4,616 research outputs found
Magnetic fields and differential rotation on the pre-main sequence I: The early-G star HD 141943 - brightness and magnetic topologies
Spectroscopic and spectropolarimetric observations of the pre-main sequence
early-G star HD 141943 were obtained at four observing epochs (in 2006, 2007,
2009 and 2010). The observations were undertaken at the 3.9-m Anglo-Australian
Telescope using the UCLES echelle spectrograph and the SEMPOL
spectropolarimeter visitor instrument. Brightness and surface magnetic field
topologies were reconstructed for the star using the technique of least-squares
deconvolution to increase the signal-to-noise of the data.
The reconstructed brightness maps show that HD 141943 had a weak polar spot
and a significant amount of low latitude features, with little change in the
latitude distribution of the spots over the 4 years of observations. The
surface magnetic field was reconstructed at three of the epochs from a high
order (l <= 30) spherical harmonic expansion of the spectropolarimetric
observations. The reconstructed magnetic topologies show that in 2007 and 2010
the surface magnetic field was reasonably balanced between poloidal and
toroidal components. However we find tentative evidence of a change in the
poloidal/toroidal ratio in 2009 with the poloidal component becoming more
dominant. At all epochs the radial magnetic field is predominantly
non-axisymmetric while the azimuthal field is predominantly axisymmetric with a
ring of positive azimuthal field around the pole similar to that seen on other
active stars.Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures, accepted by MNRA
Magnetic field, differential rotation and activity of the hot-Jupiter hosting star HD 179949
HD 179949 is an F8V star, orbited by a giant planet at ~8 R* every 3.092514
days. The system was reported to undergo episodes of stellar activity
enhancement modulated by the orbital period, interpreted as caused by
Star-Planet Interactions (SPIs). One possible cause of SPIs is the large-scale
magnetic field of the host star in which the close-in giant planet orbits.
In this paper we present spectropolarimetric observations of HD 179949 during
two observing campaigns (2009 September and 2007 June). We detect a weak
large-scale magnetic field of a few Gauss at the surface of the star. The field
configuration is mainly poloidal at both observing epochs. The star is found to
rotate differentially, with a surface rotation shear of dOmega=0.216\pm0.061
rad/d, corresponding to equatorial and polar rotation periods of 7.62\pm0.07
and 10.3\pm0.8 d respectively. The coronal field estimated by extrapolating the
surface maps resembles a dipole tilted at ~70 degrees. We also find that the
chromospheric activity of HD 179949 is mainly modulated by the rotation of the
star, with two clear maxima per rotation period as expected from a highly
tilted magnetosphere. In September 2009, we find that the activity of HD 179949
shows hints of low amplitude fluctuations with a period close to the beat
period of the system.Comment: Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of The Royal Astronomical
Societ
Bitgrail & Celsius: Similar outcomes, different reasoning
A report on two different judicial cases centering around the definition of cryptocurrencies as assets in the context of insolvency procedures
Doppler imaging of the young late-type star LO Pegasi (BD +22 4409) in September 2003
A Doppler image of the ZAMS late-type rapidly rotating star LO Pegasi, based
on spectra acquired between 12 and 15 September 2003, is presented. The Least
Square Deconvolution technique is applied to enhance the signal-to-noise ratio
of the mean rotational broadened line profiles extracted from the observed
spectra. In the present application, a unbroadened spectrum is used as a
reference, instead of a simple line list, to improve the deconvolution
technique applied to extract the mean profiles. The reconstructed image is
similar to those previously obtained from observations taken in 1993 and 1998,
and shows that LO Peg photospheric activity is dominated by high-latitude spots
with a non-uniform polar cap. The latter seems to be a persistent feature as it
has been observed since 1993 with little modifications. Small spots, observed
between ~ 10 and ~ 60 degrees of latitude, appears to be different with respect
to those present in the 1993 and 1998 maps.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, accepted by Monthly Notices of the Royal
Astronomical Societ
Alginate-metal cation interactions: Macromolecular approach
Alginates are a broad family of linear (unbranched) polysaccharides derived from brown seaweeds and some bacteria. Despite having only two monomers, i.e. β-D-mannuronate (M) and its C5 epimer α-L-guluronate (G), their blockwise arrangement in oligomannuronate (.MMM.), oligoguluronate (.GGG.), and polyalternating (.MGMG.) blocks endows it with a rather complex interaction pattern with specific counterions and salts. Classic polyelectrolyte theories well apply to alginate as polyanion in the interaction with monovalent and non-gelling divalent cations. The use of divalent gelling ions, such as Ca2+, Ba2+ or Sr2+, provides thermostable homogeneous or heterogeneous hydrogels where the block composition affects both macroscopic and microscopic properties. The mechanism of alginate gelation is still explained in terms of the original egg-box model, although over the years some novel insights have been proposed. In this review we summarize several decades of research related to structure-functionships in alginates in the presence of non-gelling and gelling cations and present some novel applications in the field of self-assembling nanoparticles and use of radionuclides
Modeling the RV jitter of early M dwarfs using tomographic imaging
In this paper we show how tomographic imaging (Zeeman Doppler Imaging, ZDI)
can be used to characterize stellar activity and magnetic field topologies,
ultimately allowing to filter out the radial velocity (RV) activity jitter of
M-dwarf moderate rotators. This work is based on spectropolarimetric
observations of a sample of five weakly-active early M-dwarfs (GJ 205, GJ 358,
GJ 410, GJ479, GJ 846) with HARPS-Pol and NARVAL. These stars have v sin i and
RV jitters in the range 1-2 km/s and 2.7-10.0 m/s rms respectively. Using a
modified version of ZDI applied to sets of phase-resolved Least-Squares- Decon-
