5,882 research outputs found
Observations of pre-stellar cores
Our understanding of the physical and chemical structure of pre-stellar
cores, the simplest star-forming sites, has significantly improved since the
last IAU Symposium on Astrochemistry (South Korea, 1999). Research done over
these years has revealed that major molecular species like CO and CS
systematically deplete onto dust grains at the interior of pre-stellar cores,
while species like N2H+ and NH3 survive in the gas phase and can usually be
detected towards the core centers. Such a selective behaviour of molecular
species gives rise to a differentiated (onion-like) chemical composition, and
manifests itself in molecular maps as a dichotomy between centrally peaked and
ring-shaped distributions. From the point of view of star-formation studies,
the identification of molecular inhomogeneities in cores helps to resolve past
discrepancies between observations made using different tracers, and brings the
possibility of self-consistent modelling of the core internal structure. Here I
present recent work on determining the physical and chemical structure of two
pre-stellar cores, L1498 and L1517B, using observations in a large number of
molecules and Monte Carlo radiative transfer analysis. These two cores are
typical examples of the pre-stellar core population, and their chemical
composition is characterized by the presence of large freeze out holes in most
molecular species. In contrast with these chemically processed objects, a new
population of chemically young cores has started to emerge. The characteristics
of its most extreme representative, L1521E, are briefly reviewed.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. To appear in IAU 231 conf. proc.
"Astrochemistry: Recent Successes and Current Challenges," eds. D.C. Lis,
G.A. Blake, and E. Herbs
Profiles of Strong Permitted Lines in Classical T Tauri Stars
We present a spectral analysis of 30 T Tauri stars observed with the Hamilton
echelle spectrograph over more than a decade. One goal is to test
magnetospheric accretion model predictions. Observational evidence previously
published supporting the model, such as emission line asymmetry and a high
frequency of redshifted absorption components, are considered. We also discuss
the relation between different line forming regions and search for good
accretion rate indicators.
In this work we confirm several important points of the models, such as the
correlation between accretion and outflow, broad emission components that are
mostly central or slightly blueshifted and only the occasional presence of
redshifted absorption. We also show, however, that the broad emission
components supposedly formed in the magnetospheric accretion flow only
partially support the models. Unlike the predictions, they are sometimes
redshifted, and are mostly found to be symmetric. The published theoretical
profiles do not have a strong resemblance to our observed ones. We emphasize
the need for accretion models to include a strong turbulent component before
their profiles will match the observations. The effects of rotation, and the
outflow components, will also be needed to complete the picture.Comment: 25 pages including 9 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in
the Astronomical Journa
Methanol in the sky with diamonds
The present of gas phase methanol in dense interstellar molecular clouds was established by radio detection of its rotational emission lines. However, the position, width, and profile of a absorption band near 1470 cm(exp -1) in the IR spectra of many dense molecular clouds strongly suggests that solid methanol is an important component of interstellar ices. In an attempt to better constrain the identification of 1470 cm(exp -1) feature, we began a program to search for other characteristic absorption bands of solid state methanol in the spectra of objects known to produce this band. One such feature is now identified in the spectra of several dense molecular clouds and its position, width, and profile fit well with those of laboratory H2O:CH3OH ices. Thus, the presence of methanol-bearing ices in space is confirmed
Matrix Factorizations, Minimal Models and Massey Products
We present a method to compute the full non-linear deformations of matrix
factorizations for ADE minimal models. This method is based on the calculation
of higher products in the cohomology, called Massey products. The algorithm
yields a polynomial ring whose vanishing relations encode the obstructions of
the deformations of the D-branes characterized by these matrix factorizations.
