9,910 research outputs found
Follow-up Observations of the Second and Third Known Pulsating Hot DQ White Dwarfs
We present follow-up time-series photometric observations that confirm and
extend the results of the significant discovery made by Barlow et al.(2008)
that the Hot DQ white dwarfs SDSS J220029.08-074121.5 and SDSS
J234843.30-094245.3 are luminosity variable. These are the second and third
known members of a new class of pulsating white dwarfs, after the prototype
SDSS J142625.71+575218.3 (Montgomery et al. 2008). We find that the light curve
of SDSS J220029.08-074121.5 is dominated by an oscillation at 654.397+-0.056 s,
and that the light pulse folded on that period is highly nonlinear due to the
presence of the first and second harmonic of the main pulsation. We also
present evidence for the possible detection of two additional pulsation modes
with low amplitudes and periods of 577.576+-0.226 s and 254.732+-0.048 s in
that star. Likewise, we find that the light curve of SDSS J234843.30-094245.3
is dominated by a pulsation with a period of 1044.168+-0.012 s, but with no
sign of harmonic components. A new oscillation, with a low amplitude and a
period of 416.919+-0.004 s, is also probably detected in that second star. We
argue, on the basis of the very different folded pulse shapes, that SDSS
J220029.08-074121.5 is likely magnetic, while SDSS J234843.30-094245.3 is
probably not.Comment: 12 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
End Mass Effects on the Frequency Response of Cantilevers: Analytical Results
International audienc
Follow-up Studies of the Pulsating Magnetic White Dwarf SDSS J142625.71+575218.3
We present a follow-up analysis of the unique magnetic luminosity-variable
carbon-atmosphere white dwarf SDSS J142625.71+575218.3. This includes the
results of some 106.4 h of integrated light photometry which have revealed,
among other things, the presence of a new periodicity at 319.720 s which is not
harmonically related to the dominant oscillation (417.707 s) previously known
in that star. Using our photometry and available spectroscopy, we consider the
suggestion made by Montgomery et al. (2008) that the luminosity variations in
SDSS J142625.71+575218.3 may not be caused by pulsational instabilities, but
rather by photometric activity in a carbon-transferring analog of AM CVn. This
includes a detailed search for possible radial velocity variations due to rapid
orbital motion on the basis of MMT spectroscopy. At the end of the exercise, we
unequivocally rule out the interacting binary hypothesis and conclude instead
that, indeed, the luminosity variations are caused by g-mode pulsations as in
other pulsating white dwarfs. This is in line with the preferred possibility
put forward by Montgomery et al. (2008).Comment: 11 pages in emulateApJ, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Causes and biophysical consequences of cellulose production by Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25 at the air-liquid interface
Cellulose over-producing wrinkly spreader mutants of Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25 have been the focus of much investigation, but conditions promoting the production of cellulose in ancestral SBW25, its effects and consequences have escaped in-depth investigation through lack of in vitro phenotype. Here, using a custom built device, we reveal that in static broth microcosms ancestral SBW25 encounters environmental signals at the air-liquid interface that activate, via three diguanylate cyclase-encoding pathways (Wsp, Aws and Mws), production of cellulose. Secretion of the polymer at the meniscus leads to modification of the environment and growth of numerous micro-colonies that extend from the surface. Accumulation of cellulose and associated microbial growth leads to Rayleigh-Taylor instability resulting in bioconvection and rapid transport of water-soluble products over tens of millimetres. Drawing upon data we build a mathematical model that recapitulates experimental results and captures the interactions between biological, chemical and physical processes.IMPORTANCE This work reveals a hitherto unrecognized behaviour that manifests at the air-liquid interface, which depends on production of cellulose, and hints to undiscovered dimensions to bacterial life at surfaces. Additionally, the study links activation of known diguanylate cyclase-encoding pathways to cellulose expression and to signals encountered at the meniscus. Further significance stems from recognition of the consequences of fluid instabilities arising from surface production of cellulose for transport of water-soluble products over large distances
A New Generation of Cool White Dwarf Atmosphere Models Using Ab Initio Calculations
Due to their high photospheric density, cool helium-rich white dwarfs
(particularly DZ, DQpec and ultracool) are often poorly described by current
atmosphere models. As part of our ongoing efforts to design atmosphere models
suitable for all cool white dwarfs, we investigate how the ionization ratio of
heavy elements and the H-He collision-induced absorption (CIA) spectrum are
altered under fluid-like densities. For the conditions encountered at the
photosphere of cool helium-rich white dwarfs, our ab initio calculations show
that the ionization of most metals is inhibited and that the H-He CIA
spectrum is significantly distorted for densities higher than 0.1 g/cm.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, submitted for publication in the proceedings of
the 20th European Workshop on White Dwarf
Pressure Distortion of the H-He Collision-Induced Absorption at the Photosphere of Cool White Dwarf Stars
Collision-induced absorption (CIA) from molecular hydrogen is a dominant
opacity source in the atmosphere of cool white dwarfs. It results in a
significant flux depletion in the near-IR and IR parts of their spectra.
Because of the extreme conditions of helium-rich atmospheres (where the density
can be as high as a few g/cm), this opacity source is expected to undergo
strong pressure distortion and the currently used opacities have not been
validated at such extreme conditions. To check the distortion of the CIA
opacity we applied state-of-the-art ab initio methods of computational quantum
chemistry to simulate the CIA opacity at high densities. The results show that
the CIA profiles are significantly distorted above densities of in a way that is not captured by the existing models. The
roto-translational band is enhanced and shifted to higher frequencies as an
effect of the decrease of the interatomic separation of the H molecule. The
vibrational band is blueward shifted and split into and branches,
separated by a pronounced interference dip. Its intensity is also substantially
reduced. The distortions result in a shift of the maximum of the absorption
from to , which could potentially explain the
spectra of some very cool, helium-rich white dwarfs.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
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