52 research outputs found
ROTSE observations of the young cluster IC 348
CCD observations of stars in the young cluster IC 348 were obtained from 2004
August to 2005 January with a 0.45 m ROTSEIIId robotic reflecting telescope at
the Turkish National Observatory site, Bakirlitepe, Turkey. The timing analysis
of selected stars whose X-Ray counterpart were detected by Chandra X-Ray
Observatory were studied. The time series of stars were searched for rotational
periodicity by using different period search methods. 35 stars were found to be
periodic with periods ranging from 0.74 to 32.3 days. Eighteen of the 35
periodic stars were new detections. Four of the new detections were CTTSs and
the others were WTTSs and G type (or unknown spectral class) stars. In this
study, we confirmed the stability of rotation periods of TTauri stars. The
periods obtained by Cohen et al. and us were different by 1%. We also confirmed
the 3.24 h pulsation period of H254 which is a delta Scuti type star as noted
by Ripepi et al. but the other periods detected by them were not found. We
examined correlation between X-ray luminosity and rotational period of our
sample of TTSs. There is a decline in the rotational period with X-ray
luminosity for late type TTSs.Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomical
Journa
The Recurrent Eclipse of an Unusual Pre--Main-Sequence Star in IC 348
The recurrence of a previously documented eclipse of a solar-like
pre--main-sequence star in the young cluster IC 348 has been observed. The
recurrence interval is 4.7 yr and portions of 4 cycles have now been
seen. The duration of each eclipse is at least 3.5 years, or % of a
cycle, verifying that this is not an eclipse by a stellar companion. The light
curve is generally symmetric and approximately flat-bottomed. Brightness at
maximum and minimum have been rather stable over the years but the light curve
is not perfectly repetitive or smooth and small variations exist at all phases.
We confirm that the star is redder when fainter. Models are discussed and it is
proposed that this could be a system similar to KH 15D in NGC 2264.
Specifically, it may be an eccentric binary in which a portion of the orbit of
one member is currently occulted during some binary phases by a circumbinary
disk. The star deserves sustained observational attention for what it may
reveal about the circumstellar environment of low-mass stars of planet-forming
age.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ (Letters
Young Low-Mass Stars and Brown Dwarfs in IC 348
I present new results from a continuing program to identify and characterize
the low-mass stellar and substellar populations in the young cluster IC 348
(1-10~Myr). Optical spectroscopy has revealed young objects with spectral types
as late as M8.25. The intrinsic J-H and H-K colors of these sources are
dwarf-like, whereas the R-I and I-J colors appear intermediate between the
colors of dwarfs and giants. Furthermore, the spectra from 6500 to 9500 A are
reproduced well with averages of standard dwarf and giant spectra, suggesting
that such averages should be used in the classification of young late-type
sources. An H-R diagram is constructed for the low-mass population in IC 348
(K6-M8). The presumably coeval components of the young quadruple system GG~Tau
(White et al.) and the locus of stars in IC 348 are used as empirical
isochrones to test the theoretical evolutionary models. For the models of
Baraffe et al., an adjustment of the temperature scale to progressively warmer
temperatures at later M types, intermediate between dwarfs and giants, brings
all components of GG~Tau onto the same model isochrone and gives the population
of IC 348 a constant age and age spread as a function of mass. When other
observational constraints are considered, such as the dynamical masses of
GM~Aur, DM~Tau, and GG~Tau~A, the models of Baraffe et al. are the most
consistent with observations of young systems. With compatible temperature
scales, the models of both D'Antona & Mazzitelli and Baraffe et al. suggest
that the hydrogen burning mass limit occurs near M6 at ages of <10 Myr. Thus,
several likely brown dwarfs are discovered in this study of IC 348, with masses
down to ~20-30 M_J.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures, accepted to Ap
The Variability and Rotation of Pre-main Sequence Stars in IC 348: Does Intracluster Environment Influence Stellar Rotation?
