8,390 research outputs found

    On the Importance of the Interclump Medium for Superionization: O VI Formation in the Wind of Zeta Pup

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    We have studied superionization and X-ray line formation in the spectra of Zeta Pup using our new stellar atmosphere code (XCMFGEN) that can be used to simultaneously analyze optical, UV, and X-ray observations. Here, we present results on the formation of the O VI ll1032, 1038 doublet. Our simulations, supported by simple theoretical calculations, show that clumped wind models that assume void in the interclump space cannot reproduce the observed O VI profiles. However, enough O VI can be produced if the voids are filled by a low density gas. The recombination of O VI is very efficient in the dense material but in the tenuous interclump region an observable amount of O VI can be maintained. We also find that different UV resonance lines are sensitive to different density regimes in Zeta Pup : C IV is almost exclusively formed within the densest regions, while the majority of O VI resides between clumps. N V is an intermediate case, with contributions from both the tenuous gas and clumps.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL, 4 pages with 3 figure

    The architecture of community: some new proposals on the social consequences of architectural and planning decisions

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    Summary: "Territorial" theories argue that spatial design can only play an important role in society by virtue of there being a "correspondence" between spatial zones and social identities. In this paper it is argued that "structured non-correspondence" can also play a positive social role, with quite different consequences for spatial design. To the extent that a system works on non-correspondences it functions more probabilistically. It relies on numbers and frequencies of events which take place to reproduce a statistically stable global system, rather than on the formal clarity of its structure. This gives non-correspondence systems a robustness which highly structured systems do not possess. They can thus tolerate much more local disorder and yet be reproducible

    What do we mean by building function?

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    Scientific approaches to architecture usually avoid the issue of building form, preferring to focus on function. But how can there be a theory of function without a systematic analysis of the key architectural variable of form? A theory of description is required. In this paper it is argued that such a theory can be built through the analysis of spatial form in buildings. Then once spatial form is describable in terms of a descriptive theory, a more powerfully scientific - and architectural - understanding of function is possible. The argument draws on several pieces of research carried out by the authors and their students, but focusses eventually on various types of medical building in order to illustrate certain general principles

    An economic analysis of trading on private information by external administrators: international comparisons

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    This paper examines the regulation of trades in listed securities by external administrators (EAs), such as trustees in bankruptcy, liquidators, receivers, and administrators on the basis of private information. We consider the economic policy issues associated with such trades. The principal considerations counsel in favour of taking a permissive approach. These are: the difficulties of associating trades with insider information, given the EA's necessarily short expected holding period, the asymmetric application of the insider trading prohibition to sales (rather than decisions not to sell), the market incentives not to misuse private information that apply to EAs, and the unlikelihood that the EA has monopolistic access to the information in question. We consider these considerations by reference to a number of hypothetical scenarios. The paper argues that the law should regulate the subject by coupling a broad exemption for EAs with a "goiod faith" proviso, a continuous disclosure obligation, and a requirement to sell "all or nothing" of a holding of listed securities

    Quantitative spectroscopic analysis of and distance to SN1999em

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    This work presents a detailed quantitative spectroscopic analysis of, and the determination of the distance to, the type II supernovae (SN) SN1999em with CMFGEN (Dessart & Hillier 2005a), based on spectrophotometric observations at eight dates up to 40 days after discovery. We use the same iron-group metal content for the ejecta, the same power-law density distribution (with exponent n~10), and a Hubble-velocity law at all times. We adopt a H/He/C/N/O abundance pattern compatible with CNO-cycle equilibrium values for a RSG/BSG progenitor, with C/O enhanced and N depleted at later times. Based on our synthetic fits to spectrophotometric observations of SN1999em, we obtain a distance of 11.5Mpc, similar to that of Baron et al. (2004) and the Cepheid distance to the galaxy host of 11.7Mpc (Leonard et al. 2003). Similarly, based on such models, the Expanding Photosphere Method (EPM) delivers a distance of 11.6Mpc, with negligible scatter between photometric bandpass sets; there is thus nothing wrong with the EPM as such. Previous determinations using the tabulated correction factors of Eastman et al. (1996) all led to 30-50% underestimates: we find that this is caused by 1) an underestimate of the correction factors compared to the only other study of the kind by Dessart & Hillier (2005b), 2) a neglect of the intrinsic >20% scatter of correction factors, and 3) the use of the EPM at late times when severe line blanketing makes the method inaccurate. The need of detailed model computations for reliable EPM distance estimates thus defeats the appeal and simplicity of the method. However, detailed fits to SN optical spectra, based on tailored models for individual SN observations, offers a promising approach to obtaining distances with 10-20% accuracy, either through the EPM or a la Baron et al. (2004).Comment: 20 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in A&

    2D non-LTE Modeling for Axi-symmetric Winds. II. A Short Characteristic Solution for Radiative Transfer in Rotating Winds

