5,192 research outputs found
The True Incidence of Magnetism among Field White Dwarfs
We study the incidence of magnetism in white dwarfs from three large and
well-observed samples of hot, cool, and nearby white dwarfs in order to test
whether the fraction of magnetic degenerates is biased, and whether it varies
with effective temperature, cooling age, or distance. The magnetic fraction is
considerably higher for the cool sample of Bergeron, Ruiz, and Leggett, and the
Holberg, Oswalt, and Sion sample of local white dwarfs that it is for the
generally-hotter white dwarfs of the Palomar Green Survey. We show that the
mean mass of magnetic white dwarfs in this survey is 0.93 solar masses or more,
so there may be a strong bias against their selection in the magnitude-limited
Palomar Green Survey. We argue that this bias is not as important in the
samples of cool and nearby white dwarfs. However, this bias may not account for
all of the difference in the magnetic fractions of these samples.
It is not clear that the magnetic white dwarfs in the cool and local samples
are drawn from the same population as the hotter PG stars. In particular, two
or threee of the cool sample are low-mass white dwarfs in unresolved binary
systems. Moreover, there is a suggestion from the local sample that the
fractional incidence may increase with decreasing temperature, luminosity,
and/or cooling age. Overall, the true incidence of magnetism at the level of 2
megagauss or greater is at least 10%, and could be higher. Limited studies
capable of detecting lower field strengths down to 10 kilogauss suggest by
implication that the total fraction may be substantially higher than 10%.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, Astronomical Journal in press -- Jan 2003 issu
Stellar-Mass Black Holes in the Solar Neighborhood
We search for nearby, isolated, accreting, ``stellar-mass'' (3 to
) black holes. Models suggest a synchrotron spectrum in visible
wavelengths and some emission in X-ray wavelengths. Of 3.7 million objects in
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Early Data Release, about 150,000 objects have
colors and properties consistent with such a spectrum, and 87 of these objects
are X-ray sources from the ROSAT All Sky Survey. Thirty-two of these have been
confirmed not to be black-holes using optical spectra. We give the positions
and colors of these 55 black-hole candidates, and quantitatively rank them on
their likelihood to be black holes. We discuss uncertainties the expected
number of sources, and the contribution of blackholes to local dark matter.Comment: Replaced with version accepted by ApJ. 40 pages, 8 figure
Deep, Wide-field CCD Photometry for the Open Cluster NGC3532
We present the results of a deep, wide-field CCD survey for the open cluster
NGC~3532. Our new photometry effectively covers a one square
degree area and reaches an unprecedented depth of to reveal that
NGC~3532 is a rich open cluster that harbors a large number of faint, low-mass
stars. We employ a number of methods to reduce the impact of field star
contamination in the cluster color-magnitude diagrams, including supplementing
our photometry with data from the 2MASS catalog. These efforts allow
us to define a robust sample of candidate main sequence stars suitable for a
purely empirical determination of the cluster's parameters by comparing them to
the well-established Hyades main sequence. Our results confirm previous
findings that NGC~3532 lies fairly near to the Sun [;
~pc] and has an extremely low reddening for its location near
the Galactic plane []. Moreover, an age of \,Myr
has been derived for the cluster by fitting a set of overshooting isochrones to
the well-populated upper main-sequence. This new photometry also extends faint
enough to reach the cluster white dwarf sequence, as confirmed by our
photometric recovery of eight spectroscopically identified members of the
cluster. Using the location of these eight members, along with the latest
theoretical cooling tracks, we have identified additional white dwarf
stars in the color-magnitude diagram that have a high probability
of belonging to NGC~3532. The age we derive from fitting white dwarf isochrones
to the locus of these stars, \,Myr, is consistent with the age
derived from the turnoff. Our analysis of the photometry also includes an
estimation of the binary star fraction, as well as a determination of the
cluster's luminosity and mass functions.Comment: Accepted for publication in AJ. 55 pages, 21 figures. High-quality
version with complete data tables can be downloaded from
http://www.phys.lsu.edu/~jclem/NGC3532
Colour-colour diagrams and extragalactic globular cluster ages. Systematic uncertainties using the (V-K)-(V-I) diagram
(abridged) We investigate biases in cluster ages and [Fe/H] estimated from
the (V-K)-(V-I) diagram, arising from inconsistent Horizontal Branch
morphology, metal mixture, treatment of core convection between observed
clusters and the theoretical colour grid employed for age and metallicity
determinations. We also study the role played by statistical fluctuations of
the observed colours, caused by the low total mass of typical globulars.
Horizontal Branch morphology is potentially the largest source of uncertainty.
