8,682 research outputs found

    Theory and practice of microlensing lightcurves around fold singularities

    Full text link
    Among all galactic microlensing events, those involving a passage of the observed source star over the caustic created by a binary lens are particularly useful in providing information about stellar atmospheres, the dynamics of stellar populations in our own and neighbouring galaxies, and the statistical properties of stellar and sub-stellar binaries. This paper presents a comprehensive guide for modelling and interpreting the lightcurves obtained in events involving fold-caustic crossings. A new general, consistent, and optimal choice of parameters provides a deep understanding of the involved features, avoids numerical difficulties and minimizes correlations between model parameters. While the photometric data of a microlensing event around a caustic crossing itself do not provide constraints on the characteristics of the underlying binary lens and does not allow predictions of the behaviour of other regions of the lightcurve, vital constraints can be obtained in an efficient way if these are combined with a few simple characteristics of data outside the caustic crossings. A corresponding algorithm containing some improvements over an earlier approach which takes into account multi-site observations is presented and discussed in detail together with the arising parameter constraints paying special attention to the role of source and background fluxes.Comment: 19 pages with 7 EPS figures embedded, LaTeX2e using mn2e.cls. Final version, tables clarifying meaning and constraints on parameters added. This is a preprint of an Article accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, (C) 2004 The Royal Astronomical Societ

    Microlensing of circumstellar envelopes III. Line profiles from stellar winds in homologous expansion

    Get PDF
    This paper examines line profile evolution due to the linear expansion of circumstellar material obsverved during a microlensing event. This work extends our previous papers on emission line profile evolution from radial and azimuthal flow during point mass lens events and fold caustic crossings. Both "flavours" of microlensing were shown to provide effective diagnostics of bulk motion in circumstellar envelopes. In this work a different genre of flow is studied, namely linear homologous expansion, for both point mass lenses and fold caustic crossings. Linear expansion is of particular relevance to the effects of microlensing on supernovae at cosmological distances. We derive line profiles and equivalent widths for the illustrative cases of pure resonance and pure recombination lines, modelled under the Sobolev approximation. The efficacy of microlensing as a diagnostic probe of the stellar environs is demonstrated and discussed

    Can microlensing fold caustics reveal a second stellar limb-darkening coefficient?

    Full text link
    Dense high-precision photometry of microlensed stars during a fold-caustic passage can be used to reveal their intensity profiles from which the temperature of the stellar atmosphere as function of fractional radius can be derived. While the capabilities of current microlensing follow-up campaigns such as PLANET allow a precise measurement of linear limb-darkening coefficients, the residual signal of a second coefficient characterizing square-root limb darkening is ~ 25 times smaller which prevents a proper determination except for unlikely cases of very high caustic-peak-to-outside relative magnifications with no adequate event being observed so far or for source stars passing over a cusp singularity. Although the presence of limb darkening can be well established from the data, a reliable measurement of the index of an underlying power-law cannot be obtained.Comment: 4 pages with 4 EPS figures embedded, LaTeX2e using mn2e.cls. Final version, minor changes. This is a preprint of an Article accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, (C) 2004 The Royal Astronomical Societ

    Giorgio Bellettini: The ISR years (and before)

    Get PDF
    In honor of Giorgio Bellettini’s 80th birthday, I present stories of his early career, through the Intersecting Storage Ring (ISR) years

    Central exclusive production in CDF

    Get PDF
    In the Collider Detector at Fermilab, CDF, we have made the first observations of several “exclusive” processes in p¯p collisions, defined as p + ¯p → p(∗) ⊕ X ⊕ ¯p(∗), where the beam (anti)protons are diffractively scattered, with or without dissociation, the “⊕” denotes a large rapidity gapΔη > 4.5 with no hadrons, and “X” is a simple state fully measured. The main part of the talk focuses on recent X = π+π− data, through the double-pomeron exchange mechanism

    Quartz Cherenkov Counters for Fast Timing: QUARTIC

    Full text link
    We have developed particle detectors based on fused silica (quartz) Cherenkov radiators read out with micro-channel plate photomultipliers (MCP-PMTs) or silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) for high precision timing (Sigma(t) about 10-15 ps). One application is to measure the times of small angle protons from exclusive reactions, e.g. p + p - p + H + p, at the Large Hadron Collider, LHC. They may also be used to measure directional particle fluxes close to external or stored beams. The detectors have small areas (square cm), but need to be active very close (a few mm) to the intense LHC beam, and so must be radiation hard and nearly edgeless. We present results of tests of detectors with quartz bars inclined at the Cherenkov angle, and with bars in the form of an "L" (with a 90 degree corner). We also describe a possible design for a fast timing hodoscope with elements of a few square mm.Comment: 24 pages, 14 figure

    1318 New Variable Stars in a 0.25 Square Degree Region of the Galactic Plane

    Full text link
    We have conducted a deep photometric survey of a 0.5 deg x 0.5 deg area of the Galactic Plane using the WFI instrument on the 2.2-m ESO telescope on La Silla, Chile. The dataset comprises a total of 267 R-band images, 204 from a 16 day observation run in 2005, supplemented by 63 images from a six week period in 2002. Our reduction employed the new numerical kernel difference image analysis method as implemented in the PYSIS3 code and resulted in more than 500,000 lightcurves of stars down to a magnitude limit of R ~ 24.5. A search for variable stars resulted in the detection of 1318 variables of different types. 1011 of these are eclipsing or contact binary stars. A number of the contact binaries have low mass-ratios and several of the detached binaries appear to have low-mass components. Three candidate contact binaries have periods at the known cut off including two with periods lower than any previously published. Also identified are 3 possible pre-main sequence detached eclipsing binaries.Comment: 54 pages, 17 figures, 11 tables, accepted by A&A. Photometry will be available through CD

    Associated central exclusive production of charged Higgs bosons

    Full text link
    We propose central exclusive production of a charged Higgs boson in association with a W boson as a possible signature of certain types of extended Higgs sectors. We calculate the cross section and find that the rate at the LHC could be large enough to allow observation in some models with two Higgs doublets, where the charged Higgs and at least one of the neutral scalars can be light enough. We use the two-Higgs doublet model as a prototype and consider two distinct regions of parameter space, but we also briefly discuss the prospects for the next-to-minimal supersymmetric standard model, where the charged Higgs may very well be quite light.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures. Minor changes, references added. Version to appear in PR

    Gravitational microlensing as a test of stellar model atmospheres

    Get PDF
    We present calculations illustrating the potential of gravitational microlensing to discriminate between classical models of stellar surface brightness profiles and the recently computed ``Next Generation'' models of Hauschildt et al. These spherically-symmetric models include a much improved treatment of molecular lines in the outer atmospheres of cool giants -- stars which are very typical sources in Galactic bulge microlensing events. We show that the microlensing signatures of intensively monitored point and fold caustic crossing events are readily able to distinguish between NextGen and the classical models, provided a photometric accuracy of 0.01 magnitudes is reached. This accuracy is now routinely achieved by alert networks, and hence current observations can discriminate between such model atmospheres, providing a unique insight on stellar photospheres.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Astronomy & Astrophysics (Letters), vol. 388, L1 (2002
    corecore