3,057 research outputs found
A Study of the B-V Colour Temperature Relation
We attempt to construct a B-V colour temperature relation for stars in the
least model dependent way employing the best modern data. The fit we obtained
with the form Teff = Teff((B-V)0,[Fe/H],log g) is well constrained and a number
of tests show the consistency of the procedures for the fit. Our relation
covers from F0 to K5 stars with metallicity [Fe/H] = -1.5 to +0.3 for both
dwarfs and giants. The residual of the fit is 66 K, which is consistent with
what are expected from the quality of the present data. Metallicity and surface
gravity effects are well separated from the colour dependence. Dwarfs and
giants match well in a single family of fit, differing only in log g. The fit
also detects the Galactic extinction correction for nearby stars with the
amount E(B-V) = 0.26 +/-0.03 mag/kpc. Taking the newly obtained relation as a
reference we examine a number of B-V colour temperature relations and
atmosphere models available in the literature. We show the presence of a
systematic error in the colour temperature relation from synthetic calculations
of model atmospheres; the systematic error across K0 to K5 dwarfs is 0.04-0.05
mag in B-V, which means 0.25-0.3 mag in Mv for the K star range. We also argue
for the error in the temperature scale used in currently popular stellar
population synthesis models; synthetic colours from these models are somewhat
too blue for aged elliptical galaxies. We derive the colour index of the sun
(B-V)sun = 0.627 +/-0.018, and discuss that redder colours (e.g., 0.66-0.67)
often quoted in the literature are incompatible with the colour-temperature
relation.Comment: AASLaTeX (aaspp4.sty),36 pages (13 figures included), submitted to
Astronomical Journal, replaced (typo in author name
Quantifying Self-Organization with Optimal Predictors
Despite broad interest in self-organizing systems, there are few
quantitative, experimentally-applicable criteria for self-organization. The
existing criteria all give counter-intuitive results for important cases. In
this Letter, we propose a new criterion, namely an internally-generated
increase in the statistical complexity, the amount of information required for
optimal prediction of the system's dynamics. We precisely define this
complexity for spatially-extended dynamical systems, using the probabilistic
ideas of mutual information and minimal sufficient statistics. This leads to a
general method for predicting such systems, and a simple algorithm for
estimating statistical complexity. The results of applying this algorithm to a
class of models of excitable media (cyclic cellular automata) strongly support
our proposal.Comment: Four pages, two color figure
Chemical Abundances Of Three Metal-Poor Globular Clusters (NGC 6287, NGC 6293, And NGC 6541) In The Inner Halo
We present a chemical abundance study of three inner old halo clusters NGC
6287, NGC 6293, and NGC 6541, finding [Fe/H] = -2.01 +/- 0.05, -1.99 +/- 0.02,
and -1.76 +/- 0.02, respectively, and our metallicity measurements are in good
agreement with previous estimates. The mean alpha-element abundances of our
program clusters are in good agreement with other globular clusters, confirming
previous results. However, the individual alpha-elements appear to follow
different trends. The silicon abundances of the inner halo clusters appear to
be enhanced and the titanium abundances appear to be depleted compared to the
intermediate halo clusters. Our results also appear to oppose to those of
metal-rich bulge giants studied by McWilliam and Rich, who found that bulge
giants are titanium enhanced and silicon deficient. In particular, [Si/Ti]
ratios appear to be related to Galactocentric distances,in the sense that
[Si/Ti] ratios decrease with Galactocentric distance. We propose that
contributions from different masses of the SNe II progenitors that enriched
proto-globular cluster clouds' elemental abundances and the different initial
physical environments surrounding the proto-globular clusters clouds are
responsible for this gradient in [Si/Ti] ratios versus Galactocentric distances
of the "old halo" globular clusters. On the other hand, our program clusters'
enhanced s-process elemental abundances suggest that the formation timescale of
our program clusters might be as short as a few times 10^8 yr after the star
formation is initiated in the Galaxy's central regions, if the s-process site
is intermediate mass AGB stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ (Sept. 2002
The Chemical Composition of Carbon-Rich, Very Metal-Poor Stars: A New Class of Mildly Carbon-Rich Objects Without Excess of Neutron-Capture Elements
We report on an analysis of the chemical composition of five carbon-rich,
very metal-poor stars based on high-resolution spectra. One star, CS22948-027,
exhibits very large overabundances of carbon, nitrogen, and the neutron-capture
elements, as found in the previous study of Hill et al.. This result may be
interpreted as a consequence of mass transfer from a binary companion that
previously evolved through the asymptotic giant branch stage. By way of
contrast, the other four stars we investigate exhibit no overabundances of
barium ([Ba/Fe]<0), while three of them have mildly enhanced carbon and/or
nitrogen ([C+N]+1). We have been unable to determine accurate carbon and
nitrogen abundances for the remaining star (CS30312-100). These stars are
rather similar to the carbon-rich, neutron-capture-element-poor star
CS22957-027 discussed previously by Norris et al., though the carbon
overabundance in this object is significantly larger ([C/Fe]=+2.2). Our results
imply that these carbon-rich objects with ``normal'' neutron-capture element
abundances are not rare among very metal-deficient stars. One possible process
to explain this phenomenon is as a result of helium shell flashes near the base
of the AGB in very low-metallicity, low-mass (M~< 1M_sun) stars, as recently
proposed by Fujimoto et al..
