4,577 research outputs found
On Simulating the Proton-Irradiation of O and HO Ices Using Astrochemical-type Models, with Implications for Bulk Reactivity
Many astrochemical models today explicitly consider the species that comprise
the bulk of interstellar dust grain ice-mantles separately from those in the
top few monolayers. Bombardment of these ices by ionizing radiation - whether
in the form of cosmic rays, stellar winds, or radionuclide emission -
represents an astrochemically viable means of driving a rich chemistry even in
the bulk of the ice-mantle, now supported by a large body of work in laboratory
astrophysics. In this study, using an existing rate equation-based
astrochemical code modified to include a method of considering radiation
chemistry recently developed by us, we attempted to simulate two such studies
in which (a) pure O ice at 5 K and, (b) pure HO ice at 16 K and 77 K,
were bombarded by keV H ions.
Our aims are twofold: (1) to test the capability of our newly developed
method to replicate the results of ice-irradiation experiments, and (2) to
determine in such a well-constrained system how bulk chemistry is best handled
using the same gas-grain codes that are used to model the interstellar medium
(ISM). We find that our modified astrochemical model is able to reproduce both
the abundance of O in the 5 K pure O ice, as well as both the abundance
of HO in the 16 K water ice and the previously noted decrease of
hydrogen peroxide at higher temperatures. However, these results require the
assumption that radicals and other reactive species produced via radiolysis
react quickly and non-diffusively with neighbors in the ice.Comment: ApJ, accepted. 30 pages, 5 figure
Evidence for Differential Rotation on a T Tauri Star
Five years of photometric monitoring of the T Tauri star HBC 338 in NGC 1333
has revealed that it is a periodic variable, but the period has changed
significantly with time. From 2000-2003, a period near 5.6 days was observed,
while in the last two seasons, the dominant period is near 4.6 days. No other T
Tauri star has been seen to change its period by such a large percentage. We
propose a model in which a differentially rotating star is seen nearly
equator-on and a high latitude spot has gradually been replaced by a low
latitude spot. We show that this model provides an excellent fit to the
observed shapes of the light curves at each epoch. The amplitude and sense of
the inferred differential rotation is similar to what is seen on the Sun. This
may be surprising given the likely high degree of magnetic surface activity on
the star relative to the Sun but we note that HBC 338 is clearly an exceptional
T Tauri star.Comment: Acepted for publication in PAS
Results of the ROTOR-program. I. The long-term photometric variability of classical T Tauri stars
We present a unique, homogeneous database of photometric measurements for
Classical T Tauri stars extending up to 20 years. The database contains more
than 21,000 UBVR observations of 72 CTTs. All the data were collected within
the framework of the ROTOR-program at Mount Maidanak Observatory (Uzbekistan)
and together they constitute the longest homogeneous, accurate record of TTS
variability ever assembled. We characterize the long term photometric
variations of 49 CTTs with sufficient data to allow a robust statistical
analysis and propose an empirical classification scheme. Several patterns of
long term photometric variability are identified. The most common pattern,
exhibited by a group of 15 stars which includes T Tau itself, consists of low
level variability (Delta(V)<=0.4mag) with no significant changes occurring from
season to season over many years. A related subgroup of 22 stars exhibits a
similar stable long term variability pattern, though with larger amplitudes (up
to Delta(V)~1.6 mag). Besides these representative groups, we identify three
smaller groups of 3-5 stars each which have distinctive photometric properties.
