83 research outputs found

    Oscillatory convective modes in red giants: a possible explanation of the long secondary periods

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    We discuss properties of oscillatory convective modes in low-mass red giants, and compare them with observed properties of the long secondary periods (LSPs) of semi-regular red giant variables. Oscillatory convective modes are very nonadiabatic g^{-} modes and they are present in luminous stars, such as red giants with \log L/{\rm L}_\odot \ga 3. Finite amplitudes for these modes are confined to the outermost nonadiabatic layers, where the radiative energy flux is more important than the convective energy flux. The periods of oscillatory convection modes increase with luminosity, and the growth times are comparable to the oscillation periods. The LSPs of red giants in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) are observed to lie on a distinct period-luminosity sequence called sequence D. This sequence D period-luminosity relation is roughly consistent with the predictions for dipole oscillatory convective modes in AGB models if we adopt a mixing length of 1.2 pressure scale height (α=1.2\alpha = 1.2). However, the effective temperature of the red-giant sequence of the LMC is consistent to models with α=1.9\alpha=1.9, which predict periods too short by a factor of two.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Using broad-band photometry to examine the nature of long secondary periods in red giants

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    Long-term JHK light curves have recently become available for large numbers of the more luminous stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We have used these JHK light curves, along with OGLE (Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment) V and I light curves, to examine the variability of a sample of luminous red giants in the SMC which show prominent long secondary periods (LSPs). The origin of the LSPs is currently unknown. In oxygen-rich stars, we found that while most broad-band colours (e.g. V − I) get redder when an oxygen-rich star dims during its LSP cycle, the J − K colour barely changes and sometimes becomes bluer.We interpret the J − K colour changes as being due to increasing water vapour absorption during declining light caused by the development of a layer of dense cool gas above the photosphere. This result and previous observations which indicate the development of a chromosphere between minimum to maximum light suggest that the LSP phenomenon is associated with the ejection of matter from the stellar photosphere near the beginning of light decline.We explore the possibility that broad-band light variations from the optical to the near-infrared regions can be explained by either dust absorption by ejected matter or large spots on a rotating stellar surface. However, neither model is capable of explaining the observed light variations in a variety of colour–magnitude diagrams.We conclude that some other mechanism is responsible for the light variations associated with LSPs in red giants

    IRSF/SIRIUS JHKs near-infrared variable star survey in the Magellanic Clouds

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    We carried out a NIR variable star survey toward the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds using the InfraRed Survey Facility (IRSF) at Sutherland, South African Astronomical Observatory. This survey project was initiated in Dember 2000, and since then, we kept monitoring a total area of 3 square degrees along the LMC bar and also an area of 1 square degree around the center of the SMC, sufficiently large to do statistical analysis and to make complete catalog of variable red giants in the Magellanic Clouds. The detection limits (S/N=10) of the survey are 17.0, 16.5 and 15.5 at J, H and Ks, respectively. In this article, we present some results on infrared variables that are not detected by the previous optical surveys. We show that they do not fall on the standard period-Ks magnitude relation for Mira-type variables pulsating in the fundamental mode.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures. To appear in "Stellar Pulsation: Challenges for Theory and Observation", Eds. J. Guzik and P. Bradle

    A survey of T Tauri stars with AKARI toward the Taurus-Auriga region

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    Aims: We search new T Tauri star (TTS) candidates with the mid-infrared (MIR) part of the AKARI All-Sky Survey at 9 and 18 um wavelengths. Methods: We used the point source catalogue (PSC), obtained by the Infrared Camera (IRC) on board AKARI. We combined the 2MASS PSC and the 3rd version of the USNO CCD Astrograph Catalogue (UCAC) with the AKARI IRC-PSC, and surveyed 517 known TTSs over a 1800-square-degree part of the Taurus-Auriga region to find criteria to extract TTSs. We considered asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars, post-AGB stars, Planetary Nebulae (PNe), and galaxies, which have similar MIR colours, to separate TTSs from these sources. Results: Of the 517 known TTSs, we detected 133 sources with AKARI. Based on the colour-colour and colour-magnitude diagrams made from the AKARI, 2MASS, and UCAC surveys, we propose the criteria to extract TTS candidates from the AKARI All-Sky data. On the basis of our criteria, we selected 176/14725 AKARI sources as TTS candidates which are located around the Taurus-Auriga region. Comparing these sources with SIMBAD, there are 148 previously identified sources including 115 Young Stellar Objects (YSOs), and 28 unidentified sources. Conclusions: Based on SIMBAD identifications, we take the TTS-identification probability using our criteria to be ~75 %. We find 28 TTS candidates, of which we expect 21 to be confirmed once follow-up observations can be obtained. Although the probability of ~75 % is not so high, it is affected by the completeness of the SIMBAD database, and we can search for TTSs over the whole sky, over all star forming regions.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&

    Galactic distributions of carbon- and oxygen-rich AGB stars revealed by the AKARI mid-infrared all-sky survey

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    Context: The environmental conditions for asympotic giant branch (AGB) stars to reach the carbon-rich (C-rich) phase are important to understand the evolutionary process of AGB stars. The difference between the spatial distributions of C-rich and oxygen-rich (O-rich) AGB stars is essential for the study of the Galactic structure and the chemical evolution of the interstellar medium (ISM). Aims: We quantitatively investigate the spatial distributions of C-rich and O-rich AGB stars in our Galaxy. We discuss the difference between them and its origin. Methods: We classify a large number of AGB stars newly detected by the AKARI id-infrared all-sky survey. In the color-color diagrams, we define their occupation zones based on the locations of known objects. We then obtain the spatial distributions of C-rich and O-rich AGB stars, assuming that they have the same luminosity for a given mass-loss rate. Results: We find that O-rich AGB stars are concentrated toward the Galactic center and that the density decreases with Galactocentric distance, whereas C-rich AGB stars show a relatively uniform distribution within about 8kpc of Sun. Conclusion: Our result confirms the trends reported in previous studies and extends them to a Galactic scale. We discuss the relations between our result, the Galactic metallicity gradient, and the chemical evolution of the ISM in our Galaxy.Comment: 13 pages, 24 figures, Accepted for A&

    Period-Magnitude relation of Mira-like variables in the Large Magellanic Cloud as a tool to understand circumstellar extinction

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    Near- to mid-infrared period-magnitude relations and also the period-bolometric luminosity relation of OGLE-III Mira-like variables in the LMC are derived. The relations have a kink, and the period at which the break occurs is quantitatively obtained. There are many Mira-like variables whose fluxes at the optical and the near-infrared wavebands are fainter than the ones predicted by the period-magnitude relations. The deviation is due to the circumstellar extinction, and the amount of the deviation is found to be strongly correlated with near-infrared colors. The empirical formulae relating the amount of the deviation and the near-infrared colors are derived. These relations are useful to accurately calculate the distances to the dusty Mira-like variables, because the dimmed fluxes due to the circumstellar extinction can be estimated. In a manner analogous to the interstellar extinction law, the ratios of deviations at any two different wavebands are calculated. The ratios are found to change with the pulsation period, indicating that the dust properties are subject to change as Mira-like variables evolve.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures and 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
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