79 research outputs found
Ultraviolet spectroscopy of the brightest supergiants in M31 and M33
Ultraviolet spectroscopy from the IUE, in combination with groundbased visual and infrared photometry, are to determine the energy distributions of the luminous blue variables, the Hubble-Sandage variables, in M31 and M33. The observed energy distributions, especially in the ultraviolet, show that these stars are suffering interstellar reddening. When corrected for interstellar extinction, the integrated energy distributions yield the total luminosities and black body temperatures of the stars. The resulting bolometric magnitudes and temperatures confirm that these peculiar stars are indeed very luminous, hot stars. They occupy the same regions of the sub B01 vs. log T sub e diagram as do eta Car, P Cyg and S Dor in our galaxy and the LMC. Many of the Hubble-Sandage variables have excess infrared radiation which is attributed to free-free emission from their extended atmospheres. Rough mass loss estimates from the infrared excess yield rates of 0.00001 M sub annual/yr. The ultraviolet spectra of the H-S variables are also compared with similar spectra of eta Car, P Cyg and S For
Critical slowing down associated with critical transition and risk of collapse in cryptocurrency
The year 2017 saw the rise and fall of the crypto-currency market, followed
by high variability in the price of all crypto-currencies. In this work, we
study the abrupt transition in crypto-currency residuals, which is associated
with the critical transition (the phenomenon of critical slowing down) or the
stochastic transition phenomena. We find that, regardless of the specific
crypto-currency or rolling window size, the autocorrelation always fluctuates
around a high value, while the standard deviation increases monotonically.
Therefore, while the autocorrelation does not display signals of critical
slowing down, the standard deviation can be used to anticipate critical or
stochastic transitions. In particular, we have detected two sudden jumps in the
standard deviation, in the second quarter of 2017 and at the beginning of 2018,
which could have served as early warning signals of two majors price collapses
that have happened in the following periods. We finally propose a mean-field
phenomenological model for the price of crypto-currency to show how the use of
the standard deviation of the residuals is a better leading indicator of the
collapse in price than the time series' autocorrelation. Our findings represent
a first step towards a better diagnostic of the risk of critical transition in
the price and/or volume of crypto-currencies.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
The Young Stellar Population of IC1613. I. A New Catalogue of OB Associations
Context: Determining the parameters of massive stars is crucial to understand
many processes in galaxies and the Universe, since these objects are important
sources of ionization, chemical enrichment and momentum. 10m class telescopes
enable us to perform detailed quantitative spectroscopic analyses of massive
stars in other galaxies, sampling areas of different metallicity. Relating the
stars to their environment is crucial to understand the physical processes
ruling their formation and evolution.
Aims: In preparation for the GTC, our goal is to build a catalogue of massive
star candidates in the metal-poor irregular galaxy IC1613 with high astrometric
accuracy, apt for the current generation of multi-object spectrographs. A
census of OB associations in this galaxy is also needed, to provide important
additional information about age and environment of the candidate OB stars.
Methods: From INT-WFC observations, we have built an astrometric and
photometric catalogue of stars in IC1613. Candidate blue massive stars are
preselected from their colors. A friends-of-friends algorithm is developed to
find their clustering in the galaxy. While a common physical origin for all the
members of the associations cannot be ensured, this is a necessary first step
to place candidate OB stars in a population context.
Results: We have produced a deep catalogue of targets in IC1613 that covers a
large field of view. To achieve high astrometric accuracy a new astrometric
procedure is developed for the INT-WFC data. We have also built a catalogue of
OB associations in IC1613. We have found that they concentrate in the central
regions, specially in the HII bubbles. The study of extinction confirms that it
is patchy, with local values of color-excess above the foreground value.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. 16 pages +
appendix (14 pages); 20 figure
Kinematical and Physical properties of a 700 pc large bubble in NGC 6946
The galaxy NGC 6946 contains a gas-star complex of 700 pc in diameter which
appears populated by tens of young stellar clusters, and a Super Star Cluster
(SSC) as massive as 10 M. The ionized gas, as drawn by the H
emission, delineates an almost circular shape which we show here to be in
expansion. Previous studies have analyzed the stellar component of the complex,
as well as the structure of the atomic and ionized gas; these analyses were
restricted to the blueshifted component along the whole extent of the bubble or
to a smaller inner region where both sides of an expanding bubble were seen. In
this work we present a complete spectroscopic study of this object for two
position angles crossing each other close to the young massive SSC. We have
obtained new data with a spectral resolution six times better than previous
spectroscopic studies, taken under atmospheric conditions better than those
previously reported, allowing us to detect the approaching and receding walls
of one the largest bubbles in external galaxies ever studied in detail.
The kinematical analysis shows a large expanding bubble, whose walls appear
to be highly structured with superposed smaller shells, likely originated as
the result of star forming events occurring at the edges of the larger scale
shell, a la Huygens. We also study some diagnostic diagrams of the ionized gas
and conclude that most of the observed ionization is originated by photons from
hot stars, but with clear evidence that some of the gas is shock ionized.
