520 research outputs found
The statistical significance of the superhump signal in U Gem
Although its well determined mass ratio of q=\Msec/\Mwd=0.357\pm0.007
should avoid superoutbursts according to the thermal tidal instability model,
the prototypical dwarf nova U Gem experienced in 1985 an extraordinary long
outburst resembling very much superoutbursts observed in SU UMa systems.
Recently, the situation for the model became even worse as superhump detections
have been reported for the 1985 outburst of U Gem. The superhump signal is
noisy and the evidence provided by simple periodograms seems to be weak.
Therefore and because of the importance for our understanding of superoutbursts
and superhumps, we determine the statistical significance of the recently
published detection of superhumps in the AAVSO light curve of the famous long
1985 outburst of U Gem. Using Lomb-Scargle periodograms, analysis of variance
(AoV), and Monte-Carlo methods we analyse the 160 visual magnitudes obtained by
the AAVSO during the outburst and relate our analyse to previous superhump
detections. The 160 data points of the outburst alone do not contain a
statistically significant period. However, using additionally the
characteristics of superhumps detected previously in other SU UMa systems and
searching only for signals that are consistent with these, we derive a
significance for the superhump signal. The alleged appearance of an
additional superhump at the end of the outbursts appears to be statistically
insignificant. Although of weak statistical significance, the superhump signal
of the long 1985 outburst of U Gem can be interpreted as further indication for
the SU UMa nature of this outburst. This further contradicts the tidal
instability model as the explanation for the superhump phenomenon.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Absolute properties of the main-sequence eclipsing binary FM Leo
First spectroscopic and new photometric observations of the eclipsing binary
FM Leo are presented. The main aims were to determine orbital and stellar
parameters of two components and their evolutionary stage. First spectroscopic
observations of the system were obtained with DDO and PST spectrographs. The
results of the orbital solution from radial velocity curves are combined with
those derived from the light-curve analysis (ASAS-3 photometry and
supplementary observations of eclipses with 1 m and 0.35 m telescopes) to
derive orbital and stellar parameters. JKTEBOP, Wilson-Devinney binary
modelling codes and a two-dimensional cross-correlation (TODCOR) method were
applied for the analysis. We find the masses to be M_1 = 1.318 0.007 and
M_2 = 1.287 0.007 M_sun, the radii to be R_1 = 1.648 0.043 and R_2
= 1.511 0.049 R_sun for primary and secondary stars, respectively. The
evolutionary stage of the system is briefly discussed by comparing physical
parameters with current stellar evolution models. We find the components are
located at the main sequence, with an age of about 3 Gyr.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, to appear in MNRA
X-ray and optical periodicities in X-ray binaries. I.A0535+26
A homogeneous set of UBV photometry (354 data points obtained between 1983
and 1998) for the Be/X-ray binary A0535+26 = V725Tau is analysed, aiming to
look for possible periodic component(s). After subtraction of the long-term
variation it was found that only a 103-day periodic component remains in the
power spectra in both the V and B colour bands. The probability of chance
occurrence of such a peak is less than 0.1%. There are no signs of optical
variability at the X-ray period (111 d). We discuss possible reasons for a
103-day modulation and suggest that it corresponds to a beat frequency of the
orbital period of the neutron star and the precession period (~1400 d) either
of an accretion disc around the neutron star or a warped decretion disc around
the Be star.Comment: LaTeX, 6 pages, 5 figures, uses psfig.st
Variability of accretion flow in the core of the Seyfert galaxy NGC 4151
We analyze observations of the Seyfert galaxy NGC 4151 covering 90 years in
the optical band and 27 years in the 2-10 keV X-ray band. We compute the
Normalized Power Spectrum Density (NPSD), the Structure Function (SF) and the
Autocorrelation Function (ACF) for these data. The results show that the
optical and X-ray variability properties are significantly different. X-ray
variations are predominantly in the timescale range of 5 - 1000 days. The
optical variations have also a short timescale component which may be related
to X-ray variability but the dominant effect is the long timescale variability,
with timescales longer than 10 years. We compare our results with
observations of NGC 5548 and Cyg X-1. We conclude that the long timescale
variability may be caused by radiation pressure instability in the accretion
disk, although the observed timescale in NGC 4151 is by a factor of few longer
than expected. X-ray variability of this source is very similar to what is
observed in Cyg X-1 but scaled with the mass of the black hole, which suggests
that the radiation pressure instability does not affect considerably the X-ray
production.Comment: 21 pages, 19 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Towards equation of state of dark energy from quasar monitoring: reverberation strategy
Context. High-redshift quasars can be used to constrain the equation of state of dark energy. They can serve as a complementary tool to supernovae Type Ia, especially at z > 1
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