361 research outputs found
Optically thick clumps: not the solution to the Wolf-Rayet wind momentum problem?
The hot star wind momentum problem η = Mν∞/(L/c)» much greater than 1 is revisited, and it is shown that the conventional belief, that it can be solved by a combination of clumping of the wind and multiple scattering of photons, is not self-consistent for optically thick clumps. Clumping does reduce the mass loss rate M, and hence the momentum supply, required to generate a specified radio emission measure epsilon, while multiple scattering increases the delivery of momentum from a specified stellar luminosity L. However, in the case of thick clumps, when combined the two effects act in opposition rather than in unison since clumping reduces multiple scattering. From basic geometric considerations, it is shown that this reduction in momentum delivery by clumping more than offsets the reduction in momentum required, for a specified ε. Thus the ratio of momentum deliverable to momentum required is maximal for a smooth wind and the momentum problem remains for the thick clump case. In the case of thin clumps, all of the benefit of clumping in reducing η lies in reducing M for a given ε so that extremely small filling factors f ≈ 10-4 are needed. It is also shown that clumping affects the inference of M from radio ε not only by changing the emission measure per unit mass but also by changing the radio optical depth unity radius Rrad, and hence the observed wind volume, at radio wavelengths. In fact, for free-free opacity proportional to αn2, contrary to intuition, Rrad increases with increasing clumpiness
A Far-UV Spectroscopic Analysis of the Central Star of the Planetary Nebula Longmore 1
We have performed a non-LTE spectroscopic analysis using far-UV and UV data
of the central star of the planetary nebula K1-26 (Longmore 1), and found Teff
= 120+/-10 kK, logg = 6.7 +0.3/-0.7, and y = 0.10. The temperature is
significantly hotter than previous results based on optical line analyses,
highlighting the importance of analyzing the spectra of such hot objects at
shorter wavelengths. The spectra show metal lines (from, e.g, carbon, oxygen,
sulfur, and iron). The signatures of most elements can be fit adequately using
solar abundances, confirming the classification of Longmore 1 as a high gravity
O(H) object. Adopting a distance of 800 pc, we derive R = 0.04 Rsun, L = 250
Lsun, and M = 0.6 Msun. This places the object on the white dwarf cooling
sequence of the evolutionary tracks with an age of ~= 65 kyr.Comment: 14 pages, 4 color figures. Accepted for publication in PAS
Evolutionary ecology of pipefish brooding structures:embryo survival and growth do not improve with a pouch
For animals that reproduce in water, many adaptations in life-history traits such as egg size, parental care, and behaviors that relate to embryo oxygenation are still poorly understood. In pipefishes, seahorses and seadragons, males care for the embryos either in some sort of brood pouch, or attached ventrally to the skin on their belly or tail. Typically, egg size is larger in the brood pouch group and it has been suggested that oxygen supplied via the pouch buffers the developing embryos against hypoxia and as such is an adaptation that has facilitated the evolution of larger eggs. Here, using four pipefish species, we tested whether the presence or absence of brood pouch relates to how male behavior, embryo size, and survival are affected by hypoxia, with normoxia as control. Two of our studied species Entelurus aequoreus and Nerophis ophidion (both having small eggs) have simple ventral attachment of eggs onto the male trunk, and the other two, Syngnathus typhle (large eggs) and S. rostellatus (small eggs), have fully enclosed brood pouches on the tail. Under hypoxia, all species showed lower embryo survival, while species with brood pouches suffered greater embryo mortality compared to pouchless species, irrespective of oxygen treatment. Behaviorally, species without pouches spent more time closer to the surface, possibly to improve oxygenation. Overall, we found no significant benefits of brood pouches in terms of embryo survival and size under hypoxia. Instead, our results suggest negative effects of large egg size, despite the protection of brood pouches
Far-UV Spectroscopic Analyses of Four Central Stars of Planetary Nebulae
We analyze the Far-UV/UV spectra of four central stars of planetary nebulae
with strong wind features -- NGC 2371, Abell 78, IC 4776 and NGC 1535, and
derive their photospheric and wind parameters by modeling high-resolution FUSE
(Far-Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer) data in the Far-UV and HST-STIS and
IUE data in the UV with spherical non-LTE line-blanketed model atmospheres.
