436 research outputs found

    The outbursts and environments of novae

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    Classical and Recurrent novae (CNe/RNe) are interacting close binary systems in which mass is transferred from a donor star to the surface of an accreting compact companion resulting in an outburst. Their study is important for our understanding of several branches of modern day astrophysics. The work presented in this thesis has focused on three particular topics: (i) Nova V458 Vulpeculae and its surrounding planetary nebula; (ii) Detailed nova light curves from the Solar Mass Ejection Imager (SMEI); and (iii) Vl721 Aquilae, an usually fast, luminous, and highly extinguished nova. A brief account is also given of more generalised work on novae in M31, and areas for future investigation are discussed. Nova V458 Vulpeculae is one of only two novae observed to lie within a planetary neb- ula (PN). Due to the outburst a light echo effect within the PN is experienced. Using Ha data taken over four years the illumination of the PN with time has been examined and a 3D visualisation obtained. Comparison of light echo data from PN models gen- erated with the morphokinematical modelling tool XS5 to observed PN light echo data indicate the presence of a PN with a bipolar external shell and an elliptical internal shell. Results have also confirmed that the PN is at a distance of 13 kpc. SMEI is a space-borne instrument based on-board the Coriolis satellite. It provides precision visible-light photometry of point sources down to 8th magnitude and near complete sky-map coverage at 102-minute cadence. Using SMEI data detailed light curves of novae have been obtained which offer unprecedented temporal resolution around, and especially before, maximum light, a phase of the nova eruption normally not covered by ground-based observations. They have allowed the exploration of fun- damental parameters for individual objects including the epoch of the initial explosion, the reality and duration of any pre-maximum halt, the presence of secondary maxima, speed of decline of the initial light curve, plus precise timing of the onset of dust for- mation. The SME1 data archive undoubtedly holds a plethora of transient events and variable stars. A code designed to search for such events has been created and imple- mented on four years of SME1 data from one of its three cameras generating over 1500 variable objects, some of which were un-catalogued and are potentially very interest- mg. Finally data on the unusually fast and luminous Nova Vl721 Aquilae has been exam- ined. Pre-outburst N1R images from the 2MASS catalogue revealed the presence of a progenitor system, the absolute magnitudes and colours of which suggested the object to have a sub-giant secondary, and so belong to the U Sco class of RNe. Post-outburst spectra of the object revealed the presence of triple-peaked Ha and 01 profiles. Spec- tral fitting of these profiles indicated a high ejection velocity of 3350 km S-l. The triple-peaked nature of the Ha profile suggested that the accretion disc of the system is viewed face-on. This is supported by models created in XS5, which also indicated an axis ratio of rv 1.4 for the ejecta

    A very luminous, highly extinguished, very fast nova - V1721 Aquilae

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    Fast novae are primarily located within the plane of the Galaxy, slow novae are found within its bulge. Because of high interstellar extinction along the line of sight many novae lying close to the plane are missed and only the brightest seen. One nova lying very close to the Galactic plane is V1721 Aquilae, discovered in outburst on 2008 September 22. Spectra obtained 2.69 days after outburst revealed very high expansion velocities (FWHM ~6450 km/s). In this paper we have used available pre- and post-outburst photometry and post-outburst spectroscopy to conclude that the object is a very fast, luminous, and highly extinguished A_V=11.6+/-0.2) nova system with an average ejection velocity of ~3400 km/s. Pre-outburst near-IR colours from 2MASS indicate that at quiescence the object is similar to many quiescent CNe and appears to have a main sequence/sub-giant secondary rather than a giant. Based on the speed of decline of the nova and its emission line profiles we hypothesise that the axis ratio of the nova ejecta is ~1.4 and that its inclination is such that the central binary accretion disc is face-on to the observer. The accretion disc's blue contribution to the system's near-IR quiescent colours may be significant. Simple models of the nova ejecta have been constructed using the morphological modelling code XS5, and the results support the above hypothesis. Spectral classification of this object has been difficult owing to low S/N levels and high extinction, which has eliminated all evidence of any He/N or FeII emission within the spectra. We suggest two possibilities for the nature of V1721 Aql: that it is a U Sco type RN with a sub-giant secondary or, less likely, that it is a highly energetic bright and fast classical nova with a main sequence secondary. Future monitoring of the object for possible RN episodes may be worthwhile, as would archival searches for previous outbursts.Comment: 9 pages 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Abstract has been slightly shortened from published versio

