2,580 research outputs found
Carbon chemistry in Galactic Bulge Planetary Nebulae
Galactic Bulge Planetary Nebulae show evidence of mixed chemistry with
emission from both silicate dust and PAHs. This mixed chemistry is unlikely to
be related to carbon dredge up, as third dredge-up is not expected to occur in
the low mass Bulge stars. We show that the phenomenon is widespread, and is
seen in 30 nebulae out of 40 of our sample, selected on the basis of their
infrared flux. HST images and UVES spectra show that the mixed chemistry is not
related to the presence of emission-line stars, as it is in the Galactic disk
population. We also rule out interaction with the ISM as origin of the PAHs.
Instead, a strong correlation is found with morphology, and the presence of a
dense torus. A chemical model is presented which shows that hydrocarbon chains
can form within oxygen-rich gas through gas-phase chemical reactions. The model
predicts two layers, one at where small hydrocarbons form from
reactions with C, and one at , where larger chains (and by
implication, PAHs) form from reactions with neutral, atomic carbon. These
reactions take place in a mini-PDR. We conclude that the mixed chemistry
phenomenon occurring in the Galactic Bulge Planetary Nebulae is best explained
through hydrocarbon chemistry in an UV-irradiated, dense torus.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figue
Innovation in smallholder farming in Africa: recent advances and recommendations: Proceedings of the International Workshop on Agricultural Innovation Systems in Africa (AISA)
In the wake of a series of recent international events and initiatives focusing on understanding and fostering innovation1, there is growing awareness and interest in applying and making sense of the Agricultural Innovation Systems (AIS) concepts and perspectives and what they offer for understanding and supporting innovation systems, processes and networks. This has particular relevance for African agriculture as it faces several challenges, such as increasing and intensifying food production in a sustainable way and nourishing its fast-growing population, adapting to the consequences of climate change, and finding its rightful place in an increasingly global and complex international scene. Several initiatives and programmes seeking answers to these questions jointly organised a series of events during a Week on Agricultural Innovation in Africa (WAIA) held in Nairobi, Kenya, on 25–31 May 2013, of which the international workshop on Agricultural Innovation Systems in Africa (AISA) on 29–31 May was a major part. Another key event during this week, was the Eastern African Farmer Innovation Fair (EAFIF) held on 28–29 May, which was linked to AISA
Dust and the spectral energy distribution of the OH/IR star OH 127.8+0.0: Evidence for circumstellar metallic iron
We present a fit to the spectral energy distribution of OH 127.8+0.0, a
typical asymptotic giant branch star with an optically thick circumstellar dust
shell. The fit to the dust spectrum is achieved using non-spherical grains
consisting of metallic iron, amorphous and crystalline silicates and water ice.
Previous similar attempts have not resulted in a satisfactory fit to the
observed spectral energy distributions, mainly because of an apparent lack of
opacity in the 3--8 micron region of the spectrum. Non-spherical metallic iron
grains provide an identification for the missing source of opacity in the
near-infrared. Using the derived dust composition, we have calculated spectra
for a range of mass-loss rates in order to perform a consistency check by
comparison with other evolved stars. The L-[12 micron] colours of these models
correctly predict the mass-loss rate of a sample of AGB stars, strengthening
our conclusion that the metallic iron grains dominate the near-infrared flux.
We discuss a formation mechanism for non-spherical metallic iron grains.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication by A&
Dust-enshrouded Asymptotic Giant Branch Stars in the Solar Neighbourhood
A study is made of a sample of 58 dust-enshrouded Asymptotic Giant Branch
(AGB) stars (including 2 possible post AGB stars), of which 27 are carbon-rich
and 31 are oxygen-rich. These objects were originally identified by Jura &
Kleinmann as nearby (within about 1 kpc of the sun) AGB stars with high
mass-loss rates, greater than 1E-6 solar masses per year. Ground-based
near-infrared photometry, data obtained by IRAS and kinematic data from the
literature are combined to investigate the properties of these stars. The light
amplitude in the near-infrared is found to be correlated with period, and this
amplitude decreases with increasing wavelength. Statistical tests show that
there is no reason to suspect any difference in the period distributions of the
carbon- and oxygen-rich stars for periods less than 1000 days, and no
carbon-rich star has a period longer than 1000 days. The colours are consistent
with those of cool stars with evolved circumstellar dust-shells. Luminosities
and distances are estimated using a period-luminosity relation. Mass-loss
rates, estimated from the 60 micron fluxes, show a correlation with pulsation
period and is tightly correlated with the K-[12] colour. The kinematics and
scale-height of the sample shows that the sources with periods less than 1000
days must have low mass main-sequence progenitors. It is argued that the three
oxygen-rich stars with periods over 1000 days probably had intermediate mass
main-sequence progenitors with remaining stars having an average progenitor
mass of about 1.3 solar masses. The average lifetime of stars in this phase is
estimated to be about 4.0E4 years, indicating they will undergo at most one
more thermal pulse before leaving the AGB.Comment: 27 pages, 20 figures, accepted for MNRA
W Hya : molecular inventory by ISO-SWS
Infrared spectroscopy is a powerful tool to probe the inventory of solid
state and molecular species in circumstellar ejecta. Here we analyse the
infrared spectrum of the Asymptotic Giant Branch star W Hya, obtained by the
Short and Long Wavelength Spectrometers on board of the Infrared Satellite
Observatory. These spectra show evidence for the presence of amorphous
silicates, aluminum oxide, and magnesium-iron oxide grains. We have modelled
the spectral energy distribution using laboratory measured optical properties
of these compounds and derive a total dust mass loss rate of 3E-10 Msol/yr. We
find no satisfactory fit to the 13 micron dust emission feature and the
identification of its carrier is still an open issue. We have also modelled the
molecular absorption bands due to H2O, OH, CO, CO2, SiO, and SO2 and estimated
the excitation temperatures for different bands which range from 300 to 3000K.