A variability study of the young cluster IC 348 at Van Vleck Observatory has
been extended to a total of seven years. Twelve new periodic stars have been
found in the last two years, bringing the total discovered by this program to
40. In addition, we confirm 16 of the periods reported by others and resolve
some discrepancies. The total number of known rotation periods in the cluster,
from all studies has now reached 70. This is sufficient to demonstrate that the
parent population of K5-M2 stars is rotationally indistinguishable from that in
the Orion Nebula Cluster even though their radii are 20% smaller and they would
be expected to spin about twice as fast if angular momentum were conserved. The
median radius and, therefore, inferred age of the IC 348 stars actually closely
matches that of NGC 2264, but the stars spin significantly more slowly. This
suggests that another factor besides mass and age plays a role in establishing
the rotation properties within a cluster and we suggest that it is environment.
If disk locking were to persist for longer times in less harsh environments,
because the disks themselves persist for longer times, it could explain the
generally slower rotation rates observed for stars in this cluster, whose
earliest type star is of class B5. We have also obtained radial velocities, the
first for PMS stars in IC348, and v sin i measurements for 30 cluster stars to
assist in the study of rotation and as an independent check on stellar radii.
Several unusual variable stars are discussed; in some or all cases their
behavior may be linked to occultations by circumstellar material. A strong
correlation exists between the range of photometric variability and the slope
of the spectral energy distribution in the infrared. Nineteen of the 21 stars
with I ranges exceeding 0.4 mag show infrared evidence for circumstellar disks.Comment: Accepted for publication in A
Circumstellar Disks in the IC 348 Cluster
We report the results of the first sensitive L-band (3.4 micron) imaging
survey of the young IC 348 cluster in Perseus. In conjunction with previously
acquired JHK (1.25, 1.65, 2.2 micron) observations, we use L-band data to
obtain a census of the circumstellar disk population to m_K=m_L<=12.0 in the
central 110 square arcmin region of the cluster. An analysis of the JHKL colors
of 107 sources indicates that 65% +/- 8% of the cluster membership possesses
(inner) disks. This fraction is lower than those (86% +/- 8% and 80% +/- 7%)
obtained from similar JHKL surveys of the younger NGC 2024 and Trapezium
clusters, suggesting that the disk fraction in clusters decreases with cluster
age. Sources with circumstellar disks in IC 348 have a median age of 0.9 Myr,
while the diskless sources have a median age of 1.4 Myr, for a cluster distance
of 320 pc. Although the difference in the median ages between the two
populations is only marginally significant, our results suggest that over a
timescale of 2 - 3 Myr, more than a third of the disks in the IC 348 cluster
disappear. Moreover, we find that at a very high confidence level, the disk
fraction is a function of spectral type. All stars earlier than G appear
diskless, while stars with spectral types G and later have a disk fraction
ranging between 50% - 67%, with the latest type stars having the higher disk
fraction. This suggests that the disks around stars with spectral types G and
earlier have evolved more rapidly than those with later spectral types. The
L-band disk fraction for sources with similar ages in both IC 348 and Taurus is
the same, within the errors, suggesting that, at least in clusters with no O
stars, the disk lifetime is independent of environment.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures. Paper to appear in April A
A Multi-Year Photometric Study of IC 348
The extremely young cluster IC 348 has been monitored photometrically over 5
observing seasons from Dec 1998 to March 2003 in Cousins I with a 0.6 m
telescope at Van Vleck Observatory. Twenty-eight periodic variables and 16
irregular variables have been identified. Among the brighter stars, 14 of the
16 known K or M-type WTTS were found to be periodic variables, while all 5 of
the known CTTS were found to be irregular variables. In the full sample, which
includes 150 stars with I mag as faint as 18, we find that 40% of the 63 WTTS
are detected as variables, nearly all of them periodic, while 55% of the 20
CTTS are also detected as variable, with none of them periodic. Our study
suggests that 80-90% of all WTTS in young clusters will be detected as periodic
variables given sufficiently precise and extended monitoring, whereas CTTS will
reveal themselves primarily or solely as irregular variables. This has clear
consequences for PMS rotational studies based on photometric periods. We
examine the stability of the periodic light curves from season to season. All
periodic stars show modulations of their amplitude, mean brightness and light
curve shape on time scales of less than 1 yr, presumably due to changes in spot
configurations and/or physical characteristics. In no case, however, can we
find definitive evidence of a change in period, indicating that differential
rotation is probably much less on WTTS than it is on the Sun. Among the
non-periodic stars, we report the detection of two possible UXors as well as a
pre-main sequence star, HMW 15, which apparently undergoes an eclipse with a
duration exceeding three years
A multilayer service data acquisition and operation system for oceanographic ships and instrumentation networks
A new Data Acquisition and Operation System for Oceanographic ships
and Instrumentation Networks has been developed by the Marine Technology Unit
of the Spanish Research Vessels for their networked remote acquisition platforms.