The long term variability of most CTTs is fairly stable and merely reflects
shorter term variability due to cold and hot surface spots. Only a small
fraction of CTTs undergo significant brightness changes on the long term
(months, years), which probably arise from slowly varying circumstellar
extinction.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures. Astron. Astrophys., in pres
Bipolar jets produced by a spectroscopic binary
We present evidence that the spectroscopically identified bipolar jets of the
pre-main sequence binary KH 15D are a common product of the whole binary
system, rather than being launched from either star individually. They may be
launched from the innermost part of the circumbinary disk (CBD) or may result
from the merging of two outflows driven by the individual stars. This evidence
is based on high-resolution H-alpha and [OI] 6300A line profiles obtained
during eclipse phases of this nearly edge-on system. The occultation of star A
(the only currently visible star) by the disk strongly suppresses the stellar
H-alpha and continuum emission and allows one to study the faint redshifted and
blueshifted emission components of the bipolar jets. The strongest evidence for
jet production by the whole binary system comes from the observed radial
velocity symmetry of the two jet components relative to the systemic velocity
of the binary, in combination with current accretion models from the CBD onto a
binary system.Comment: ApJ Letters, in press [6 pages
Sarma phase in relativistic and non-relativistic systems
We investigate the stability of the Sarma phase in two-component fermion
systems in three spatial dimensions. For this purpose we compare
strongly-correlated systems with either relativistic or non-relativistic
dispersion relation: relativistic quarks and mesons at finite isospin density
and spin-imbalanced ultracold Fermi gases. Using a Functional Renormalization
Group approach, we resolve fluctuation effects onto the corresponding phase
diagrams beyond the mean-field approximation. We find that fluctuations induce
a second order phase transition at zero temperature, and thus a Sarma phase, in
the relativistic setup for large isospin chemical potential. This motivates the
investigation of the cold atoms setup with comparable mean-field phase
structure, where the Sarma phase could then be realized in experiment. However,
for the non-relativistic system we find the stability region of the Sarma phase
to be smaller than the one predicted from mean-field theory. It is limited to
the BEC side of the phase diagram, and the unitary Fermi gas does not support a
Sarma phase at zero temperature. Finally, we propose an ultracold quantum gas
with four fermion species that has a good chance to realize a zero-temperature
Sarma phase.Comment: version published in Phys.Lett.B; 10 pages, 5 figure
Recent Developments in Simulations of Low-mass Star Formation
In star forming regions, we can observe different evolutionary stages of
various objects and phenomena such as molecular clouds, protostellar jets and
outflows, circumstellar disks, and protostars. However, it is difficult to
directly observe the star formation process itself, because it is veiled by the
dense infalling envelope. Numerical simulations can unveil the star formation
process in the collapsing gas cloud. Recently, some studies showed protostar
formation from the prestellar core stage, in which both molecular clouds and
protostars are resolved with sufficient spatial resolution. These simulations
showed fragmentation and binary formation, outflow and jet driving, and
circumstellar disk formation in the collapsing gas clouds. In addition, the
angular momentum transfer and dissipation process of the magnetic field in the
star formation process were investigated. In this paper, I briefly review
recent developments in numerical simulations of low-mass star formation.Comment: Proceedings of the IAU Symposium 270 "Computational Star Formation"
(eds. Alves, Elmegreen, Girart, Trimble
ALFA & 3D: integral field spectroscopy with adaptive optics
One of the most important techniques for astrophysics with adaptive optics is
the ability to do spectroscopy at diffraction limited scales. The extreme
difficulty of positioning a faint target accurately on a very narrow slit can
be avoided by using an integral field unit, which provides the added benefit of
full spatial coverage. During 1998, working with ALFA and the 3D integral field
spectrometer, we demonstrated the validity of this technique by extracting and
distinguishing spectra from binary stars separated by only 0.26". The
combination of ALFA & 3D is also ideally suited to imaging distant galaxies or
the nuclei of nearby ones, as its field of view can be changed between
1.2"x1.2" and 4"x4", depending on the pixel scale chosen. In this contribution
we present new results both on galactic targets, namely young stellar objects,
as well as extra-galactic objects including a Seyfert and a starburst nucleus.Comment: SPIE meeting 4007 on Adaptive Optical Systems Technology, March 200
Global phylogeography and evolution of chelonid fibropapilloma-associated herpesvirus
A global phylogeny for chelonid fibropapilloma-associated herpesvirus (CFPHV), the most likely aetiological agent of fibropapillomatosis (FP) in sea turtles, was inferred, using dated sequences, through Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo analysis and used to estimate the virus evolutionary rate independent of the evolution of the host, and to resolve the phylogenetic positions of new haplotypes from Puerto Rico and the Gulf of Guinea. Four phylogeographical groups were identified: eastern Pacific, western Atlantic/eastern Caribbean, mid-west Pacific and Atlantic. The latter comprises the Gulf of Guinea and Puerto Rico, suggesting recent virus gene flow between these two regions. One virus haplotype from Florida remained elusive, representing either an independent lineage sharing a common ancestor with all other identified virus variants or an Atlantic representative of the lineage giving rise to the eastern Pacific group. The virus evolutionary rate ranged from 1.62x10(-4) to 2.22x10(-4) substitutions per site per year, which is much faster than what is expected for a herpesvirus. The mean time for the most recent common ancestor of the modern virus variants was estimated at 192.90-429.71 years ago, which, although more recent than previous estimates, still supports an interpretation that the global FP pandemic is not the result of a recent acquisition of a virulence mutation(s). The phylogeographical pattern obtained seems partially to reflect sea turtle movements, whereas altered environments appear to be implicated in current FP outbreaks and in the modern evolutionary history of CFPHV.DNER-PR; US NMFS (NMFS-NOAA) [NA08NMF4720436]; US-Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS); Sociedad Chelonia; WIDECAST; US Environmental Protection Agency (US-EPA); Lisbon Oceanarium, Portugal; Interdisciplinary Research Center for Animal Health of the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine of the Technical University of Lisbon (FMV/TUL)info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
- …