191 research outputs found
Search for optical bursts from the gamma ray burst source GBS 0526-66
Attempts were made to detect optical bursts from the gamma-ray burst source GBS 0526-66 during Dec. 31, 1984 to Jan. 2, 1985 and Feb. 23 to Feb. 24, 1985, using the one meter reflector of the Kavalur Observatory. Jan. 1, 1985 coincided with the zero phase of the predicted 164 day period of burst activity from the source (Rothschild and Lingenfelter, 1984). A new optical burst photon counting system with adjustable trigger threshold was used in parallel with a high speed photometer for the observations. The best time resolution was 1 ms and maximum count rate capability was 255,000 counts s(-1). Details of the instrumentation and observational results are presented
Voyager 2 and the world of Neptune
After dramatic discoveries during its flybys of Jupiter, Saturn and Uranus, Voyager 2 has now sent back breath- taking images of Neptune and its moons. The major discoveries in the Neptunian system include puzzling weather systems, broad sheet of ring material, peculiar offset and tilting of the magnetic dipole field, six new moons, and atmospheric composition and surface features of the biggest moon, Triton
The Interplanetary Network Supplement to the BeppoSAX Gamma-Ray Burst Catalogs
Between 1996 July and 2002 April, one or more spacecraft of the
interplanetary network detected 787 cosmic gamma-ray bursts that were also
detected by the Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor and/or Wide-Field X-Ray Camera
experiments aboard the BeppoSAX spacecraft. During this period, the network
consisted of up to six spacecraft, and using triangulation, the localizations
of 475 bursts were obtained. We present the localization data for these events.Comment: 89 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal
Supplement Serie
Normal modes and discovery of high-order cross-frequencies in the DBV white dwarf GD 358
We present a detailed mode identification performed on the 1994 Whole Earth Telescope (WET) run on GD 358. The results are compared with that obtained for the same star from the 1990 WET data. The two temporal spectra show very few qualitative differences, although amplitude changes are seen in most modes, including the disappearance of the mode identified as k=14 in the 1990 data. The excellent coverage and signal-to-noise ratio obtained during the 1994 run lead to the secure identification of combination frequencies up to fourth order, i.e. peaks that are sums or differences of up to four parent frequencies, including a virtually complete set of second-order frequencies, as expected from harmonic distortion. We show how the third-order frequencies are expected to affect the triplet structure of the normal modes by back-interacting with them. Finally, a search for â=2 modes was unsuccessful, not verifying the suspicion that such modes had been uncovered in the 1990 data set
High speed photometry of PG 1012-029
High speed optical photometric observations of PG 1012-029, conducted during 1990-1991, confirm the nova-like classification of the object. Several eclipses observed by us have been used to refine the orbital period of the system. Variations in the light curves and in particular, the presence of a bright hot spot in our 1991 data are high-lighted. We also deduce a maximum mass transfer rate of 1.5 10-8Mâ yr-1 for the system
Finite element simulation of three-dimensional free-surface flow problems
An adaptive finite element algorithm is described for the stable solution of three-dimensional free-surface-flow problems based primarily on the use of node movement. The algorithm also includes a discrete remeshing procedure which enhances its accuracy and robustness. The spatial discretisation allows an isoparametric piecewise-quadratic approximation of the domain geometry for accurate resolution of the curved free surface.
The technique is illustrated through an implementation for surface-tension-dominated viscous flows modelled in terms of the Stokes equations with suitable boundary conditions on the deforming free surface. Two three-dimensional test problems are used to demonstrate the performance of the method: a liquid bridge problem and the formation of a fluid droplet
Flares on AM Canum Venaticorum
AM CVn, an interacting binary system consisting of two helium white dwarfs, has been classified as a nova-like object. Normally it exhibits only small amplitude modulations of 0.05 mag with a 1051 s periodicity. The authors report what is believed to be for the first time, two unusually intense optical flares in AM CVn during 1985-87. The characteristics of the two flares in white light observed on 1985 February 24 and 1986 February 7 with Îm=0.34 and Îm=1.07 respectively are described. The authors estimate the maximum amount of energy released from these flares as 2.7Ă1036 erg and suggest in the light of current models possible sites of origin of the flaring activity
New Whole Earth Telescope observations of CD-24 7599: steps towards ÎŽ Scuti star seismology
92 h of new Whole Earth Telescope observations have been acquired for the ÎŽ Scuti star CD-24 7599. All the seven pulsation modes reported by Handler et al. are confirmed. However, significant amplitude variations which are not caused by beating of closely spaced frequencies occurred within two years. Analysing the combined data of both WET runs, we detect six further pulsation modes, bringing the total number up to 13. We also examine our data for high-frequency pulsations similar to those exhibited by rapidly oscillating Ap stars, but we do not find convincing evidence for variability in this frequency domai
Understanding the Cool DA White Dwarf, G29-38
The white dwarfs are promising laboratories for the study of cosmochronology
and stellar evolution. Through observations of the pulsating white dwarfs, we
can measure their internal structures and compositions, critical to
understanding post main sequence evolution, along with their cooling rates,
allowing us to calibrate their ages directly. The most important set of white
dwarf variables to measure are the oldest of the pulsators, the cool DAVs,
which have not previously been explored through asteroseismology due to their
complexity and instability. Through a time-series photometry data set spanning
ten years, we explore the pulsation spectrum of the cool DAV, G29-38 and find
an underlying structure of 19 (not including multiplet components) normal-mode,
probably l=1 pulsations amidst an abundance of time variability and linear
combination modes. Modelling results are incomplete, but we suggest possible
starting directions and discuss probable values for the stellar mass and
hydrogen layer size. For the first time, we have made sense out of the
complicated power spectra of a large-amplitude DA pulsator. We have shown its
seemingly erratic set of observed frequencies can be understood in terms of a
recurring set of normal-mode pulsations and their linear combinations. With
this result, we have opened the interior secrets of the DAVs to future
asteroseismological modelling, thereby joining the rest of the known white
dwarf pulsators.Comment: 29 pages including 5 figures To appear in ApJ 1 Mar 9
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