This coincides with the critical locus of the effective superpotential which
can be computed by integrating these relations. Our results for the effective
superpotential are in agreement with those obtained from solving the A-infinity
relations. We point out a relation to the superpotentials of Kazama-Suzuki
models. We will illustrate our findings by various examples, putting emphasis
on the E_6 minimal model.Comment: 32 pages, v2: typos corrected, v3: additional comments concerning the
bulk-boundary crossing constraint, some small clarifications, typo
Rotation in the Orion Nebula Cluster
Eighteen fields in the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC) have been monitored for one
or more observing seasons from 1990-99 with a 0.6-m telescope at Wesleyan
University. Photometric data were obtained in Cousins I on 25-40 nights per
season. Results from the first 3 years of monitoring were analyzed by Choi &
Herbst (1996; CH). Here we provide an update based on 6 more years of
observation and the extensive optical and IR study of the ONC by Hillenbrand
(1997) and Hillenbrand et al. (1998). Rotation periods are now available for
134 ONC members. Of these, 67 were detected at multiple epochs with identical
periods by us and 15 more were confirmed by Stassun et al. (1999) in their
study of Ori OBIc/d. The bimodal period distribution for the ONC is confirmed,
but we also find a clear dependence of rotation period on mass. This can be
understood as an effect of deuterium burning, which temporarily slows the
contraction and thus spin-up of stars with M <0.25 solar masses and ages of ~1
My. Stars with M <0.25 solar masses have not had time to bridge the gap in the
period distribution at ~4 days. Excess H-K and I-K emission, as well as CaII
infrared triplet equivalent widths (Hillenbrand et al. 1998), show weak but
significant correlations with rotation period among stars with M >0.25 solar
masses. Our results provide new observational support for the importance of
disks in the early rotational evolution of low mass stars. [abridged]Comment: 18 pages of text, 17 figures, and 4 tables; accepted for publication
in The Astronomical Journa
A Variational Approach to the Spinless Relativistic Coulomb Problem
By application of a straightforward variational procedure we derive a simple,
analytic upper bound on the ground-state energy eigenvalue of a
semirelativistic Hamiltonian for (one or two) spinless particles which
experience some Coulomb-type interaction.Comment: 7 pages, HEPHY-PUB 606/9
Periodic Accretion From A Circumbinary Disk In The Young Binary UZ Tau E
Close pre-main-sequence binary stars are expected to clear central holes in their protoplanetary disks, but the extent to which material can flow from the circumbinary disk across the gap onto the individual circumstellar disks has been unclear. In binaries with eccentric orbits, periodic perturbation of the outer disk is predicted to induce mass flow across the gap, resulting in accretion that varies with the binary period. This accretion may manifest itself observationally as periodic changes in luminosity. Here we present a search for such periodic accretion in the pre-main-sequence spectroscopic binary UZ Tau E. We present BVRI photometry spanning 3 years; we find that the brightness of UZ Tau E is clearly periodic, with a best-fit period of 19.16 +/- 0.04 days. This is consistent with the spectroscopic binary period of 19.13 days, refined here from analysis of new and existing radial velocity data. The brightness of UZ Tau E shows significant random variability, but the overall periodic pattern is a broad peak in enhanced brightness, spanning more than half the binary orbital period. The variability of the H alpha line is not as clearly periodic, but given the sparseness of the data, some periodic component is not ruled out. The photometric variations are in good agreement with predictions from simulations of binaries with orbital parameters similar to those of UZ Tau E, suggesting that periodic accretion does occur from circumbinary disks, replenishing the inner circumstellar disks and possibly extending the timescale over which they might form planets
Die Bedienung ländlicher Räume als Aufgabe aller Verkehrsträger: planungsrelevante Fakten
In mehreren Forschungsprojekten wurden 50 Siedlungen in dünn besiedelten Gebieten Nord- und Süddeutschlands untersucht. Die Bedienungsqualität der vorhandenen ÖPNV-Netze wurde bewertet und alle Haushalte wurden schriftlich befragt. Die Rücklaufquoten lagen um 50%. Als Ergebnis zeigte sich, dass der öffentliche Verkehr im dünnbesiedelten ländlichen Raum der Bundesrepublik Deutschland ohne größere Bedeutung ist. Selbst bei drastischen Verbesserungen des öffentlichen Verkehrsangebots nahm hier die Nachfrage nur stark unterproportional zu. Trotzdem ist der öffentliche Verkehr im ländlichen Raum besser als sein Ruf. In der vergleichenden Bewertung des ÖPNV-Angebots urteilte jedoch die betroffene Bevölkerung 2-3 Schulnoten (von 5) schlechter als die Verkehrsexperten. Bei dieser Bewertung konnten ÖPNV- und MIV-Benutzer nicht mehr getrennt