A single-age system harbouring a large fraction of clusters with an HB
morphology systematically bluer than the one accounted for in the theoretical
colour grid, can simulate a bimodal population with an age difference as large
as 8 Gyr. When only the redder clusters are considered, this uncertainty is
almost negligible, unless there is an extreme mass loss along the Red Giant
Branch phase. The metal mixture affects mainly the redder clusters; the effect
of colour fluctuations becomes negligible for the redder clusters, or when the
integrated Mv is brighter than -8.5 mag. The treatment of core convection is
relevant for ages below ~4 Gyr. The retrieved [Fe/H] distributions are overall
only mildly affected. Colour fluctuations and convective core extension have
the largest effect. When 1sigma photometric errors reach 0.10 mag, all biases
found in our analysis are erased, and bimodal age populations with age
differences of up to ~8 Gyr go undetected. The use of both (U-I)-(V-K) and
(V-I)-(V-K) diagrams may help disclosing the presence of blue HB stars
unaccounted for in the theoretical colour calibration.Comment: 20 pages, including 26 figures. A&A in pres
Thermally Pulsing Asymptotic Giant Branch Star Models and Globular Cluster Planetary Nebulae I: The Model
Thermally pulsing asymptotic giant branch models of globular cluster stars
are calculated using a synthetic model with the goal of reproducing the
chemical composition, core masses and other observational parameters of the
four known globular cluster planetary nebulae as well as roughly matching the
overall cluster properties. The evolution of stars with an enhanced helium
abundance () and blue stragglers are modeled. New pre-thermally pulsing
asymptotic giant branch mass-losses for red giant branch and early asymptotic
giant branch stars are calculated from the Padova stellar evolution models
\citep{berta,bertb}. The new mass-losses are calculated to get the relative
differences in mass-losses due to enhanced helium abundances.
The global properties of the globular cluster planetary nebula are reproduced
with these models. The metallicity, mass of the central star, overall
metallicities, helium abundance and the nebular mass are matched to the
observational values. Globular cluster planetary nebulae JaFu 1 and JaFu 2 are
reproduced {\it by assuming progenitor stars} with masses near the typical main
sequence turn-offs of globular clusters and with enhanced helium abundances
very similar to the enhancements inferred from fitting isochrones to globular
cluster colour-magnitude diagrams. The globular cluster PN GJJC-1 can be
roughly fit by a progenitor star with very extreme helium enhancement
() near the turn-off producing a central star with the same mass
as inferred by observations and a very low nebular mass. The abundances and
core mass of planetary nebula Ps 1 and its central star (K648) are reproduced
by a blue straggler model. However, it turned out to be impossible to reproduce
its nebular mass and it is concluded some kind of binary scenario may be needed
to explain K648.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Hubble Space Telescope Observations of the Draco Dwarf Spheroidal
We present an F606W-F814W color-magnitude diagram for the Draco dwarf
spheroidal galaxy based on Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2 images. The luminosity
function is well-sampled to 3 magnitudes below the turn-off. We see no evidence
for multiple turnoffs and conclude that, at least over the field of the view of
the WFPC2, star formation was primarily single-epoch. If the observed number of
blue stragglers is due to extended star formation, then roughly 6% (upper
limit) of the stars could be half as old as the bulk of the galaxy. The color
difference between the red giant branch and the turnoff is consistent with an
old population and is very similar to that observed in the old, metal-poor
Galactic globular clusters M68 and M92. Despite its red horizontal branch,
Draco appears to be older than M68 and M92 by 1.6 +/- 2.5 Gyrs, lending support
to the argument that the ``second parameter'' which governs horizontal branch
morphology must be something other than age. Draco's observed luminosity
function is very similar to that of M68, and the derived initial mass function
is consistent with that of the solar neighborhood.Comment: 16 pages, AASTeX, 9 postscript figures, figures 1 and 2 available at
ftp://bb3.jpl.nasa.gov/pub/draco/. Accepted for publication in the
Astronomical Journa
The Tidal Disruption of Giant Stars and Their Contribution to the Flaring Supermassive Black Hole Population
Sun-like stars are thought to be regularly disrupted by supermassive black
holes (SMBHs) within galactic nuclei. Yet, as stars evolve off the main
sequence their vulnerability to tidal disruption increases drastically as they
develop a bifurcated structure consisting of a dense core and a tenuous
envelope. Here we present the first hydrodynamic simulations of the tidal
disruption of giant stars and show that the core has a substantial influence on
the star's ability to survive the encounter. Stars with more massive cores
retain large fractions of their envelope mass, even in deep encounters.
