278 research outputs found
A laser triggered electron source for pulsed radiolysis
We present the design of a photo-injector based accelerator for pulsed radiolysis applications. This machine is destined to meet the needs of the physical chemistry community at the Universite de Paris XI. A 4 MeV Energy electron pulse of a few picoseconds duration and with a charge in the range of 1 to 10 nC is produced from a Cs/sub 2 /Te photocathode. The photocathode is placed in the half energy spread cell of a 1-1/2 cell, 3 GHz RF gun, whose design is based on the gun used for the drive beam of the CERN CLIC Test facility. A 4 cell "booster" cavity is then used to accelerate the beam to an energy of 9 MeV. The transport system consists of a quadrupole triplet downsteam of the booster, two rectangular, 30 degree bend, dipoles with a pair of quadrupoles between them and a second triplet downstream of the second dipole. Energy dependent path length effects in the two dipoles allow the possibility of magnetic bunch compression depending on the phase-energy correlation of the bunch exiting the booster cavity. The beam envelope and the bunch length have been calculated through the transport line using TRACE-3d and PARMELA. These codes allow us to verify the required beam parameters at the experimental areas. We discuss the adjustment of the optics, aimed at producing the minimum electron bunch length at the experimental targets. (4 refs)
Superhumps in Cataclysmic Binaries. XXIII. V442 Ophiuchi and RX J1643.7+3402
We report the results of long observing campaigns on two novalike variables:
V442 Ophiuchi and RX J1643.7+3402. These stars have high-excitation spectra,
complex line profiles signifying mass loss at particular orbital phases, and
similar orbital periods (respectively 0.12433 and 0.12056 d). They are
well-credentialed members of the SW Sex class of cataclysmic variables. Their
light curves are also quite complex. V442 Oph shows periodic signals with
periods of 0.12090(8) and 4.37(15) days, and RX J1643.7+3402 shows similar
signals at 0.11696(8) d and 4.05(12) d. We interpret these short and long
periods respectively as a "negative superhump" and the wobble period of the
accretion disk. The superhump could then possibly arise from the heating of the
secondary (and structures fixed in the orbital frame) by inner-disk radiation,
which reaches the secondary relatively unimpeded since the disk is not
coplanar.
At higher frequencies, both stars show another type of variability:
quasi-periodic oscillations (QPOs) with a period near 1000 seconds. Underlying
these strong signals of low stability may be weak signals of higher stability.
Similar QPOs, and negative superhumps, are quite common features in SW Sex
stars. Both can in principle be explained by ascribing strong magnetism to the
white dwarf member of the binary; and we suggest that SW Sex stars are
borderline AM Herculis binaries, usually drowned by a high accretion rate. This
would provide an ancestor channel for AM Hers, whose origin is still
mysterious.Comment: PDF, 41 pages, 4 tables, 16 figures; accepted, in press, to appear
December 2002, PASP; more info at http://cba.phys.columbia.edu
OGLE-2012-BLG-0455/MOA-2012-BLG-206: Microlensing event with ambiguity in planetary interpretations caused by incomplete coverage of planetary signal
Characterizing a microlensing planet is done from modeling an observed
lensing light curve. In this process, it is often confronted that solutions of
different lensing parameters result in similar light curves, causing
difficulties in uniquely interpreting the lens system, and thus understanding
the causes of different types of degeneracy is important. In this work, we show
that incomplete coverage of a planetary perturbation can result in degenerate
solutions even for events where the planetary signal is detected with a high
level of statistical significance. We demonstrate the degeneracy for an
actually observed event OGLE-2012-BLG-0455/MOA-2012-BLG-206. The peak of this
high-magnification event exhibits very strong deviation
from a point-lens model with for data sets with a
total number of measurement 6963. From detailed modeling of the light curve, we
find that the deviation can be explained by four distinct solutions, i.e., two
very different sets of solutions, each with a two-fold degeneracy. While the
two-fold (so-called "close/wide") degeneracy is well-understood, the degeneracy
between the radically different solutions is not previously known. The model
light curves of this degeneracy differ substantially in the parts that were not
covered by observation, indicating that the degeneracy is caused by the
incomplete coverage of the perturbation. It is expected that the frequency of
the degeneracy introduced in this work will be greatly reduced with the
improvement of the current lensing survey and follow-up experiments and the
advent of new surveys.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, ApJ accepte
Microlensing Event MOA-2007-BLG-400: Exhuming the Buried Signature of a Cool, Jovian-Mass Planet
We report the detection of the cool, Jovian-mass planet MOA-2007-BLG-400Lb.
The planet was detected in a high-magnification microlensing event (with peak
magnification A_max = 628) in which the primary lens transited the source,
resulting in a dramatic smoothing of the peak of the event. The angular extent
of the region of perturbation due to the planet is significantly smaller than
the angular size of the source, and as a result the planetary signature is also
smoothed out by the finite source size. Thus the deviation from a single-lens
fit is broad and relatively weak (~ few percent). Nevertheless, we demonstrate
that the planetary nature of the deviation can be unambiguously ascertained
from the gross features of the residuals, and detailed analysis yields a fairly
precise planet/star mass ratio of q = 0.0026+/-0.0004, in accord with the large
significance (\Delta\chi^2=1070) of the detection. The planet/star projected
separation is subject to a strong close/wide degeneracy, leading to two
indistinguishable solutions that differ in separation by a factor of ~8.5.