volved (LSD) profiles of unpolarized spectral lines, we are able to
characterize the distribution of active regions at the stellar surfaces. We
find that darks spots cover less than 2% of the total surface of the stars of
our sample. Our technique is e cient at modeling the rotationally mod- ulated
component of the activity jitter, and succeeds at decreasing the amplitude of
this com- ponent by typical factors of 2-3 and up to 6 in optimal cases. From
the rotationally modulated time-series of circularly polarized spectra and with
ZDI, we also reconstruct the large-scale magnetic field topology. These fields
suggest that bi-stability of dynamo processes observed in active M dwarfs may
also be at work for moderately active M dwarfs. Comparing spot distributions
with field topologies suggest that dark spots causing activity jitter
concentrate at the magnetic pole and/or equator, to be confirmed with future
data on a larger sample.Comment: 34 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA
M-dwarf stellar winds: the effects of realistic magnetic geometry on rotational evolution and planets
We perform three-dimensional numerical simulations of stellar winds of
early-M dwarf stars. Our simulations incorporate observationally reconstructed
large-scale surface magnetic maps, suggesting that the complexity of the
magnetic field can play an important role in the angular momentum evolution of
the star, possibly explaining the large distribution of periods in field dM
stars, as reported in recent works. In spite of the diversity of the magnetic
field topologies among the stars in our sample, we find that stellar wind
flowing near the (rotational) equatorial plane carries most of the stellar
angular momentum, but there is no preferred colatitude contributing to mass
loss, as the mass flux is maximum at different colatitudes for different stars.
We find that more non-axisymmetric magnetic fields result in more asymmetric
mass fluxes and wind total pressures (defined as the sum of
thermal, magnetic and ram pressures). Because planetary magnetospheric sizes
are set by pressure equilibrium between the planet's magnetic field and , variations of up to a factor of in (as found in the
case of a planet orbiting at several stellar radii away from the star) lead to
variations in magnetospheric radii of about 20 percent along the planetary
orbital path. In analogy to the flux of cosmic rays that impact the Earth,
which is inversely modulated with the non-axisymmetric component of the total
open solar magnetic flux, we conclude that planets orbiting M dwarf stars like
DT~Vir, DS~Leo and GJ~182, which have significant non-axisymmetric field
components, should be the more efficiently shielded from galactic cosmic rays,
even if the planets lack a protective thick atmosphere/large magnetosphere of
their own.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, to appear in MNRA
No detection of large-scale magnetic fields at the surfaces of Am and HgMn stars
We investigate the magnetic dichotomy between Ap/Bp and other A-type stars by
carrying out a deep spectropolarimetric study of Am and HgMn stars. Using the
NARVAL spectropolarimeter at the Telescope Bernard Lyot (Observatoire du Pic du
Midi, France), we obtained high-resolution circular polarisation spectroscopy
of 12 Am stars and 3 HgMn stars. Using Least Squares Deconvolution (LSD), no
magnetic field is detected in any of the 15 observed stars. Uncertaintiies as
low as 0.3 G (respectively 1 G) have been reached for surface-averaged
longitudinal magnetic field measurements for Am (respectively HgMn) stars.
Associated with the results obtained previously for Ap/Bp stars, our study
confirms the existence of a magnetic dichotomy among A-type stars. Our data
demonstrate that there is at least one order of magnitude difference in field
strength between Zeeman detected stars (Ap/Bp stars) and non Zeeman detected
stars (Am and HgMn stars). This result confirms that the
spectroscopically-defined Ap/Bp stars are the only A-type stars harbouring
detectable large-scale surface magnetic fields.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Towards an understanding of the Of?p star HD 191612: optical spectroscopy
We present extensive optical spectroscopy of the early-type magnetic star HD
191612 (O6.5f?pe-O8fp). The Balmer and HeI lines show strongly variable
emission which is highly reproducible on a well-determined 538-d period. Metal
lines and HeII absorptions (including many selective emission lines but
excluding He II 4686A emission) are essentially constant in line strength, but
are variable in velocity, establishing a double-lined binary orbit with P(orb)
= 1542d, e=0.45. We conduct a model-atmosphere analysis of the primary, and
find that the system is consistent with a O8: giant with a B1: main-sequence
secondary. Since the periodic 538-d changes are unrelated to orbital motion,
rotational modulation of a magnetically constrained plasma is strongly favoured
as the most likely underlying `clock'. An upper limit on the equatorial
rotation is consistent with this hypothesis, but is too weak to provide a
strong constraint.Comment: Accepted for MNRA
DNA demethylating antineoplastic strategies: a comparative point of view.
Despite the involvement of genetic alterations in neoplastic cell transformation, it is increasingly evident that abnormal epigenetic patterns, such as those affecting DNA methylation and histone posttranslational modifications (PTMs), play an essential role in the early stages of tumor development. This finding, together with the evidence that epigenetic changes are reversible, enabled the development of new antineoplastic therapeutic approaches known as epigenetic therapies. Epigenetic modifications are involved in the control of gene expression, and their aberrant distribution is thought to participate in neoplastic transformation by causing the deregulation of crucial cellular pathways. Epigenetic drugs are able to revert the defective gene expression profile of cancer cells and, consequently, reestablish normal molecular pathways. Considering the emerging interest in epigenetic therapeutics, this review focuses on the approaches affecting DNA methylation, evaluates novel strategies and those already approved for clinical use, and compares their therapeutic potential
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