werden, da die Zahl der ÖPNV-Benutzer bereits statistisch zu klein war. Der dargestellte Evolutionszyklus zeigt einen Funktionsverlust des Linienbusses als Mobilitätsprodukt von gestern. Allgemeine Messlatte ist heute und hier der Pkw vor der Haustür. Die systematische Unkenntnis des täglichen Linienbusses spricht aber auch für Wahrnehmungsdefizit, das sich durch preiswerte Maßnahmen aus der Welt schaffen lässt. Auch sie gehören gerade hier zur unumgänglichen und umfassenden Neuorganisation des ÖPNV.Several research projects investigated the provision of public transport in 50 communities in sparsely populated areas of North and South Germany. The levels of service were evaluated and all households were surveyed by questionnaire in 1979 and 1980. The response rates were between 48 and 58%. The results showed the very low importance of public transport in sparsely populated areas of the Federal Republic of Germany. Even after dramatic improvements in the provision of line bus service the corresponding rise in demand was much lower. Nevertheless public transport in rural areas is better than its reputation. The local population rated the quality of service significantly lower than transport experts. Because the number of bus passengers was already so low it was not possible for statistical reasons to distinguish between the rating of car users and public transport users. As the evolution cycle explains here the line bus is an mobility product of yesteryear. The most important yardstick today is the car in front of the front door. In addition the daily line bus is hardly noticed. Therefore rural areas require the comprehensive reorganization of their public transport system and low cost measures to improve the awareness of the existence of public transport
Chemical sensitivity to the ratio of the cosmic-ray ionization rates of He and H2 in dense clouds
Aim: To determine whether or not gas-phase chemical models with homogeneous
and time-independent physical conditions explain the many observed molecular
abundances in astrophysical sources, it is crucial to estimate the
uncertainties in the calculated abundances and compare them with the observed
abundances and their uncertainties. Non linear amplification of the error and
bifurcation may limit the applicability of chemical models. Here we study such
effects on dense cloud chemistry. Method: Using a previously studied approach
to uncertainties based on the representation of rate coefficient errors as log
normal distributions, we attempted to apply our approach using as input a
variety of different elemental abundances from those studied previously. In
this approach, all rate coefficients are varied randomly within their log
normal (Gaussian) distribution, and the time-dependent chemistry calculated
anew many times so as to obtain good statistics for the uncertainties in the
calculated abundances. Results: Starting with so-called ``high-metal''
elemental abundances, we found bimodal rather than Gaussian like distributions
for the abundances of many species and traced these strange distributions to an
extreme sensitivity of the system to changes in the ratio of the cosmic ray
ionization rate zeta\_He for He and that for molecular hydrogen zeta\_H2. The
sensitivity can be so extreme as to cause a region of bistability, which was
subsequently found to be more extensive for another choice of elemental
abundances. To the best of our knowledge, the bistable solutions found in this
way are the same as found previously by other authors, but it is best to think
of the ratio zeta\_He/zeta\_H2 as a control parameter perpendicular to the
''standard'' control parameter zeta/n\_H.Comment: Accepted for publicatio
Detection of doubly-deuterated methanol in the solar-type protostar IRAS16293-2422
We report the first detection of doubly-deuterated methanol (CHD2OH), as well
as firm detections of the two singly-deuterated isotopomers of methanol (CH2DOH
and CH3OD), towards the solar-type protostar IRAS16293-2422. From the present
multifrequency observations, we derive the following abundance ratios:
[CHD2OH]/[CH3OH] = 0.2 +/- 0.1, [CH2DOH]/[CH3OH] = 0.9 +/- 0.3, [CH3OD]/[CH3OH]
= 0.04 +/- 0.02. The total abundance of the deuterated forms of methanol is
greater than that of its normal hydrogenated counterpart in the circumstellar
material of IRAS16293-2422, a circumstance not previously encountered.
Formaldehyde, which is thought to be the chemical precursor of methanol,
possesses a much lower fraction of deuterated isotopomers (~ 20%) with respect
to the main isotopic form in IRAS16293-2422. The observed fractionation of
methanol and formaldehyde provides a severe challenge to both gas-phase and
grain-surface models of deuteration. Two examples of the latter model are
roughly in agreement with our observations of CHD2OH and CH2DOH if the
accreting gas has a large (0.2-0.3) atomic D/H ratio. However, no gas-phase
model predicts such a high atomic D/H ratio, and hence some key ingredient
seems to be missing.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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