Accretion flares resulting from the disruption of giant stars should last for
tens to hundreds of years. Their characteristic signature in transient searches
would not be the decay typically associated with tidal disruption
events, but a correlated rise over many orders of magnitude in brightness on
months to years timescales. We calculate the relative disruption rates of stars
of varying evolutionary stages in typical galactic centers, then use our
results to produce Monte Carlo realizations of the expected flaring event
populations. We find that the demographics of tidal disruption flares are
strongly dependent on both stellar and black hole mass, especially near the
limiting SMBH mass scale of . At this black hole mass, we
predict a sharp transition in the SMBH flaring diet beyond which all observable
disruptions arise from evolved stars, accompanied by a dramatic cutoff in the
overall tidal disruption flaring rate. Black holes less massive than this
limiting mass scale will show observable flares from both main sequence and
evolved stars, with giants contributing up to 10% of the event rate. The
relative fractions of stars disrupted at different evolutionary states can
constrain the properties and distributions of stars in galactic nuclei other
than our own.Comment: 18 pages, 18 figures, submitted to Ap
Two Rare Magnetic Cataclysmic Variables with Extreme Cyclotron Features Identified in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Two newly identified magnetic cataclysmic variables discovered in the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), SDSSJ155331.12+551614.5 and SDSSJ132411.57+032050.5,
have spectra showing highly prominent, narrow, strongly polarized cyclotron
humps with amplitudes that vary on orbital periods of 4.39 and 2.6 hrs,
respectively. In the former, the spacing of the humps indicates the 3rd and 4th
harmonics in a magnetic field of ~60 MG. The narrowness of the cyclotron
features and the lack of strong emission lines imply very low temperature
plasmas and very low accretion rates, so that the accreting area is heated by
particle collisions rather than accretion shocks. The detection of rare systems
like these exemplifies the ability of the SDSS to find the lowest accretion
rate close binaries.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal, vol. 583,
February 1, 2003; slight revisions and additions in response to referee's
comments; 17 pages, 6 figures, AASTeX v4.
An Initial Survey of White Dwarfs in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
An initial assessment is made of white dwarf and hot subdwarf stars observed
in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. In a small area of sky (190 square degrees),
observed much like the full survey will be, 269 white dwarfs and 56 hot
subdwarfs are identified spectroscopically where only 44 white dwarfs and 5 hot
subdwarfs were known previously. Most are ordinary DA (hydrogen atmosphere) and
DB (helium) types. In addition, in the full survey to date, a number of WDs
have been found with uncommon spectral types. Among these are blue DQ stars
displaying lines of atomic carbon; red DQ stars showing molecular bands of C_2
with a wide variety of strengths; DZ stars where Ca and occasionally Mg, Na,
and/or Fe lines are detected; and magnetic WDs with a wide range of magnetic
field strengths in DA, DB, DQ, and (probably) DZ spectral types. Photometry
alone allows identification of stars hotter than 12000 K, and the density of
these stars for 15<g<20 is found to be ~2.2 deg^{-2} at Galactic latitudes
29-62 deg. Spectra are obtained for roughly half of these hot stars. The
spectra show that, for 15<g<17, 40% of hot stars are WDs and the fraction of
WDs rises to ~90% at g=20. The remainder are hot sdB and sdO stars.Comment: Accepted for AJ; 43 pages, including 12 figures and 5 table
The effect of positively framed and negatively framed messages on televised smoking cessation advertisement success : a systematic review
Background: Smoking cessation campaigns aim to decrease the prevalence of smoking in the community. However, smoking cessation campaigns can be expensive to develop and implement, therefore is it essential that campaigns have high impact and broad reach to ensure the most efficient use of resources. Method: A systematic review was conducted in October 2020 to assess the efficacy of positively framed and negatively framed messages used in televised smoking cessation advertisements. The search was restricted to quantitative primary research published between 2010 and 2020, yielding 4640 results. Study selection was performed using the PRISMA method. Population was inclusive of all ages and smoking status. A total of 15 articles met the criteria for review. Results: Negative messages were found to increase the likelihood of a smoker intending to quit, attempting to quit, successfully quitting, or calling a quitline, while some studies found that positive messages increased confidence to quit and calls to quitline. Combination of negative and positive messages were found to complement one another and were more successful at influencing quit behaviour than using either message type alone. However, findings were not consistent across all studies. Conclusion: The results of this review may be used to inform the development of future smoking cessation advertisements to ensure content is relevant, effective, and cost-efficient. Further exploration of the efficacy of positive and negative messages on target populations would be valuable to advise the design of cessation campaigns. © 2023 College of Public Health Sciences, Chulalongkorn University. This is an open access article under the CC BY license
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