Abell 78 is a hydrogen-deficient transitional [WR]-PG 1159 object, and we find
NGC 2371 to be in the same stage, both migrating from the constant-luminosity
phase to the white dwarf cooling sequence with Teff ~= 120 kK, Mdot ~= 5x10^-8
Msun/yr. NGC 1535 is a ``hydrogen-rich'' O(H) CSPN, and the exact nature of IC
4776 is ambiguous, although it appears to be helium burning. Both objects lie
on the constant-luminosity branch of post-AGB evolution and have Teff ~= 65 kK,
Mdot ~= 1x10^-8 Msun/yr. Thus, both the H-rich and H-deficient channels of PN
evolution are represented in our sample. We also investigate the effects of
including higher ionization stages of iron (up to FeX) in the model atmosphere
calculations of these hot objects (usually neglected in previous analyses), and
find iron to be a useful diagnostic of the stellar parameters in some cases.
The Far-UV spectra of all four objects show evidence of hot (T ~ 300 K)
molecular hydrogen in their circumstellar environments.Comment: 38 pages, 8 figures (6 color). Accepted for publication in Ap
Discovery of NeVII in the Winds of Hot Evolved Stars
We show that a strong P-Cygni feature seen in the far-UV spectra of some very
hot (Teff >~ 85 kK) central stars of planetary nebulae (CSPN), which has been
previously identified as CIII lambda 977, actually originates from NeVII lambda
973. Using stellar atmospheres models, we reproduce this feature seen in the
spectra of two [WR]-PG 1159 type CSPN, Abell 78 and NGC 2371, and in one PG
1159 CSPN, K 1-16. In the latter case, our analysis suggests an enhanced neon
abundance. Strong neon features in CSPN spectra are important because an
overabundance of this element is indicative of processed material that has been
dredged up to the surface from the inter-shell region in the ``born-again''
scenario, an explanation of hydrogen-deficient CSPN. Our modeling indicates the
NeVII lambda 973 wind feature may be used to discern enhanced neon abundances
for stars showing an unsaturated P-Cygni profile, such as some PG 1159 stars.
We explore the potential of this strong feature as a wind diagnostic in stellar
atmospheres analyses for evolved objects. For the [WR]-PG 1159 objects, the
line is present as a P-Cygni line for Teff >~ 85 kK, and becomes strong for 100
<~ Teff <~ 155 kK when the neon abundance is solar, and can be significantly
strong beyond this range for higher neon abundances. When unsaturated, i.e.,
for very high Teff and/or very low mass-loss rates, it is sensitive to Mdot and
very sensitive to the neon abundance. The NeVII classification is consistent
with recent identification of this line seen in absorption in many PG 1159
spectra.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures (3 color). Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
The structure of Chariklo's rings from stellar occultations
Two narrow and dense rings (called C1R and C2R) were discovered around the
Centaur object (10199) Chariklo during a stellar occultation observed on 2013
June 3. Following this discovery, we planned observations of several
occultations by Chariklo's system in order to better characterize the physical
properties of the ring and main body. Here, we use 12 successful occulations by
Chariklo observed between 2014 and 2016. They provide ring profiles (physical
width, opacity, edge structure) and constraints on the radii and pole position.
Our new observations are currently consistent with the circular ring solution
and pole position, to within the km formal uncertainty for the ring
radii derived by Braga-Ribas et al. The six resolved C1R profiles reveal
significant width variations from to 7.5 km. The width of the fainter
ring C2R is less constrained, and may vary between 0.1 and 1 km. The inner and
outer edges of C1R are consistent with infinitely sharp boundaries, with
typical upper limits of one kilometer for the transition zone between the ring
and empty space. No constraint on the sharpness of C2R's edges is available. A
1 upper limit of m is derived for the equivalent width of
narrow (physical width <4 km) rings up to distances of 12,000 km, counted in
the ring plane
The Rachel Carson Letters and the Making of Silent Spring
Environment, conservation, green, and kindred movements look back to Rachel Carsonâs 1962 book Silent Spring as a milestone. The impact of the book, including on government, industry, and civil society, was immediate and substantial, and has been extensively described; however, the provenance of the book has been less thoroughly examined. Using Carsonâs personal correspondence, this paper reveals that the primary source for Carsonâs book was the extensive evidence and contacts compiled by two biodynamic farmers, Marjorie Spock and Mary T. Richards, of Long Island, New York. Their evidence was compiled for a suite of legal actions (1957-1960) against the U.S. Government and that contested the aerial spraying of dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT). During Rudolf Steinerâs lifetime, Spock and Richards both studied at