1,033 research outputs found
A Volume-limited Sample of 63 M7-M9.5 Dwarfs II. Activity, magnetism, and the fade of the rotation-dominated dynamo
In a volume-limited sample of 63 ultracool dwarfs of spectral type M7-M9.5,
we have obtained high-resolution spectroscopy with UVES at the Very Large
Telescope and HIRES at Keck Observatory. In this second paper, we present
projected rotation velocities, average magnetic field strengths, and
chromospheric emission from the Halpha line. We confirm earlier results that
the mean level of normalized Halpha luminosity decreases with lower
temperature, and we find that the scatter among Halpha luminosities is larger
at lower temperature. We measure average magnetic fields between 0 and 4kG with
no indication for a dependence on temperature between M7 and M9.5. For a given
temperature, Halpha luminosity is related to magnetic field strength,
consistent with results in earlier stars. A few very slowly rotating stars show
very weak magnetic fields and Halpha emission, all stars rotating faster than
our detection limit show magnetic fields of at least a few hundred Gauss. In
contrast to earlier-type stars, we observe magnetic fields weaker than 1kG in
stars rotating faster than ~3km/s, but we find no correlation between rotation
and magnetic flux generation among them. We interpret this as a fundamental
change in the dynamo mechanism; in ultracool dwarfs, magnetic field generation
is predominantly achieved by a turbulent dynamo, while other mechanisms can
operate more efficiently at earlier spectral type.Comment: accepted by Ap
The First Direct Measurements of Magnetic Fields on Very Low-Mass Stars
We present the first direct magnetic field measurements on M dwarfs cooler
than spectral class M4.5. Utilizing a new method based on the effects of a
field on the FeH band near 1 micron, we obtain information on whether the
integrated surface magnetic flux (Bf) is low (well under 1 kilogauss),
intermediate (between 1 and about 2.5 kG), or strong (greater than about 3 kG)
on a set of stars ranging from M2 down to M9. We also measure the rotational
broadening (vsini) and Halpha emission for more than 20 stars. Our goal is to
advance the understanding of how dynamo field production varies with stellar
parameters for very low-mass stars, how the field and emission activity are
related, and whether there is a connection between the rotation and magnetic
flux. We find that fields are produced throughout the M-dwarfs. Among the early
M stars we have too few targets to yield conclusive results. In the mid-M
stars, there is a clear connection between slow rotation and weak fields. In
the late-M stars, rotation is always measureable, and the strongest fields go
with the most rapid rotators. These very cool rapid rotators have the largest
magnetic flux in the whole sample. Halpha emission is found to be a good
general proxy for magnetic fields. The drop-off in fractional emission near the
bottom of the main sequence is not accompanied by a drop-off in magnetic flux,
lending credence to the hypothesis that it is due to atmospheric coupling to
the field rather than changes in the field itself. It is clear that the
methodology we have developed can be further applied to discover more about the
behavior of magnetic dynamos and magnetic activity in cool and fully convective
objects.Comment: 33 pages, accepted by ApJ, abstract abbreviated for astro-p
3D simulations of M star atmosphere velocities and their influence on molecular FeH lines
We present an investigation of the velocity fields in early to late M-type
star hydrodynamic models, and we simulate their influence on FeH molecular line
shapes. The M star model parameters range between log g of 3.0 - 5.0 and Teff
of 2500 K and 4000 K. Our aim is to characterize the Teff- and log g
-dependence of the velocity fields and express them in terms of micro- and
macro-turbulent velocities in the one dimensional sense. We present also a
direct comparison between 3D hydrodynamical velocity fields and 1D turbulent
velocities. The velocity fields strongly affect the line shapes of FeH, and it
is our goal to give a rough estimate for the log g and Teff parameter range in
which 3D spectral synthesis is necessary and where 1D synthesis suffices. In
order to calculate M-star structure models we employ the 3D
radiative-hydrodynamics (RHD) code CO5BOLD. The spectral synthesis on these
models is performed with the line synthesis code LINFOR3D. We describe the 3D
