201 research outputs found

    The Distance and Morphology of V723 Cassiopeiae (NOVA CASSIOPEIA 1995)

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    We present spatially resolved infrared spectra of V723 Cas (Nova Cassiopeia 1995) obtained over four years with the integral field spectrograph OSIRIS on Keck II. Also presented are one epoch of spatially unresolved spectra from the long slit spectrograph NIRSPEC on Keck II. The OSIRIS observations made use of the laser guide star adaptive optics facility that produced diffraction-limited spatial resolution of the strong coronal emission features in the nova ejecta. We remove the point-like continuum from V723 Cas data cubes to reveal details of the extended nebula and find that emission due to [Si VI] and [Ca VIII] has an equatorial ring structure with polar nodules-a strikingly different morphology than emission due to [Al IX], which appears as a prolate spheroid. The contrast in structure may indicate separate ejection events. Using the angular expansion and Doppler velocities observed over four epochs spaced at one year intervals, we determine the distance to V723 Cas to be 3.85+0.23-0.21 kpc. We present the OSIRIS three-dimensional data here in many ways: as narrowband images, one- and two-dimensional spectra, and a volume rendering that reveals the true shape of the ejecta.Comment: 37 pages, 8 figure

    The Low-Mass Companion to the Lithium-Depleted, Spectroscopic Binary HBC 425 (St 34)

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    We present high angular resolution, near-infrared imaging and spectroscopy of a low-mass companion to the lithium-depleted, double-line spectroscopic binary HBC 425 (St 34) obtained using the Near Infrared Spectrograph (NIRSPEC) and the Keck II adaptive optics system. Positioned 1.23" southeast of the primary pair, the companion, HBC 425C, is ~2.4 magnitudes fainter at 2.2 microns. Moderate-resolution (R~2500) J- and K-band spectroscopy reveal HBC 425C to have an M5.5 (+/-0.5) spectral type. Comparisons with pre-main sequence evolutionary models imply a mass of ~0.09 M(Sun) and ages of 8-10 Myr, assuming the nominal distance of Taurus-Auriga (~140 pc), or ~25 Myr if placed at ~90 pc. We also present high dispersion, optical spectra of HBC 425 and HBC 425C obtained using the High Resolution Echelle Spectrometer (HIRES) on Keck I. We detect strong Li I 6708 absorption in the spectrum of HBC 425C. Using curves of growth for the Li I 6708 doublet, we estimate its abundance level to lie between log N(Li)=1.9 and 3.1 dex. The spectrum of HBC 425 exhibits Ca II H & K, He I 5876, 6678, and strong Balmer line emission, consistent with accretion. We place more restrictive upper limits on the surface abundance of lithium and find that HBC 425 retains less than ~0.1% of its primordial abundance. The presence of lithium in the photosphere of HBC 425C does not resolve the discrepancy between isochronal and lithium depletion ages for the primary pair. However, if lithium were depleted relative to interstellar abundance levels, even minimally, considerable support would be gained for the more advanced age of this hierarchical triple system.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in the Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacifi

    The Wide Brown Dwarf Binary Oph 1622-2405 and Discovery of A Wide, Low Mass Binary in Ophiuchus (Oph 1623-2402): A New Class of Young Evaporating Wide Binaries?

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    We imaged five objects near the star forming clouds of Ophiuchus with the Keck Laser Guide Star AO system. We resolved Allers et al. (2006)'s #11 (Oph 16222-2405) and #16 (Oph 16233-2402) into binary systems. The #11 object is resolved into a 243 AU binary, the widest known for a very low mass (VLM) binary. The binary nature of #11 was discovered first by Allers (2005) and independently here during which we obtained the first spatially resolved R~2000 near-infrared (J & K) spectra, mid-IR photometry, and orbital motion estimates. We estimate for 11A and 11B gravities (log(g)>3.75), ages (5+/-2 Myr), luminosities (log(L/Lsun)=-2.77+/-0.10 and -2.96+/-0.10), and temperatures (Teff=2375+/-175 and 2175+/-175 K). We find self-consistent DUSTY evolutionary model (Chabrier et al. 2000) masses of 17+4-5 MJup and 14+6-5 MJup, for 11A and 11B respectively. Our masses are higher than those previously reported (13-15 MJup and 7-8 MJup) by Jayawardhana & Ivanov (2006b). Hence, we find the system is unlikely a ``planetary mass binary'', (in agreement with Luhman et al. 2007) but it has the second lowest mass and lowest binding energy of any known binary. Oph #11 and Oph #16 belong to a newly recognized population of wide (>100 AU), young (<10 Myr), roughly equal mass, VLM stellar and brown dwarf binaries. We deduce that ~6+/-3% of young (<10 Myr) VLM objects are in such wide systems. However, only 0.3+/-0.1% of old field VLM objects are found in such wide systems. Thus, young, wide, VLM binary populations may be evaporating, due to stellar encounters in their natal clusters, leading to a field population depleted in wide VLM systems.Comment: Accepted version V2. Now 13 pages longer (45 total) due to a new discussion of the stability of the wide brown dwarf binary population, new summary Figure 17 now included, Astrophysical Journal 2007 in pres

