121 research outputs found
Photometric Variability in the Faint Sky Variability Survey
The Faint Sky Variability Survey (FSVS) is aimed at finding photometric
and/or astrometric variable objects between 16th and 24th mag on time-scales
between tens of minutes and years with photometric precisions ranging from 3
millimag to 0.2 mag. An area of 23 deg, located at mid and high Galactic
latitudes, was covered using the Wide Field Camera (WFC) on the 2.5-m Isaac
Newton Telescope (INT) on La Palma. Here we present some preliminary results on
the variability of sources in the FSVS.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in 14th European Workshop on White
Dwarfs, ASP Conference Series, eds. D. Koester, S. Moehle
The spectroscopic evolution of the symbiotic-like recurrent nova V407 Cygni during its 2010 outburst. I. The shock and its evolution
On 2010 Mar 10, V407 Cyg was discovered in outburst, eventually reaching V< 8
and detected by Fermi. Using medium and high resolution ground-based optical
spectra, visual and Swift UV photometry, and Swift X-ray spectrophotometry, we
describe the behavior of the high-velocity profile evolution for this nova
during its first three months. The peak of the X-ray emission occurred at about
day 40 with a broad maximum and decline after day 50. The main changes in the
optical spectrum began at around that time. The He II 4686A line first appeared
between days 7 and 14 and initially displayed a broad, symmetric profile that
is characteristic of all species before day 60. Low-excitation lines remained
comparatively narrow, with v(rad,max) of order 200-400 km/s. They were
systematically more symmetric than lines such as [Ca V], [Fe VII], [Fe X], and
He II, all of which showed a sequence of profile changes going from symmetric
to a blue wing similar to that of the low ionization species but with a red
wing extended to as high as 600 km/s . The Na I D doublet developed a broad
component with similar velocity width to the other low-ionization species. The
O VI Raman features were not detected. We interpret these variations as
aspherical expansion of the ejecta within the Mira wind. The blue side is from
the shock penetrating into the wind while the red wing is from the low-density
periphery. The maximum radial velocities obey power laws, v(rad,max) t^{-n}
with n ~ 1/3 for red wing and ~0.8 for the blue. (truncated)Comment: Accepted for publication, A&A (submitted: 9 Oct 2010; accepted: 1 Dec
2010) in press; based on data obtained with Swift, Nordic Optical Telescope,
Ondrejov Observatory. Corrected typo, Fermi?LAT detection was at energies
above 100 MeV (with thanks to C. C. Cheung
Water-ice driven activity on Main-Belt Comet P/2010 A2 (LINEAR) ?
The dust ejecta of Main-Belt Comet P/2010 A2 (LINEAR) have been observed with
several telescopes at the at the Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos on La
Palma, Spain. Application of an inverse dust tail Monte Carlo method to the
images of the dust ejecta from the object indicates that a sustained, likely
water-ice driven, activity over some eight months is the mechanism responsible
for the formation of the observed tail. The total amount of dust released is
estimated to be 5E7 kg, which represents about 0.3% of the nucleus mass. While
the event could have been triggered by a collision, this cannot be decided from
the currently available data.Comment: Accepted for ApJ Letter
Short timescale variability in the Faint Sky Variability Survey
We present the V band variability analysis of the point sources in the Faint
Sky Variability Survey on time scales from 24 minutes to tens of days. We find
that about one percent of the point sources down to V = 24 are variables. We
discuss the variability detection probabilities for each field depending on
field sampling, amplitude and timescale of the variability. The combination of
colour and variability information allows us to explore the fraction of
variable sources for different spectral types. We find that about 50 percent of
the variables show variability timescales shorter than 6 hours. The total
number of variables is dominated by main sequence sources. The distribution of
variables with spectral type is fairly constant along the main sequence, with 1
per cent of the sources being variable, except at the blue end of the main
sequence, between spectral types F0--F5, where the fraction of variable sources
increases to about 2 percent. For bluer sources, above the main sequence, this
percentage increases to about 3.5. We find that the combination of the sampling
and the number of observations allows us to determine the variability
timescales and amplitudes for a maximum of 40 percent of the variables found.
About a third of the total number of short timescale variables found in the
survey were not detected in either B or/and I. These show a similar variability
timescale distribution to that found for the variables detected in all three
bands.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures and 4 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Kepler423b: a half-Jupiter mass planet transiting a very old solar-like star
We report the spectroscopic confirmation of the Kepler object of interest
KOI-183.01 (Kepler-423b), a half-Jupiter mass planet transiting an old
solar-like star every 2.7 days. Our analysis is the first to combine the full
Kepler photometry (quarters 1-17) with high-precision radial velocity
measurements taken with the FIES spectrograph at the Nordic Optical Telescope.