The moderate carbon enhancements reported herein ([C/Fe]+1) are similar to
those reported in the famous r-process-enhanced star CS22892-052. We discuss
the possibility that the same process might be responsible for this similarity,
as well as the implication that a completely independent phenomenon was
responsible for the large r-process enhancement in CS22892-052.Comment: 53 pages, 8 figures, to appear in Ap
Rubidium in Metal-Deficient Disk and Halo Stars
We report the first extensive study of stellar Rb abundances. High-resolution
spectra have been used to determine, or set upper limits on, the abundances of
this heavy element and the associated elements Y, Zr, and Ba in 44 dwarfs and
giants with metallicities spanning the range -2.0 <[Fe/H] < 0.0. In
metal-deficient stars Rb is systematically overabundant relative to Fe; we find
an average [Rb/Fe] of +0.21 for the 32 stars with [Fe/H] < -0.5 and measured
Rb. This behavior contrasts with that of Y, Zr, and Ba, which, with the
exception of three new CH stars (HD 23439A and B and BD +5 3640), are
consistently slightly deficient relative to Fe in the same stars; excluding the
three CH stars, we find the stars with [Fe/H] < -0.5 have average [Y/Fe],
[Zr/Fe], and [Ba/Fe] of --0.19 (24 stars), --0.12 (28 stars), and --0.06 (29
stars), respectively. The different behavior of Rb on the one hand and Y, Zr,
and Ba on the other can be attributed in part to the fact that in the Sun and
in these stars Rb has a large r-process component while Y, Zr, and Ba are
mostly s-process elements with only small r-process components. In addition,
the Rb s-process abundance is dependent on the neutron density at the
s-processing site. Published observations of Rb in s-process enriched red
giants indicate a higher neutron density in the metal-poor giants. These
observations imply a higher s-process abundance for Rb in metal-poor stars. The
calculated combination of the Rb r-process abundance, as estimated for the
stellar Eu abundances, and the s-process abundance as estimated for red giants
accounts satisfactorily for the observed run of [Rb/Fe] with [Fe/H].Comment: 23 pages, 5 tables, 7 figure
Using Space Weather Variability in Evaluating the Radiation Environment Design Specifications for NASA's Constellation Program
NASA's Constellation program, initiated to fulfill the Vision for Space Exploration, will create a new generation of vehicles for servicing low Earth orbit, the Moon, and beyond. Space radiation specifications for space system hardware are necessarily conservative to assure system robustness for a wide range of space environments. Spectral models of solar particle events and trapped radiation belt environments are used to develop the design requirements for estimating total ionizing radiation dose, displacement damage, and single event effects for Constellation hardware. We first describe the rationale using the spectra chosen to establish the total dose and single event design environmental specifications for Constellation systems. We then compare variability of the space environment to the spectral design models to evaluate their applicability as conservative design environments and potential vulnerabilities to extreme space weather event
Using Space Weather Variability in Evaluating the Environment Design Specifications for NASA'S Constellation Program
Spectral models of solar particle events and trapped radiation belts are necessary for the design requirements of total ionizing radiation dose, single event effects, and spacecraft charging. Space radiation and plasma environment specifications for hardware design are necessarily conservative to assure system robustness for a wide range of space environments
DEFINING AND REDUCING WILDLIFE HAZARDS TO AVIATION IN THE USA
The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Wildlife Research Center (NWRC), through an interagency agreement with the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), conducts a national research program to define and reduce bird and other wildlife hazards to aircraft. The goal is to provide the FAA and airports nationwide with a scientific foundation for policies and recommendations related to wildlife and aviation safety. Research tasks conducted by NWRC under the agreement include: 1) investigations of habitat management and land-use practices on and near airports to reduce bird activity; 2) development and evaluation of bird repellent and frightening methods for airports; 3) management and analysis of the National Wildlife Strike Database for civil aviation; and 4) development of publications, including a manual on wildlife hazard management, for use by airport operators nationwide. The research, coordinated by NWRC’s Sandusky, Ohio Field Station, has resulted in over 100 scientific publications since 1992. Recent highlights include 1) development of a wildlife strike database for civil aviation with about 28,000 strike reports, 1990-1999; 2) publication of a report, based on analyses of data in the bird strike database, which indicated wildlife collisions with aircraft cost U.S. civil aviation over $300 million/year, 1990-1998; 3) partnership with private industry to develop chemical repellents for use against Canada geese on airports; 4) development of management program at JFK International Airport, New York, that resulted in a 90% reduction in gull-aircraft collisions; and 5) publication of a comprehensive manual for airport personnel entitled “Wildlife Hazard Management at Airports”
Far Infrared Prperties of M Dwarfs
We report the mid- and far-infrared properties of nearby M dwarfs.
Spitzer/MIPS measurements were obtained for a sample of 62 stars at 24 um, with
subsamples of 41 and 20 stars observed at 70 um and 160 um respectively. We
compare the results with current models of M star photospheres and look for
indications of circumstellar dust in the form of significant deviations of
K-[24 um] colors and 70 um / 24 um flux ratios from the average M star values.
At 24 um, all 62 of the targets were detected; 70 um detections were achieved
for 20 targets in the subsample observed; and no detections were seen in the
160 um subsample. No clear far-infrared excesses were detected in our sample.
The average far infrared excess relative to the photospheric emission of the M
stars is at least four times smaller than the similar average for a sample of
solar-type stars. However, this limit allows the average fractional infrared
luminosity in the M-star sample to be similar to that for more massive stars.
We have also set low limits for the maximum mass of dust possible around our
stars.Comment: 28 pages, 4 figures, to be published in The Astrophysical Journa
Bulk Charging of Dielectrics in Cryogenic Space Environments
We use a 1-D bulk charging model to evaluate dielectric charging at cryogenic temperatures relevant to space systems using passive cooling to <100K or extended operations in permanently dark lunar craters and the lunar night
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