336 research outputs found
A three-dimensional model for the radio emission of magnetic chemically peculiar stars
In this paper we present a three-dimensional numerical model for the radio
emission of Magnetic Chemically Peculiar stars, on the hypothesis that
energetic electrons emit by the gyrosynchrotron mechanism. For this class of
radio stars, characterized by a mainly dipolar magnetic field whose axis is
tilted with respect to the rotational axis, the geometry of the magnetosphere
and its deformation due to the stellar rotation are determined. The radio
emitting region is determined by the physical conditions of the magnetosphere
and of the stellar wind. Free-free absorption by the thermal plasma trapped in
the inner magnetosphere is also considered. Several free parameters are
involved in the model, such as the size of the emitting region, the energy
spectrum and the number density of the emitting electrons, and the
characteristics of the plasma in the inner magnetosphere. By solving the
equation of radiative transfer, along a path parallel to the line of sight, the
radio brightness distribution and the total flux density as a function of
stellar rotation are computed. As the model is applied to simulate the observed
5 GHz lightcurves of HD37479 and HD37017, several possible magnetosphere
configurations are found. After simulations at other frequencies, in spite of
the large number of parameters involved in the modeling, two solutions in the
case of HD37479 and only one solution in the case of HD37017 match the observed
spectral indices. The results of our simulations agree with the magnetically
confined wind-shock model in a rotating magnetosphere. The X-ray emission from
the inner magnetosphere is also computed, and found to be consistent with the
observations.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, A&A in pres
3D-modelling of the stellar auroral radio emission
The electron cyclotron maser is the coherent emission process that gives rise
to the radio lighthouse effect observed in the hot magnetic chemically peculiar
star CU Virginis. It has also been proposed to explain the highly circularly
polarized radio pulses observed on some ultra cool dwarfs, with spectral type
earlier than M7. Such kind of coherent events resemble the auroral radio
emission from the magnetized planets of the solar system. In this paper, we
present a tridimensional model able to simulate the timing and profile of the
pulses emitted by those stars characterized by a dipolar magnetic field by
following the hypothesis of the laminar source model, used to explain the
beaming of the terrestrial auroral kilometric radiation. This model proves to
be a powerful tool to understand the auroral radio-emission phenomenon,
allowing us to derive some general conclusions about the effects of the model's
free parameters on the features of the coherent pulses, and to learn more about
the detectability of such kind of pulsed radio emission.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
Millimeter observations of Planetary Nebulae: a contribution to the Planck pre-launch catalogue
We present new millimetre 43 GHz observations of a sample of radio-bright
Planetary Nebulae. Such observations were carried out to have a good
determination of the high-frequency radio spectra of the sample in order to
evaluate, together with far-IR measurements (IRAS), the fluxes emitted by the
selected source in the millimetre and sub-millimetre band. This spectral range,
even very important to constraint the physics of circumstellar environment, is
still far to be completely exploited. To estimate the millimetre and
sub-millimetre fluxes, we extrapolated and summed together the ionized gas
(free-free radio emission) and dust (thermal emission) contributions at this
frequency range. By comparison of the derived flux densities to the foreseen
sensitivity we investigate the possible detection of such source for all the
channels of the forthcoming ESA's PLANCK mission. We conclude that almost 80%
of our sample will be detected by PLANCK, with the higher detection rate in the
higher frequency channels, where there is a good combination of brighter
intrinsic flux from the sources and reduced extended Galactic foregrounds
contamination despite a worst instrumental sensitivity. From the new 43 GHz,
combined with single-dish 5 GHz observations from the literature, we derive
radio spectral indexes, which are consistent with optically thin free-free
nebula. This result indicates that the high frequency radio spectrum of our
sample sources is dominated by thermal free-free and other emission, if
present, are negligible.Comment: Submitted to A&A, 6 pages, 3 figure
Expanded Very Large Array Observations of the Nebula Around G79.29+0.46
We have observed the radio nebula surrounding the Galactic luminous blue variable candidate G79.29+0.46 with the Expanded Very Large Array (EVLA) at 6 cm. These new radio observations allow a morphological comparison between the radio emission, which traces the ionized gas component, and the mid-IR emission, a tracer of the dust component. The InfraRed Array Camera (8 μm) and the Multiband Imaging Photometer for Spitzer (24 μm and 70 μm) images have been reprocessed and compared with the EVLA map. We confirm the presence of a second shell at 24 μm and also provide evidence for its detection at 70 μm. The differences between the spatial morphology of the radio and mid-IR maps indicate the existence of two dust populations, the cooler one emitting mostly at longer wavelengths. Analysis of the two dusty, nested shells have provided us with an estimate of the characteristic timescales for shell ejection, providing important constraints for stellar evolutionary models. Finer details of the ionized gas distribution can be appreciated thanks to the improved quality of the new 6 cm image, most notably the highly structured texture of the nebula. Evidence of interaction between the nebula and the surrounding interstellar medium can be seen in the radio map, including brighter features that delineate regions where the shell structure is locally modified. In particular, the brighter filaments in the southwest region appear to frame the shocked southwestern clump reported from CO observations
Molecular Conformation of Aza-substituted Benzanilides by Electronic Absorption Spectra and Dipole Moments
The electronic absorption spectra of thirteen pyridine aromatic
amides of general formula R1-CO-NH- R2 (Ri, R2 = pyridil or
phenyl) were obtained in methanol and dioxane solution.
The band assignment is briefly discussed.
The dipole moments were measured in dioxane at 25 ± 0.1 °c
and compared with values calculated by both the S. H. M. 0. method
and vectorial model. The comparison suggests the most probable
conformation of derivatives which have the nitrogen either in the
ortho or meta position in one or both rings of the molecule
Molecular Conformation of Pyridinic Aromatic Esters. II. Electronic Absorption Spectra and Dipole Moments by Semiempirical Methods
The semiempirical MIM method was applied to calculate the
UV spectra of nine pyridine-aromatic-ester derivatives (having the
general formula R1-COO-R2) assuming a planar geometry. Benzene,
pyridine and formic acid were adopted as component systems.
The dipole moments of the same compounds were evaluated at the
MIM and INDO levels and the equilibrium percentage of the conformers
was deduced from experimental and theoretical values.
Comparable results were generally obtained. On the whole the
results are satisfactory but not sufficient to affirm with certainty
if the molecular skeleton is or is not planar
Automated detection of extended sources in radio maps: progress from the SCORPIO survey
Automated source extraction and parameterization represents a crucial
challenge for the next-generation radio interferometer surveys, such as those
performed with the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) and its precursors. In this
paper we present a new algorithm, dubbed CAESAR (Compact And Extended Source
Automated Recognition), to detect and parametrize extended sources in radio
interferometric maps. It is based on a pre-filtering stage, allowing image
denoising, compact source suppression and enhancement of diffuse emission,
followed by an adaptive superpixel clustering stage for final source
segmentation. A parameterization stage provides source flux information and a
wide range of morphology estimators for post-processing analysis. We developed
CAESAR in a modular software library, including also different methods for
local background estimation and image filtering, along with alternative
algorithms for both compact and diffuse source extraction. The method was
applied to real radio continuum data collected at the Australian Telescope
Compact Array (ATCA) within the SCORPIO project, a pathfinder of the ASKAP-EMU
survey. The source reconstruction capabilities were studied over different test
fields in the presence of compact sources, imaging artefacts and diffuse
emission from the Galactic plane and compared with existing algorithms. When
compared to a human-driven analysis, the designed algorithm was found capable
of detecting known target sources and regions of diffuse emission,
outperforming alternative approaches over the considered fields.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
- …