velocity fields in terms of a Gaussian standard deviation and project them onto
the line of sight to include geometrical and limb-darkening effects. The micro-
and macro-turbulent velocities are determined with the "Curve of Growth" method
and convolution with a Gaussian velocity profile, respectively. To characterize
the log g and Teff dependence of FeH lines, the equivalent width, line width,
and line depth are regarded. The velocity fields in M-stars strongly depend on
log g and Teff. They become stronger with decreasing log g and increasing Teff.Comment: 14 pages, 17 figures, 3 tables, accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
High-Resolution Spectroscopy during Eclipse of the Young Substellar Eclipsing Binary 2MASS 0535-0546. II. Secondary Spectrum: No Evidence that Spots Cause the Temperature Reversal
We present high-resolution optical spectra of the young brown-dwarf eclipsing
binary 2M0535-05, obtained during eclipse of the higher-mass (primary) brown
dwarf. Combined with our previous spectrum of the primary alone (Paper I), the
new observations yield the spectrum of the secondary alone. We investigate,
through a differential analysis of the two binary components, whether cool
surface spots are responsible for suppressing the temperature of the primary.
In Paper I, we found a significant discrepancy between the empirical surface
gravity of the primary and that inferred via fine analysis of its spectrum.
Here we find precisely the same discrepancy in surface gravity, both
qualitatively and quantitatively. While this may again be ascribed to either
cool spots or model opacity errors, it implies that cool spots cannot be
responsible for preferentially lowering the temperature of the primary: if they
were, spot effects on the primary spectrum should be preferentially larger, and
they are not. The Teff we infer for the primary and secondary, from the
TiO-epsilon bands alone, show the same reversal, in the same ratio, as is
empirically observed, bolstering the validity of our analysis. In turn, this
implies that if suppression of convection by magnetic fields on the primary is
the fundamental cause of the Teff reversal, then it cannot be a local
suppression yielding spots mainly on the primary (though both components may be
equally spotted), but a global suppression in the interior of the primary. We
briefly discuss current theories of how this might work.Comment: Final ApJ version. Small textual change in summary at the end (Sec
6.2), to include work published after submission of this paper; no changes in
our results or conclusion
Geometry Technology Module (GTM). Volume 1: Engineering description and utilization manual
The geometry technology module (GTM) is described as a system of computerized elements residing in the engineering design integration system library developed for the generation, manipulation, display, computation of mass properties, and data base management of panelled geometry. The GTM is composed of computer programs and associated data for performing configuration analysis on geometric shapes. The program can be operated in batch or demand mode and is designed for interactive use
The engineering design integration (EDIN) system
A digital computer program complex for the evaluation of aerospace vehicle preliminary designs is described. The system consists of a Univac 1100 series computer and peripherals using the Exec 8 operating system, a set of demand access terminals of the alphanumeric and graphics types, and a library of independent computer programs. Modification of the partial run streams, data base maintenance and construction, and control of program sequencing are provided by a data manipulation program called the DLG processor. The executive control of library program execution is performed by the Univac Exec 8 operating system through a user established run stream. A combination of demand and batch operations is employed in the evaluation of preliminary designs. Applications accomplished with the EDIN system are described
Geometry Technology Module (GTM). Volume 2: Programmers' manual
For abstract, see N75-17120
Teff and log g dependence of velocity fields in M-stars
We present an investigation of velocity fields in early to late M-type
hydrodynamic stellar atmosphere models. These velocities will be expressed in
classical terms of micro- and macro-turbulent velocities for usage in 1D
spectral synthesis. The M-star model parameters range between log g of 3.0 -