    Swift X-ray Observations of Classical Novae

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    The new gamma-ray burst mission Swift has obtained pointed observations of several classical novae in outburst. We analyzed all the observations of classical novae from the Swift archive up to 30 June, 2006. We analyzed usable observations of 12 classical novae and found 4 non-detections, 3 weak sources and 5 strong sources. This includes detections of 2 novae exhibiting spectra resembling those of Super Soft X-ray binary Source spectra (SSS) implying ongoing nuclear burning on the white dwarf surface. With these new Swift data, we add to the growing statistics of the X-ray duration and characteristics of classical novae.Comment: Accepted for ApJ; this version contains additional material: 18 pages, 16 figure

    Two close binaries across the hydrogen-burning limit in the Praesepe open cluster

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    We present Keck I/OSIRIS and Keck II/NIRC2 adaptive optics imaging of two member candidates of the Praesepe stellar cluster (d=186.18±\pm0.11 pc; 590-790 Myr), UGC J08451066+2148171 (L1.5±\pm0.5) and UGCS J08301935++2003293 (no spectroscopic classification). We resolved UGCS J08451066++2148171 into a binary system in the near-infrared, with a KK-band wavelength flux ratio of 0.89±\pm0.04, a projected separation of 60.3±\pm1.3 mas (11.2±\pm0.7 au; 1σ\sigma). We also resolved UGCS J08301935++2003293 into a binary system with a flux ratio of 0.46±\pm0.03 and a separation of 62.5±\pm0.9 mas. Assuming zero eccentricity, we estimate minimum orbital periods of \sim100 years for both systems. According to theoretical evolutionary models, we derive masses in the range of 0.074-0.078 M_{\odot} and 0.072-0.076 M_{\odot} for the primary and secondary of UGCS J08451066++2148171 for an age of 700±\pm100 Myr. In the case of UGCS J08301935++2003293, the primary is a low-mass star at the stellar/substellar boundary (0.070-0.078 M_{\odot}) while the companion candidate might be a brown dwarf (0.051-0.065 M_{\odot}). These are the first two binaries composed of L dwarfs in Praesepe. They are benchmark systems to derive the location of the substellar limit at the age and metallicity of Praesepe, determine the age of the cluster based on the lithium depletion boundary test, derive dynamical masses, and improve low-mass stellar and substellar evolutionary models at a well-known age and metallicity.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Variability and multi-periodic oscillations in the X-ray light curve of the classical nova V4743 Sgr

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    The classical nova V4743 Sgr was observed with XMM-Newton for about 10 hours on April 4 2003, 6.5 months after optical maximum. At this time, this nova had become the brightest supersoft X-ray source ever observed. We present the results of a time series analysis performed on the X-ray light curve obtained in this observation, and in a previous shorter observation done with Chandra 16 days earlier. Intense variability, with amplitude as large as 40% of the total flux, was observed both times. Similarities can be found between the two observations in the structure of the variations. Most of the variability is well represented as a combination of oscillations at a set of discrete frequencies lower than 1.7 mHz. At least five frequencies are constant over the 16 day time interval between the two observations. We suggest that a periods in the power spectrum of both light curves at the frequency of 0.75 mHz and its first harmonic are related to the spin period of the white dwarf in the system, and that other observed frequencies are signatures of nonradial white dwarf pulsations. A possible signal with a 24000 sec period is also found in the XMM-Newton light curve: a cycle and a half are clearly identified. This period is consistent with the 24278 s periodicity discovered in the optical light curve of the source and thought to be the orbital period of the nova binary system.Comment: In press in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Societ

    The Early Spectrophotometric Evolution of V1186 Scorpii (Nova Scorpii 2004 #1)

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    We report optical photometry and optical through mid-infrared spectroscopy of the classical nova V1186 Sco. This slowly developing nova had an complex light curve with multiple secondary peaks similar to those seen in PW Vul. The time to decline 2 magnitudes, t2_2, was 20 days but the erratic nature of the light curve makes determination of intrinsic properties based on the decline time (e.g., luminosity) problematic, and the often cited MMRD relationship of Della Valle and Livio (1995) fails to yield a plausible distance. Spectra covering 0.35 to 35 μ\mum were obtained in two separate epochs during the first year of outburst. The first set of spectra, taken about 2 months after visible maximum, are typical of a CO-type nova with narrow line emission from \ion{H}{1}, \ion{Fe}{2}, \ion{O}{1} and \ion{He}{1}. Later data, obtained between 260 and 380 days after maximum, reveal an emerging nebular spectrum. \textit{Spitzer} spectra show weakening hydrogen recombination emission with the emergence of [\ion{Ne}{2}] (12.81 μ\mum) as the strongest line. Strong emission from [\ion{Ne}{3}] (15.56 μ\mum) is also detected. Photoionization models with low effective temperature sources and only marginal neon enhancement (Ne \sim 1.3 Ne_{\odot}) are consistent with these IR fine-structure neon lines indicating that V1186 Sco did not occur on a ONeMg white dwarf. In contrast, the slow and erratic light curve evolution, spectral development, and photoionization analysis of the ejecta imply the outburst occurred on a low mass CO white dwarf. We note that this is the first time strong [\ion{Ne}{2}] lines have been detected so early in the outburst of a CO nova and suggests that the presence of mid-infrared neon lines is not directly indicative of a ONeMg nova event.Comment: 7 figures, 37 pages. Astronimocal Journal accepte
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