1,785 research outputs found
Periodic photometric variability of the brown dwarf Kelu-1
We have detected a strong periodicity of 1.80+/-0.05 hours in photometric
observations of the brown dwarf Kelu-1. The peak-to-peak amplitude of the
variation is ~1.1% (11.9+/-0.8 mmag) in a 41nm wide filter centred on 857nm and
including the dust/temperature sensitive TiO & CrH bands. We have identified
two plausible causes of variability: surface features rotating into- and
out-of-view and so modulating the light curve at the rotation period; or,
elliposidal variability caused by an orbiting companion. In the first scenario,
we combine the observed vsin(i) of Kelu-1 and standard model radius to
determine that the axis of rotation is inclined at 65+/-12 degrees to the line
of sight.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Final Report: 9-B English Service-learning Evaluation, Moorhead High School, Moorhead, Minnesota
Mark Jensen, English faculty at MHS offered his service-learning program for an evaluation. This evaluation was initiated by Jeanie Jacobs consequent to the conditions of a grant she received; the structure of this evaluation evolved over several team meetings between Jensen, Ann Larson (District 152 Director of Community Service-learning) and myself
Vsini-s for late-type stars from spectral synthesis in K-band region
We analyse medium-resolution spectra (R\sim 18000) of 19 late type dwarfs in
order to determine vsini-s using synthetic rather than observational template
spectra. For this purpose observational data around 2.2 m of stars with
spectral classes from G8V to M9.5V were modelled.
We find that the Na I (2.2062 and 2.2090 m) and CO 2-0 band
features are modelled well enough to use for vsini determination without the
need for a suitable observational template spectra. Within the limit of the
resolution of our spectra, we use synthetic spectra templates to derive vsini
values consistent with those derived in the optical regime using observed
templates. We quantify the errors in our vsini determination due to incorrect
choice of model parameters \Teff, log , , [Fe/H] or FWHM and
show that they are typically less than 10 per cent. We note that the spectral
resolution of our data(\sim 16 km/s) limited this study to relatively fast
rotators and that resolutions of 60000 will required to access most late-type
dwarfs.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, 3 tables, accepted to the MNRA
Exploring the Local Milky Way: M Dwarfs as Tracers of Galactic Populations
We have assembled a spectroscopic sample of low-mass dwarfs observed as part
of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey along one Galactic sightline, designed to
investigate the observable properties of the thin and thick disks. This sample
of ~7400 K and M stars also has measured ugriz photometry, proper motions, and
radial velocities. We have computed UVW space motion distributions, and
investigate their structure with respect to vertical distance from the Galactic
Plane. We place constraints on the velocity dispersions of the thin and thick
disks, using two-component Gaussian fits. We also compare these kinematic
distributions to a leading Galactic model. Finally, we investigate other
possible observable differences between the thin and thick disks, such as
color, active fraction and metallicity.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, Accepted by A
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