11,937 research outputs found
New detections of H2O masers in planetary nebulae and post-AGB stars using the Robledo-70m antenna
Aims: We investigated the possible relationship between the evolutionary
stage of post-AGB stars and planetary nebulae (PNe) and the presence of water
masers in their envelopes.
Methods: We have used NASA's 70-m antenna in Robledo de Chavela (Spain) to
search for the water maser transition at 22235.08 MHz, towards a sample of 105
sources with IRAS colour characteristic of post-AGB stars and PNe at
declination >-32 deg. 83% of the sources in the sample are post-AGB stars, 15%
PNe or PN candidates, while only 2% seem to be HII regions.
Results: We have detected five water masers, of which four are reported for
the first time: two in PNe (IRAS 17443-2949 and IRAS 18061-2505), a ``water
fountain'' in a post-AGB star (IRAS 16552-3050), and one in a source previously
catalogued as a PN, but whose classification is uncertain (IRAS 17580-3111).
Conclusions: The unexpected detections of water masers in two objects among
the small subset of PNe led us to suggest that the PNe harbouring water masers
are a special type of massive, rapidly evolving PNe.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Causality Constraints on Massive Gravity
The de Rham-Gabadadze-Tolley massive gravity admits pp-wave backgrounds on
which linear fluctuations are shown to undergo time advances for all values of
the parameters. The perturbations may propagate in closed time-like curves
unless the parameter space is constrained to a line. These classical phenomena
take place well within the theory's validity regime.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; to appear in PR
An updated catalog of OH-maser-emitting planetary nebulae
Aims. We studied the characteristics of planetary nebulae (PNe) that show
both OH maser and radio continuum emission (hereafter OHPNe). These have been
proposed to be very young PNe, and therefore, they could be key objects for
understanding the formation and evolution of PNe. Methods. We consulted the
literature searching for interferometric observations of radio continuum and OH
masers toward evolved stars, including the information from several surveys. We
also processed radio continuum and OH maser observations toward PNe in the Very
Large Array data archive. The high positional accuracy provided by
interferometric observations allow us to confirm or reject the association
between OH maser and radio continuum emission. Results. We found a total of six
PNe that present both OH maser and radio continuum emissions, as confirmed with
radio interferometric observations. These are bona fide OHPNe. The confirmed
OHPNe present a bipolar morphology in resolved images of their ionized emission
at different wavelengths, suggesting that the OH maser emission in PNe is
related to nonspherical mass-loss phenomena. The OH maser spectra in PNe
present a clear asymmetry, tending to show blueshifted emission with respect to
the systemic velocity. Their infrared colors suggest that most of these objects
are very young PNe. OHPNe do not form a homogeneous group, and seem to
represent a variety of different evolutionary stages. We suggest that OH masers
pumped in the AGB phase may disappear during the post-AGB phase, but reappear
once the source becomes a PN and its radio continuum emission is amplified by
the OH molecules. Therefore, OH maser emission could last significantly longer
than the previously assumed 1000 yr after the end of the AGB phase. This maser
lifetime may be longer in PNe with more massive central stars, which ionize a
larger amount of gas in the envelope.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication by Astronomy
& Astrophysic
Labor supply of married women in Mexico: 1990-2000
In the last couple of decades, and in particular during the last couple of administrations, the Mexican government has implemented various social programs targeted specifically to women, such as PROGRESA/Oportunidades, a child care program, and a gender equality program (PROIGUALDAD). The impact that those programs may have on the work behavior of women largely depends on the form that the female labor supply takes, and in particular, on the labor supply elasticities with respect to own wages, and the husband’s wages. Despite this fact, the literature on female labor supply in Mexico is very scarce. To our knowledge, there is no estimate of the female labor supply elasticities at the national level. This paper fills in this gap in the literature. Using data from the 1990 and 2000 Mexican Census of Population, we estimate a structural model of labor supply through an application of Wooldridge’s (2002) threestep procedure. We …nd that the female labor supply elasticities had a rather sharp decrease between 1990 and 2000, which suggests that women are getting increasingly attached to the labor market. We also find evidence of heterogenous effects for women with young children and women of different cohorts. Even though female are now less responsive to changes in wages, the elasticities that we …nd are still large enough so that social programs aimed at modifying females´ work behavior through incentives might still be very successful.wage inequality, Mexico, labor supply, employment, married women
Scaling law for the heating of solar coronal loops
We report preliminary results from a series of numerical simulations of the
reduced magnetohydrodynamic equations, used to describe the dynamics of
magnetic loops in active regions of the solar corona. A stationary velocity
field is applied at the photospheric boundaries to imitate the driving action
of granule motions.
