28 research outputs found
Ultraviolet stellar astronomy
The author has identified the following significant results. During all three Skylab missions, prism-on observations were obtained in 188 starfields and prism-off observations in 31 starfields. In general, the fields are concentrated in the Milky Way where the frequency of hot stars is highest. These fields cover an area approximately 3660 degrees and include roughly 24 percent of a band 30 deg wide centered on the plane of the Milky Way. A census of stars in the prism-on fields shows that nearly 6,000 stars have measurable flux data at a wavelength of 2600A, that 1,600 have measurable data at 2000A, and that 400 show useful data at 1500A. Obvious absorption or emission features shortward of 2000A are visible in approximately 120 stars. This represents a bonanza of data useful for statistical studies of stellar classification and of interstellar reddening as well as for studies of various types of peculiar stars
Catalog of far-ultraviolet objective-prism spectrophotometry: Skylab experiment S-019, ultraviolet steller astronomy
Ultraviolet stellar spectra in the wavelength region from 1300 to 5000 A (130 to 500) were photographed during the three manned Skylab missions using a 15 cm aperture objective-prism telescope. The prismatic dispersion varied from 58 A mm/1 at 1400 A to 1600 A mm/1 at 3000 A. Approximately 1000 spectra representing 500 stars were measured and reduced to observed fluxes. About 100 stars show absorption lines of Si IV, C IV, or C II. Numerous line features are also recorded in supergiant stars, shell stars, A and F stars, and Wolf-Rayet stars. Most of the stars in the catalog are of spectral class B, with a number of O and A type stars and a sampling of WC, WN, F and C type stars. Spectrophotometric results are tabulated for these 500 stars
Physical Structure of Small Wolf-Rayet Ring Nebulae
We have selected the seven most well-defined WR ring nebulae in the LMC (Br
2, Br 10, Br 13, Br 40a, Br 48, Br 52, and Br 100) to study their physical
nature and evolutionary stages. New CCD imaging and echelle observations have
been obtained for five of these nebulae; previous photographic imaging and
echelle observations are available for the remaining two nebulae. Using the
nebular dynamics and abundances, we find that the Br 13 nebula is a
circumstellar bubble, and that the Br 2 nebula may represent a circumstellar
bubble merging with a fossil main-sequence interstellar bubble. The nebulae
around Br 10, Br 52, and Br 100 all show influence of the ambient interstellar
medium. Their regular expansion patterns suggest that they still contain
significant amounts of circumstellar material. Their nebular abundances would
be extremely interesting, as their central stars are WC5 and WN3-4 stars whose
nebular abundances have not been derived previously. Intriguing and tantalizing
implications are obtained from comparisons of the LMC WR ring nebulae with ring
nebulae around Galactic WR stars, Galactic LBVs, LMC LBVs, and LMC BSGs;
however, these implications may be limited by small-number statistics. A SNR
candidate close to Br 2 is diagnosed by its large expansion velocity and
nonthermal radio emission. There is no indication that Br 2's ring nebula
interacts dynamically with this SNR candidate.Comment: 20 pages, Latex (aaspp4.sty), 2 figures, accepted by the Astronomical
Journal (March 99 issue
HATSouth: a global network of fully automated identical wide-field telescopes
HATSouth is the world's first network of automated and homogeneous telescopes
that is capable of year-round 24-hour monitoring of positions over an entire
hemisphere of the sky. The primary scientific goal of the network is to
discover and characterize a large number of transiting extrasolar planets,
reaching out to long periods and down to small planetary radii. HATSouth
achieves this by monitoring extended areas on the sky, deriving high precision
light curves for a large number of stars, searching for the signature of
planetary transits, and confirming planetary candidates with larger telescopes.
