3,708 research outputs found
Modelling convection in A star atmospheres. Bisectors and lineshapes of HD108642
We present a code, VeDyn, for modelling envelopes and atmospheres of A to F
stars focusing on accurate treatment of convective processes. VeDyn implements
the highly sophisticated convection model of Canuto and Dubovikov (1998) but is
fast and handy enough to be used in practical astrophysical applications. We
developed the HME envelope solver for this convection model furtheron to
consistently model the envelope together with the stellar atmosphere. The
synthesis code SynthV was extended to account for the resulting velocity
structure. Finally, we tested our approach on atomic line bisectors. It is
shown that our synthetic line bisectors of HD108642 bend towards the blue and
are of a magnitude comparable to the observed ones. Even though this approach
of modelling convection requires the solution of a coupled system of nonlinear
differential equations, it is fast enough to be applicable to many of the
investigation techniques relying on model atmospheres.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
Concentration of the first eigenfunction for a second order elliptic operator
We study the semi-classical limits of the first eigenfunction of a positive
second order operator on a compact Riemannian manifold when the diffusion
constant goes to zero. We assume that the first order term is given
by a vector field , whose recurrent components are either hyperbolic points
or cycles or two dimensional torii. The limits of the normalized eigenfunctions
concentrate on the recurrent sets of maximal dimension where the topological
pressure \cite{Kifer90} is attained. On the cycles and torii, the limit
measures are absolutely continuous with respect to the invariant probability
measure on these sets. We have determined these limit measures, using a blow-up
analysis.Comment: Note to appear in C.R.A.
Stellar model atmospheres with magnetic line blanketing
Model atmospheres of A and B stars are computed taking into account magnetic
line blanketing. These calculations are based on the new stellar model
atmosphere code LLModels which implements direct treatment of the opacities due
to the bound-bound transitions and ensures an accurate and detailed description
of the line absorption. The anomalous Zeeman effect was calculated for the
field strengths between 1 and 40 kG and a field vector perpendicular to the
line of sight. The model structure, high-resolution energy distribution,
photometric colors, metallic line spectra and the hydrogen Balmer line profiles
are computed for magnetic stars with different metallicities and are discussed
with respect to those of non-magnetic reference models. The magnetically
enhanced line blanketing changes the atmospheric structure and leads to a
redistribution of energy in the stellar spectrum. The most noticeable feature
in the optical region is the appearance of the 5200 A depression. However, this
effect is prominent only in cool A stars and disappears for higher effective
temperatures. The presence of a magnetic field produces opposite variation of
the flux distribution in the optical and UV region. A deficiency of the UV flux
is found for the whole range of considered effective temperatures, whereas the
``null wavelength'' where flux remains unchanged shifts towards the shorter
wavelengths for higher temperatures.Comment: accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysic
Fast Recognition of Partial Star Products and Quasi Cartesian Products
This paper is concerned with the fast computation of a relation on the
edge set of connected graphs that plays a decisive role in the recognition of
approximate Cartesian products, the weak reconstruction of Cartesian products,
and the recognition of Cartesian graph bundles with a triangle free basis.
A special case of is the relation , whose convex closure
yields the product relation that induces the prime factor
decomposition of connected graphs with respect to the Cartesian product. For
the construction of so-called Partial Star Products are of particular
interest. Several special data structures are used that allow to compute
Partial Star Products in constant time. These computations are tuned to the
recognition of approximate graph products, but also lead to a linear time
algorithm for the computation of for graphs with maximum bounded
degree.
Furthermore, we define \emph{quasi Cartesian products} as graphs with
non-trivial . We provide several examples, and show that quasi
Cartesian products can be recognized in linear time for graphs with bounded
maximum degree. Finally, we note that quasi products can be recognized in
sublinear time with a parallelized algorithm
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