788 research outputs found
Effect of local treatments of convection upon the solar p-mode excitation rates
We compute, for several solar models, the rates P at which the solar radial p
modes are expected to be excited. The solar models are computed with two
different local treatments of convection : the classical mixing-length theory
(MLT hereafter) and Canuto, Goldmann and Mazzitelli(1996, CGM hereafter)'s
formulation. For one set of solar models (EMLT and ECGM models), the atmosphere
is gray and assumes Eddington's approximation. For a second set of models (KMLT
and KCGM models), the atmosphere is built using a T(tau) law which has been
obtained from a Kurucz's model atmosphere computed with the same local
treatment of convection. The mixing-length parameter in the model atmosphere is
chosen so as to provide a good agreement between synthetic and observed Balmer
line profiles, while the mixing-length parameter in the interior model is
calibrated so that the model reproduces the solar radius at solar age. For the
MLT treatment, the rates P do depend significantly on the properties of the
atmosphere. On the other hand, for the CGM treatment, differences in P between
the ECGM and the KCGM models are very small compared to the error bars attached
to the seismic measurements. The excitation rates P for modes from the EMLT
model are significantly under-estimated compared with the solar seismic
constraints. The KMLT model results in intermediate values for P and shows also
an important discontinuity in the temperature gradient and the convective
velocity. On the other hand, the KCGM model and the ECGM model yield values for
P closer to the seismic data than the EMLT and KMLT models. We conclude that
the solar p-mode excitation rates provide valuable constraints and according to
the present investigation cleary favor the CGM treatment with respect to the
MLT.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, proceedings of the SOHO14/GONG 2004 workshop
"Helio- and Asteroseismology: Towards a Golden Future" from July 12-16 2004
at New Haven CT (USA
Influence of local treatments of convection upon solar p mode excitation rates
We compute the rates P at which acoustic energy is injected into the solar
radial p modes for several solar models. The solar models are computed with two
different local treatments of convection: the classical mixing-length theory
(MLT hereafter) and Canuto et al (1996)'s formulation (CGM hereafter). Among
the models investigated here, our best models reproduce both the solar radius
and the solar luminosity at solar age and the observed Balmer line profiles.
For the MLT treatment, the rates P do depend significantly on the properties of
the atmosphere whereas for the CGM's treatment the dependence of P on the
properties of the atmosphere is found smaller than the error bars attached to
the seismic measurements. The excitation rates P for modes associated with the
MLT models are significantly underestimated compared with the solar seismic
constraints. The CGM models yield values for P closer to the seismic data than
the MLT models. We conclude that the solar p-mode excitation rates provide
valuable constraints and according to the present investigation clearly favor
the CGM treatment with respect to the MLT, although neither of them yields
values of P as close to the observations as recently found for 3D numerical
simulations.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
The rotational broadening of V395 Car - implications on compact object's mass
CONTEXT: The masses previously obtained for the X-ray binary 2S0921-630
inferred a compact object that was either a high-mass neutron star or low-mass
black-hole, but used a previously published value for the rotational broadening
(vsini) with large uncertainties. AIMS: We aim to determine an accurate mass
for the compact object through an improved measurement of the secondary star's
projected equatorial rotational velocity. METHODS: We have used UVES echelle
spectroscopy to determine the vsini of the secondary star (V395 Car) in the
low-mass X-ray binary 2S0921-630 by comparison to an artificially broadened
spectral-type template star. In addition, we have also measured vsini from a
single high signal-to-noise ratio absorption line profile calculated using the
method of Least-Squares Deconvolution (LSD). RESULTS: We determine vsini to lie
between 31.3+/-0.5km/s to 34.7+/-0.5km/s (assuming zero and continuum limb
darkening, respectively) in disagreement with revious results based on
intermediate resolution spectroscopy obtained with the 3.6m NTT. Using our
revised vsini value in combination with the secondary star's radial velocity
gives a binary mass ratio of 0.281+/-0.034. Furthermore, assuming a binary
inclination angle of 75 degrees gives a compact object mass of 1.37+/-0.13Mo.
CONCLUSIONS: We find that using relatively low-resolution spectroscopy can
result in systemic uncertainties in the measured vsini values obtained using
standard methods. We suggest the use of LSD as a secondary, reliable check of
the results as LSD allows one to directly discern the shape of the absorption
line profile. In the light of the new vsini measurement, we have revised down
the compact object's mass, such that it is now compatible with a canonical
neutron star mass.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, accpeted by A
Recommended from our members
Predictors of Stunting, Wasting and Underweight among Tanzanian Children Born to HIV-Infected Women.
Children born to human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected women are susceptible to undernutrition, but modifiable risk factors and the time course of the development of undernutrition have not been well characterized. The objective of this study was to identify maternal, socioeconomic and child characteristics that are associated with stunting, wasting and underweight among Tanzanian children born to HIV-infected mothers, followed from 6 weeks of age for 24 months. Maternal and socioeconomic characteristics were recorded during pregnancy, data pertaining to the infant's birth were collected immediately after delivery, morbidity histories and anthropometric measurements were performed monthly. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards methods were used to assess the association between potential predictors and the time to first episode of stunting, wasting and underweight. A total of 2387 infants (54.0% male) were enrolled and followed for a median duration of 21.2 months. The respective prevalence of prematurity (<37 weeks) and low birth weight (<2500 g) was 15.2% and 7.0%; 11.3% of infants were HIV-positive at 6 weeks. Median time to first episode of stunting, wasting and underweight was 8.7, 7.2 and 7.0 months, respectively. Low maternal education, few household possessions, low infant birth weight, child HIV infection and male sex were all independent predictors of stunting, wasting and underweight. In addition, preterm infants were more likely to become wasted and underweight, whereas those with a low Apgar score at birth were more likely to become stunted. Interventions to improve maternal education and nutritional status, reduce mother-to-child transmission of HIV, and increase birth weight may lower the risk of undernutrition among children born to HIV-infected women
Critical evaluation of magnetic field detections reported for pulsating B-type stars in the light of ESPaDOnS, Narval and reanalyzed FORS1/2 observations
Recent spectropolarimetric studies of 7 SPB and Cep stars have
suggested that photospheric magnetic fields are more common in B-type pulsators
than in the general population of B stars, suggesting a significant connection
between magnetic and pulsational phenomena. We present an analysis of new and
previously published spectropolarimetric observations of these stars. New
Stokes observations obtained with the high-resolution ESPaDOnS and Narval
instruments confirm the presence of a magnetic field in one of the stars
( Lup), but find no evidence of magnetism in 5 others. A re-analysis
of the published longitudinal field measurements obtained with the
low-resolution FORS1/2 spectropolarimeters finds that the measurements of all
stars show more scatter from zero than can be attributed to Gaussian noise,
suggesting the presence of a signal and/or systematic under-estimation of error
bars. Re-reduction and re-measurement of the FORS1/2 spectra from the ESO
archive demonstrates that small changes in reduction procedure lead to
substantial changes in the inferred longitudinal field, and substantially
reduces the number of field detections at the 3 level. Furthermore, we
find that the published periods are not unique solutions to the time series of
either the original or the revised FORS1/2 data. We conclude that the reported
field detections, proposed periods and field geometry models for Pyx,
15 CMa, 33 Eri and V1449 Aql are artefacts of the data analysis and reduction
procedures, and that magnetic fields at the reported strength are no more
common in SPB/ Cep stars than in the general population of B stars.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, 2012, typo
correcte
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