1,303 research outputs found
Survey of aircraft electrical power systems
Areas investigated include: (1) load analysis; (2) power distribution, conversion techniques and generation; (3) design criteria and performance capabilities of hydraulic and pneumatic systems; (4) system control and protection methods; (5) component and heat transfer systems cooling; and (6) electrical system reliability
Star formation environments and the distribution of binary separations
We have carried out K-band speckle observations of a sample of 114 X-ray
selected weak-line T Tauri stars in the nearby Scorpius-Centaurus OB
association. We find that for binary T Tauri stars closely associated to the
early type stars in Upper Scorpius, the youngest subgroup of the OB
association, the peak in the distribution of binary separations is at 90 A.U.
For binary T Tauri stars located in the direction of an older subgroup, but not
closely associated to early type stars, the peak in the distribution is at 215
A.U. A Kolmogorov-Smirnov test indicates that the two binary populations do not
result from the same distibution at a significance level of 98%. Apparently,
the same physical conditions which facilitate the formation of massive stars
also facilitate the formation of closer binaries among low-mass stars, whereas
physical conditions unfavorable for the formation of massive stars lead to the
formation of wider binaries among low-mass stars. The outcome of the binary
formation process might be related to the internal turbulence and the angular
momentum of molecular cloud cores, magnetic field, the initial temperature
within a cloud, or - most likely - a combination of all of these. We conclude
that the distribution of binary separations is not a universal quantity, and
that the broad distribution of binary separations observed among main-sequence
stars can be explained by a superposition of more peaked binary distributions
resulting from various star forming environments. The overall binary frequency
among pre-main-sequence stars in individual star forming regions is not
necessarily higher than among main-sequence stars.Comment: 7 pages, Latex, 4 Postscript figures; also available at
http://spider.ipac.caltech.edu/staff/brandner/pubs/pubs.html ; accepted for
publication in ApJ Letter
A NICMOS Direct Imaging Search for Giant Planets around the Single White Dwarfs in the Hyades
We report preliminary results from our search for massive giant planets (6-12
Jupiter masses) around the known seven single white dwarfs in the Hyades
cluster at sub-arcsec separations. At an age of 625 Myr, the white dwarfs had
progenitor masses of about 3 solar masses, and massive gaseous giant planets
should have formed in the massive circumstellar disks around these ex-Herbig A0
stars, probably at orbital separations similar or slightly larger than that of
Jupiter. Such planets would have survived the post-Main-Sequence mass loss of
the parent star and would have migrated outward adiabatically to a distance of
about 25 AU. At the distance of the Hyades (45 pc) this corresponds to an
angular separation of 0.5 arcsec. J and H magnitudes of these giants are in the
range of 20.5-23.3 mag, which can be resolved with NICMOS. The achieved
sensitivities and contrast ratios agree well with simulations. Preliminary
evaluation of the NICMOS data set did not reveal any evidence for neither
planetary mass companions with masses down to about 10 Jupiter masses nor brown
dwarfs around any of the seven white dwarfs for separations larger than 0.5
arcsec.Comment: 14th European Workshop on White Dwarf
Early ComeOn+ Adaptive Optics Observation of GQ Lup and its Substellar Companion
An analysis of adaptive optics K-band imaging data of GQ Lup acquired in 1994
by the first generation adaptive optics system ComeOn+ at the ESO 3.6m optical
telescope in La Silla is presented. The data reveal a likely candidate for the
low-mass companion recently reported in the literature. An a posteriori
detection in the 11 year old data would provide a useful astrometric data point
for the very long period (~1000 yr) orbit of the GQ Lup system. However, the
data is severely contaminated by speckle noise at the given projected
separation, which decreases the confidence of the detection. Still, from the
data we can conclude that GQ Lup B is not an unrelated background source, but
instead a physical companion to GQ Lup A. We present here the reduction and
analysis of the ComeOn+ images, as well as the results. We also discuss the
nature of the companion based on data and models available in the scientific
literature and examine claims made regarding the classification of the object
as a planet.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&
First NACO observations of the Brown Dwarf LHS 2397aB
Observations of the standard late type M8 star LHS 2397aA were obtained at
the ESO-VLT 8m telescope ``Yepun'' using the NAOS/CONICA Adaptive Optics
facility. The observations were taken during the NACO commissioning, and the
infrared standard star LHS 2397aA was observed in the H, and Ks broad band
filters. In both bands the brown dwarf companion LHS2397aB was detected. Using
a program recently developed (Bouy et al., 2003) for the detection of stellar
binaries we calculated the principal astrometric parameters (angular binary
separation and position angle P.A.) and the photometry of LHS 2397aA and LHS
2397aB. Our study largely confirms previous results obtained with the
AO-Hokupa'a facility at Gemini-North (Freed et al., 2003); however a few
discrepancies are observed.Comment: 5 page
NGC 3603 - a Local Template for Massive Young Clusters
We present a study of the star cluster associated with the massive Galactic
HII region NGC3603 based on near-IR broad-- and narrowband observations taken
with ISAAC/VLT under excellent seeing conditions (<0.4''). We discuss
color-color diagrams and address the impact of the high UV flux on the disk
evolution of the low-mass stars.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figures. To appear in the Proceedings of IAU Symposium 207
"Extragalactic Star Clusters", eds. E. Grebel, D. Geisler and D. Minitt
The search for planetary mass companions to field brown dwarfs with HST/NICMOS
We present the results of a high-resolution spectral differential imaging
survey of 12 nearby, relatively young field L dwarfs (<1 Gyr) carried out with
HST/NICMOS to search for planetary mass companions at small physical
separations from their host. The survey resolved two brown dwarf binaries: the
L dwarf system Kelu-1AB and the newly discovered L/T transition system 2MASS
J031059+164815AB. For both systems common proper motion has already been
confirmed in follow-up observations which have been published elsewhere. The
derived separations of the binaries are smaller than 6 AU and consistent with
previous brown dwarf binary statistics. Their mass ratios of q > 0.8 confirm
the preference for equal mass systems similar to a large number of other
surveys. Furthermore, we found tentative evidence for a companion to the L4
dwarf 2MASS W033703-175807, straddling the brown dwarf/planetary mass boundary
and revealing an uncommonly low mass ratio system (q ~ 0.2) compared to the
vast majority of previously found brown dwarf binaries. With a derived minimum
mass of 10 - 15 Mjup, a planetary nature of the secondary cannot be ruled out
yet. However, it seems more likely to be a very low mass brown dwarf secondary
at the border of the spectral T/Y transition regime, primarily due to its
similarities to recently found very cool T dwarfs. This would make it one of
the closest resolved brown dwarf binaries (0.087" 0.015", corresponding
to 2.52 0.44 AU at a distance of 29 pc) with the coolest (Teff ~ 600-630
K) and least massive companion to any L or T dwarf.Comment: 33 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication by Ap
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
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