HATSouth employs 6 telescope units spread over 3 locations with large longitude
separation in the southern hemisphere (Las Campanas Observatory, Chile; HESS
site, Namibia; Siding Spring Observatory, Australia). Each of the HATSouth
units holds four 0.18m diameter f/2.8 focal ratio telescope tubes on a common
mount producing an 8.2x8.2 arcdeg field, imaged using four 4Kx4K CCD cameras
and Sloan r filters, to give a pixel scale of 3.7 arcsec/pixel. The HATSouth
network is capable of continuously monitoring 128 square arc-degrees. We
present the technical details of the network, summarize operations, and present
weather statistics for the 3 sites. On average each of the 6 HATSouth units has
conducted observations on ~500 nights over a 2-year time period, yielding a
total of more than 1million science frames at 4 minute integration time, and
observing ~10.65 hours per day on average. We describe the scheme of our data
transfer and reduction from raw pixel images to trend-filtered light curves and
transiting planet candidates. Photometric precision reaches ~6 mmag at 4-minute
cadence for the brightest non-saturated stars at r~10.5. We present detailed
transit recovery simulations to determine the expected yield of transiting
planets from HATSouth. (abridged)Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, 1 table, submitted to PAS
Photometry and low resolution spectroscopy of hot post-AGB candidates
We have obtained Johnson U, B, V and Cousins R, I photometry and low
resolution spectra of a small sample of hot post-AGB candidates. Using the
present data in combination with JHK data from 2MASS, infrared data from the
MSX catalog and the IRAS fluxes, we have studied the spectral energy
distribution (SED) of these stars. Using the DUSTY code we have estimated the
dust temperatures, the distances to the stars, the mass-loss rates, angular
radii of the inner boundary of the dust envelopes and dynamical ages from the
tip of the AGB. These candidates have also been imaged through a narrow band
H-alpha filter, to search for nebulosity around the central stars. Our H-alpha
images revealed the bipolar morphology of the low excitation PN IRAS 17395-0841
with an angular extent of 2.8arcsec. The bipolar lobes of IRAS 17423-1755 in
H-alpha were found to have an angular extent of 3.5arcsec (south-east lobe) and
2.2arcsec (north-west lobe). The dust envelope characteristics, low resolution
spectrum and IRAS colors suggest that IRAS 18313-1738 is similar to the
proto-planetary nebula (PPN) HD 51585. The SED of IRAS 17423-1755, IRAS
18313-1738 and IRAS 19127+1717 show a warm dust component (in addition to the
cold dust) which may be due to recent and ongoing mass-loss.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, h-alpha figure compressed with XV, paper
accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
A Hubble Space Telescope Survey for Resolved Companions of Planetary-Nebula Nuclei
We report results of an HST "snapshot" survey aimed at finding resolved
binary companions of the central stars of Galactic planetary nebulae (PNe).
Using WF/PC and WFPC2, we searched the fields of 113 PNe for stars whose close
proximity to the central star suggests a physical association. We find 10
binary nuclei that are very likely to be physically associated, and another six
that are possible binary associations. By correcting for interstellar
extinction and placing the central stars' companions on the main sequence, we
derive distances to the objects, and thereby significantly increase the number
of PNe with reliable distances.
Comparison of our derived distances with those obtained from various
statistical methods shows that all of the latter have systematically
overestimated the distances, by factors ranging up to a factor of two or more.
