896 research outputs found
WR146 - observing the OB-type companion
We present new radio and optical observations of the colliding-wind system
WR146 aimed at understanding the nature of the companion to the Wolf-Rayet star
and the collision of their winds. The radio observations reveal emission from
three components: the WR stellar wind, the non-thermal wind-wind interaction
region and, for the first time, the stellar wind of the OB companion. This
provides the unique possibility of determining the mass-loss rate and terminal
wind velocity ratios of the two winds, independent of distance. Respectively,
these ratios are determined to be 0.20+/-0.06 and 0.56+/-0.17 for the
OB-companion star relative to the WR star. A new optical spectrum indicates
that the system is more luminous than had been believed previously. We deduce
that the ``companion'' cannot be a single, low luminosity O8 star as previously
suggested, but is either a high luminosity O8 star, or possibly an O8+WC binary
system.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures,
ftp://fto.drao.nrc.ca/pub/smd/wr146/accepted.ps.gz To be published in Monthly
Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ
The Ever Changing Circumstellar Nebula Around UW Centauri
We present new images of the reflection nebula surrounding the R Coronae
Borealis Star, UW Cen. This nebula, first detected in 1990, has changed its
appearance significantly. At the estimated distance of UW Cen, this nebula is
approximately 0.6 ly in radius so the nebula cannot have physically altered in
only 8 years. Instead, the morphology of the nebula appears to change as
different parts are illuminated by light from the central star modulated by
shifting thick dust clouds near its surface. These dust clouds form and
dissipate at irregular intervals causing the well-known declines in the R
Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars. In this way, the central star acts like a
lighthouse shining through holes in the dust clouds and lighting up different
portions of the nebula. The existence of this nebula provides clues to the
evolutionary history of RCB stars possibly linking them to the Planetary
Nebulae and the final helium shell flash stars.Comment: To be published in ApJ Letters. 5 pages, 3 figures (2 in color
The effect of dust obscuration in RR Tel on optical and IR long-term photometry and Fe II emission lines
Infrared and optical photometric and spectroscopic observations of the
symbiotic nova RR Tel are used to study the effects and properties of dust in
symbiotic binaries containing a cool Mira component, as well as showing
"obscuration events" of increased absorption, which are typical for such Miras.
A set of photometric observations of the symbiotic nova RR Tel in different
wavelength bands - visual from 1949 to 2002 and near-infrared (JHKL) from 1975
to 2002 - are presented. The variability due to the normal Mira pulsation was
removed from the JHKL data, which were then compared with the AAVSO visual
light curve. The changes of the Fe II emission line fluxes during the 1996-2000
obscuration episode were studied in the optical spectra taken with the
Anglo-Australian telescope.
We discuss the three periods during which the Mira component was heavily
obscured by dust as observed in the different wavelength bands. A change in the
correlations of J with other infrared magnitudes was observed with the colour
becoming redder after JD2446000. Generally, J-K was comparable, while K-L was
larger than typical values for single Miras. A distance estimate of 2.5 kpc,
based on the IR data, is given. A larger flux decrease for the permitted than
for the forbidden Fe II lines, during the obscuration episode studied, has been
found. There is no evidence for other correlations with line properties, in
particular with wavelength, which suggests obscuration due to separate
optically thick clouds in the outer layers.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, 3 table
A Buffer Stocks Model for Stabilizing Price of Staple Food with Considering the Expectation of Non Speculative Wholesaler
This paper is a study of price stabilization in the
staple food distribution system. All stakeholders experience
market risks due to some possibility causes of price volatility.
Many models of price stabilization had been developed by
employing several approaches such as floor-ceiling prices,
buffer funds, export or import taxes, and subsidies. In the
previous researches, the models were expanded to increase the
purchasing price for producer and decrease the selling price
for consumer. Therefore, the policy can influence the losses for
non-speculative wholesaler that is reflected by the descending
of selling quantity and ascending of the stocks. The objective of
this model is not only to keep the expectation of both producer
and consumer, but also to protect non-speculative wholesaler
from the undesirable result of the stabilization policy. A
nonlinear programming model was addressed to determine the
instruments of intervention program. Moreover, the result
shows that the wholesaler behavior affects the intervention
costs.
Index Terms Buffer stocks, Price stabilization, Nonlinear
programming, Wholesaler behavior
K2 Variable Catalogue: Variable Stars and Eclipsing Binaries in K2 Campaigns 1 and 0
We have created a catalogue of variable stars found from a search of the
publicly available K2 mission data from Campaigns 1 and 0. This catalogue
provides the identifiers of 8395 variable stars, including 199 candidate
eclipsing binaries with periods up to 60d and 3871 periodic or quasi-periodic
objects, with periods up to 20d for Campaign 1 and 15d for Campaign 0.
