4,548 research outputs found
Additions a nos connaissances sur les Saturniens hémileucides des genres Catocephala, Molippa et Micrattacus (Lep. Sat.)
La famille américaine des Hérnileucides est une des plus vastes,
peut-étre méme la plus vaste du groupe des Saturniens. C'est aussi la
plus compliquée et la plus difficile parce qu'on y a établi de nombreux
genres dont les limites sont bin d'étre fixées. En attendant qu'une
étude comparative approfondie permette de bien caractériser ces genres
et s'il y a heu, d'en réduire ou d'en augmenter le nombre, le mieux
est de bien faire connaitre les formes rares ou nouvelles qui s'y rattachent
ou qui se trouvent à . la limite indécise q ui sépare plusieurs d'entre
eux. Tel est l'objet de la brĂšve Ă©tude que j'ai cru devoir consacrer
aux trois espĂšces suivantes.Peer reviewe
A possible third component in the L dwarf binary system DENIS-P J020529.0-115925 discovered with the Hubble Space Telescope
We present results showing that the multiple system DENIS-P J020529.0-115925
is likely to be a triple system of brown dwarfs. The secondary of this
previously known binary system shows a clear elongation on six images obtained
at six different epochs. Significant residuals remain after PSF subtraction on
these images, characteristic of multiplicity, and indicating that the secondary
is probably a double itself. Dual-PSF fitting shows that the shape of the
secondary is consistent with that of a binary system. These measurements show
that the probability that DENIS-P J020529.0-115925 is a triple system is very
high. The photometric and spectroscopic properties of the system are consistent
with the presence of three components with spectral types L5, L8 and T0.Comment: 15 pages, 3 tables, 6 figures, accepted for publication in AJ. High
resolution version available at
ftp://ftp.mpe.mpg.de/people/hbouy/publications/denis0205.ps.g
The low-mass population of the Rho Ophiuchi molecular cloud
Star formation theories are currently divergent regarding the fundamental
physical processes that dominate the substellar regime. Observations of nearby
young open clusters allow the brown dwarf (BD) population to be characterised
down to the planetary mass regime, which ultimately must be accommodated by a
successful theory. We hope to uncover the low-mass population of the Rho
Ophiuchi molecular cloud and investigate the properties of the newly found
brown dwarfs. We use near-IR deep images (reaching completeness limits of
approximately 20.5 mag in J, and 18.9 mag in H and Ks) taken with the Wide
Field IR Camera (WIRCam) at the Canada France Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) to
identify candidate members of Rho Oph in the substellar regime. A spectroscopic
follow-up of a small sample of the candidates allows us to assess their
spectral type, and subsequently their temperature and membership. We select 110
candidate members of the Rho Ophiuchi molecular cloud, from which 80 have not
previously been associated with the cloud. We observed a small sample of these
and spectroscopically confirm six new brown dwarfs with spectral types ranging
from M6.5 to M8.25
Cluster membership probabilities from proper motions and multiwavelength photometric catalogues: I. Method and application to the Pleiades cluster
We present a new technique designed to take full advantage of the high
dimensionality (photometric, astrometric, temporal) of the DANCe survey to
derive self-consistent and robust membership probabilities of the Pleiades
cluster. We aim at developing a methodology to infer membership probabilities
to the Pleiades cluster from the DANCe multidimensional astro-photometric data
set in a consistent way throughout the entire derivation. The determination of
the membership probabilities has to be applicable to censored data and must
incorporate the measurement uncertainties into the inference procedure.
We use Bayes' theorem and a curvilinear forward model for the likelihood of
the measurements of cluster members in the colour-magnitude space, to infer
posterior membership probabilities. The distribution of the cluster members
proper motions and the distribution of contaminants in the full
multidimensional astro-photometric space is modelled with a
mixture-of-Gaussians likelihood. We analyse several representation spaces
composed of the proper motions plus a subset of the available magnitudes and
colour indices. We select two prominent representation spaces composed of
variables selected using feature relevance determination techniques based in
Random Forests, and analyse the resulting samples of high probability
candidates. We consistently find lists of high probability (p > 0.9975)
candidates with 1000 sources, 4 to 5 times more than obtained in the
most recent astro-photometric studies of the cluster.
