596 research outputs found
Narrow passband imagery of comets
During an emission-line survey of the Milky Way, Comet West was accidently imaged through four different narrow passbands with a wide-field, image-intensified camera. Three passbands recorded very similar head plus tail structure. The fourth passband shows an additional large, diffuse component around the head. It was serendipitous that such was recorded as the filters, being selected for studies of emission nebulae, are not particularly suited for studies of comets. However the imagery, plus subsequent studies, suggests that much can be learned about the structure of comets using narrow passband imagery simultaneously with long slit spectroscopy
A possible technique for cometary studies with high angular and spectral resolution
The echelle spectrographs, designed for and used at the Cassegrain stations of the KPNO and CTIO 4-meter telescopes, are capable of cometary spectroscopy with seeing-limited angular resolution along the slit and with spectral resolving power (lambda/delta lambda) ranging from 10 to the 4th power to 10 to the 5th power. Various gratings, cameras and detectors can be used in combination for specific studies in the 3000A to 10,000A range
The young Of star HD148937 and its associated interstellar bubble: H 2 region
The star HD148937 and nebulosities surrounding the star are found to be closely inter-related. IUE spectroscopy of HD148937 shows the star to be a young Of star with low mass loss. Properties Of the surrounding interstellar bubble and the H II region support the implied youth of HD148937
IUE observations of Seyfert galaxies
The L alpha/H beta ratio and line profiles for several galaxies are presented. The continuous energy distribution of NGC 4151 and MKN 509 are presented from the X-ray region to the infrared
Superbubbles
Individual massive stars with M sub bol -6 have huge stellar winds that create interstellar bubbles. Stars with masses greater than 8 solar mass are considered supernova progenitors. These massive stars are numerous in OB associations where few supernova remnants are detected. Model calculations describing the evolution of an association show: that large, hot cavities are formed by pushing the ambient gas into neutral shells; that the shell radii change with galactocentric radius; that only thirty percent of the interstellar medium is in the form of supercavities; and that a consequence is that only a small fraction of supernovae form supernova remnants
Detection of the compressed primary stellar wind in eta Carinae
A series of three HST/STIS spectroscopic mappings, spaced approximately one
year apart, reveal three partial arcs in [Fe II] and [Ni II] emissions moving
outward from eta Carinae. We identify these arcs with the shell-like
structures, seen in the 3D hydrodynamical simulations, formed by compression of
the primary wind by the secondary wind during periastron passages.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letter
Comment on ``Consistency, amplitudes and probabilities in quantum theory'' by A. Caticha
A carefully written paper by A. Caticha [Phys. Rev. A57, 1572 (1998)] applies
consistency arguments to derive the quantum mechanical rules for compounding
probability amplitudes in much the same way as earlier work by the present
author [J. Math. Phys. 29, 398 (1988) and Int. J. Theor. Phys. 27, 543 (1998)].
These works are examined together to find the minimal assumptions needed to
obtain the most general results
Ultraviolet spectroscopy of the brightest supergiants in M31 and M33
Ultraviolet spectroscopy from the IUE, in combination with groundbased visual and infrared photometry, are to determine the energy distributions of the luminous blue variables, the Hubble-Sandage variables, in M31 and M33. The observed energy distributions, especially in the ultraviolet, show that these stars are suffering interstellar reddening. When corrected for interstellar extinction, the integrated energy distributions yield the total luminosities and black body temperatures of the stars. The resulting bolometric magnitudes and temperatures confirm that these peculiar stars are indeed very luminous, hot stars. They occupy the same regions of the sub B01 vs. log T sub e diagram as do eta Car, P Cyg and S Dor in our galaxy and the LMC. Many of the Hubble-Sandage variables have excess infrared radiation which is attributed to free-free emission from their extended atmospheres. Rough mass loss estimates from the infrared excess yield rates of 0.00001 M sub annual/yr. The ultraviolet spectra of the H-S variables are also compared with similar spectra of eta Car, P Cyg and S For
3D Radiative Transfer in Carinae: Application of the SimpleX Algorithm to 3D SPH Simulations of Binary Colliding Winds
Eta Carinae is an ideal astrophysical laboratory for studying massive binary
interactions and evolution, and stellar wind-wind collisions. Recent
three-dimensional (3D) simulations set the stage for understanding the highly
complex 3D flows in Car. Observations of different broad high- and
low-ionization forbidden emission lines provide an excellent tool to constrain
the orientation of the system, the primary's mass-loss rate, and the ionizing
flux of the hot secondary. In this work we present the first steps towards
generating synthetic observations to compare with available and future HST/STIS
data. We present initial results from full 3D radiative transfer simulations of
the interacting winds in Car. We use the SimpleX algorithm to
post-process the output from 3D SPH simulations and obtain the ionization
fractions of hydrogen and helium assuming three different mass-loss rates for
the primary star. The resultant ionization maps of both species constrain the
regions where the observed forbidden emission lines can form. Including
collisional ionization is necessary to achieve a better description of the
ionization states, especially in the areas shielded from the secondary's
radiation. We find that reducing the primary's mass-loss rate increases the
volume of ionized gas, creating larger areas where the forbidden emission lines
can form. We conclude that post processing 3D SPH data with SimpleX is a viable
tool to create ionization maps for Car.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
[TiII] and [NiII] emission from the strontium filament of eta Carinae
We study the nature of the [TiII] and [NiII] emission from the so-called
strontium filament found in the ejecta of eta Carinae. To this purpose we
employ multilevel models of the TiII and NiII systems which are used to
investigate the physical condition of the filament and the excitation
mechanisms of the observed lines. For the TiII ion, for which no atomic data
was previously available, we carry out ab initio calculations of radiative
transition rates and electron impact excitation rate coefficients. It is found
that the observed spectrum is consistent with the lines being excited in a
mostly neutral region with an electron density of the order of cm
and a temperature around 6000 K. In analyzing three observations with different
slit orientations recorded between March~2000 and November~2001 we find line
ratios that change among various observations, in a way consistent with changes
of up to an order of magnitude in the strength of the continuum radiation
field. These changes result from different samplings of the extended filament,
due to the different slit orientations used for each observation, and yield
clues on the spatial extent and optical depth of the filament. The observed
emission indicates a large Ti/Ni abundance ratio relative to solar abundances.
It is suggested that the observed high Ti/Ni ratio in gas is caused by dust-gas
fractionation processes and does not reflect the absolute Ti/Ni ratio in the
ejecta of \etacar. We study the condensation chemistry of Ti, Ni and Fe within
the filament and suggest that the observed gas phase overabundance of TiComment: 14 paginas, 12 figure
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