It is clear that different molecules giving rise to these absorption bands
originate from different gas layers. We present and analyse high resolution
Fabry-Perot spectra of the three CO2 bands in the 15 micron region. In these
data, the bands are resolved into individual Q-lines in emission, which allows
the direct determination of the excitation temperature and column density of
the emitting gas. This reveals the presence of a warm (about 450K) extended
layer of CO2, somewhere between the photosphere and the dust formation zone.
The gas in this layer is cooler than the 1000K CO2 gas responsible for the
low-resolution absorption bands at 4.25 and 15 micron. The rotational and
vibrational excitation temperatures derived from the individual Q-branch lines
of CO2 are different (450K and 150K, respectively) so that the CO2 level
population is not in LTE.Comment: To appear in Astronomy and Astrophysics A reference is adde
Three-micron spectra of AGB stars and supergiants in nearby galaxies
The dependence of stellar molecular bands on the metallicity is studied using
infrared L-band spectra of AGB stars (both carbon-rich and oxygen-rich) and
M-type supergiants in the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC and SMC) and
in the Sagittarius Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy. The spectra cover SiO bands for
oxygen-rich stars, and acetylene (C2H2), CH and HCN bands for carbon-rich AGB
stars. The equivalent width of acetylene is found to be high even at low
metallicity. The high C2H2 abundance can be explained with a high
carbon-to-oxygen (C/O) ratio for lower metallicity carbon stars. In contrast,
the HCN equivalent width is low: fewer than half of the extra-galactic carbon
stars show the 3.5micron HCN band, and only a few LMC stars show high HCN
equivalent width. HCN abundances are limited by both nitrogen and carbon
elemental abundances. The amount of synthesized nitrogen depends on the initial
mass, and stars with high luminosity (i.e. high initial mass) could have a high
HCN abundance. CH bands are found in both the extra-galactic and Galactic
carbon stars. None of the oxygen-rich LMC stars show SiO bands, except one
possible detection in a low quality spectrum. The limits on the equivalent
widths of the SiO bands are below the expectation of up to 30angstrom for LMC
metallicity. Several possible explanations are discussed. The observations
imply that LMC and SMC carbon stars could reach mass-loss rates as high as
their Galactic counterparts, because there are more carbon atoms available and
more carbonaceous dust can be formed. On the other hand, the lack of SiO
suggests less dust and lower mass-loss rates in low-metallicity oxygen-rich
stars. The effect on the ISM dust enrichment is discussed.Comment: accepted for A&
Emission-line stars discovered in the UKST H-alpha survey of the Large Magellanic Cloud; Part 1: Hot stars
We present new, accurate positions, spectral classifications, radial and
rotational velocities, H-alpha fluxes, equivalent widths and B,V,I,R magnitudes
for 579 hot emission-line stars (classes B0 - F9) in the Large Magellanic Cloud
which include 469 new discoveries. Candidate emission line stars were
discovered using a deep, high resolution H-alpha map of the central 25 deg2 of
the LMC obtained by median stacking a dozen 2 hour H-alpha exposures taken with
the UK Schmidt Telescope. Spectroscopic follow-up observations on the AAT,
UKST, VLT, the SAAO 1.9m and the MSSSO 2.3m telescope have established the
identity of these faint sources down to magnitude R~23 for H-alpha (4.5 x
10^-17 ergs cm^2 s^-1 Ang). Confirmed emission-line stars have been assigned an
underlying spectral classification through cross-correlation against 131
absorption line template spectra covering the range O1 to F8. We confirm 111
previously identified emission line stars and 64 previously known variable
stars with spectral types hotter than F8. The majority of hot stars identified
(518 stars or 89%) are class B. Of all the hot emission-line stars in classes
B-F, 130 or 22% are type B[e], characterised by the presence of forbidden
emission lines such as [SII], [NII] and [OII]. We report on the physical
location of these stars with reference to possible contamination from ambient
HII emission. Along with flux calibration of the H-alpha emission we provide
the first H-alpha luminosity function for selected sub-samples after correction
for any possible nebula or ambient contamination. We find a moderate
correlation between the intensity of H-alpha emission and the V magnitude of
the central star based on SuperCOSMOS magnitudes and OGLE-II photometry where
possible. Cool stars from classes G-S, with and without strong H-alpha
emission, will be the focus of part 2 in this series.Comment: 24 pages (main paper) 36 figures, 6 tables; Appendix Tables: 22
pages, MNRAS, 201
The evolutionary status of the semiregular variable QYSge
Repeated spectroscopic observations made with the 6m telescope of yielded new
data on the radial-velocity variability of the anomalous yellow supergiant
QYSge. The strongest and most peculiar feature in its spectrum is the complex
profile of NaI D lines, which contains a narrow and a very wide emission
components. The wide emission component can be seen to extend from -170 to +120
km/s, and at its central part it is cut by an absorption feature, which, in
turn, is split into two subcomponents by a narrow (16km/s at r=2.5) emission
peak. An analysis of all the Vr values leads us to adopt for the star a
systemic velocity of Vr=-21.1 km/s, which corresponds to the position of the
narrow emission component of NaI. The locations of emission-line features of
NaI D lines are invariable, which point to their formation in regions that are
external to the supergiant's photosphere. Differential line shifts of about
10km/s are revealed. The absorption lines in the spectrum of QYSge have a
substantial width of FWHM~45 km/s. The method of model atmospheres is used to
determine the following parameters: Teff=6250K, lg g=2.0, and microturbulence
Vt=4.5km/s. The metallicity of the star is found to be somewhat higher than the
solar one with an average overabundance of iron-peak elements of [Met/H]=+0.20.
