1,014 research outputs found
Hydrogen Stark broadened Brackett lines
Stark broadened lines of the hydrogen Brackett series are computed for the
conditions of stellar atmospheres and circumstellar envelopes. The computation
is performed within the Model Microfield Method, which includes the ion dynamic
effects and makes the bridge between the impact limit at low density and the
static limit at high density and in the line wings. The computation gives the
area normalized line shape, from the line core up to the static line wings.Comment: 13 pages - 7 figures, to be published in International Journal of
Spectroscopy (IJS
Modeling T Tauri Winds from He I 10830 Profiles
The high opacity of He I 10830 makes it an exceptionally sensitive probe of
the inner wind geometry of accreting T Tauri stars. In this line blueshifted
absorption below the continuum results from simple scattering of stellar
photons, a situation which is readily modeled without definite knowledge of the
physical conditions and recourse to multi-level radiative transfer. We present
theoretical line profiles for scattering in two possible wind geometries, a
disk wind and a wind emerging radially from the star, and compare them to
observed He I 10830 profiles from a survey of classical T Tauri stars. The
comparison indicates that subcontinuum blueshifted absorption is characteristic
of disk winds in ~30% of the stars and of stellar winds in ~40%. We further
conclude that for many stars the emission profile of helium likely arises in
stellar winds, increasing the fraction of accreting stars inferred to have
accretion-powered stellar winds to ~60%. Stars with the highest disk accretion
rates are more likely to have stellar wind than disk wind signatures and less
likely to have redshifted absorption from magnetospheric funnel flows. This
suggests the possibility that when accretion rates are high, disks can extend
closer to the star, magnetospheric accretion zones can be reduced in size and
conditions arise that favor radially outflowing stellar winds.Comment: 41 pages, 11 figures. Accepted by Astrophysical Journa
Cervicoscapulalgies professionnelles
Les cervicoscapulalgies peuvent être reconnues comme maladies professionnelles "hors tableaux de la sécurité sociale" dans de nombreuses professions où le rachis cervical est exposé. En outre, ces pathologies sont souvent associées à des affections de l\u27épaule - officiellement reconnues parmi les troubles musculo-squelettiques (TMS)
Proper motions and velocity asymmetries in the RW Aur jet
We present adaptive optics spectro-imaging observations of the RW Aur jet in
optical forbidden lines, at an angular resolution of 0.4 arcsec. Comparison
with HST data taken 2 years later shows that proper motions in the blueshifted
and redshifted lobes are in the same ratio as their radial velocities, a direct
proof that the velocity asymmetry in this jet is real and not an emissivity
effect. The inferred jet inclination to the line of sight is i = 46 +/- 3
degrees. The inner knot spacing appears best explained by time variability with
at least two modes: one irregular and asymmetric (possibly random) on
timescales of <3-10 yr, and another more regular with ~ 20 yr period. We also
report indirect evidence for correlated velocity and excitation gradients in
the redshifted lobe, possibly related to the blue/red velocity and brightness
asymmetry in this system.Comment: 4 pags, 3 figure
Laser Guide Star Adaptive Optics Integral Field Spectroscopy of a Tightly Collimated Bipolar Jet from the Herbig Ae star LkHa 233
We have used the integral field spectrograph OSIRIS and laser guide star
adaptive optics at Keck Observatory to obtain high angular resolution (0.06"),
moderate spectral resolution (R ~ 3800) images of the bipolar jet from the
Herbig Ae star LkHa 233, seen in near-IR [Fe II] emission at 1.600 & 1.644
microns. This jet is narrow and tightly collimated, with an opening angle of
only 9 degrees, and has an average radial velocity of ~ 100 km/s. The jet and
counterjet are asymmetric, with the red-shifted jet much clumpier than its
counterpart at the angular resolution of our observations. The observed
properties are in general similar to jets seen around T Tauri stars, though it
has a relatively large mass flux of (1.2e-7 +- 0.3e-7) M_sun/year, near the
high end of the observed mass flux range around T Tauri stars. We also
spatially resolve an inclined circumstellar disk around LkHa 233, which
obscures the star from direct view. By comparison with numerical radiative
transfer disk models, we estimate the disk midplane to be inclined i = 65 +- 5
degrees relative to the plane of the sky. Since the star is seen only in
scattered light at near-infrared wavelengths, we detect only a small fraction
of its intrinsic flux. Because previous estimates of its stellar properties did
not account for this, either LkHa 233 must be located closer than the
previously believed, or its true luminosity must be greater than previously
supposed, consistent with its being a ~4 M_sun star near the stellar birthline.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Ap
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