4,561 research outputs found
The chiral quark condensate and pion decay constant in nuclear matter at next-to-leading order
Making use of the recently developed chiral power counting for the physics of
nuclear matter [1,2], we evaluate the in-medium chiral quark condensate up to
next-to-leading order for both symmetric nuclear matter and neutron matter. Our
calculation includes the full in-medium iteration of the leading order local
and one-pion exchange nucleon-nucleon interactions. Interestingly, we find a
cancellation between the contributions stemming from the quark mass dependence
of the nucleon mass appearing in the in-medium nucleon-nucleon interactions.
Only the contributions originating from the explicit quark mass dependence of
the pion mass survive. This cancellation is the reason of previous observations
concerning the dominant role of the long-range pion contributions and the
suppression of short-range nucleon-nucleon interactions. We find that the
linear density contribution to the in-medium chiral quark condensate is only
slightly modified for pure neutron matter by the nucleon-nucleon interactions.
For symmetric nuclear matter the in-medium corrections are larger, although
smaller compared to other approaches due to the full iteration of the lowest
order nucleon-nucleon tree-level amplitudes. Our calculation satisfies the
Hellmann-Feynman theorem to the order worked out. Also we address the problem
of calculating the leading in-medium corrections to the pion decay constant. We
find that there are no extra in-medium corrections that violate the
Gell-Mann-Oakes-Renner relation up to next-to-leading order.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figure
Sparse aperture masking at the VLT II. Detection limits for the eight debris disks stars Pic, AU Mic, 49 Cet, Tel, Fomalhaut, g Lup, HD181327 and HR8799
Context. The formation of planetary systems is a common, yet complex
mechanism. Numerous stars have been identified to possess a debris disk, a
proto-planetary disk or a planetary system. The understanding of such formation
process requires the study of debris disks. These targets are substantial and
particularly suitable for optical and infrared observations. Sparse Aperture
masking (SAM) is a high angular resolution technique strongly contributing to
probe the region from 30 to 200 mas around the stars. This area is usually
unreachable with classical imaging, and the technique also remains highly
competitive compared to vortex coronagraphy. Aims. We aim to study debris disks
with aperture masking to probe the close environment of the stars. Our goal is
either to find low mass companions, or to set detection limits. Methods. We
observed eight stars presenting debris disks ( Pictoris, AU
Microscopii, 49 Ceti, Telescopii, Fomalhaut, g Lupi, HD181327 and
HR8799) with SAM technique on the NaCo instrument at the VLT. Results. No close
companions were detected using closure phase information under 0.5 of
separation from the parent stars. We obtained magnitude detection limits that
we converted to Jupiter masses detection limits using theoretical isochrones
from evolutionary models. Conclusions. We derived upper mass limits on the
presence of companions in the area of few times the diffraction limit of the
telescope around each target star.Comment: 7 pages, All magnitude detection limits maps are only available in
electronic form at the CDS via anonymous ftp to cdsarc.u-strasbg.fr
(130.79.128.5
Discovery of Seven Companions To Intermediate-Mass Stars With Extreme Mass Ratios in the Scorpius-Centaurus Association
We report the detection of seven low-mass companions to intermediate-mass stars (SpT B/A/F; M similar to 1.5-4.5M(circle dot)) in the Scorpius-Centaurus (Sco-Cen) Association using nonredundant aperture masking interferometry. Our newly detected objects have contrasts Delta L' approximate to 4-6, corresponding to masses as low as similar to 20 M-Jup and mass ratios of q approximate to 0.01-0.08, depending on the assumed age of the target stars. With projected separations rho approximate to 10-30 AU, our aperture masking detections sample an orbital region previously unprobed by conventional adaptive optics imaging of intermediate-mass Sco-Cen stars covering much larger orbital radii (similar to 30-3000 AU). At such orbital separations, these objects resemble higher-mass versions of the directly imaged planetary mass companions to the 10-30 Myr, intermediate-mass stars HR 8799, beta Pictoris, and HD 95086. These newly discovered companions span the brown dwarf desert, and their masses and orbital radii provide a new constraint on models of the Formation of low-mass stellar and substellar companions to intermediate-mass stars.NASA through the Sagan Fellowship ProgramNSF Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship AST-1203023Clay FellowshipNASA through Hubble Fellowship 51257.01AURA, Inc., for NASA NAS 5-26555W. M. Keck FoundationAstronom
Imaging the spotty surface of Betelgeuse in the H band
This paper reports on H-band interferometric observations of Betelgeuse made
at the three-telescope interferometer IOTA. We image Betelgeuse and its
asymmetries to understand the spatial variation of the photosphere, including
its diameter, limb darkening, effective temperature, surrounding brightness,
and bright (or dark) star spots. We used different theoretical simulations of
the photosphere and dusty environment to model the visibility data. We made
images with parametric modeling and two image reconstruction algorithms: MIRA
and WISARD. We measure an average limb-darkened diameter of 44.28 +/- 0.15 mas
with linear and quadratic models and a Rosseland diameter of 45.03 +/- 0.12 mas
with a MARCS model. These measurements lead us to derive an updated effective
temperature of 3600 +/- 66 K. We detect a fully-resolved environment to which
the silicate dust shell is likely to contribute. By using two imaging
reconstruction algorithms, we unveiled two bright spots on the surface of
Betelgeuse. One spot has a diameter of about 11 mas and accounts for about 8.5%
of the total flux. The second one is unresolved (diameter < 9 mas) with 4.5% of
the total flux. Resolved images of Betelgeuse in the H band are asymmetric at
the level of a few percent. The MOLsphere is not detected in this wavelength
range. The amount of measured limb-darkening is in good agreement with model
predictions. The two spots imaged at the surface of the star are potential
signatures of convective cells.Comment: 10 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, references
adde
Southern Massive Stars at High Angular Resolution: Observational Campaign and Companion Detection
Multiplicity is one of the most fundamental observable properties of massive
O-type stars and offers a promising way to discriminate between massive star
formation theories. Nevertheless, companions at separations between 1 and 100
mas remain mostly unknown due to intrinsic observational limitations. [...] The
Southern MAssive Stars at High angular resolution survey (SMASH+) was designed
to fill this gap by providing the first systematic interferometric survey of
Galactic massive stars. We observed 117 O-type stars with VLTI/PIONIER and 162
O-type stars with NACO/SAM, respectively probing the separation ranges 1-45 and
30-250mas and brightness contrasts of Delta H < 4 and Delta H < 5. Taking
advantage of NACO's field-of-view, we further uniformly searched for visual
companions in an 8''-radius down to Delta H = 8. This paper describes the
observations and data analysis, reports the discovery of almost 200 new
companions in the separation range from 1mas to 8'' and presents the catalog of
detections, including the first resolved measurements of over a dozen known
long-period spectroscopic binaries.