A turbulent stationary regime is reached, characterized by a broadband power
spectrum and heating rate levels compatible with the
heating requirements of active region loops. A dimensional analysis of the
equations indicates that their solutions are determined by two dimensionless
parameters: the Reynolds number and the ratio between the Alfven time and the
photospheric turnover time. From a series of simulations for different values
of this ratio, we determine how the heating rate scales with the physical
parameters of the problem, which might be useful for an observational test of
this model.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. Astrophysical Journal Letters (in press
Multilingual Lexical Semantic Resources for Ontology Translation
We describe the integration of some multilingual language resources in ontological descriptions, with the purpose of providing ontologies, which are normally using concept labels in just one (natural) language, with multilingual facility in their design and use in the context of Semantic Web applications, supporting both the semantic annotation of textual documents with multilingual ontology labels and ontology extraction from multilingual text sources
Hall-MHD small-scale dynamos
Much of the progress in our understanding of dynamo mechanisms has been made
within the theoretical framework of magnetohydrodynamics (MHD). However, for
sufficiently diffuse media, the Hall effect eventually becomes non-negligible.
We present results from three dimensional simulations of the Hall-MHD equations
subjected to random non-helical forcing. We study the role of the Hall effect
in the dynamo efficiency for different values of the Hall parameter, using a
pseudospectral code to achieve exponentially fast convergence. We also study
energy transfer rates among spatial scales to determine the relative importance
of the various nonlinear effects in the dynamo process and in the energy
cascade. The Hall effect produces a reduction of the direct energy cascade at
scales larger than the Hall scale, and therefore leads to smaller energy
dissipation rates. Finally, we present results stemming from simulations at
large magnetic Prandtl numbers, which is the relevant regime in hot and diffuse
media such a the interstellar medium.Comment: 11 pages and 11 figure
Understanding the spiral structure of the Milky Way using the local kinematic groups
We study the spiral arm influence on the solar neighbourhood stellar
kinematics. As the nature of the Milky Way (MW) spiral arms is not completely
determined, we study two models: the Tight-Winding Approximation (TWA) model,
which represents a local approximation, and a model with self-consistent
material arms named PERLAS. This is a mass distribution with more abrupt
gravitational forces. We perform test particle simulations after tuning the two
models to the observational range for the MW spiral arm properties. We explore
the effects of the arm properties and find that a significant region of the
allowed parameter space favours the appearance of kinematic groups. The
velocity distribution is mostly sensitive to the relative spiral arm phase and
pattern speed. In all cases the arms induce strong kinematic imprints for
pattern speeds around 17 km/s/kpc (close to the 4:1 inner resonance) but no
substructure is induced close to corotation. The groups change significantly if
one moves only ~0.6 kpc in galactocentric radius, but ~2 kpc in azimuth. The
appearance time of each group is different, ranging from 0 to more than 1 Gyr.
Recent spiral arms can produce strong kinematic structures. The stellar
response to the two potential models is significantly different near the Sun,
both in density and kinematics. The PERLAS model triggers more substructure for
a larger range of pattern speed values. The kinematic groups can be used to
reduce the current uncertainty about the MW spiral structure and to test
whether this follows the TWA. However, groups such as the observed ones in the
solar vicinity can be reproduced by different parameter combinations. Data from
velocity distributions at larger distances are needed for a definitive
constraint.Comment: 18 pages, 21 figures, 4 tables; acccepted for publication in MNRA
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