14,925 research outputs found
The origin of the radio emission from beta Lyrae
In this paper we present new observational evidence that supports the
presence of an extra source of continuum emission in the binary system beta
Lyrae. New VLA and IRAM observations, together with published data from the
literature and ISO archive data, allow us to build the Spectral Energy
Distribution of the binary between 5x10^9 Hz and 5x10^15Hz. The
radio-millimeter part of the spectrum is consistent with free-free emission
from a symbiotic-like wind associated with the primary component and ionized by
the radiation field of the hidden companion. Furthermore, we also consider the
possibility that the observed radio flux originates from collimated radio
structures associated with the mass gaining component and its disk (Conical
thermal jets). An extrapolation of this emission to the far-IR part of the
spectrum indicates that in both cases the free-free contribution at these
frequencies cannot explain the observations and that the observed infrared
excess flux is due principally to the secondary component and its associated
disk.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, A&A in pres
Variability of the HeI5876 A line in early type chemically peculiar stars
Chemically peculiar stars present spectral and photometric variability with a
single period. In the oblique rotator model, the non homogeneous distribution
of elements on the stellar surface is at the origin of the observed variations.
As to helium weak stars, it has been suggested that photometric and helium line
equivalent width variations are out of phase. To understand the behaviour of
helium in CP stars, we have obtained time resolved spectra of the HeI5876 A
line for a sample of 16 chemically peculiar stars in the spectral range B3 --
A1 and belonging to different sub-groups. The HeI5876 A line is too weak to be
measured in the spectra of the stars HD 24155, HD 41269, and HD 220825. No
variation of the equivalent width of the selected He line has been revealed in
the stars HD 22920, HD 24587, HD 36589, HD 49606, and HD 209515. The equivalent
width variation of the HeI5876 A line is in phase with the photometric
variability for the stars HD 43819, HD 171247 and HD 176582. On the contrary it
is out of phase for the stars HD 28843, HD 182255 and HD 223640. No clear
relation has been found for the stars HD 26571 and HD 177003.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures. 1998, A&AS in pres
Answer Set Planning Under Action Costs
Recently, planning based on answer set programming has been proposed as an
approach towards realizing declarative planning systems. In this paper, we
present the language Kc, which extends the declarative planning language K by
action costs. Kc provides the notion of admissible and optimal plans, which are
plans whose overall action costs are within a given limit resp. minimum over
all plans (i.e., cheapest plans). As we demonstrate, this novel language allows
for expressing some nontrivial planning tasks in a declarative way.
Furthermore, it can be utilized for representing planning problems under other
optimality criteria, such as computing ``shortest'' plans (with the least
number of steps), and refinement combinations of cheapest and fastest plans. We
study complexity aspects of the language Kc and provide a transformation to
logic programs, such that planning problems are solved via answer set
programming. Furthermore, we report experimental results on selected problems.
Our experience is encouraging that answer set planning may be a valuable
approach to expressive planning systems in which intricate planning problems
can be naturally specified and solved
Laboratory investigation of visible shuttle glow mechanisms
Laboratory experiments designed to uncover mechanistic information about the spectral and spatial characteristics of shuttle glow were conducted. The luminescence was created when a pulse of O atoms traveling at orbital velocities was directed toward NO molecules previously adsorbed to aluminum, nickel, and Z306 Chemglaz (a common baffle black) coated surfaces held at various temperatures. Spectral and spatial measurements were made using a CCD imaging spectrometer. Corroborative spectral information was recorded in separate measurements using a scanning monochromator and gated photomultiplier arrangement. The e-folding distance at several temperatures was calculated from images of the surface glow using the photometrics image processing capability of the imaging spectrometer. The e-folding distance was not altered as a function of incoming O beam velocity. The results are presented and the observations provide direct evidence that the visible shuttle glow results from recombination of oxygen atoms and surface bound NO
A three-dimensional model for the radio emission of magnetic chemically peculiar stars
In this paper we present a three-dimensional numerical model for the radio
emission of Magnetic Chemically Peculiar stars, on the hypothesis that
energetic electrons emit by the gyrosynchrotron mechanism. For this class of
radio stars, characterized by a mainly dipolar magnetic field whose axis is
tilted with respect to the rotational axis, the geometry of the magnetosphere
and its deformation due to the stellar rotation are determined. The radio
emitting region is determined by the physical conditions of the magnetosphere
and of the stellar wind. Free-free absorption by the thermal plasma trapped in
the inner magnetosphere is also considered. Several free parameters are
involved in the model, such as the size of the emitting region, the energy
spectrum and the number density of the emitting electrons, and the
characteristics of the plasma in the inner magnetosphere. By solving the
equation of radiative transfer, along a path parallel to the line of sight, the
radio brightness distribution and the total flux density as a function of
stellar rotation are computed. As the model is applied to simulate the observed
5 GHz lightcurves of HD37479 and HD37017, several possible magnetosphere
configurations are found. After simulations at other frequencies, in spite of
the large number of parameters involved in the modeling, two solutions in the
case of HD37479 and only one solution in the case of HD37017 match the observed
spectral indices. The results of our simulations agree with the magnetically
confined wind-shock model in a rotating magnetosphere. The X-ray emission from
the inner magnetosphere is also computed, and found to be consistent with the
observations.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, A&A in pres
Na-O anticorrelation and HB. IX. Kinematics of the program clusters. A link between systemic rotation and HB morphology?
