532 research outputs found
Dynamical evolution of active detached binaries on log Jo - log M diagram and contact binary formation
Orbital angular momentum (Jo), systemic mass (M) and orbital period (P)
distributions of chromospherically active binaries (CAB) and W Ursae Majoris (W
UMa) systems were investigated. The diagrams of log Jo - log P, log M - log P
and log Jo-log M were formed from 119 CAB and 102 W UMa stars. The log Jo-log M
diagram is found to be most meaningful in demonstrating dynamical evolution of
binary star orbits. A slightly curved borderline (contact border) separating
the detached and the contact systems was discovered on the log Jo - log M
diagram. Since orbital size (a) and period (P) of binaries are determined by
their current Jo, M and mass ratio q, the rates of orbital angular momentum
loss (dlog Jo/dt) and mass loss (dlog M/dt) are primary parameters to determine
the direction and the speed of the dynamical evolution. A detached system
becomes a contact system if its own dynamical evolution enables it to pass the
contact border on the log Jo - log M diagram. Evolution of q for a mass loosing
detached system is unknown unless mass loss rate for each component is known.
Assuming q is constant in the first approximation and using the mean decreasing
rates of Jo and M from the kinematical ages of CAB stars, it has been predicted
that 11, 23 and 39 cent of current CAB stars would transform to W UMa systems
if their nuclear evolution permits them to live 2, 4 and 6 Gyrs respectively.Comment: 28 pages, including 6 figures and 2 tables, accepted for publication
in MNRA
Resolving the pulsations of subdwarf B stars: HS 0039+4302, HS 0444+0458, and an examination of the group properties of resolved pulsators
We continue our program of single-site observations of pulsating subdwarf B
(sdB) stars and present the results of extensive time series photometry of HS
0039+4302 and HS 0444+0458. Both were observed at MDM Observatory during the
fall of 2005. We extend the number of known frequencies for HS 0039+4302 from 4
to 14 and discover one additional frequency for HS 0444+0458, bringing the
total to three. We perform standard tests to search for multiplet structure,
measure amplitude variations, and examine the frequency density to constrain
the mode degree .
Including the two stars in this paper, 23 pulsating sdB stars have received
follow-up observations designed to decipher their pulsation spectra. It is
worth an examination of what has been detected. We compare and contrast the
frequency content in terms of richness and range and the amplitudes with
regards to variability and diversity. We use this information to examine
observational correlations with the proposed pulsation mechanism as
well as alternative theories.Comment: 32 pages, 18 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
A spectroscopy study of nearby late-type stars, possible members of stellar kinematic groups
Nearby late-type stars are excellent targets for seeking young objects in
stellar associations and moving groups. The origin of these structures is still
misunderstood, and lists of moving group members often change with time and
also from author to author. Most members of these groups have been identified
by means of kinematic criteria, leading to an important contamination of
previous lists by old field stars. We attempt to identify unambiguous moving
group members among a sample of nearby-late type stars by studying their
kinematics, lithium abundance, chromospheric activity, and other age-related
properties. High-resolution echelle spectra () of a sample of
nearby late-type stars are used to derive accurate radial velocities that are
combined with the precise Hipparcos parallaxes and proper motions to compute
galactic-spatial velocity components. Stars are classified as possible members
of the classical moving groups according to their kinematics. The spectra are
also used to study several age-related properties for young late-type stars,
i.e., the equivalent width of the lithium Li~{\sc i} \space 6707.8 \space \AA
\space line or the index. Additional information like X-ray
fluxes from the ROSAT All-Sky Survey or the presence of debris discs is also
taken into account. The different age estimators are compared and the moving
group membership of the kinematically selected candidates are discussed. From a
total list of 405 nearby stars, 102 have been classified as moving group
candidates according to their kinematics. i.e., only 25.2 \% of the
sample. The number reduces when age estimates are considered, and only 26
moving group candidates (25.5\% of the 102 candidates) have ages in agreement
with the star having the same age as an MG memberComment: 39 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy \&
Astrophysic