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    We present a new radiative transfer code for axi-symmetric stellar atmospheres and compare test results against 1D and 2D models with and without velocity fields. The code uses the short characteristic method with modifications to handle axi-symmetric and non-monotonic 3D wind velocities, and allows for distributed calculations. The formal solution along a characteristic is evaluated with a resolution that is proportional to the velocity gradient along the characteristic. This allows us to accurately map the variation of the opacities and emissivities as a function of frequency and spatial coordinates, but avoids unnecessary work in low velocity regions. We represent a characteristic with an impact-parameter vector p (a vector that is normal to the plane containing the characteristic and the origin) rather than the traditional unit vector in the direction of the ray. The code calculates the incoming intensities for the characteristics by a single latitudinal interpolation without any further interpolation in the radiation angles. Using this representation also provides a venue for distributed calculations since the radiative transfer can be done independently for each p.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in A&

    Further Criteria for the Existence of Steady Line-Driven Winds

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    In Paper I, we showed that steady line-driven disk wind solutions can exist by using "simple" models that mimic the disk environment. Here I extend the concepts introduced in Paper I and discuss many details of the analysis of the steady/unsteady nature of 1D line-driven winds. This work confirms the results and conclusions of Paper I, and is thus consistent with the steady nature of the 1D streamline line-driven disk wind models of Murray and collaborators and the 2.5D line-driven disk wind models of Pereyra and collaborators. When including gas pressures effects, as is routinely done in time-dependent numerical models, I find that the spatial dependence of the nozzle function continues to play a key role in determining the steady/unsteady nature of supersonic line-driven wind solutions. I show here that the existence/nonexistence of local wind solutions can be proved through the nozzle function without integrating the equation of motion. This work sets a detailed framework with which we will analyze, in a following paper, more realistic models than the "simple" models of Paper I.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication by The Astrophysical Journa

    Radial dependence of line profile variability in seven O9--B0.5 stars

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    Massive stars show a variety of spectral variability: presence of discrete absorption components in UV P-Cygni profiles, optical line profile variability, X-ray variability, radial velocity modulations. Our goal is to study the spectral variability of single OB stars to better understand the relation between photospheric and wind variability. For that, we rely on high spectral resolution, high signal-to-noise ratio optical spectra collected with the spectrograph NARVAL on the Telescope Bernard Lyot at Pic du Midi. We investigate the variability of twelve spectral lines by means of the Temporal Variance Spectrum (TVS). The selected lines probe the radial structure of the atmosphere, from the photosphere to the outer wind. We also perform a spectroscopic analysis with atmosphere models to derive the stellar and wind properties, and to constrain the formation region of the selected lines. We show that variability is observed in the wind lines of all bright giants and supergiants, on a daily timescale. Lines formed in the photosphere are sometimes variable, sometimes not. The dwarf stars do not show any sign of variability. If variability is observed on a daily timescale, it can also (but not always) be observed on hourly timescales, albeit with lower amplitude. There is a very clear correlation between amplitude of the variability and fraction of the line formed in the wind. Strong anti-correlations between the different part of the temporal variance spectrum are observed. Our results indicate that variability is stronger in lines formed in the wind. A link between photospheric and wind variability is not obvious from our study, since wind variability is observed whatever the level of photospheric variability. Different photospheric lines also show different degrees of variability.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures + appendix. A&A accepted. Figures degraded for arxiv submissio

    The UV Scattering Halo of the Central Source Associated with Eta Carinae

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    We have made an extensive study of the UV spectrum of Eta Carinae, and find that we do not directly observe the star and its wind in the UV. Because of dust along our line of sight, the UV light that we observe arises from bound-bound scattering at large impact parameters. We obtain a reasonable fit to the UV spectrum by using only the flux that originates outside 0.033". This explains why we can still observe the primary star in the UV despite the large optical extinction -- it is due to the presence of an intrinsic coronagraph in the Eta Carinae system, and to the extension of the UV emitting region. It is not due to peculiar dust properties alone. We have computed the spectrum of the purported companion star, and show that it could only be directly detected in the UV spectrum preferentially in the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) spectral region (912-1175 Ang.). However, we find no direct evidence for a companion star, with the properties indicated by X-ray studies and studies of the Weigelt blobs, in UV spectra. This might be due to reprocessing of the companion's light by the dense stellar wind of the primary. Broad FeII and [FeII] emission lines, which form in the stellar wind, are detected in spectra taken in the SE lobe, 0.2" from the central star. The wind spectrum shows some similarities to the spectra of the B & D Weigelt blobs, but also shows some marked differences in that high excitation lines, and lines pumped by Ly-alpha, are not seen. The detection of the broad lines lends support to our interpretation of the UV spectrum, and to our model for Eta Carinae.Comment: To appear in ApJ. 57 pages with 18 figure
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