55 research outputs found
Permanente inventarisatie van de Natuurreservaten aan de Kust, PINK II: Eindrapport periode 2012-2014
On the evolutionary status of Be stars. I. Field Be stars near the Sun
A sample of 97 galactic field Be stars were studied by taking into account
the effects induced by the fast rotation on their fundamental parameters. All
program stars were observed in the BCD spectrophotometric system in order to
minimize the perturbations produced by the circumstellar environment on the
spectral photospheric signatures. This is one of the first attempts at
determining stellar masses and ages by simultaneously using model atmospheres
and evolutionary tracks, both calculated for rotating objects. The stellar ages
() normalized to the respective inferred time that each rotating star can
spend in the main sequence phase () reveal a mass-dependent
trend. This trend shows that: a) there are Be stars spread over the whole
interval 0 \la \tau/\tau\_{\rm MS} \la 1 of the main sequence evolutionary
phase; b) the distribution of points in the () diagram indicates that in massive stars (M \ga
12M\_{\odot}) the Be phenomenon is present at smaller
age ratios than for less massive stars (M \la 12M\_{\odot}). This
distribution can be due to: ) higher mass-loss rates in massive objets,
which can act to reduce the surface fast rotation; ) circulation time
scales to transport angular momentum from the core to the surface, which are
longer the lower the stellar mass.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures, A&A, in pres
On the nature of the Be star HR 7409 (7 Vul)
HR 7409 (7 Vul) is a newly identified Be star possibly part of the Gould Belt
and is the massive component of a 69-day spectroscopic binary. The binary
parameters and properties of the Be star measured using high-dispersion spectra
obtained at Ondrejov Observatory and at Rozhen Observatory imply the presence
of a low mass companion (~ 0.5-0.8 M_sun). If the pair is relatively young
(<50-80 Myr), then the companion is a K V star, but, following another, older
evolutionary scenario, the companion is a horizontal-branch star or possibly a
white dwarf star. In the latter scenario, a past episode of mass transfer from
an evolved star onto a less massive dwarf star would be responsible for the
peculiar nature of the present-day, fast-rotating Be star.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
On the metallicity dependence of HMXBs
It is commonly assumed that high mass X-ray binary (HMXB) populations are
little-affected by metallicity. However, the massive stars making up their
progenitor systems depend on metallicity in a number of ways, not least through
their winds. We present simulations, well-matched to the observed sample of
Galactic HMXBs, which demonstrate that both the number and the mean period of
HMXB progenitors can vary with metallicity, with the number increasing by about
a factor of three between solar and SMC metallicity. However, the SMC
population itself cannot be explained simply by metallicity effects; it
requires both that the HMXBs observed therein primarily sample the older end of
the HMXB population, and that the star formation rate at the time of their
formation was very large.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS accepte
The blue supergiant MN18 and its bipolar circumstellar nebula
We report the results of spectrophotometric observations of the massive star MN18 revealed via discovery of a bipolar nebula around it with the Spitzer Space Telescope. Using the optical spectrum obtained with the Southern African Large Telescope, we classify this star as B1 Ia. The evolved status of MN18 is supported by the detection of nitrogen overabundance in the nebula, which implies that it is composed of processed material ejected by the star. We analysed the spectrum of MN18 by using the code CMFGEN, obtaining a stellar effective temperature of ≈21 kK. The star is highly reddened, E(B − V) ≈ 2 mag. Adopting an absolute visual magnitude of MV = −6.8 ± 0.5 (typical of B1 supergiants), MN18 has a luminosity of log L/L⊙ ≈ 5.42 ± 0.30, a mass-loss rate of ≈(2.8-4.5) × 10− 7 M⊙ yr− 1, and resides at a distance of ≈5.6
+1.5−1.2
−1.2+1.5
kpc. We discuss the origin of the nebula around MN18 and compare it with similar nebulae produced by other blue supergiants in the Galaxy (Sher 25, HD 168625, [SBW2007] 1) and the Large Magellanic Cloud (Sk−69 deg 202). The nitrogen abundances in these nebulae imply that blue supergiants can produce them from the main-sequence stage up to the pre-supernova stage. We also present a K-band spectrum of the candidate luminous blue variable MN56 (encircled by a ring-like nebula) and report the discovery of an OB star at ≈17 arcsec from MN18. The possible membership of MN18 and the OB star of the star cluster Lynga 3 is discussed
The evolution of rotating stars
First, we review the main physical effects to be considered in the building
of evolutionary models of rotating stars on the Upper Main-Sequence (MS). The
internal rotation law evolves as a result of contraction and expansion,
meridional circulation, diffusion processes and mass loss. In turn,
differential rotation and mixing exert a feedback on circulation and diffusion,
so that a consistent treatment is necessary.
