79,590 research outputs found
Extracting surface rotation periods of solar-like Kepler targets
We use various method to extract surface rotation periods of Kepler targets
exhibiting solar-like oscillations and compare their results.Comment: Proceedings of the CoRoT3-KASC7 Conference. 2 pages, 1 figur
Investigating magnetic activity of F stars with the it Kepler mission
The dynamo process is believed to drive the magnetic activity of stars like
the Sun that have an outer convection zone. Large spectroscopic surveys showed
that there is a relation between the rotation periods and the cycle periods:
the longer the rotation period is, the longer the magnetic activity cycle
period will be. We present the analysis of F stars observed by Kepler for which
individual p modes have been measure and with surface rotation periods shorter
than 12 days. We defined magnetic indicators and proxies based on photometric
observations to help characterise the activity levels of the stars. With the
Kepler data, we investigate the existence of stars with cycles (regular or
not), stars with a modulation that could be related to magnetic activity, and
stars that seem to show a flat behaviour.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, proceedings of IAU Symposium 302 'Magnetic fields
through stellar evolution', 25-30 August 2013, Biarritz, Franc
Spectroscopy of the post-AGB star HD 101584(IRAS 11385-5517)
From an analysis of the spectrum (4000\AA to 8800\AA) of HD~101584 it is
found that most of the neutral and single ionized metallic lines are in
emission. The forbidden emission lines of [OI] 6300\AA and 6363\AA and [CI]
8727\AA are detected, which indicate the presence of a very low excitation
nebula. The H, FeII 6383\AA, NaI D, D lines and the CaII IR
triplet lines show P-Cygni profiles indicating a mass outflow. The H
line shows many velocity components in the profile. The FeII 6383\AA also has
almost the same line profile as the H line indicating that they are
formed in the same region. From the spectrum synthesis analysis we find the
atmospheric parameters to be T=8500K, log g=1.5,
V=13km~s and [Fe/H]=0.0. From an analysis of the absorption
lines the photospheric abundances of some of the elements are derived. Carbon
and nitrogen are found to be overabundant. From the analysis of Fe emission
lines we derived T=6100K200 for the emission line region.Comment: To appear in A&A, 15 pages, 11 figure
The Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries: Issues, Terminology, Principles, Institutional Foundations, Implementation and Outlook
Ecosystems are complex and dynamic natural units that produce goods and services beyond those of benefit to fisheries. Because fisheries have a direct impact on the ecosystem, which is also impacted by other human activities, they need to be managed in an ecosystem context. The meaning of the terms 'ecosystem management', 'ecosystem based management', 'ecosystem approach to fisheries'(EAF), etc., are still not universally defined and progressively evolving. The justification of EAF is evident in the characteristics of an exploited ecosystem and the impacts resulting from fisheries and other activities. The rich set of international agreements of relevance to EAF contains a large number of principles and conceptual objectives. Both provide a fundamental guidance and a significant challenge for the implementation of EAF. The available international instruments also provide the institutional foundations for EAF. The FAO Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries is particularly important in this respect and contains provisions for practically all aspects of the approach. One major difficulty in defining EAF lies precisely in turning the available concepts and principles into operational objectives from which an EAF management plan would more easily be developed. The paper discusses these together with the types of action needed to achieve them. Experience in EAF implementation is still limited but some issues are already apparent, e.g. in added complexity, insufficient capacity, slow implementation, need for a pragmatic approach, etc. It is argued, in conclusion, that the future of EAF and fisheries depends on the way in which the two fundamental concepts of fisheries management and ecosystem management, and their respective stakeholders, will join efforts or collide
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