The methodology presented here is ready for application in data sets that
include more dimensions, such as radial and/or rotational velocities, spectral
indices and variability.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A&
Membership and Multiplicity among Very Low-Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs in the Pleiades Cluster
We present near-infrared photometry and optical spectroscopy of very low-mass
stars and brown dwarf candidates in the Pleiades open cluster. The membership
status of these objects is assessed. Eight objects out of 45 appear to be
non-members. A search for companions among 34 very low-mass Pleiades members
(M0.09 M) in high-spatial resolution images obtained with the
Hubble Space Telescope and the adaptive optics system of the
Canada-France-Hawaii telescope produced no resolved binaries with separations
larger than 0.2 arcsec (a ~ 27 AU; P ~ 444 years). Nevertheless, we find
evidence for a binary sequence in the color-magnitude diagrams, in agreement
with the results of Steele & Jameson (1995) for higher mass stars. We compare
the multiplicity statistics of the Pleiades very low-mass stars and brown
dwarfs with that of G and K-type main sequence stars in the solar neighborhood
(Duquennoy & Mayor 1991). We find that there is some evidence for a deficiency
of wide binary systems (separation >27 AU) among the Pleiades very low-mass
members. We briefly discuss how this result can fit with current scenarios of
brown dwarf formation. We correct the Pleiades substellar mass function for the
contamination of cluster non-members found in this work. We find a
contamination level of 33% among the brown dwarf candidates identified by
Bouvier et al. (1998). Assuming a power law IMF across the substellar boundary,
we find a slope dN/dM ~ M^{-0.53}, implying that the number of objects per mass
bin is still rising but the contribution to the total mass of the cluster is
declining in the brown dwarf regime.Comment: to be published in The Astrophysical Journa
A Hubble Space Telescope ACS Search for Brown Dwarf Binaries in the Pleiades Open Cluster
We present the results of a high-resolution imaging survey for brown dwarf
binaries in the Pleiades open cluster. The observations were carried out with
the Advance Camera for Surveys onboard the Hubble Space Telescope. Our sample
consists of 15 bona-fide brown dwarfs. We confirm 2 binaries and detect their
orbital motion, but we did not resolve any new binary candidates in the
separation range between 5.4AU and 1700AU and masses in the range
0.035--0.065~Msun. Together with the results of our previous study (Martin et
al., 2003), we can derive a visual binary frequency of 13.3\%
for separations greater than 7~AU masses between 0.055--0.065~M_{\sun} and
mass ratios between 0.45--0.91.0. The other observed properties of
Pleiades brown dwarf binaries (distributions of separation and mass ratio)
appear to be similar to their older counterparts in the field.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
The Seven Sisters DANCe III: Projected spatial distribution
Methods. We compute Bayesian evidences and Bayes Factors for a set of
variations of the classical radial models by King (1962), Elson et al. (1987)
and Lauer et al. (1995). The variations incorporate different degrees of model
freedom and complexity, amongst which we include biaxial (elliptical) symmetry,
and luminosity segregation. As a by-product of the model comparison, we obtain
posterior distributions and maximum a posteriori estimates for each set of
model parameters. Results. We find that the model comparison results depend on
the spatial extent of the region used for the analysis. For a circle of 11.5
parsecs around the cluster centre (the most homogeneous and complete region),
we find no compelling reason to abandon Kings model, although the Generalised
King model, introduced in this work, has slightly better fitting properties.
Furthermore, we find strong evidence against radially symmetric models when
compared to the elliptic extensions. Finally, we find that including mass
segregation in the form of luminosity segregation in the J band, is strongly
supported in all our models. Conclusions. We have put the question of the
projected spatial distribution of the Pleiades cluster on a solid probabilistic
framework, and inferred its properties using the most exhaustive and least
contaminated list of Pleiades candidate members available to date. Our results
suggest however that this sample may still lack about 20% of the expected
number of cluster members. Therefore, this study should be revised when the
completeness and homogeneity of the data can be extended beyond the 11.5
parsecs limit. Such study will allow a more precise determination of the
Pleiades spatial distribution, its tidal radius, ellipticity, number of objects
and total mass.Comment: 39 pages, 31 figure
Accretion-Induced Lithium Line Enhancements in Classical T Tauri Stars: RW Aur
It is widely accepted that much of the stochastic variability of T Tauri
stars is due to accretion by a circumstellar disk. The emission line spectrum
as well as the excess continuum emission are common probes of this process. In
this communication, we present additional probes of the circumstellar
environment in the form of resonance lines of low ionization potential
elements. Using a set of 14 high resolution echelle observations of the
classical T Tauri star (CTTS), RW Aur, taken between 1986 and 1996, we
carefully measure the continuum veiling at each epoch by comparing more than
500 absorption lines with those of an appropriate template. This allows us to
accurately subtract out the continuum emission and to recover the underlying
photospheric spectrum. In doing so, we find that selected photospheric lines
are enhanced by the accretion process, namely the resonance lines of LiI and
KI. A resonance line of TiI and a low excitation potential line of CaI also
show weak enhancements. Simple slab models and computed line bisectors lead us
to propose that these line enhancements are markers of cool gas at the
beginning of the accretion flow which provides an additional source of line
opacity. These results suggest that published values of surface lithium
abundances of classical T Tauri stars are likely to be overestimated. This
would account for the various reports of surface lithium abundances in excess
of meteoritic values among the extreme CTTS. Computing LTE lithium abundances
of RW Aur in a low and then high accretion state yields abundances which vary
by one order of magnitude. The low accretion state lithium abundance is
consistent with theoretical predictions for a star of this age and mass while
the high accretion state spectrum yields a super-meteoritic lithium abundance.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Ap
The Seven Sisters DANCe. I. Empirical isochrones, Luminosity and Mass Functions of the Pleiades cluster
The DANCe survey provides photometric and astrometric (position and proper
motion) measurements for approximately 2 millions unique sources in a region
encompassing 80deg centered around the Pleiades cluster.
We aim at deriving a complete census of the Pleiades, and measure the mass
and luminosity function of the cluster. Using the probabilistic selection
method described in Sarro+2014, we identify high probability members in the
DANCe (14mag) and Tycho-2 (12mag) catalogues, and study the
properties of the cluster over the corresponding luminosity range. We find a
total of 2109 high probability members, of which 812 are new, making it the
most extensive and complete census of the cluster to date. The luminosity and
mass functions of the cluster are computed from the most massive members down
to 0.025M. The size, sensitivity and quality of the sample
result in the most precise luminosity and mass functions observed to date for a
cluster. Our census supersedes previous studies of the Pleiades cluster
populations, both in terms of sensitivity and accuracy.Comment: Language Edition Done. Final version to be published in A&A. Tables
will be published at CDS. Meanwhile, they can be requested to H. Bouy (hbouy
-at- cab . inta - csic . es
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