsic properties of radial pulsators. In this paper we present the results
of a comprehensive set of Cepheid models computed within such theoretical
framework for selected assumptions on their original chemical composition.Comment: 24 pages, 1 latex file containing 6 tables, 10 postscript figures,
accepted for publication on Ap
The AEgIS experiment at CERN: Probing antimatter gravity
The AE¯gIS experiment at CERN’s Antiproton Decelerator is set up to precisely measure the gravitational interaction between matter and antimatter. For this purpose, antihydrogen will be formed from cold antiprotons and positronium, the hydrogen-like bound state of an electron and a positron. Subsequently,
the free-fall acceleration of a cold horizontal beam of antihydrogen will be measured by a deflectometer. The present status, recent experimental progress and the medium-term plan of the AE¯gIS experiment are presented
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