Lightcurves are extracted and detrended from the available data. These are
searched using a combination of algorithmic and human classification, leading
to a classifier for each object as an eclipsing binary, sinusoidal periodic,
quasi periodic, or aperiodic variable. The source of the variability is not
identified, but could arise in the non-eclipsing binary cases from pulsation or
stellar activity. Each object is cross-matched against variable star related
guest observer proposals to the K2 mission, which specifies the variable type
in some cases. The detrended lightcurves are also compared to lightcurves
currently publicly available. The resulting catalogue is made available online
via the MAST archive at https://archive.stsci.edu/prepds/k2varcat/, and gives
the ID, type, period, semi-amplitude and range of the variation seen. We also
make available the detrended lightcurves for each object.Comment: Accepted by A&A. 6 pages, 6 figures. Catalogue and lightcurves are
available online via MAST at https://archive.stsci.edu/prepds/k2varcat
The rapid evolution of the born-again giant Sakuraiâs object
The extraordinarily rapid evolution of the born-again giant Sakuraiâs object following discovery in 1996 has been investigated. The evolution can be traced both in a continued cooling of the stellar surface and dramatic changes in chemical composition on a timescale of a mere few months. The abundance alterations are the results of the mixing and nuclear reactions which have ensued due to the final He-shell flash which occurred during the descent along the white dwarf cooling track. The observed changes in the H and Li abundances can be explained by ingestion and burning of the H-rich envelope and Li-production through the Cameron-Fowler mechanism. The rapidly increasing abundances of the light s-elements (including Sc) are consistent with current s-processing by neutrons released from the concomitantly produced 13C. However, the possibility that the s-elements have previously been synthesized during the AGB-phase and only mixed to the surface in connection with the final He-shell flash in the pre-white dwarf cannot be convincingly ruled out either. Since Sakuraiâs object shows substantial abundance similarities with the R CrB stars and has recently undergone R CrB-like visual fading events, the âbirthâ of an R CrB star may have been witnessed for the first time ever. Sakuraiâs object thus lends strong support for the suggestion that at least some of the R CrB stars have been formed through a final He-shell flash in a post-AGB star
What are the hot R Coronae Borealis stars?
We investigate the evolutionary status of four stars: V348 Sgr, DY Cen, and MV Sgr in the Galaxy and HV 2671 in the LMC. These stars have in common random deep declines in visual brightness, which are characteristic of R Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars. RCB stars are typically cool hydrogen-deficient supergiants. The four stars studied in this paper are hotter (Teff = 15â20 kK) than the majority of RCB stars (Teff = 5000â7000 K). Although these are commonly grouped together as the hot RCB stars they do not necessarily share a common evolutionary history. We present new observational data and an extensive collection of archival and previously published data that is reassessed to ensure internal consistency. We find temporal variations of various properties on different timescales that will eventually help us to uncover the evolutionary history of these objects. DY Cen and MV Sgr have typical RCB helium abundances, which exclude any currently known postâasymptotic giant branch (post-AGB) evolutionary models. Moreover, their carbon and nitrogen abundances present us with further problems for their interpretation. V348 Sgr and HV 2671 are in general agreement with a born-again post-AGB evolution, and their abundances are similar to Wolf-Rayet central stars of planetary nebulae (PNs). The three Galactic stars in the sample have circumstellar nebulae, which produce forbidden line radiation (for HV 2671 we have no information). V348 Sgr and DY Cen have low-density, low-expansion velocity nebulae (resolved in the case of V348 Sgr), while MV Sgr has a higher density, higher expansion velocity nebula. All three stars, on the other hand, have split emission lines, which indicate the presence of an equatorial bulge but not of a Keplerian disk. In addition, the historical light curves for the three Galactic hot RCB stars show evidence for a significant fading in their maximum-light brightnesses of ~1 mag over the last 70 yr. From this we deduce that their effective temperatures increased by a few thousand degrees. If V348 Sgr is a born-again star, as we presume, this means that the star is returning from the born-again AGB phase to the phase of a central star of PN. Spectroscopically, no dramatic change is observed over the last 50 years for V348 Sgr and MV Sgr. However, there is some evidence that the winds of V348 Sgr and DY Cen have increased in strength in the last decade. HV 2671, located in the LMC, has not been analyzed in detail but at 5 Ă
⊠resolution is almost identical to V348 Sgr. Through the bolometric correction derived for V348 Sgr and the known distance, we can estimate the absolute Îœ magnitude of HV 2671 (MÎœ = -3.0 mag) and its bolometric luminosity (~6000 Lâ)
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