This peculiar complex is an excellent laboratory for the analysis of the
interaction and feedback between the gas where the stars were formed and the
young and massive generation of new born stars.Comment: 41 pages, 12 figure
Supernova Remnants in the Magellanic Clouds. IV. X-Ray Emission from the Largest SNR in the LMC
We present the first X-ray detection of SNR 0450-70.9 the largest known
supernova remnant (SNR) in the Large Magellanic Cloud. To study the physical
conditions of this SNR, we have obtained XMM-Newton X-ray observations, optical
images and high-dispersion spectra, and radio continuum maps. Optical images of
SNR 0450-70.9 show a large, irregular elliptical shell with bright filaments
along the eastern and western rims and within the shell interior. The interior
filaments have higher [S II]/Halpha ratios and form an apparent inner shell
morphology. The X-ray emission region is smaller than the full extent of the
optical shell, with the brightest X-ray emission found within the small
interior shell and on the western rim of the large shell. The expansion
velocity of the small shell is ~220 km/s, while the large shell is ~120 km/s.
The radio image shows central brightening and a fairly flat radio spectral
index over the SNR. However, no point X-ray or radio source corresponding to a
pulsar is detected and the X-ray emission is predominantly thermal. Therefore,
these phenomena can be most reasonably explained in terms of the advanced age
of the large SNR. Using hydrodynamic models combined with a nonequilibrium
ionization model for thermal X-ray emission, we derived a lower limit on the
SNR age of about 45,000 yr, well into the later stages of SNR evolution.
Despite this, the temperature and density derived from spectral fits to the
X-ray emission indicate that the remnant is still overpressured, and thus that
the development is largely driven by hot gas in the SNR interior.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa
High-resolution radio continuum survey of M33 II. Thermal and nonthermal emission
We determine the variation in the nonthermal radio spectral index in the
nearby spiral galaxy M33 at a linear resolution of 360 pc. We separate the
thermal and nonthermal components of the radio continuum emission without the
assumption of a constant nonthermal spectral index. Using the Spitzer FIR data
at 70 and 160 m and a standard dust model, we deredden the H
emission. The extinction corrected H emission serves as a template for
the thermal free-free radio emission. Subtracting from the observed 3.6 cm and
20 cm emission (Effelsberg and the VLA) this free-free emission, we obtain the
nonthermal maps. A constant electron temperature used to obtain the thermal
radio intensity seems appropriate for M~33 which, unlike the Milky Way, has a
shallow metallicity gradient. For the first time, we derive the distribution of
the nonthermal spectral index across a galaxy, M33. We detect strong nonthermal
emission from the spiral arms and star-forming regions. Wavelet analysis shows
that at 3.6 cm the nonthermal emission is dominated by contributions from
star-forming regions, while it is smoothly distributed at 20 cm. For the whole
galaxy, we obtain thermal fractions of 51% and 18% at 3.6 cm and 20 cm,
respectively. The thermal emission is slightly stronger in the southern than in
the northern half of the galaxy. We find a clear radial gradient of mean
extinction in the galactic plane. The nonthermal spectral index map indicates
that the relativistic electrons suffer energy-loss when diffusing from their
origin in star-forming regions towards interarm regions and the outer parts of
the galaxy. We also conclude that the radio emission is mostly nonthermal at R
5 kpc in M33.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomy and
Astrophysics journa
Optical Spectra of SNR Candidates in NGC 300
We present moderate-resolution (<5A) long-slit optical spectra of 51 nebular
objects in the nearby Sculptor Group galaxy NGC 300 obtained with the 2.3 meter
Advanced Technology Telescope at Siding Spring Observatory, Australia. Adopting
the criterion of [SII]/Ha>=0.4 to confirm supernova remnants (SNRs) from
optical spectra, we find that of 28 objects previously proposed as SNRs from
optical observations, 22 meet this criterion with six showing [SII]/Ha of less
than 0.4. Of 27 objects suggested as SNRs from radio data, four are associated
with the 28 previously proposed SNRs. Of these four, three (included in the 22
above) meet the criterion. In all, 22 of the 51 nebular objects meet the
[SII]/Ha criterion as SNRs while the nature of the remaining 29 objects remains
undetermined by these observations.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics & Space Scienc
Long-term X-ray Variability Study of IC342 from XMM-Newton Observations
We presented the results of an analysis of four XMM-Newton observations of
the starburst galaxy IC342 taken over a four-year span from 2001 to 2005, with
an emphasis on investigating the long-term flux and spectral variability of the
X-ray point sources. We detected a total of 61 X-ray sources within 35'
30' of the galaxy down to a luminosity of (1-2)1037 erg s-1
depending on the local background. We found that 39 of the 61 detected sources
showed long-term variability, in which 26 of them were classified as X-ray
transients. We also found 19 sources exhibiting variations in hardness ratios
or undergoing spectral transitions among observations, and were identified as
spectral variables. In particular, 8 of the identified X-ray transients showed
spectral variability in addition to flux variability. The diverse patterns of
variability observed is indicative of a population of X-ray binaries. We used
X-ray colors, flux and spectral variability, and in some cases the optical or
radio counterparts to classify the detected X-ray sources into several stellar
populations. We identified a total of 11 foreground stars, 1 supersoft sources
(SSS), 3 quasisoft sources (QSS), and 2 supernova remnants (SNR). The
identified SSS/QSS are located near or on the spiral arms, associate with young
stellar populations; the 2 SNR are very close to the starburst nucleus where
current star formation activities are dominated. We also discovered a spectral
change in the nuclear source of IC342 for the first time by a series of X-ray
spectrum analysis.Comment: 45 pages, 6 figures accepted by Ap
- …