The new system built over LABVIR project background follows a Service Oriented Architecture
to allow expandable access to acquired data in real time and to archived
data. Several Data layers are implemented to allow data access from the more common
tools and formats used in marine sciences.Peer Reviewe
Herbig Ae/Be Stars in nearby OB associations
We have carried out a study of the early type stars in nearby OB associations
spanning an age range of 3 to 16 Myr, with the aim of determining the
fraction of stars which belong to the Herbig Ae/Be class. We studied the B, A,
and F stars in the nearby ( pc) OB associations Upper Scorpius,
Perseus OB2, Lacerta OB1, and Orion OB1, with membership determined from
Hipparcos data. We obtained spectra for 440 Hipparcos stars in these
associations, from which we determined accurate spectral types, visual
extinctions, effective temperatures, luminosities and masses, using Hipparcos
photometry. Using colors corrected for reddening, we find that the Herbig Ae/Be
stars and the Classical Be stars (CBe) occupy clearly different regions in the
JHK diagram. Thus, we use the location on the JHK diagram, as well as the
presence of emission lines and of strong 12 microns flux relative to the visual
to identify the Herbig Ae/Be stars in the associations. We find that the Herbig
Ae/Be stars constitute a small fraction of the early type stellar population
even in the younger associations. Comparing the data from associations with
different ages and assuming that the near-infrared excess in the Herbig Ae/Be
stars arises from optically thick dusty inner disks, we determined the
evolution of the inner disk frequency with age. We find that the inner disk
frequency in the age range 3 - 10 Myr in intermediate mass stars is lower than
that in the low mass stars (< 1msun). This indicates that the time-scales for
disk evolution are much shorter in the intermediate mass stars, which could be
a consequence of more efficient mechanisms of inner disk dispersal (viscous
evolution, dust growth and settling toward the midplane).Comment: 34 pages, 10 figure
Comparing the observational instability regions for pulsating pre-main sequence and classical Scuti stars
A comparison of the hot and cool boundaries of the classical instability
strip with observations has been an important test for stellar structure and
evolution models of post- and main sequence stars. Over the last few years, the
number of pulsating pre-main sequence (PMS) stars has increased significantly:
36 PMS pulsators and candidates are known as of June 2007. This number allows
to investigate the location of the empirical PMS instability region and to
compare its boundaries to those of the classical (post- and main sequence)
instability strip. Due to the structural differences of PMS and (post-)main
sequence stars, the frequency spacings for nonradial modes will be measurably
different, thus challenging asteroseismology as a diagnostic tool.Comment: accepted by Ap
Neurodegeneration and Epilepsy in a Zebrafish Model of CLN3 Disease (Batten Disease)
The neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses are a group of lysosomal storage disorders that comprise the most common, genetically heterogeneous, fatal neurodegenerative disorders of children. They are characterised by childhood onset, visual failure, epileptic seizures, psychomotor retardation and dementia. CLN3 disease, also known as Batten disease, is caused by autosomal recessive mutations in the CLN3 gene, 80–85% of which are a ~1 kb deletion. Currently no treatments exist, and after much suffering, the disease inevitably results in premature death. The aim of this study was to generate a zebrafish model of CLN3 disease using antisense morpholino injection, and characterise the pathological and functional consequences of Cln3 deficiency, thereby providing a tool for future drug discovery. The model was shown to faithfully recapitulate the pathological signs of CLN3 disease, including reduced survival, neuronal loss, retinopathy, axonopathy, loss of motor function, lysosomal storage of subunit c of mitochondrial ATP synthase, and epileptic seizures, albeit with an earlier onset and faster progression than the human disease. Our study provides proof of principle that the advantages of the zebrafish over other model systems can be utilised to further our understanding of the pathogenesis of CLN3 disease and accelerate drug discovery
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