Steinerâs Goetheanum, the headquarters of Anthroposophy, located in Dornach, Switzerland. Spock and Richards were prominent U.S. anthroposophists, and established a biodynamic farm under the tutelage of the leading biodynamics exponent of the time, Dr. Ehrenfried Pfeiffer. When their property was under threat from a government program of DDT spraying, they brought their case, eventually lost it, in the process spent US$100,000, and compiled the evidence that they then shared with Carson, who used it, and their extensive contacts and the trial transcripts, as the primary input for Silent Spring. Carson attributed to Spock, Richards, and Pfeiffer, no credit whatsoever in her book. As a consequence, the organics movement has not received the recognition, that is its due, as the primary impulse for Silent Spring, and it is, itself, unaware of this provenance
On the nature of the prototype LBV AG Carinae I. Fundamental parameters during visual minimum phases and changes in the bolometric luminosity during the S-Dor cycle
We present a detailed spectroscopic analysis of the luminous blue variable AG
Carinae during the last two visual minimum phases of its S-Dor cycle (1985-1990
and 2000-2003). The analysis reveals an overabundance of He, N, and Na, and a
depletion of H, C, and O, on the surface of AG Car, indicating the presence of
CNO-processed material. Furthermore, the ratio N/O is higher on the stellar
surface than in the nebula. We found that the minimum phases of AG Car are not
equal to each other, since we derived a noticeable difference between the
maximum effective temperature achieved during 1985-1990 (22,800 K) and
2000-2001 (17,000 K). While the wind terminal velocity was 300 km/s in
1985-1990, it was as low as 105 km/s in 2001. The mass-loss rate, however, was
lower from 1985-1990 (1.5 x 10^(-5) Msun/yr) than from 2000-2001 (3.7 x 10^(-5)
Msun/yr). We found that the wind of AG Car is significantly clumped (f=0.10 -
0.25) and that clumps must be formed deep in the wind. We derived a bolometric
luminosity of 1.5 x 10^6 Lsun during both minimum phases which, contrary to the
common assumption, decreases to 1.0 x 10^6 Lsun as the star moves towards
maximum flux in the V band. Assuming that the decrease in the bolometric
luminosity of AG Car is due to the energy used to expand the outer layers of
the star (Lamers 1995), we found that the expanding layers contain roughly 0.6
- 2 Msun. Such an amount of mass is an order of magnitude lower than the
nebular mass around AG Car, but is comparable to the nebular mass found around
lower-luminosity LBVs and to that of the Little Homunculus of Eta Car. If such
a large amount of mass is indeed involved in the S Dor-type variability, we
speculate that such instability could be a failed Giant Eruption, with several
solar masses never becoming unbound from the star.(abridged)Comment: 22 pages, 13 figures, ApJ in press. A high-resolution PDF version is
also available at http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/jgroh/agcar.htm
Surface Operators and Knot Homologies
Topological gauge theories in four dimensions which admit surface operators provide a natural framework for realizing homological knot invariants. Every such theory leads to an action of the braid group on branes on the corresponding moduli space. This action plays a key role in the construction of homological knot invariants. We illustrate the general construction with examples based on surface operators in N=2 and N=4 twisted gauge theories which lead to a categorification of the Alexander polynomial, the equivariant knot signature, and certain analogs of the Casson invariant
Ground-based astrometry calibrated by Gaia DR1: new perspectives in asteroid orbit determination
Context. The Gaia Data Release 1 (GDR1) is a first, important step on the path of evolution of astrometric accuracy towards a much improved situation. Although asteroids are not present in GDR1, this intermediate release already impacts asteroid astrometry.
Aims. Our goal is to investigate how the GDR1 can change the approach to a few typical problems, including the determination of orbits from short-arc astrometry, the exploitation of stellar occultations, and the impact risk assessment.
Methods.We employ optimised asteroid orbit determination tools, and study the resulting orbit accuracy and post-fit residuals. For this goal, we use selected ground-based asteroid astrometry, and occultation events observed in the past. All measurements are calibrated by using GDR1 stars.
Results. We show that, by adopting GDR1, very short measurement arcs can already provide interesting orbital solutions, capable of correctly identifying near-Earth asteroids (NEAs) and providing a much more accurate risk rating. We also demonstrate that occultations, previously used to derive asteroid size and shapes, now reach a new level of accuracy at which they can be fruitfully used to obtain astrometry at the level of accuracy of Gaia star positions
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