    Nova light curves from the Solar Mass Ejection Imager (SMEI) - II. The extended catalogue

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    We present the results from observing nine Galactic novae in eruption with the Solar Mass Ejection Imager (SMEI) between 2004 and 2009. While many of these novae reached peak magnitudes that were either at or approaching the detection limits of SMEI, we were still able to produce light curves that in many cases contained more data at and around the initial rise, peak, and decline than those found in other variable star catalogs. For each nova, we obtained a peak time, maximum magnitude, and for several an estimate of the decline time (t2). Interestingly, although of lower quality than those found in Hounsell et al. (2010a), two of the light curves may indicate the presence of a pre-maximum halt. In addition the high cadence of the SMEI instrument has allowed the detection of low amplitude variations in at least one of the nova light curves

    Seminal plasma and prostaglandin E2 up-regulate fibroblast growth factor 2 expression in endometrial adenocarcinoma cells via E-series prostanoid-2 receptor-mediated transactivation of the epidermal growth factor receptor and extracellular signal-regulated kinase pathway

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    We report a multiwavelength (X-ray, ultraviolet/optical/infrared, radio) analysis of the relativistic tidal disruption event candidate Sw J2058+05 from 3 months to 3 yr post-discovery in order to study its properties and compare its behavior with that of Sw J1644+57. Our main results are as follows. (1) The long-term X-ray light curve of Sw J2058+05 shows a remarkably similar trend to that of Sw J1644+57. After a prolonged power-law decay, the X-ray flux drops off rapidly by a factor of ≳160\gtrsim 160 within a span of Δ\Deltatt/tt ≤\le 0.95. Associating this sudden decline with the transition from super-Eddington to sub-Eddington accretion, we estimate the black hole mass to be in the range of 104−610^{4-6} M⊙_{\odot}. (2) We detect rapid (≲500\lesssim 500 s) X-ray variability before the dropoff, suggesting that, even at late times, the X-rays originate from close to the black hole (ruling out a forward-shock origin). (3) We confirm using HST and VLBA astrometry that the location of the source coincides with the galaxy's center to within ≲400\lesssim 400 pc (in projection). (4) We modeled Sw J2058+05's ultraviolet/optical/infrared spectral energy distribution with a single-temperature blackbody and find that while the radius remains more or less constant at a value of 63.4±4.563.4 \pm 4.5 AU (∼1015\sim 10^{15} cm) at all times during the outburst, the blackbody temperature drops significantly from ∼\sim 30,000 K at early times to a value of ∼\sim 15,000 K at late times (before the X-ray dropoff). Our results strengthen Sw J2058+05's interpretation as a tidal disruption event similar to Sw J1644+57.Comment: Replaced with the published version of the manuscrip

    Psychology students’ perception of and engagement with feedback as a function of year of study

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    Undergraduate students’ perception of feedback and level of engagement with the feedback they receive have gained increasing attention in the educational literature recently to identify areas which require educators’ attention. However, research in this area has generally been based on limited self-selecting samples, and has not considered how students’ relationship with feedback may alter depending on their year of study. To address this, a survey measuring students’ views and practices regarding feedback was completed at a higher education institution by 447 first-, second- and third-year psychology students, representing 77% of the cohort. Findings revealed that third years responded more negatively in both areas than their first- and second-year counterparts, whose ratings on these aspects themselves were far from optimal. These findings highlight the need for early interventions to improve students’ perception of and engagement with feedback in the earlier years, and to prevent the recorded deterioration later on in the degree course
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