827 research outputs found
Mass and orbit constraints of the gamma-ray binary LS 5039
We present the results of space-based photometric and ground-based
spectroscopic observing campaigns on the gamma-ray binary LS 5039. The new
orbital and physical parameters of the system are similar to former results,
except we found a lower eccentricity. Our MOST-data show that any broad-band
optical photometric variability at the orbital period is below the 2 mmag
level. Light curve simulations support the lower value of eccentricity and
imply that the mass of the compact object is higher than 1.8 solar masses.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure (with 2 panels); to be published in the
Proceedings: From Interacting Binaries to Exoplanets: Essential Modeling
Tools, IAU Symposium 282 (18-22 July, 2011, Tatranska Lomnica, Slovakia
VLT/FLAMES spectroscopy of red giant branch stars in the Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy
Fornax is one of the most massive dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the Local
Group. The Fornax field star population is dominated by intermediate age stars
but star formation was going on over almost its entire history. It has been
proposed that Fornax experienced a minor merger event. Despite recent progress,
only the high metallicity end of Fornax field stars ([Fe/H]>-1.2 dex) has been
sampled in larger number via high resolution spectroscopy. We want to better
understand the full chemical evolution of this galaxy by better sampling the
whole metallicity range, including more metal poor stars. We use the VLT-FLAMES
multi-fibre spectrograph in high-resolution mode to determine the abundances of
several alpha, iron-peak and neutron-capture elements in a sample of 47
individual Red Giant Branch stars in the Fornax dwarf spheroidal galaxy. We
combine these abundances with accurate age estimates derived from the age
probability distribution from the colour-magnitude diagram of Fornax. Similar
to other dwarf spheroidal galaxies, the old, metal-poor stars of Fornax are
typically alpha-rich while the young metal-rich stars are alpha-poor. In the
classical scenario of the time delay between SNe II and SNe Ia, we confirm that
SNe Ia started to contribute to the chemical enrichment at [Fe/H] between -2.0
and -1.8 dex. We find that the onset of SNe Ia took place between 12-10 Gyrs
ago. The high values of [Ba/Fe], [La/Fe] reflect the influence of SNe Ia and
AGB stars in the abundance pattern of the younger stellar population of Fornax.
Our findings of low [alpha/Fe] and enhanced [Eu/Mg] are compatible with an
initial mass function that lacks the most massive stars and with star formation
that kept going on throughout the whole history of Fornax. We find that massive
stars kept enriching the interstellar medium in alpha-elements, although they
were not the main contributor to the iron enrichment.Comment: Resubmitted to A&A (18/09/2014) after Referee's comment
The X-ray binary 2S0114+650=LSI+65 010:A slow pulsar or tidally-induced pulsations?
The X-ray source 2S0114+650=LSI+65 010 is a binary system containing a B-type
primary and a low mass companion believed to be a neutron star. The system has
three reported periodicities: the orbital period, P{orb}~11.6 d, X-ray flaring
with P{flare}~2.7 hr, and a "superorbital" X-ray periodicity P{super}~30.7 d.
The objective of this paper is to show that the puzzling periodicities in the
system may be explained in the context of scenarios in which tidal interactions
drive oscillations in the B-supergiant star. We calculate the solution of the
equations of motion for one layer of small surface elements distributed along
the equator of the star, as they respond to the forces due to gas pressure,
centrifugal, coriolis, viscous forces, and the gravitational forces of both
stars. This calculation provides variability timescales that can be compared
with the observations. In addition, we use observational data obtained at the
Observatorio Astron\'omico Nacional en San Pedro M\'artir (OAN/SPM) between
1993-2004 to determine which of the periodicities may be present in the optical
region. We suggest that the tidal oscillations lead to a structured stellar
wind which, when fed to the neutron star, produces the X-ray modulations. The
connection between the stellar oscillations and the modulation of the mass
ejection may lie in the shear energy dissipation generated by the tangential
motions that are produced by the tidal interaction, particularly in the tidal
bulge region. The tidal oscillation scenario weakens the case for 2S0114+650
containing a magnetar descendent.Comment: 12 pages, 14 figure
Chemical Composition of Extremely Metal-Poor Stars in the Sextans Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy
Chemical abundances of six extremely metal-poor ([Fe/H]<-2.5) stars in the
Sextans dwarf spheroidal galaxy are determined based on high resolution
spectroscopy (R=40,000) with the Subaru Telescope High Dispersion Spectrograph.
(1) The Fe abundances derived from the high resolution spectra are in good
agreement with the metallicity estimated from the Ca triplet lines in low
resolution spectra. The lack of stars with [Fe/H]=<-3 in Sextans, found by
previous estimates from the Ca triplet, is confirmed by our measurements,
although we note that high resolution spectroscopy for a larger sample of stars
will be necessary to estimate the true fraction of stars with such low
metallicity. (2) While one object shows an overabundance of Mg (similar to
Galactic halo stars), the Mg/Fe ratios of the remaining five stars are similar
to the solar value. This is the first time that low Mg/Fe ratios at such low
metallicities have been found in a dwarf spheroidal galaxy. No evidence for
over-abundances of Ca and Ti are found in these five stars, though the
measurements for these elements are less certain. Possible mechanisms to
produce low Mg/Fe ratios, with respect to that of Galactic halo stars, are
discussed. (3) Ba is under-abundant in four objects, while the remaining two
stars exhibit large and moderate excesses of this element. The abundance
distribution of Ba in this galaxy is similar to that in the Galactic halo,
indicating that the enrichment of heavy elements, probably by the r-process,
started at metallicities [Fe/H] < -2.5, as found in the Galactic halo.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, 6 tables, A&A, in pres
SACY - a Search for Associations Containing Young stars
The scientific goal of the SACY (Search for Associations Containing
Young-stars) was to identify possible associations of stars younger than the
Pleiades Association among optical counterparts of the ROSAT X-ray bright
sources. High-resolution spectra for possible optical counterparts later than
G0 belonging to HIPPARCOS and/or TYCHO-2 catalogs were obtained in order to
assess both the youth and the spatial motion of each target. More than 1000
ROSAT sources were observed, covering a large area in the Southern Hemisphere.