5.0 and Teff of 2500 K - 4000 K. We characterize the Teff- and log g-dependence
of the hydrodynamical velocity fields in these models with a binning method,
and for the determination of micro-turbulent velocities, the Curve of Growth
method is used. The macro-turbulent velocities are obtained by convolutions
with Gaussian profiles. Velocity fields in M-stars strongly depend on log g and
Teff. Their velocity amplitudes increase with decreasing log g and increasing
Teff. The 3D hydrodynamical and 1D macro-turbulent velocities range from ~100
m/s for cool high gravity models to ~ 800 m/s - 1000 m/s for hot models or
models with low log g. The micro-turbulent velocities range in the order of
~100 m/s for cool models, to ~600 m/s for hot or low log g models. Our M-star
structure models are calculated with the 3D radiative-hydrodynamics (RHD) code
CO5BOLD. The spectral synthesis on these models is performed with the line
synthesis code LINFOR3D.Comment: 8 pages, 6 Figures, Proceeding fot the "Recent directions in
astrophysical quantitative spectroscopy and radiation hydrodynamics"
conferenc
Periodic Radio and H-alpha Emission from the L Dwarf Binary 2MASSW J0746425+200032: Exploring the Magnetic Field Topology and Radius of an L Dwarf
[Abridged] We present an 8.5-hour simultaneous radio, X-ray, UV, and optical
observation of the L dwarf binary 2MASSW J0746+20. We detect strong radio
emission, dominated by short-duration periodic pulses at 4.86 GHz with
P=124.32+/-0.11 min. The stability of the pulse profiles and arrival times
demonstrates that they are due to the rotational modulation of a B~1.7 kG
magnetic field. A quiescent non-variable component is also detected, likely due
to emission from a uniform large-scale field. The H-alpha emission exhibits
identical periodicity, but unlike the radio pulses it varies sinusoidally and
is offset by exactly 1/4 of a phase. The sinusoidal variations require
chromospheric emission from a large-scale field structure, with the radio
pulses likely emanating from the magnetic poles. While both light curves can be
explained by a rotating mis-aligned magnetic field, the 1/4 phase lag rules out
a symmetric dipole topology since it would result in a phase lag of 1/2
(poloidal field) or zero (toroidal field). We therefore conclude that either
(i) the field is dominated by a quadrupole configuration, which can naturally
explain the 1/4 phase lag; or (ii) the H-alpha and/or radio emission regions
are not trivially aligned with the field. Regardless of the field topology, we
use the measured period along with the known rotation velocity (vsini=27 km/s),
and the binary orbital inclination (i=142 deg), to derive a radius for the
primary star of 0.078+/-0.010 R_sun. This is the first measurement of the
radius of an L dwarf, and along with a mass of 0.085+/-0.010 M_sun it provides
a constraint on the mass-radius relation below 0.1 M_sun. We find that the
radius is about 30% smaller than expected from theoretical models, even for an
age of a few Gyr.Comment: Submitted to Ap
Evidence for Magnetic Flux Saturation in Rapidly Rotating M Stars
We present magnetic flux measurements in seven rapidly rotating M dwarfs. Our
sample stars have X-ray and H-alpha emission indicative of saturated emission,
i.e., emission at a high level independent of rotation rate. Our measurements
are made using near-infrared FeH molecular spectra observed with HIRES at Keck.
Because of their large convective overturn times, the rotation velocity of M
stars with small Rossby numbers is relatively slow and does not hamper the
measurement of Zeeman splitting. The Rossby numbers of our sample stars are as
small as 0.01. All our sample stars exhibit magnetic flux of kilo-Gauss
strength. We find that the magnetic flux saturates in the same regime as
saturation of coronal and chromospheric emission, at a critical Rossby number
of around 0.1. The filling factors of both field and emission are near unity by
then. We conclude that the strength of surface magnetic fields remains
independent of rotation rate below that; making the Rossby number yet smaller
by a factor of ten has little effect. These saturated M-star dynamos generate
an integrated magnetic flux of roughly 3 kG, with a scatter of about 1 kG. The
relation between emission and flux also has substantial scatter.Comment: 10 pages, accepted for publication in Ap
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