4,124 research outputs found
Molecules in the Circumstellar Disk Orbiting BP Piscium
BP Psc is a puzzling late-type, emission-line field star with large infrared
excess. The star is encircled and enshrouded by a nearly edge-on, dust
circumstellar disk, and displays an extensive jet system similar to those
associated with pre-main sequence (pre-MS) stars. We conducted a mm-wave
molecular line survey of BP Psc with the 30 m telescope of the Institut de
Radio Astronomie Millimetrique (IRAM). We detected lines of 12CO and 13CO and,
possibly, very weak emission from HCO+ and CN; HCN, H2CO, and SiO are not
detected. The CO line profiles of BP Psc are well fit by a model invoking a
disk in Keplerian rotation. The mimumum disk gas mass, inferred from the 12CO
line intensity and 13CO/12CO line ratio, is ~0.1 Jupiter masses. The weakness
of HCO+ and CN (relative to 13CO) stands in sharp contrast to the strong HCO+
and CN emission that characterizes most low-mass, pre-main sequence stars that
have been the subjects of molecular emission-line surveys, and is suggestive of
a very low level of X-ray-induced molecular ionization within the BP Psc disk.
These results lend some support to the notion that BP Psc is an evolved star
whose circumstellar disk has its origins in a catastrophic interaction with a
close companion.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; to appear in Astronomy & Astrophysic
VLA Imaging of the Disk Surrounding the Nearby Young Star TW Hya
The TW Hya system is perhaps the closest analog to the early solar nebula. We
have used the Very Large Array to image TW Hya at wavelengths of 7mm and 3.6 cm
with resolutions 0.1 arcseconds (about 5 AU) and 1.0 arcseconds (about 50 AU),
respectively. The 7mm emission is extended and appears dominated by a dusty
disk of radius larger than 50 AU surrounding the star. The 3.6 cm emission is
unresolved and likely arises from an ionized wind or gyrosynchrotron activity.
The dust spectrum and spatially resolved 7mm images of the TW Hya disk are
fitted by a simple model with temperature and surface density described by
radial power laws, and . These
properties are consistent with an irradiated gaseous accretion disk of mass
with an accretion rate and viscosity parameter . The estimates of
mass and mass accretion rates are uncertain as the gas-to-dust ratio in the TW
Hya disk may have evolved from the standard interstellar value.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, accepted by ApJ Letter
On three-dimensional reconstruction of optically thin solar emission sources
Calculations are given for constructing the three dimensional distribution of optically thin EUV emission sources associated with solar active regions, from two dimensional observations (projections) recorded by the spectroheliograph on the OSO 7 satellite. The relation of the method to other image reconstruction methods is briefly discussed as well as the special requirements imposed in the solar case such as a knowledge of the true solar rotation function. A useful correlation criterion for establishing the physical validity of solutions is given
Spitzer IRS Spectra of Luminous 8 micron Sources in the Large Magellanic Cloud: Testing color-based classifications
We present archival Spitzer IRS spectra of 19 luminous 8 micron selected
sources in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). The object classes derived from
these spectra and from an additional 24 spectra in the literature are compared
with classifications based on 2MASS/MSX (J, H, K, and 8 micron) colors in order
to test the "JHK8" classification scheme (Kastner et al. 2008). The IRS spectra
confirm the classifications of 22 of the 31 sources that can be classified
under the JHK8 system. The spectroscopic classification of 12 objects that were
unclassifiable in the JHK8 scheme allow us to characterize regions of the
color-color diagrams that previously lacked spectroscopic verification,
enabling refinements to the JHK8 classification system. The results of these
new classifications are consistent with previous results concerning the
identification of the most infrared-luminous objects in the LMC. In particular,
while the IRS spectra reveal several new examples of asymptotic giant branch
(AGB) stars with O-rich envelopes, such objects are still far outnumbered by
carbon stars (C-rich AGB stars). We show that Spitzer IRAC/MIPS color-color
diagrams provide improved discrimination between red supergiants and
oxygen-rich and carbon-rich asymptotic giant branch stars relative to those
based on 2MASS/MSX colors. These diagrams will enable the most luminous IR
sources in Local Group galaxies to be classified with high confidence based on
their Spitzer colors. Such characterizations of stellar populations will
continue to be possible during Spitzer's warm mission, through the use of IRAC
[3.6]-[4.5] and 2MASS colors.Comment: 31 pages, 10 figures, to be published in A
Relaxation timescales and decay of correlations in a long-range interacting quantum simulator
We study the time evolution of correlation functions in long-range
interacting quantum Ising models. For a large class of initial conditions,
exact analytic results are obtained in arbitrary lattice dimension, both for
ferromagnetic and antiferromagnetic coupling, and hence also in the presence of
geometric frustration. In contrast to the nearest-neighbour case, we find that
correlations decay like stretched or compressed exponentials in time. Provided
the long-range character of the interactions is sufficiently strong, pronounced
prethermalization plateaus are observed and relaxation timescales are widely
separated. Specializing to a triangular lattice in two spatial dimensions, we
propose to utilize these results for benchmarking of a recently developed
ion-trap based quantum simulator.Comment: 19 pages, 6 figures; v2: one section removed, appendices added; v3:
upper bound corrected + minor corrections; v4: as publishe
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