The newly identified young stars present a patchy distribution in UVW and XYZ,
revealing the existence of huge nearby young associations. Here we present the
associations identified in this survey.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of Open Issues in
Local Formation and Early Stellar Evolution, Ouro Preto, Brazi
A New Association of Post-T Tauri Stars Near The Sun
Observing ROSAT sources in 20 x 25 deg centered at the high latitude active
star ER Eri, we found evidences for a new young nearby association (~30Myr
at~60pc), the Horologium Association (HorA), formed by at least 10 probable and
6 possible members, some being Post-T Tauri stars. We examine several
requirements that characterize a young association and they, together, create a
strong evidence for the reality of the HorA. In fact, the Li line intensities
are between those of the oldest classical T Tauri stars and the ones of the
Local Association stars. The space velocities of the HorA relative to the Sun,
U= -9.5+/-1.0, V = -20.9 +/- 1.1, W = -2.1 +/- 1.9, are not far from those of
the Local Association. We suggest that some hotter and non-X-ray active stars,
with similar space velocities, could be massive members of the HorA, among
them, the nearby Be star Achernar. The maximum of the mass distribution
function of the HorA is around 0.8 solar masses. At its distance, the projected
size of the HorA, ~50 pc, would be larger than our surveyed area and many other
members could have been missed. We also observed 3 control regions, two at
northern and southern galactic latitudes and a third one in the known TW Hya
Association (TWA), and the properties and distribution of their young stars
strengthen the reality of the HorA. Contrary to the TWA, the only known
binaries in the HorA are 2 very wide systems. The HorA is much more isolated
from clouds and older than the TWA and could give some clues about the lifetime
of the disks around T Tauri stars. Actually, none of the proposed members is an
IRAS source indicating an advanced stage of the evolution of their accreting
disks. ER Eri itself was found to be a RS CVn-like system.Comment: 25 pages, 5 eps figures, to appear in Astron.
On the Absorption of X-rays in the Interstellar Medium
We present an improved model for the absorption of X-rays in the ISM intended
for use with data from future X-ray missions with larger effective areas and
increased energy resolution such as Chandra and XMM, in the energy range above
100eV. Compared to previous work, our formalism includes recent updates to the
photoionization cross section and revised abundances of the interstellar
medium, as well as a treatment of interstellar grains and the H2molecule. We
review the theoretical and observational motivations behind these updates and
provide a subroutine for the X-ray spectral analysis program XSPEC that
incorporates our model.Comment: ApJ, in press, for associated software see
http://astro.uni-tuebingen.de/nh
Evolution of the polarization of the optical afterglow of the gamma-ray burst GRB 030329
We report 31 polarimetric observations of the afterglow of GRB 030329 with
high signal-to-noise and high sampling frequency. We establish the polarization
light curve, detect sustained polarization at the percent level, and find
significant variability of polarization degree and angle. The data imply that
the afterglow magnetic field has small coherence length and is mostly random,
probably generated by turbulence.Comment: Nature 426 (13. Nov. 2003), 2 figure
A Spectroscopic Study of Mass Outflows in the Interacting Binary RY Scuti
The massive interacting binary RY Scuti is an important representative of an
active mass-transferring system that is changing before our eyes and which may
be an example of the formation of a Wolf-Rayet star through tidal stripping.
Utilizing new and previously published spectra, we present examples of how a
number of illustrative absorption and emission features vary during the binary
orbit. We identify spectral features associated with each component, calculate
a new, double-lined spectroscopic binary orbit, and find masses of 7.1 +/- 1.2
M_sun for the bright supergiant and 30.0 +/- 2.1 M_sun for the hidden massive
companion. Through tomographic reconstruction of the component spectra from the
composite spectra, we confirm the O9.7 Ibpe spectral class of the bright
supergiant and discover a B0.5 I spectrum associated with the hidden massive
companion; however, we suggest that the latter is actually the spectrum of the
photosphere of the accretion torus immediately surrounding the massive
companion. We describe the complex nature of the mass loss flows from the
system in the context of recent hydrodynamical models for beta Lyr, leading us
to conclude RY Scuti has matter leaving the system in two ways: 1) a bipolar
outflow from winds generated by the hidden massive companion, and 2) mass from
the bright O9.7 Ibpe supergiant flowing from the region near the L2 point to
fill out a large, dense circumbinary disk. This circumbinary disk (radius ~ 1
AU) may feed the surrounding double-toroidal nebula (radius ~ 2000 AU).Comment: 41 pages with 7 tables and 11 figures, accepted to Ap
The spectral variations of the O-type runaway supergiant HD 188209
We report spectral time series of the late O-type runaway supergiant HD 188209. Radial velocity variations of photospheric absorption lines with a possible quasi-period of âŒ6.4 d have been detected in high-resolution echelle spectra. Night-to-night variations in the position and strength of the central emission reversal of the Hα profile occurring over ill-defined time-scales have been observed. The fundamental parameters of the star are derived using state-of-the-art plane-parallel and unified non-LTE model atmospheres, the latter including the mass-loss rate. The derived helium abundance is moderately enhanced with respect to solar, and the stellar masses are lower than those predicted by the evolutionary models. The binary nature of this star is not suggested either from Hipparcos photometry or from radial velocity curves
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