291 research outputs found
Preparation for Discipleship- Discipleship in Jesus\u27 Farewell Discourses, St John13-17
The meaning of discipleship is significant for the church today. As the world changes, the church and the members of the church change, and it becomes necessary for the church to renew her churchliness. In order to be the church, the church must know the meaning of discipleship. If the church wants to understand her divine duty she must know the meaning of discipleship. This thesis presents an investigation of the meaning of discipleship in Jesus\u27 farewell discourses in the Gospel according to St. John (chapters 13-17)
High-amplitude, long-term X-ray variability in the solar-type star HD 81809: the beginning of an X-ray activity cycle?
We present the initial results from our XMM program aimed at searching for
X-ray activity cycles in solar-type stars. HD 81809 is a G2-type star (somewhat
more evolved than the Sun, and with a less massive companion) with a pronounced
8.2 yr chromospheric cycle, as evident from from the Mt. Wilson program data.
We present here the results from the initial 2.5 years of XMM observations,
showing that large amplitude (a factor of approx. 10) modulation is present in
the X-ray luminosity, with a clearly defined maximum in mid 2002 and a steady
decrease since then. The maximum of the chromospheric cycle took place in 2001;
if the observed X-ray variability is the initial part of an X-ray cycle, this
could imply a phase shift between chromospheric and coronal activity, although
the current descent into chromospheric cycle minimum is well reflected into the
star's X-ray luminosity. The observations presented here provide clear evidence
for the presence of large amplitude X-ray variability coherent with the
activity cycle in the chromosphere in a star other than the Sun.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Crossing the Brown Dwarf Desert Using Adaptive Optics: A Very Close L-Dwarf Companion to the Nearby Solar Analog HR 7672
We have found a very faint companion to the active solar analog HR 7672 (HD
190406; GJ 779; 15 Sge). Three epochs of high resolution imaging using adaptive
optics (AO) at the Gemini-North and Keck II Telescopes demonstrate that HR
7672B is a common proper motion companion, with a separation of 0.79" (14 AU)
and a 2.16 um flux ratio of 8.6 mags. Using follow-up K-band spectroscopy from
Keck AO+NIRSPEC, we measure a spectral type of L4.5+/-1.5. This is the closest
ultracool companion around a main sequence star found to date by direct
imaging. We estimate the primary has an age of 1-3 Gyr. Assuming coevality, the
companion is most likely substellar, with a mass of 55-78 Mjup based on
theoretical models. The primary star shows a long-term radial velocity trend,
and we combine the radial velocity data and AO imaging to set a firm
(model-independent) lower limit of 48 Mjup. In contrast to the paucity of brown
dwarf companions at <~4 AU around FGK dwarfs, HR 7672B implies that brown dwarf
companions do exist at separations comparable to those of the giant planets in
our own solar system. Its presence is at variance with scenarios where brown
dwarfs form as ejected stellar embryos. Moreover, since HR 7672B is likely too
massive to have formed in a circumstellar disk as planets are believed to, its
discovery suggests that a diversity of physical processes act to populate the
outer regions of exoplanetary systems.Comment: Astrophysical Journal, in pres
Lay leadership dinner
Immanuel Janssen, master of ceremonies; R. Hopmann, L. Hempelmann, J. Klotz, R. Meyer, M. Miller, S. Nafzger, R. Bohlmann, speakers.
Recorded May 7, 1981
Ultraviolet Spectroscopy of Rapidly-Rotating Solar-Mass Stars: Emission Line Redshifts as a Test of the Solar-Stellar Connection
We compare high-resolution ultraviolet spectra of the Sun and thirteen
solarmass main sequence stars with different rotational periods that serve as
proxies for their different ages and magnetic field structures. In this the
second paper in the series, we study the dependence of ultraviolet
emission-line centroid velocities on stellar rotation period, as rotation rates
decrease from that of the Pleiades star HII314 (Prot = 1.47 days) to Alpha Cen
A (Prot = 28 days). Our stellar sample of F9 V to G5 V stars consists of six
stars observed with the Cosmic Origins 1Guest Observer, NASA/ESA Hubble Space
Telescope and User of the Data Archive at the Space Telescope Science
Institute. Spectrograph on HST and eight stars observed with the Space
Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on HST. We find a systematic trend of increasing
redshift with more rapid rotation (decreasing rotation period) that is similar
to the increase in line red shift between quiet and plage regions on the Sun.