We simultaneously modelled the photometric and spectroscopic data-sets using
Bayesian approach coupled with Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling. We found that
the Kepler pre-search data conditioned (PDC) light curve of KOI-183 exhibits
quarter-to-quarter systematic variations of the transit depth, with a
peak-to-peak amplitude of about 4.3 % and seasonal trends reoccurring every
four quarters. We attributed these systematics to an incorrect assessment of
the quarterly variation of the crowding metric. The host star KOI-183 is a G4
dwarf with M_\rm{Sun},
R_\rm{Sun}, K, dex, and with
an age of Gyr. The planet KOI-183b has a mass of
M and a radius of
R, yielding a planetary bulk
density of g/cm. The radius of KOI-183b
is consistent with both theoretical models for irradiated coreless giant
planets and expectations based on empirical laws. The inclination of the
stellar spin axis suggests that the system is aligned along the line of sight.
We detected a tentative secondary eclipse of the planet at a 2-
confidence level ( ppm) and found that the
orbit might have a small non-zero eccentricity of .
With a Bond albedo of , KOI-183b is one of the
gas-giant planets with the lowest albedo known so far.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, 5 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A.
Planet designation changed from KOI-183b to Kepler-423
A cyclical period variation detected in the updated orbital period analysis of TV Columbae
The two CCD photometries of the intermediate polar TV Columbae are made for
obtaining the two updated eclipse timings with high precision. There is an
interval time \sim 17yr since the last mid-eclipse time observed in 1991. Thus,
the new mid-eclipse times can offer an opportunity to check the previous
orbital ephemerides. A calculation indicates that the orbital ephemeris derived
by Augusteijn et al. (1994) should be corrected. Based on the proper linear
ephemeris (Hellier, 1993), the new orbital period analysis suggests a cyclical
period variation in the O-C diagram of TV Columbae. Using Applegate's mechanism
to explain the periodic oscillation in O-C diagram, the required energy is
larger than that a M0-type star can afford over a complete variation period
\sim 31.0(\pm 3.0)yr. Thus, the light travel-time effect indicates that the
tertiary component in TV Columbae may be a dwarf with a low mass, which is near
the mass lower limit \sim 0.08Msun as long as the inclination of the third body
high enough.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Watch out for that tree! A tutorial on shortcut deforestation
Functional programmers are strong enthusiasts of modular solutions to programming problems. Since software characteristics such as readability or maintainability are often directly proportional to modularity, this programming style naturally contributes to the beauty of functional programs. Unfortunately, in return of this beauty we often sacrifice efficiency: modular programs rely, at runtime, on the creation, use and elimination of intermediate data structures to connect its components. In this tutorial paper, we study an advanced technique that attempts to retain the best of this two worlds: (i) it allows programmers to implement beautiful, modular programs (ii) it shows how to transform such programs, in a way that can be incorporated in a compiler, into programs that do not construct any intermediate structure.- (undefined
An Extensive Census of HST Counterparts to Chandra X-ray Sources in the Globular Cluster 47 Tucanae. II. Time Series and Analysis
We report time series and variability information for the optical
identifications of X-ray sources in 47 Tuc reported in Paper I. The eight CVs
with secure orbital periods have fainter accretion disks, in the V band, than
field CVs with similar periods. These faint disks and the faint absolute
magnitudes (Mv) of the 47 Tuc CVs suggests they have low accretion rates. The
median Fx/Fopt value for the 47 Tuc CVs is higher than that of all known
classes of field CV, because of both the faint Mv values and the relatively
high X-ray luminosities (Lx). The latter are only seen in DQ Her systems in the
field, but the 47 Tuc CVs are much fainter optically than most field DQ Hers.
Some combination of magnetic behavior and low accretion rates may be able to
explain our observations, but the results at present are ambiguous, since no
class of field CV has distributions of both Lx and Mv that are consistent with
those of the 47 Tuc CVs. The radial distribution of the X-ray detected active
binaries is indistinguishable from that of the much larger sample of optical
variables detected in previous WFPC2 studies. The X-ray properties of these
objects are consistent with those of active binaries found in field studies.
One reasonable and one marginal candidate for optical identification of a
quiescent LMXB was found (one is already known). Finally, we study the blue
variables showing little or no evidence for X-ray emission. Their generally
long periods and the absence of flickering suggests they are not CVs. At
present we have no satisfactory explanation for these objects, although some
may be detached WD-main sequence star binaries.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal. 34 pages, 24
figures, 5 tables, abridged abstract. Some figures at reduced resolutio
The accretion flow in the discless intermediate polar V2400 Ophiuchi
RXTE observations confirm that the X-ray lightcurve of V2400 Oph is pulsed at
the beat cycle, as expected in a discless intermediate polar. There are no
X-ray modulations at the orbital or spin cycles, but optical line profiles vary
with all three cycles. We construct a model for line-profile variations in a
discless accretor, based on the idea that the accretion stream flips from one
magnetic pole to the other, and show that this accounts for the observed
behaviour over the spin and beat cycles. The minimal variability over the
orbital cycle implies that 1) V2400 Oph is at an inclination of only ~10 deg,
and 2) much of the accretion flow is not in a coherent stream, but is circling
the white dwarf, possibly as a ring of denser, diamagnetic blobs. We discuss
the light this sheds on disc formation in intermediate polars.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures, To appear in MNRAS, includes low-res figures to
reduce siz
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