The star is found to be slightly overabundant in carbon and nitrogen,
[C/Fe]=+0.25, [N/Fe]=+0.27. The alpha-process elements Mg, Si, and Ca are
slightly overabundant [alpha/H]=+0.12. The strong sodium excess, [Na/Fe]=+0.75,
is likely to be due to the dredge-up of the matter processed in the NeNa cycle.
Heavy elements of the s-process are underabundant relative to the Sun. On the
whole, the observed properties of QYSge do not give grounds for including this
star into the group of RCrB or RVTau-type type objects.Comment: 29 pages, 8 figures, 4 tables; accepted by Astrophys. Bulleti
Does publication bias inflate the apparent efficacy of psychological treatment for major depressive disorder? A systematic review and meta-analysis of US national institutes of health-funded trials
Background The efficacy of antidepressant medication has been shown empirically to be overestimated due to publication bias, but this has only been inferred statistically with regard to psychological treatment for depression. We assessed directly the extent of study publication bias in trials examining the efficacy of psychological treatment for depression. Methods and Findings We identified US National Institutes of Health grants awarded to fund randomized clinical trials comparing psychological treatment to control conditions or other treatments in patients diagnosed with major depressive disorder for the period 1972–2008, and we determined whether those grants led to publications. For studies that were not published, data were requested from investigators and included in the meta-analyses. Thirteen (23.6%) of the 55 funded grants that began trials did not result in publications, and two others never started. Among comparisons to control conditions, adding unpublished studies (Hedges’ g = 0.20; CI95% -0.11~0.51; k = 6) to published studies (g = 0.52; 0.37~0.68; k = 20) reduced the psychotherapy effect size point estimate (g = 0.39; 0.08~0.70) by 25%. Moreover, these findings may overestimate the "true" effect of psychological treatment for depression as outcome reporting bias could not be examined quantitatively. Conclusion The efficacy of psychological interventions for depression has been overestimated in the published literature, just as it has been for pharmacotherapy. Both are efficacious but not to the extent that the published literature would suggest. Funding agencies and journals should archive both original protocols and raw data from treatment trials to allow the detection and correction of outcome reporting bias. Clinicians, guidelines developers, and decision makers should be aware that the published literature overestimates the effects of the predominant treatments for depression
Cyclic Variability of the Circumstellar Disc of the Be Star Tau. II. Testing the 2D Global Disc Oscillation Model
Aims. In this paper we model, in a self-consistent way, polarimetric,
photometric, spectrophotometric and interferometric observations of the
classical Be star Tauri. Our primary goal is to conduct a critical
quantitative test of the global oscillation scenario. Methods. We have carried
out detailed three-dimensional, NLTE radiative transfer calculations using the
radiative transfer code HDUST. For the input for the code we have used the most
up-to-date research on Be stars to include a physically realistic description
for the central star and the circumstellar disc. We adopt a rotationally
deformed, gravity darkened central star, surrounded by a disc whose unperturbed
state is given by a steady-state viscous decretion disc model. We further
assume that disc is in vertical hydrostatic equilibrium. Results. By adopting a
viscous decretion disc model for Tauri and a rigorous solution of the
radiative transfer, we have obtained a very good fit of the time-average
properties of the disc. This provides strong theoretical evidence that the
viscous decretion disc model is the mechanism responsible for disc formation.
With the global oscillation model we have successfully fitted spatially
resolved VLTI/AMBER observations and the temporal V/R variations of the
H and Br lines. This result convincingly demonstrates that the
oscillation pattern in the disc is a one-armed spiral. Possible model
shortcomings, as well as suggestions for future improvements, are also
discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted to A&
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