The fastest-rotating solar-mass star in our study, HII314, shows significantly
enhanced redshifts at all temperatures above log T = 4.6, including the corona,
which is very different from the redshift pattern observed in the more
slowly-rotating stars. This difference in the redshift pattern suggests that a
qualitative change in the magnetic-heating process occurs near Prot = 2 days.
We propose that HII314 is an example of a solar-mass star with a magnetic
heating rate too large for the physical processes responsible for the redshift
pattern to operate in the same way as for the more slowly rotating stars.
HII314 may therefore lie above the high activity end of the set of solar-like
phenomena that is often called the "solar-stellar connection".Comment: 36 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables, to appear in the Astrophysical Journal
July 201
Stellar Lyman-alpha Emission Lines in the Hubble Space Telescope Archive: Intrinsic Line Fluxes and Absorption from the Heliosphere and Astrospheres
We search the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) archive for previously unanalyzed
observations of stellar H I Lyman-alpha emission lines, our primary purpose
being to look for new detections of Lyman-alpha absorption from the outer
heliosphere, and to also search for analogous absorption from the astrospheres
surrounding the observed stars. The astrospheric absorption is of particular
interest because it can be used to study solar-like stellar winds that are
otherwise undetectable. We find and analyze 33 HST Lyman-alpha spectra in the
archive. All the spectra were taken with the E140M grating of the Space
Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) instrument on board HST. The HST/STIS
spectra yield 4 new detections of heliospheric absorption (70 Oph, Xi Boo, 61
Vir, and HD 165185) and 7 new detections of astrospheric absorption (EV Lac, 70
Oph, Xi Boo, 61 Vir, Delta Eri, HD 128987, and DK UMa), doubling the previous
number of heliospheric and astrospheric detections. When combined with previous
results, 10 of 17 lines of sight within 10 pc yield detections of astrospheric
absorption. This high detection fraction implies that most of the ISM within 10
pc must be at least partially neutral, since the presence of H I within the ISM
surrounding the observed star is necessary for an astrospheric detection. In
contrast, the detection percentage is only 9.7% (3 out of 31) for stars beyond
10 pc. Our Lyman-alpha analyses provide measurements of ISM H I and D I column
densities for all 33 lines of sight, and we discuss some implications of these
results. Finally, we measure chromospheric Lyman-alpha fluxes from the observed
stars. We use these fluxes to determine how Lyman-alpha flux correlates with
coronal X-ray and chromospheric Mg II emission, and we also study how
Lyman-alpha emission depends on stellar rotation.Comment: 56 pages, 15 figures; AASTEX v5.0 plus EPSF extensions in mkfig.sty;
accepted by ApJ
Recurrence Plot Based Measures of Complexity and its Application to Heart Rate Variability Data
The knowledge of transitions between regular, laminar or chaotic behavior is
essential to understand the underlying mechanisms behind complex systems. While
several linear approaches are often insufficient to describe such processes,
there are several nonlinear methods which however require rather long time
observations. To overcome these difficulties, we propose measures of complexity
based on vertical structures in recurrence plots and apply them to the logistic
map as well as to heart rate variability data. For the logistic map these
measures enable us not only to detect transitions between chaotic and periodic
states, but also to identify laminar states, i.e. chaos-chaos transitions. The
traditional recurrence quantification analysis fails to detect the latter
transitions. Applying our new measures to the heart rate variability data, we
are able to detect and quantify the laminar phases before a life-threatening
cardiac arrhythmia occurs thereby facilitating a prediction of such an event.