Identification of a nearby stellar association in the Hipparcos catalog: implications for recent, local star formation
The TW Hydrae Association (~55 pc from Earth) is the nearest known region of
recent star formation. Based primarily on the Hipparcos catalog, we have now
identified a group of 9 or 10 co-moving star systems at a common distance (~45
pc) from Earth that appear to comprise another, somewhat older, association
(``the Tucanae Association''). Together with ages and motions recently
determined for some nearby field stars, the existence of the Tucanae and TW
Hydrae Associations suggests that the Sun is now close to a region that was the
site of substantial star formation only 10-40 million years ago. The TW Hydrae
Association represents a final chapter in the local star formation history.Comment: 5 pages incl figs and table
Updated Information on the Local Group
The present note updates the information published in my recent monograph on
\underline{The Galaxies of the Local Group}. Highlights include (1) the
addition of the newly discovered Cetus dwarf spheroidal as a certain member of
the Local Group, (2) an improved distance for SagDIG, which now places this
object very close to the edge of the Local Group zero-velocity surface, (3)
more information on the evolutionary histories of some individual Local Group
members, and (4) improved distance determinations to, and luminosities for, a
number of Local Group members. These data increase the number of certain (or
probable) Local Group members to 36. The spatial distribution of these galaxies
supports Hubble's claim that the Local Group ``is isolated in the general
field.'' Presently available evidence suggests that star formation continued
much longer in many dwarf spheroidals than it did in the main body of the
Galactic halo. It is suggested that ``young'' globular clusters, such as
Ruprecht 106, might have formed in now defunct dwarf spheroidals. Assuming
SagDIG, which is the most remote Local Group galaxy, to lie on, or just inside,
the zero-velocity surface of the Local Group yields a dynamical age \gtrsim
17.9 \pm 2.7 Gyr.Comment: 19 pages, 1 figure, to be published in the April 2000 issue of PAS
Contact Discontinuities in Models of Contact Binaries Undergoing Thermal Relaxation Oscillations
In this paper we pursue the suggestion by Shu, Lubow & Anderson (1979) and
Wang (1995) that contact discontinuity (DSC) may exist in the secondary in the
expansion TRO (thermal relaxation oscillation) state. It is demonstrated that
there is a mass exchange instability in some range of mass ratio for the two
components. We show that the assumption of {\it constant} volume of the
secondary should be relaxed in DSC model. For {\it all} mass ratio the
secondary alway satisfies the condition that no mass flow returns to the
primary through the inner Lagrangian point. The secondary will expand in order
to equilibrate the interaction between the common convective envelope and the
secondary. The contact discontinuity in contact binary undergoing thermal
relaxation does not violate the second law of thermodynamics. The maintaining
condition of contact discontinuity is derived in the time-dependent model. It
is desired to improve the TRO model with the advanced contact discontinuity
layer in future detailed calculations.Comment: 5 pages in emulateapj, 1 figur
Orbital Eccentricity Distribution of Solar-Neighbour Halo Stars
We present theoretical calculations for the differential distribution of
stellar orbital eccentricity for a sample of solar-neighbour halo stars. Two
types of static, spherical gravitational potentials are adopted to define the
eccentricity e for given energy E and angular momentum L, such as an isochrone
potential and a Navarro-Frenk-White potential that can serve as two extreme
ends covering in-between any realistic potential of the Milky Way halo. The
solar-neighbour eccentricity distribution \Delta N(e) is then formulated, based
on a static distribution function of the form f(E,L) in which the velocity
anisotropy parameter \beta monotonically increases in the radial direction away
from the galaxy center, such that beta is below unity (near isotropic velocity
dispersion) in the central region and asymptotically approaches \sim 1
(radially anisotropic velocity dispersion) in the far distant region of the
halo. We find that \Delta N(e) sensitively depends upon the radial profile of
\beta, and this sensitivity is used to constrain such profile in comparison
with some observational properties of \Delta N_{obs}(e) recently reported by
Carollo et al. (2010). Especially, the linear e-distribution and the fraction
of higher-e stars for their sample of solar-neighbour inner-halo stars rule out
a constant profile of \beta, contrary to the opposite claim by Bond et al.
