1,434 research outputs found
The magnetic fields of hot subdwarf stars
Detection of magnetic fields has been reported in several sdO and sdB stars.
Recent literature has cast doubts on the reliability of most of these
detections. We revisit data previously published in the literature, and we
present new observations to clarify the question of how common magnetic fields
are in subdwarf stars. We consider a sample of about 40 hot subdwarf stars.
About 30 of them have been observed with the FORS1 and FORS2 instruments of the
ESO VLT. Here we present new FORS1 field measurements for 17 stars, 14 of which
have never been observed for magnetic fields before. We also critically review
the measurements already published in the literature, and in particular we try
to explain why previous papers based on the same FORS1 data have reported
contradictory results. All new and re-reduced measurements obtained with FORS1
are shown to be consistent with non-detection of magnetic fields. We explain
previous spurious field detections from data obtained with FORS1 as due to a
non-optimal method of wavelength calibration. Field detections in other surveys
are found to be uncertain or doubtful, and certainly in need of confirmation.
There is presently no strong evidence for the occurrence of a magnetic field in
any sdB or sdO star, with typical longitudinal field uncertainties of the order
of 2-400 G. It appears that globally simple fields of more than about 1 or 2 kG
in strength occur in at most a few percent of hot subdwarfs, and may be
completely absent at this strength. Further high-precision surveys, both with
high-resolution spectropolarimeters and with instruments similar to FORS1 on
large telescopes, would be very valuable
Dust in the diffuse interstellar medium: Extinction, emission, linear and circular polarisation
We present a model for the diffuse interstellar dust that explains the
observed wavelength-dependence of extinction, emission, linear and circular
polarisation of light. The model is set-up with a small number of parameters.
It consists of a mixture of amorphous carbon and silicate grains with sizes
from the molecular domain of 0.5 up to about 500nm. Dust grains with radii
larger than 6nm are spheroids. Spheroidal dust particles have a factor 1.5 - 3
larger absorption cross section in the far IR than spherical grains of the same
volume. Mass estimates derived from submillimeter observations that ignore this
effect are overestimated by the same amount. In the presence of a magnetic
field, spheroids may be partly aligned and polarise light. We find that
polarisation spectra help to determine the upper particle radius of the
otherwise rather unconstrained dust size distribution. Stochastically heated
small grains of graphite, silicates and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)
are included. We tabulate parameters for PAH emission bands in various
environments. They show a trend with the hardness of the radiation field that
can be explained by the ionisation state or hydrogenation coverage of the
molecules. For each dust component its relative weight is specified, so that
absolute element abundances are not direct input parameters. The model is
confronted with the average properties of the Milky Way, which seems to
represent dust in the solar neighbourhood. It is then applied to four specific
sight lines including the reflection nebula NGC2023. For these sight lines, we
present linear and circular spectro-polarimetric observations obtained with
FORS/VLT. Using prolate rather than oblate grains gives a better fit to
observed spectra; the axial ratio of the spheroids is typically two and aligned
silicates are the dominant contributor to the polarisation.Comment: accepted by A&A Edito
On the consistency of magnetic field measurements of Ap stars: lessons learned from the FORS1 archive
CONTEXT. The ESO archive of FORS1 spectropolarimetric observations may be
used to create a homogeneous database of magnetic field measurements. However,
no systematic comparison of FORS field measurements to those obtained with
other instruments has been undertaken so far. AIMS. We exploit the FORS archive
of circular spectropolarimetric data to examine in a general way how reliable
and accurate field detections obtained with FORS are. METHODS. We examine the
observations of Ap and Bp stars, on the grounds that almost all of the
unambiguous detections of magnetic fields in the FORS1 archive are in these
kinds of stars. We assess the overall quality of the FORS1 magnetic data by
examining the consistency of field detections with what is known from previous
measurements obtained with other instruments, and we look at patterns of
internal consistency. RESULTS. FORS1 magnetic measurements are fully consistent
with those made with other instruments, and the internal consistency of the
data is excellent. However, it is important to recognise that each choice of
grism and wavelength window constitutes a distinct instrumental measuring
system, and that simultaneous field measurements in different instrumental
systems may produce field strength values that differ up to 20 %, or more.
Furthermore, we found that field measurements using hydrogen lines only yield
results that meaningfully reflect the field strength as sampled specifically by
lines of hydrogen for stars with effective temperatures above about 9000 K.
CONCLUSIONS. In general the magnetic field measurements of Ap and Bp stars
obtained with FORS1 are of excellent quality, accuracy and precision, and FORS1
provides an extremely useful example that offers valuable lessons for field
measurements with other low- resolution Cassegrain spectropolarimeters.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in section 13 of
Astronomy & Astrophysics on 13 October 201
Observations of magnetic fields in hot stars
The presence of magnetic fields at the surfaces of many massive stars has
been suspected for decades, to explain the observed properties and activity of
OB stars. However, very few genuine high-mass stars had been identified as
magnetic before the advent of a new generation of powerful spectropolarimeters
that has resulted in a rapid burst of precise information about the magnetic
properties of massive stars. During this talk, I will briefly review modern
methods used to diagnose magnetic fields of higher-mass stars, and summarize
our current understanding of the magnetic properties of OB stars.Comment: Proceedings of IAUS272: Active OB stars, review talk (11 pages
Polarimetry and photometry of the peculiar main-belt object 7968 = 133P/Elst-Pizarro
133P/Elst-Pizarro is an object that has been described as either an active
asteroid or a cometary object in the main asteroid belt. Here we present a
photometric and polarimetric study of this object in an attempt to infer
additional information about its origin.