We show that this error is most likely due to the fact that the properties of
our PNe with binary nuclei are systematically different from those of PNe used
heretofore to calibrate statistical methods. Specifically, our PNe tend to have
lower surface brightnesses at the same physical radius than the traditional
calibration objects. This difference may arise from a selection effect: the PNe
in our survey are typically nearby, old nebulae, whereas most of the objects
that calibrate statistical techniques are low-latitude,
high-surface-brightness, and more distant nebulae. As a result, the statistical
methods that seem to work well with samples of distant PNe, e.g., those in the
Galactic bulge or external galaxies, may not be applicable to the more diverse
population of local PNe.Comment: 37 text pages, 17 table pages, 9 figures. Accepted by Astronomical
Journal for June 1999 issu
Modelling entomological-climatic interactions of Plasmodium falciparum malaria transmission in two Colombian endemic-regions: contributions to a National Malaria Early Warning System
BACKGROUND: Malaria has recently re-emerged as a public health burden in Colombia. Although the problem seems to be climate-driven, there remain significant gaps of knowledge in the understanding of the complexity of malaria transmission, which have motivated attempts to develop a comprehensive model. METHODS: The mathematical tool was applied to represent Plasmodium falciparum malaria transmission in two endemic-areas. Entomological exogenous variables were estimated through field campaigns and laboratory experiments. Availability of breeding places was included towards representing fluctuations in vector densities. Diverse scenarios, sensitivity analyses and instabilities cases were considered during experimentation-validation process. RESULTS: Correlation coefficients and mean square errors between observed and modelled incidences reached 0.897–0.668 (P > 0.95) and 0.0002–0.0005, respectively. Temperature became the most relevant climatic parameter driving the final incidence. Accordingly, malaria outbreaks are possible during the favourable epochs following the onset of El Niño warm events. Sporogonic and gonotrophic cycles showed to be the entomological key-variables controlling the transmission potential of mosquitoes' population. Simulation results also showed that seasonality of vector density becomes an important factor towards understanding disease transmission. CONCLUSION: The model constitutes a promising tool to deepen the understanding of the multiple interactions related to malaria transmission conducive to outbreaks. In the foreseeable future it could be implemented as a tool to diagnose possible dynamical patterns of malaria incidence under several scenarios, as well as a decision-making tool for the early detection and control of outbreaks. The model will be also able to be merged with forecasts of El Niño events to provide a National Malaria Early Warning System
Low-mass pre--main-sequence stars in the Magellanic Clouds
[Abridged] The stellar Initial Mass Function (IMF) suggests that sub-solar
stars form in very large numbers. Most attractive places for catching low-mass
star formation in the act are young stellar clusters and associations, still
(half-)embedded in star-forming regions. The low-mass stars in such regions are
still in their pre--main-sequence (PMS) evolutionary phase. The peculiar nature
of these objects and the contamination of their samples by the evolved
populations of the Galactic disk impose demanding observational techniques for
the detection of complete numbers of PMS stars in the Milky Way. The Magellanic
Clouds, the companion galaxies to our own, demonstrate an exceptional star
formation activity. The low extinction and stellar field contamination in
star-forming regions of these galaxies imply a more efficient detection of
low-mass PMS stars than in the Milky Way, but their distance from us make the
application of special detection techniques unfeasible. Nonetheless, imaging
with the Hubble Space Telescope yield the discovery of solar and sub-solar PMS
stars in the Magellanic Clouds from photometry alone. Unprecedented numbers of
such objects are identified as the low-mass stellar content of their
star-forming regions, changing completely our picture of young stellar systems
outside the Milky Way, and extending the extragalactic stellar IMF below the
persisting threshold of a few solar masses. This review presents the recent
developments in the investigation of PMS stars in the Magellanic Clouds, with
special focus on the limitations by single-epoch photometry that can only be
circumvented by the detailed study of the observable behavior of these stars in
the color-magnitude diagram. The achieved characterization of the low-mass PMS
stars in the Magellanic Clouds allowed thus a more comprehensive understanding
of the star formation process in our neighboring galaxies.Comment: Review paper, 26 pages (in LaTeX style for Springer journals), 4
figures. Accepted for publication in Space Science Review
AE Aquarii represents a new subclass of Cataclysmic Variables
We analyze properties of the unique nova-like star AE Aquarii identified with
a close binary system containing a red dwarf and a very fast rotating
magnetized white dwarf. It cannot be assigned to any of the three commonly
adopted sub-classes of Cataclysmic Variables: Polars, Intermediate Polars, and
Accreting non-magnetized White Dwarfs. Our study has shown that the white dwarf
in AE Aqr is in the ejector state and its dipole magnetic moment is . It switched into this state due to intensive mass
exchange between the system components during a previous epoch. A high rate of
disk accretion onto the white dwarf surface resulted in temporary screening of
its magnetic field and spin-up of the white dwarf to its present spin period.
Transition of the white dwarf to the ejector state had occurred at a final
stage of the spin-up epoch as its magnetic field emerged from the accreted
plasma due to diffusion. In the frame of this scenario AE Aqr represents a
missing link in the chain of Polars evolution and the white dwarf resembles a
recycled pulsar.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy Reports (July 2012