Our findings could be of importance for the therapy of malignant cardiac
arrhythmias
The Active Corona of HD 35850 (F8 V)
We present Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer spectroscopy and photometry of the
nearby F8 V star HD 35850 (HR 1817). The EUVE spectra reveal 28 emission lines
from Fe IX and Fe XV to Fe XXIV. The Fe XXI 102, 129 A ratio yields an upper
limit for the coronal electron density, log n < 11.6 per cc. The EUVE SW
spectrum shows a small but clearly detectable continuum. The line-to-continuum
ratio indicates approximately solar Fe abundances, 0.8 < Z < 1.6. The resulting
emission-measure distribution is characterized by two temperature components at
log T of 6.8 and 7.4. The EUVE spectra have been compared with non-simultaneous
ASCA SIS spectra of HD 35850. The SIS spectrum shows the same temperature
distribution as the EUVE DEM analysis. However, the SIS spectral firs suggest
sub-solar abundances, 0.34 < Z < 0.81. Although some of the discrepancy may be
the result of incomplete X-ray line lists, we cannot explain the disagreement
between the EUVE line-to-continuum ratio and the ASCA-derived Fe abundance.
Given its youth (t ~ 100 Myr), its rapid rotation (v sin i ~ 50 km/s), and its
high X-ray activity (Lx ~ 1.5E+30 ergs/s), HD 35850 may represent an activity
extremum for single, main-sequence F-type stars. The variability and EM
distribution can be reconstructed using the continuous flaring model of Guedel
provided that the flare distribution has a power-law index of 1.8. Similar
results obtained for other young solar analogs suggest that continuous flaring
is a viable coronal heating mechanism on rapidly rotating, late-type,
main-sequence stars.Comment: 32 pages incl. 14 figures and 3 tables. To appear in the 1999 April
10 issue of The Astrophysical Journa
Spectroscopic variability of two Oe stars
The Oe stars HD45314 and HD60848 have recently been found to exhibit very
different X-ray properties: whilst HD60848 has an X-ray spectrum and emission
level typical of most OB stars, HD45314 features a much harder and brighter
X-ray emission, making it a so-called gamma Cas analogue. Monitoring the
optical spectra could provide hints towards the origin of these very different
behaviours. We analyse a large set of spectroscopic observations of HD45314 and
HD60848, extending over 20 years. We further attempt to fit the H-alpha line
profiles of both stars with a simple model of emission line formation in a
Keplerian disk. Strong variations in the strengths of the H-alpha, H-beta, and
He I 5876 emission lines are observed for both stars. In the case of HD60848,
we find a time lag between the variations in the equivalent widths of these
lines. The emission lines are double peaked with nearly identical strengths of
the violet and red peaks. The H-alpha profile of this star can be successfully
reproduced by our model of a disk seen under an inclination of 30 degrees. In
the case of HD45314, the emission lines are highly asymmetric and display
strong line profile variations. We find a major change in behaviour between the
2002 outburst and the one observed in 2013. This concerns both the relationship
between the equivalent widths of the various lines and their morphologies at
maximum strength (double-peaked in 2002 versus single-peaked in 2013). Our
simple disk model fails to reproduce the observed H-alpha line profiles of
HD45314. Our results further support the interpretation that Oe stars do have
decretion disks similar to those of Be stars. Whilst the emission lines of
HD60848 are explained by a disk with a Keplerian velocity field, the disk of
HD45314 seems to have a significantly more complex velocity field that could be
related to the phenomenon that produces its peculiar X-ray emission.Comment: Accepted for Publication in A&
New rotation periods in the Pleiades: Interpreting activity indicators
We present results of photometric monitoring campaigns of G, K and M dwarfs
in the Pleiades carried out in 1994, 1995 and 1996. We have determined rotation
periods for 18 stars in this cluster. In this paper, we examine the validity of
using observables such as X-ray activity and amplitude of photometric
variations as indicators of angular momentum loss. We report the discovery of
cool, slow rotators with high amplitudes of variation. This contradicts
previous conclusions about the use of amplitudes as an alternate diagnostic of
the saturation of angular momentum loss. We show that the X-ray data can be
used as observational indicators of mass-dependent saturation in the angular
momentum loss proposed on theoretical grounds.Comment: 24 pages, LaTex (AASTeX); includes 8 postscript figures and 4 Latex
tables. To appear in ApJ, Feb. 1, 1998. Postscript version of preprint can be
obtained from http://casa.colorado.edu/~anitak/pubs.htm
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