71 research outputs found
Effective temperatures and luminosities of very hot o-type subdwarfs
Twelve very hot O-type subdwarfs were observed with the IUE-satellite in the low dispersion mode. Temperatures were derived from the slopes of the UV continua and distances were estimated from the color excesses. Most of them are hotter than 60,000 K, i.e., they are the hottest known subdwarfs. From their spectral appearance and location in a H.R.-diagram they form a rather inhomogeneous group. Three of them turned out to be central stars or nearly central stars, and four are definitely near the white dwarf stage. The surface helium to hydrogen ratio varies from about normal to the extreme case. Most of them appear to be post EHB objectives of 0.5 solar mass with a helium burning shell as their energy source, and their peculiar helium-to-hydrogen ratios are most likely the result of diffusion and convective mixing in surface layers
The evolution of planetary nebulae. VIII. True expansion rates and visibility times
The visibility time of planetary nebulae (PNe) in stellar systems is an
essential quantity for estimating the size of a PN population in the context of
general population studies. For instance, it enters directly into the PN death
rate determination. The basic ingredient for determining visibility times is
the typical nebular expansion velocity, as a suited average over all PN sizes
of a PN population within a certain volume or stellar system. The true
expansion speed of the outer nebular edge of a PN is, however, not accessible
by spectroscopy -- a difficulty that we surmount by radiation-hydrodynamics
modelling. We find a mean true expansion velocity of 42 km/s, i.e. nearly twice
as high as the commonly adopted value to date. Accordingly, the time for a PN
to expand to a radius of, say 0.9 pc, is only 21000 +/- 5000 years. This
visibility time of a PN holds for all central star masses since a nebula does
not become extinct as the central star fades. There is, however, a dependence
on metallicity in the sense that the visibility time becomes shorter for lower
nebular metal content. With the higher expansion rate of PNe derived here we
determined their local death-rate density as (1.4 +/- 0.5) x E-12 PN pc^{-3}
yr^{-1}, using the local PN density advocated by Frew (2008).Comment: 20 pages, 10 Figures; accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysics / Note added in proo
The LSS 4300: A hot counterpart of Upsilon Sgr and KS Per?
A number of observations indicate that the star LSS 4300 is a high temperature analog of the hydrogen-deficient binaries upsilon Sgr and KS Per. A preliminary model-atmosphere analysis based on high-dispersion spectra obtained at Kitt Peak and Cerro Tololo yields T(eff) = 14,400 K, log(g) = 1.4, n(H)/n(He) = 0.003, and n(N)/n(C) = 20 (the corresponding values for upsilon Sgr are T(eff) = 10,000 K, log(g) = 1, n(H)/n(He) = 0.0005, and n(N)/n(C) = 20). The optical emission-line spectrum of LSS 4300 is nearly identical to that of upsilon Sgr, including strong, broad H alpha, FeII and Ca II emission. The ultraviolet spectrum of LSS 4300 was observed with IUE, and can be attributed almost entirely to the visible star. The JHKL photometry of LSS 4300 obtained at Cerro Tololo reveals an infrared excess nearly identical to that of upsilon Sgr. It is suggested that LSS 4300, like upsilon Sgr and KS Per, is a close binary system consisting of a helium supergiant of about one solar mass, and a secondary which is overluminous for its mass due to the accretion of matter from the primary, which is undergoing its second mass exchange
A hydrodynamical study of multiple-shell planetary nebulae. III. Expansion properties and internal kinematics: Theory versus observation
We present the result of a study on the expansion properties and internal
kinematics of round/elliptical planetary nebulae of the Milky Way disk, the
halo, and of the globular cluster M15. The purpose of this study is to
considerably enlarge the small sample of nebulae with precisely determined
expansion properties. To this aim, we selected a representative sample of
objects with different evolutionary stages and metallicities and conducted
high-resolution echelle spectroscopy. In most cases, we succeeded in detecting
the weak signals from the outer nebular shell which are attached to the main
line emission from the bright nebular rim. Next to the measurement of the
motion of the rim gas by decomposition of the main line components into
Gaussians, we were able to measure separately, for most objects for the first
time, the gas velocity immediately behind the leading shock of the shell, i.e.
the post-shock velocity. We more than doubled the number of objects for which
the velocities of both rim and shell are known and confirm that the overall
expansion of planetary nebulae is accelerating with time. There are, however,
differences between the expansion behaviour of the shell and the rim. This
observed distinct velocity evolution of both rim and shell is explained by
radiation-hydrodynamics simulations, at least qualitatively. Because of the
time-dependent boundary conditions, a planetary nebula will never evolve into a
simple self-similar expansion. Also the metal-poor objects behave as theory
predicts: The post-shock velocities are higher and the rim flow velocities are
equal or even lower compared to disk objects at similar evolutionary stage. We
detected, for the first time, in some objects an asymmetric expansion
behaviour: The relative expansions between rim and shell appear to be different
for the receding and approaching parts of the nebular envelope.Comment: 32 pages, 19 Figures; accepted for publication in "Astronomical Notes
/ Astronomische Nachrichten
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