17,923 research outputs found
Asteroseismic Theory of Rapidly Oscillating Ap Stars
This paper reviews some of the important advances made over the last decade
concerning theory of roAp stars.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Testing excitation models of rapidly oscillating Ap stars with interferometry
Rapidly oscillating Ap stars are unique objects in the potential they offer
to study the interplay between a number of important physical phenomena, in
particular, pulsations, magnetic fields, diffusion, and convection.
Nevertheless, the simple understanding of how the observed pulsations are
excited in these stars is still in progress. In this work we perform a test to
what is possibly the most widely accepted excitation theory for this class of
stellar pulsators. The test is based on the study of a subset of members of
this class for which stringent data on the fundamental parameters are available
thanks to interferometry. For three out of the four stars considered in this
study, we find that linear, non-adiabatic models with envelope convection
suppressed around the magnetic poles can reproduce well the frequency region
where oscillations are observed. For the fourth star in our sample no agreement
is found, indicating that a new excitation mechanism must be considered. For
the three stars whose observed frequencies can be explained by the excitation
models under discussion, we derive the minimum angular extent of the region
where convection must be suppressed. Finally, we find that the frequency
regions where modes are expected to be excited in these models is very
sensitive to the stellar radius. This opens the interesting possibility of
determining this quantity and related ones, such as the effective temperature
or luminosity, from comparison between model predictions and observations, in
other targets for which these parameters are not well determined.Comment: Accepted for publication in the MNRA
A Note on Tachyon Moduli and Closed Strings
The collective behavior of the SL(2,R) covariant brane states of non-critical
c=1 string theory found in a previous work, is studied in the Fermi liquid
approximation. It is found that such states mimick the coset WZW model, whereas
only by further restrictions one recovers the double-scaling limit which was
purported to be equivalent to closed string models. Another limit is proposed,
inspired by the tachyon condensation ideas, where the spectrum is the same of
two-dimensional string theory. We close by noting some strange connections
between vacuum states of the theory in their different interpretations.Comment: PDFLaTeX, 17 pages, 2 figures; Section 2 rewritten, several fixes
throughout the text to improve clarit
Impact of stellar companions on precise radial velocities
Context: With the announced arrival of instruments such as ESPRESSO one can
expect that several systematic noise sources on the measurement of precise
radial velocity will become the limiting factor instead of photon noise. A
stellar companion within the fiber is such a possible noise source. Aims: With
this work we aim at characterizing the impact of a stellar companion within the
fiber to radial velocity measurements made by fiber-fed spectrographs. We
consider the contaminant star either to be part of a binary system whose
primary star is the target star, or as a background/foreground star. Methods:
To carry out our study, we used HARPS spectra, co-added the target with
contaminant spectra, and then compared the resulting radial velocity with that
obtained from the original target spectrum. We repeated this procedure and used
different tunable knobs to reproduce the previously mentioned scenarios.
Results: We find that the impact on the radial velocity calculation is a
function of the difference between individual radial velocities, of the
difference between target and contaminant magnitude, and also of their spectral
types. For the worst-case scenario in which both target and contaminant star
are well centered on the fiber, the maximum contamination for a G or K star may
be higher than 10 cm/s, on average, if the difference between target and
contaminant magnitude is < 10, and higher than 1 m/s if <
8. If the target star is of spectral type M, < 8 produces the same
contamination of 10 cm/s, and a contamination may be higher than 1 m/sComment: Accepted for publication in A&A on 29/12/2019 - 14 page
Solar type II radio bursts associated with CME expansions as shown by EUV waves
We investigate the physical conditions of the sources of two metric Type-II
bursts associated with CME expansions with the aim of verifying the
relationship between the shocks and the CMEs, comparing the heights of the
radio sources and the heights of the EUV waves associated with the CMEs. The
heights of the EUV waves associated with the events were determined in relation
to the wave fronts. The heights of the shocks were estimated by applying two
different density models to the frequencies of the Type-II emissions and
compared with the heights of the EUV waves. For the 13 June 2010 event, with
band-splitting, the shock speed was estimated from the frequency drifts of the
upper and lower branches of the harmonic lane, taking into account the H/F
frequency ratio fH/fF = 2. Exponential fits on the intensity maxima of the
branches revealed to be more consistent with the morphology of the spectrum of
this event. For the 6 June 2012 event, with no band-splitting and with a clear
fundamental lane on the spectrum, the shock speed was estimated directly from
the frequency drift of the fundamental emission, determined by linear fit on
the intensity maxima of the lane. For each event, the most appropriate density
model was adopted to estimate the physical parameters of the radio source. The
13 June 2010 event presented a shock speed of 664-719 km/s, consistent with the
average speed of the EUV wave fronts of 609 km/s. The 6 June 2012 event was
related to a shock of speed of 211-461 km/s, also consistent with the average
speed of the EUV wave fronts of 418 km/s. For both events, the heights of the
EUV wave revealed to be compatible with the heights of the radio source,
assuming a radial propagation of the shock.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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