Excluding known runaway stars for which no companions are detected, 96
objects in our main sample (DEC < 0 deg; H<7.5) were observed both with PIONIER
and NACO/SAM. The fraction of these stars with at least one resolved companion
within 200mas is 0.53. Accounting for known but unresolved spectroscopic or
eclipsing companions, the multiplicity fraction at separation < 8'' increases
to f_m = 0.91 +/- 0.03. The fraction of luminosity class V stars that have a
bound companion reaches 100% at 30mas while their average number of physically
connected companions within 8'' is f_c = 2.2 +/- 0.3. This demonstrates that
massive stars form nearly exclusively in multiple systems. Additionally, the
nine non-thermal (NT) radio emitters observed by SMASH+ are all resolved [...]Comment: 57 pages, 20 figures, 7 tables; accepted for publication in ApJ
Importance of the Saharan heat low in controlling the North Atlantic free tropospheric humidity budget deduced from IASI <i>δ</i>D observations
The isotopic composition of water vapour in the North Atlantic free
troposphere is investigated with Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer
(IASI) measurements of the D ∕ H ratio (δD) above the ocean. We
show that in the vicinity of West Africa, the seasonality of δD is
particularly strong (130 ‰), which is related with the influence of
the Saharan heat low (SHL) during summertime. The SHL indeed largely
influences the dynamic in that region by producing deep turbulent mixing
layers, yielding a specific water vapour isotopic footprint. The influence of
the SHL on the isotopic budget is analysed on various time and space scales
and is shown to be large, highlighting the importance of the SHL dynamics on
the moistening and the HDO enrichment of the free troposphere over the North
Atlantic. The potential influence of the SHL is also investigated on the
inter-annual scale as we also report important variations in δD above
the Canary archipelago region. We interpret the variability in the
enrichment, using backward trajectory analyses, in terms of the ratio of air
masses coming from the North Atlantic and air masses coming from the African
continent. Finally, the interest of IASI high sampling capabilities is
further illustrated by presenting spatial distributions of δD and
humidity above the North Atlantic from which we show that the different
sources and dehydration pathways controlling the humidity can be disentangled
thanks to the added value of δD observations. More generally, our
results demonstrate the utility of δD observations obtained from the
IASI sounder to gain insight into the hydrological cycle processes in the
West African region
On the structure of the transition disk around TW Hya
For over a decade, the structure of the inner cavity in the transition disk
of TW Hydrae has been a subject of debate. Modeling the disk with data obtained
at different wavelengths has led to a variety of proposed disk structures.
Rather than being inconsistent, the individual models might point to the
different faces of physical processes going on in disks, such as dust growth
and planet formation. Our aim is to investigate the structure of the transition
disk again and to find to what extent we can reconcile apparent model
differences. A large set of high-angular-resolution data was collected from
near-infrared to centimeter wavelengths. We investigated the existing disk
models and established a new self-consistent radiative-transfer model. A
genetic fitting algorithm was used to automatize the parameter fitting. Simple
disk models with a vertical inner rim and a radially homogeneous dust
composition from small to large grains cannot reproduce the combined data set.
Two modifications are applied to this simple disk model: (1) the inner rim is
smoothed by exponentially decreasing the surface density in the inner ~3 AU,
and (2) the largest grains (>100 um) are concentrated towards the inner disk
region. Both properties can be linked to fundamental processes that determine
the evolution of protoplanetary disks: the shaping by a possible companion and
the different regimes of dust-grain growth, respectively. The full
interferometric data set from near-infrared to centimeter wavelengths requires
a revision of existing models for the TW Hya disk. We present a new model that
incorporates the characteristic structures of previous models but deviates in
two key aspects: it does not have a sharp edge at 4 AU, and the surface density
of large grains differs from that of smaller grains. This is the first
successful radiative-transfer-based model for a full set of interferometric
data.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Characterization of integrated optics components for the second generation of VLTI instruments
Two of the three instruments proposed to ESO for the second generation
instrumentation of the VLTI would use integrated optics for beam combination.
Several design are studied, including co-axial and multi-axial recombination.
An extensive quantity of combiners are therefore under test in our
laboratories. We will present the various components, and the method used to
validate and compare the different combiners. Finally, we will discuss the
performances and their implication for both VSI and Gravity VLTI instruments.Comment: SPIE Astronomical Instrumentation 2008 in Marseille, France --
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