215 research outputs found
Calibrated and completeness-corrected optical stellar density maps of the Northern Galactic Plane
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Royal Astronomical Society. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Following on from the second release of calibrated photometry from IPHAS, the INT/WFC Photometric Hα Survey of the Northern Galactic Plane, we present incompleteness-corrected stellar density maps in the r and i photometric bands. These have been computed to a range of limiting magnitudes reaching to 20th magnitude in r and 19th in i (Vega system), and with different angular resolutions – the highest resolution available being 1 arcmin2. The maps obtained cover 94 per cent of the 1800 square degree IPHAS footprint, spanning the Galactic latitude range, −5◦ < b < +5◦, north of the celestial equator. The corrections for incompleteness, due to confusion and sensitivity loss at the faint limit, have been deduced by the method of artificial source injection. The presentation of this method is preceded by a discussion of other more approximate methods of determining completeness. Our method takes full account of position-dependent seeing and source ellipticity in the survey data base. The application of the star counts to testing reddened Galactic disc models is previewed by a comparison with predicted counts along three constant-longitude cuts at 30◦, 90◦ and 175◦: some overprediction of the most heavily reddened 30◦ counts is found, alongside good agreement at 90◦ and 175◦. KeyPeer reviewedFinal Published versio
Photometry of K2 Campaign 9 bulge data
In its Campaign 9, K2 observed dense regions toward the Galactic bulge in
order to constrain the microlensing parallaxes and probe for free-floating
planets. Photometric reduction of the \emph{K2} bulge data poses a significant
challenge due to a combination of the very high stellar density, large pixels
of the Kepler camera, and the pointing drift of the spacecraft. Here we present
a new method to extract K2 photometry in dense stellar regions. We extended the
Causal Pixel Model developed for less-crowded fields, first by using the pixel
response function together with accurate astrometric grids, second by combining
signals from a few pixels, and third by simultaneously fitting for an
astrophysical model. We tested the method on two microlensing events and a
long-period eclipsing binary. The extracted K2 photometry is an order of
magnitude more precise than the photometry from other method
Voices from the classroom : an exploration of the perceptions of teaching assistants
This research gave voice to teaching assistants, exploring their experiences and perceptions, in terms of their backgrounds, roles and responsibilities, experiences whilst studying on an NVQ programme, support from their schools, their aspirations and the progression routes available to them. A small-scale phenomenological study approach was adopted, aimed to interpret and explain human actions and thought through descriptions, capturing first person accounts. Qualitative data was collected from focus group interviews. The research found that the main entry route into the role of teaching assistant was that of parent-helper at the school their child(ren) attended. Previous employment was varied, however, previous skills and experience was not drawn upon or utilised by the schools. Differences in job titles were not reflected by the roles performed by the participants. Support from their schools for undertaking qualifications was limited and participants had little knowledge of progression routes available to them. The research concluded that there is a need for a transparent career structure, which indicates levels of responsibility. Linked to this should be nationally recognised qualifications, which every member of support staff would have to gain, at the appropriate level for the role they fulfil. Wages should reflect the roles and associated qualifications, bringing about a clearer picture of the job of ‘teaching assistant’.EThOS - Electronic Theses Online ServiceGBUnited Kingdo
The ionized nebula surrounding the red supergiant W26 in Westerlund 1
We present Hα images of an ionized nebula surrounding the M2-5Ia red supergiant (RSG) W26 in the massive star cluster Westerlund 1. The nebula consists of a circumstellar shell or ring ∼0.1 pc in diameter and a triangular nebula ∼0.2 pc from the star that in high-resolution Hubble Space Telescope images shows a complex filamentary structure. The excitation mechanism of both regions is unclear since RSGs are too cool to produce ionizing photons and we consider various possibilities. The presence of the nebula, high stellar luminosity and spectral variability suggests that W26 is a highly evolved RSG experiencing extreme levels of mass-loss. As the only known example of an ionized nebula surrounding an RSG W26 deserves further attention to improve our understanding of the final evolutionary stages of massive stars
The Gaia-ESO Survey: Chromospheric Emission, Accretion Properties, and Rotation in Velorum and Chamaeleon I
We use the fundamental parameters delivered by the GES consortium in the
first internal data release to select the members of Vel and Cha I
among the UVES and GIRAFFE spectroscopic observations. A total of 140
Vel members and 74 Cha I members were studied. We calculated stellar
luminosities through spectral energy distributions, while stellar masses were
derived by comparison with evolutionary tracks. The spectral subtraction of
low-activity and slowly rotating templates, which are rotationally broadened to
match the of the targets, enabled us to measure the equivalent widths
(EWs) and the fluxes in the H and H lines. The H line
was also used for identifying accreting objects and for evaluating the mass
accretion rate (). The distribution of for the
members of Vel displays a peak at about 10 km s with a tail
toward faster rotators. There is also some indication of a different
distribution for the members of its two kinematical populations. Only a handful
of stars in Vel display signatures of accretion, while many more
accretors were detected in the younger Cha~I. Accreting and active stars occupy
two different regions in a -flux diagram and we propose a
criterion for distinguishing them. We derive in the ranges
-yr and -yr
for Vel and Cha I accretors, respectively. We find less scatter in the
relation derived through the H EWs, when
compared to the H diagnostics, in agreement with other authors
Circumstellar disk accretion across the Lagoon Nebula: the influence of environment and stellar mass
Pre-main sequence disk accretion is pivotal in determining the final stellar
properties and the early conditions for close-in planets. We aim to establish
the impact of internal (stellar mass) and external (radiation field) parameters
on disk evolution in the Lagoon Nebula massive star-forming region. We employ
simultaneous time series photometry, archival infrared data,
and high-precision light curves, to derive stellar, disk, and accretion
properties for 1012 Lagoon Nebula members. Of all young stars in the Lagoon
Nebula, we estimate have inner disks traceable down to
m, while are actively accreting. We detect disks 1.5
times more frequently around G/K/M stars than higher-mass stars, which appear
to deplete their inner disks on shorter timescales. We find tentative evidence
for faster disk evolution in the central regions of the Lagoon Nebula, where
the bulk of the O/B population is located. Conversely, disks appear to last
longer at its outskirts, where the measured fraction of disk-bearing stars
tends to exceed those of accreting and disk-free stars. The derived mass
accretion rates show a non-uniform dependence on stellar mass between . In addition, the typical accretion rates appear to differ
across the Lagoon Nebula extension, with values two times lower in the core
region than at its periphery. Finally, we detect tentative density gradients in
the accretion shocks, with lags in the appearance of brightness features as a
function of wavelength that can amount to of the rotation
period.Comment: 30 pages, 11 figures, two tables; accepted for publication in The
Astronomical Journa
Classical T Tauri stars with VPHAS+ -I : H α and u-band accretion rates in the Lagoon Nebula M8
We estimate the accretion rates of 235 Classical T Tauri star (CTTS) candidates in the Lagoon Nebula using H photometry from the VPHAS+ survey. Our sample consists of stars displaying H-excess, the intensity of which is used to derive accretion rates. For a subset of 87 stars, the intensity of the -band excess is also used to estimate accretion rates. We find the mean variation in accretion rates measured using H and -band intensities to be 0.17 dex, agreeing with previous estimates (0.04-0.4 dex) but for a much larger sample. The spatial distribution of CTTS align with the location of protostars and molecular gas suggesting that they retain an imprint of the natal gas fragmentation process. Strong accretors are concentrated spatially, while weak accretors are more distributed. Our results do not support the sequential star forming processes suggested in the literature.Peer reviewe
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