(2010). Our constraint of \beta \lesssim 0.5 at the galaxy center indicates
that the violent relaxation that has acted on the inner halo is effective
within a scale radius of \sim 10 kpc from the galaxy center. We discuss that
our result would help understand the formation and evolution of the Milky Way
halo.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Solar Neighborhood. XXVI. AP Col: The Closest (8.4 pc) Pre-Main-Sequence Star
We present the results of a multi-technique investigation of the M4.5Ve flare
star AP Col, which we discover to be the nearest pre-main-sequence star. These
include astrometric data from the CTIO 0.9m, from which we derive a proper
motion of 342.0+/-0.5 mas yr^-1, a trigonometric parallax of 119.21+/-0.98 mas
(8.39+/-0.07 pc), and photometry and photometric variability at optical
wavelengths. We also provide spectroscopic data, including radial velocity
(22.4+/-0.3 km s^-1), lithium Equivalent Width (EW) (0.28+/-0.02 A), H-alpha EW
(-6.0 to -35 A), {\it vsini} (11+/-1 km s^-1), and gravity indicators from the
Siding Spring 2.3-m WiFeS, Lick 3-m Hamilton echelle, and Keck-I HIRES echelle
spectrographs. The combined observations demonstrate that AP Col is the closer
of only two known systems within 10 pc of the Sun younger than 100 Myr. Given
its space motion and apparent age of 12-50 Myr, AP Col is likely a member of
the recently proposed ~40 Myr old Argus/IC 2391 association.Comment: 31 pages, 11 figure
A new test for the Galactic formation and evolution -- prediction for the orbital eccentricity distribution of the halo stars
We present theoretical calculations for the differential distribution of
stellar orbital eccentricity in a galaxy halo, assuming that the stars
constitute a spherical, collisionless system in dynamical equilibrium with a
dark matter halo. In order to define the eccentricity e of a halo star for
given energy E and angular momentum L, we adopt two types of gravitational
potential, such as an isochrone potential and a Navarro-Frenk-White potential,
that could form two ends covering in-between any realistic potential of dark
matter halo. Based on a distribution function of the form f(E,L) that allows
constant anisotropy in velocity dispersions characterized by a parameter \beta,
we find that the eccentricity distribution is a monotonically increasing
function of e for the case of highly radially anisotropic velocity dispersions
(\beta > 0.6), while showing a hump-like shape for the cases from radial
through tangential velocity anisotropy (\beta < 0.6). We also find that when
the velocity anisotropy agrees with that observed for the Milky Way halo stars
(\beta = 0.5-0.7), a nearly linear eccentricity distribution of N(e) \alpha e
results at e < 0.7, largely independent of the potential adopted. Our
theoretical eccentricity distribution would be a vital tool of examining how
far out in the halo the dynamical equilibrium has been achieved, through
comparison with kinematics of halo stars sampled at greater distances. Given
that large surveys of the SEGUE and Gaia projects would be in progress, we
discuss how our results would serve as a new guide in exploring the formation
and evolution of the Milky Way halo.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figure
Follow-up observations of pulsating subdwarf B stars: Multisite campaigns on PG 1618+563B and PG 0048+091
We present follow-up observations of pulsating subdwarf B (sdB) stars as part
of our efforts to resolve the pulsation spectra for use in asteroseismological
analyses. This paper reports on multisite campaigns of the pulsating sdB stars
PG 1618+563B and PG 0048+091. Data were obtained from observatories placed
around the globe for coverage from all longitudes. For PG 1618+563B, our
five-site campaign uncovered a dichotomy of pulsation states: Early during the
campaign the amplitudes and phases (and perhaps frequencies) were quite
variable while data obtained late in the campaign were able to fully resolve
five stable pulsation frequencies. For PG 0048+091, our five-site campaign
uncovered a plethora of frequencies with short pulsation lifetimes. We find
them to have observed properties consistent with stochastically excited
oscillations, an unexpected result for subdwarf B stars. We discuss our
findings and their impact on subdwarf B asteroseismology.Comment: 50 pages including 17 figures and 10 tables. Accepted for publication
in the Astrophysical Journa
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