Upper limits on flux from the lens constrain its mass to be M < 0.75 M_Sun
(assuming it is a main-sequence star). A Bayesian analysis that includes all
available observational constraints indicates a primary in the Galactic bulge
with a mass of ~0.2-0.5 M_Sun and thus a planet mass of ~ 0.5-1.3 M_Jupiter.
The separation and equilibrium temperature are ~0.6-1.1AU (~5.3-9.7AU) and
~103K (~34K) for the close (wide) solution. If the primary is a main-sequence
star, follow-up observations would enable the detection of its light and so a
measurement of its mass and distance.Comment: 30 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to Ap
MOA-2011-BLG-293Lb: A test of pure survey microlensing planet detections
Because of the development of large-format, wide-field cameras, microlensing
surveys are now able to monitor millions of stars with sufficient cadence to
detect planets. These new discoveries will span the full range of significance
levels including planetary signals too small to be distinguished from the
noise. At present, we do not understand where the threshold is for detecting
planets. MOA-2011-BLG-293Lb is the first planet to be published from the new
surveys, and it also has substantial followup observations. This planet is
robustly detected in survey+followup data (Delta chi^2 ~ 5400). The planet/host
mass ratio is q=5.3+/- 0.2*10^{-3}. The best fit projected separation is
s=0.548+/- 0.005 Einstein radii. However, due to the s-->s^{-1} degeneracy,
projected separations of s^{-1} are only marginally disfavored at Delta
chi^2=3. A Bayesian estimate of the host mass gives M_L = 0.43^{+0.27}_{-0.17}
M_Sun, with a sharp upper limit of M_L < 1.2 M_Sun from upper limits on the
lens flux. Hence, the planet mass is m_p=2.4^{+1.5}_{-0.9} M_Jup, and the
physical projected separation is either r_perp = ~1.0 AU or r_perp = ~3.4 AU.
We show that survey data alone predict this solution and are able to
characterize the planet, but the Delta chi^2 is much smaller (Delta chi^2~500)
than with the followup data. The Delta chi^2 for the survey data alone is
smaller than for any other securely detected planet. This event suggests a
means to probe the detection threshold, by analyzing a large sample of events
like MOA-2011-BLG-293, which have both followup data and high cadence survey
data, to provide a guide for the interpretation of pure survey microlensing
data.Comment: 29 pages, 6 figures, Replaced 7/3/12 with the version accepted to Ap
The Extreme Microlensing Event OGLE-2007-BLG-224: Terrestrial Parallax Observation of a Thick-Disk Brown Dwarf
Parallax is the most fundamental technique to measure distances to
astronomical objects. Although terrestrial parallax was pioneered over 2000
years ago by Hipparchus (ca. 140 BCE) to measure the distance to the Moon, the
baseline of the Earth is so small that terrestrial parallax can generally only
be applied to objects in the Solar System. However, there exists a class of
extreme gravitational microlensing events in which the effects of terrestrial
parallax can be readily detected and so permit the measurement of the distance,
mass, and transverse velocity of the lens. Here we report observations of the
first such extreme microlensing event OGLE-2007-BLG-224, from which we infer
that the lens is a brown dwarf of mass M=0.056 +- 0.004 Msun, with a distance
of 525 +- 40 pc and a transverse velocity of 113 +- 21 km/s. The velocity
places the lens in the thick disk, making this the lowest-mass thick-disk brown
dwarf detected so far. Follow-up observations may allow one to observe the
light from the brown dwarf itself, thus serving as an important constraint for
evolutionary models of these objects and potentially opening a new window on
sub-stellar objects. The low a priori probability of detecting a thick-disk
brown dwarf in this event, when combined with additional evidence from other
observations, suggests that old substellar objects may be more common than
previously assumed.Comment: ApJ Letters, in press, 15 pages including 2 figure
OGLE-2009-BLG-092/MOA-2009-BLG-137: A Dramatic Repeating Event With the Second Perturbation Predicted by Real-Time Analysis
We report the result of the analysis of a dramatic repeating gravitational
microlensing event OGLE-2009-BLG-092/MOA-2009-BLG-137, for which the light
curve is characterized by two distinct peaks with perturbations near both
peaks. We find that the event is produced by the passage of the source
trajectory over the central perturbation regions associated with the individual
components of a wide-separation binary. The event is special in the sense that
the second perturbation, occurring days after the first, was
predicted by the real-time analysis conducted after the first peak,
demonstrating that real-time modeling can be routinely done for binary and
planetary events. With the data obtained from follow-up observations covering
the second peak, we are able to uniquely determine the physical parameters of
the lens system. We find that the event occurred on a bulge clump giant and it
was produced by a binary lens composed of a K and M-type main-sequence stars.
The estimated masses of the binary components are
and , respectively, and they are separated in
projection by . The measured distance to the
lens is . We also detect the orbital motion
of the lens system.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
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