We use accurate radial velocities for 1981 member stars in 20 Galactic
globular clusters, collected within our large survey aimed at the analysis of
the Na-O anti-correlation, to study the internal kinematics of the clusters. We
performed the first systematic exploration of the possible connections between
cluster kinematics and the multiple populations phenomenon in GCs. We did not
find any significant correlation between Na abundance and either velocity
dispersion or systemic rotation. We searched for systemic rotation in the eight
clusters of our sample that lack such analysis from previous works in the
literature (NGC2808, NGC5904, NGC6171, NGC6254, NGC6397, NGC6388, NGC6441, and
NGC6838). These clusters are found to span a large range of rotational
amplitudes, from ~0.0 km/s (NGC6397) to ~13.0 km/s (NGC6441). We found a
significant correlation between the ratio of rotational velocity to central
velocity dispersion (V_{rot}/sigma_0) and the Horizontal Branch Morphology
parameter (B-R)/(B+R+V). V_{rot}/sigma_0 is found to correlate also with
metallicity, possibly hinting to a significant role of dissipation in the
process of formation of globular clusters. V_{rot} is found to correlate well
with (B-R)/(B+R+V), M_V, sigma_0 and [Fe/H]. All these correlations strongly
suggest that systemic rotation may be intimately linked with the processes that
led to the formation of globular clusters and the stellar populations they
host.Comment: Accepted for publication on Astronomy & Astrophysics. Pdflatex, 16
pages, 16 pdf figures. The position angles of the rotation axes have been
corrected, since the values reported in the previous version were erroneous.
The results of the analysis are unchanged. The manuscript has also been
processed by a language edito
The radio lighthouse CU Virginis: the spindown of a single main sequence star
The fast rotating star CU Virginis is a magnetic chemically peculiar star
with an oblique dipolar magnetic field. The continuum radio emission has been
interpreted as gyrosyncrotron emission arising from a thin magnetospheric
layer. Previous radio observations at 1.4 GHz showed that a 100% circular
polarized and highly directive emission component overlaps to the continuum
emission two times per rotation, when the magnetic axis lies in the plane of
the sky. This sort of radio lighthouse has been proposed to be due to cyclotron
maser emission generated above the magnetic pole and propagating
perpendicularly to the magnetic axis. Observations carried out with the
Australia Telescope Compact Array at 1.4 and 2.5 GHz one year after this
discovery show that this radio emission is still present, meaning that the
phenomenon responsible for this process is steady on a timescale of years. The
emitted radiation spans at least 1 GHz, being observed from 1.4 to 2.5 GHz. On
the light of recent results on the physics of the magnetosphere of this star,
the possibility of plasma radiation is ruled out. The characteristics of this
radio lighthouse provides us a good marker of the rotation period, since the
peaks are visible at particular rotational phases. After one year, they show a
delay of about 15 minutes. This is interpreted as a new abrupt spinning down of
the star. Among several possibilities, a quick emptying of the equatorial
magnetic belt after reaching the maximum density can account for the magnitude
of the breaking. The study of the coherent emission in stars like CU Vir, as
well as in pre main sequence stars, can give important insight into the angular
momentum evolution in young stars. This is a promising field of investigation
that high sensitivity radio interferometers such as SKA can exploit.Comment: Accepted to MNRAS, 8 pages, 7 figures, updated versio
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