We review recent results on the evolution of internal rotation and the
surface rotational velocities for stars on the Upper MS, for red giants,
supergiants and W-R stars. A fast rotation is enhancing the mass loss by
stellar winds and reciprocally high mass loss is removing a lot of angular
momentum. The problem of the ``break-up'' or -limit is critically
examined in connection with the origin of Be and LBV stars. The effects of
rotation on the tracks in the HR diagram, the lifetimes, the isochrones, the
blue to red supergiant ratios, the formation of W-R stars, the chemical
abundances in massive stars as well as in red giants and AGB stars, are
reviewed in relation to recent observations for stars in the Galaxy and
Magellanic Clouds. The effects of rotation on the final stages and on the
chemical yields are examined, as well as the constraints placed by the periods
of pulsars. On the whole, this review points out that stellar evolution is not
only a function of mass M and metallicity Z, but of angular velocity
as well.Comment: 78 pages, 7 figures, review for Annual Review of Astronomy and
Astrophysics, vol. 38 (2000
The eclipsing LMC star OGLE05155332--6925581: a clue for Double Periodic Variables
We investigate the nature of OGLE05155332-6925581, one of the brightest
members of the enigmatic group of Double Periodic Variables (DPVs) recently
found in the Magellanic Clouds. The modeling of archival orbital light curves
(LCs), along with the analysis of the radial velocities suggest that this
object is a semi--detached binary with the less massive star transferring
matter to the more massive and less evolved star, in an Algol--like
configuration. We find evidence for additional orbital variability and
H emission, likely caused by an accretion disc around the primary star.
As in the case of the circumprimary disc seems to be more luminous
than the primary, but we do not detect orbital period changes. We find that the
LC follows a loop in the color--magnitude diagram during the long cycle; the
system is redder when brighter and the rising phase is bluer than during
decline. Infrared excess is also present. The source of the long--term
periodicity is not eclipsed, indicating its circumbinary origin. Strong
asymmetries, discrete absorption components (DACs) and a shift are new
and essential observational properties in the infrared H I lines. The DACs
strength and RV follow a saw--teeth pattern during the orbital cycle. We
suggest that the system experiences supercycles of mass outflow feeding a
circumbinary disc. Mass exchange and mass loss could produce comparable but
opposite effects in the orbital period on a long time scale, resulting in a
quasi--constancy of this parameter.Comment: submitted to MNRA
The Bits of Silence : Redundant Traffic in VoIP
Human conversation is characterized by brief pauses and so-called turn-taking behavior between the speakers. In the context of VoIP, this means that there are frequent periods where the microphone captures only background noise – or even silence whenever the microphone is muted. The bits transmitted from such silence periods introduce overhead in terms of data usage, energy consumption, and network infrastructure costs. In this paper, we contribute by shedding light on these costs for VoIP applications. We systematically measure the performance of six popular mobile VoIP applications with controlled human conversation and acoustic setup. Our analysis demonstrates that significant savings can indeed be achievable - with the best performing silence suppression technique being effective on 75% of silent pauses in the conversation in a quiet place. This results in 2-5 times data savings, and 50-90% lower energy consumption compared to the next better alternative. Even then, the effectiveness of silence suppression can be sensitive to the amount of background noise, underlying speech codec, and the device being used. The codec characteristics and performance do not depend on the network type. However, silence suppression makes VoIP traffic network friendly as much as VoLTE traffic. Our results provide new insights into VoIP performance and offer a motivation for further enhancements, such as performance-aware codec selection, that can significantly benefit a wide variety of voice assisted applications, as such intelligent home assistants and other speech codec enabled IoT devices.Peer reviewe
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