With the FORS1 instrument of the ESO VLT, we have performed during the 2007
apparition of 133P/Elst-Pizarro quasi-simultaneous photometry and polarimetry
of its nucleus at nine epochs in the phase angle range 0 - 20 deg. For each
observing epoch, we also combined all available frames to obtain a deep image
of the object, to seek signatures of weak cometary activity. Polarimetric data
were analysed by means of a novel physical interference modelling.
The object brightness was found to be highly variable over timescales <1h, a
result fully consistent with previous studies. Using the albedo-polarization
relationships for asteroids and our photometric results, we found for our
target an albedo of about 0.06-0.07 and a mean radius of about 1.6 km.
Throughout the observing epochs, our deep imaging of the comet detects a tail
and an anti-tail. Their temporal variations are consistent with an activity
profile starting around mid May 2007 of minimum duration of four months. Our
images show marginal evidence of a coma around the nucleus. The overall light
scattering behaviour (photometry and polarimetry) resembles most closely that
of F-type asteroids.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysic
Evolution of magnetic fields in stars across the upper main sequence: I. Catalogue of magnetic field measurements with FORS1 at the VLT
To properly understand the physics of Ap and Bp stars it is particularly
important to identify the origin of their magnetic fields. For that, an
accurate knowledge of the evolutionary state of stars that have a measured
magnetic field is an important diagnostic. Previous results based on a small
and possibly biased sample suggest that the distribution of magnetic stars with
mass below 3 M_sun in the H-R diagram differs from that of normal stars in the
same mass range (Hubrig et al. 2000). In contrast, higher mass magnetic Bp
stars may well occupy the whole main-sequence width (Hubrig, Schoeller & North
2005). In order to rediscuss the evolutionary state of upper main sequence
magnetic stars, we define a larger and bias-free sample of Ap and Bp stars with
accurate Hipparcos parallaxes and reliably determined longitudinal magnetic
fields. We used FORS1 at the VLT in its spectropolarimetric mode to measure the
magnetic field in chemically peculiar stars where it was unknown or poorly
known as yet. In this first paper we present our results of the mean
longitudinal magnetic field measurements in 136 stars. Our sample consists of
105 Ap and Bp stars, two PGa stars, 17 HgMn stars, three normal stars, and nine
SPB stars. A magnetic field was for the first time detected in 57 Ap and Bp
stars, in four HgMn stars, one PGa star, one normal B-type star and four SPB
stars.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, to appear in AN 327, 28
The FORS1 catalogue of stellar magnetic field measurements
The FORS1 instrument on the ESO Very Large Telescope was used to obtain
low-resolution circular polarised spectra of nearly a thousand different stars,
with the aim of measuring their mean longitudinal magnetic fields. A catalogue
of FORS1 magnetic measurements would provide a valuable resource with which to
better understand the strengths and limitations of this instrument and of
similar low-dispersion, Cassegrain spectropolarimeters. However, FORS1 data
reduction has been carried out by a number of different groups using a variety
of reduction and analysis techniques. Our understanding of the instrument and
our data reduction techniques have both improved over time. A full re-analysis
of FORS1 archive data using a consistent and fully documented algorithm would
optimise the accuracy and usefulness of a catalogue of field measurements.
Based on the ESO FORS pipeline, we have developed a semi-automatic procedure
for magnetic field determinations, which includes self-consistent checks for
field detection reliability. We have applied our procedure to the full content
of circular spectropolarimetric measurements of the FORS1 archive. We have
produced a catalogue of spectro-polarimetric observations and magnetic field
measurements for about 1400 observations of about 850 different objects. The
spectral type of each object has been accurately classified. We have also been
able to test different methods for data reduction is a systematic way. The
resulting catalogue has been used to produce an estimator for an upper limit to
the uncertainty in a field strength measurement of an early type star as a
function of the signal-to-noise ratio of the observation. While FORS1 is not
necessarily an optimal instrument for the discovery of weak magnetic fields, it
is very useful for the systematic study of larger fields, such as those found
in Ap/Bp stars and in white dwarfs.Comment: Accepted for publication by A&
BGP-like TE Capabilities for SHIM6
In this paper we present a comprehensive set of mechanisms that restore to the site administrator the capacity of enforcing traffic engineering (TE) policies in a multiaddressed IPv6 scenario. The mechanisms rely on the ability of SHIM6 to securely perform locator changes in a transparent fashion to transport and application layers. Once an outgoing path has been selected for a communication by proper routing configuration in the site, the source prefix of SHIM6 data packets is rewritten by the site routers to avoid packet discarding due to ingress filtering. The SHIM6 locator preferences exchanged in the context establishment phase are modified by the site routers to influence in the path used for receiving traffic. Scalable deployment is ensured by the stateless nature of these mechanisms.Publicad
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