36 research outputs found

    An ``outside-in'' outburst of Aql X--1

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    We present optical spectroscopy and optical and infrared photometry of the neutron star soft X-ray transient Aql X--1 during its X-ray outburst of August 1997. By modelling the X-ray, optical, and IR light curves, we find a 3 day delay between the IR and X-ray rise times, analogous to the UV-optical delay seen in dwarf novae outbursts and black hole X-ray transients. We interpret this delay as the signature of an ``outside-in'' outburst, in which a thermal instability in the outer disc propagates inward. This outburst is the first of this type definitively identified in a neutron star X-ray transient.Comment: 6 pages latex, 2 figures, Accepted by MNRA

    UV Spectroscopy of AB Doradus with the Hubble Space Telescope. Impulsive flares and bimodal profiles of the CIV 1549 line in a young star

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    We observed AB Doradus, a young and active late type star (K0 - K2 IV-V, P= 0.514 d) with the Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph of the post-COSTAR Hubble Space Telescope with the time and spectral resolutions of 27 s and 15 km, respectively. The wavelength band (1531 - 1565 A) included the strong CIV doublet (1548.202 and 1550.774, formed in the transition region at 100 000 K). The mean quiescent CIV flux state was close to the saturated value and 100 times the solar one. The line profile (after removing the rotational and instrumental profiles) is bimodal consisting of two Gaussians, narrow (FWHM = 70 km/s) and broad (FWHM =330km/s). This bimodality is probably due to two separate broadening mechanisms and velocity fields at the coronal base. It is possible that TR transient events (random multiple velocities), with a large surface coverage, give rise to the broadening of the narrow component,while true microflaring is responsible for the broad one. The transition region was observed to flare frequently on different time scales and magnitudes. The largest impulsive flare seen in the CIV 1549 emission reached in less than one minute the peak differential emission measure (10**51.2 cm-3) and returned exponentially in 5 minutes to the 7 times lower quiescent level.The 3 min average line profile of the flare was blue-shifted (-190 km/s) and broadened (FWHM = 800 km/s). This impulsive flare could have been due to a chromospheric heating and subsequent evaporation by an electron beam, accelerated (by reconnection) at the apex of a coronal loop.Comment: to be published in AJ (April 98), 3 tables and 7 figures as separate PS-files, print Table 2 as a landscap

    Flux-transport dynamos with Lorentz force feedback on differential rotation and meridional flow: Saturation mechanism and torsional oscillations

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    In this paper we discuss a dynamic flux-transport dynamo model that includes the feedback of the induced magnetic field on differential rotation and meridional flow. We consider two different approaches for the feedback: meanfield Lorentz force and quenching of transport coefficients such as turbulent viscosity and heat conductivity. We find that even strong feedback on the meridional flow does not change the character of the flux-transport dynamo significantly; however it leads to a significant reduction of differential rotation. To a large degree independent from the dynamo parameters, the saturation takes place when the toroidal field at the base of the convection zone reaches between 1.2 an 1.5 T, the energy converted intomagnetic energy corresponds to about 0.1 to 0.2% of the solar luminosity. The torsional oscillations produced through Lorentz force feedback on differential rotation show a dominant poleward propagating branch with the correct phase relation to the magnetic cycle. We show that incorporating enhanced surface cooling of the active region belt (as proposed by Spruit) leads to an equatorward propagating branch in good agreement with observations.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ August 10 issue; corrected typos, corrected referenc

    The nature of the infrared counterpart of IGR J19140+0951

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    The INTEGRAL observatory has been (re-)discovering new X-ray sources since the beginning of nominal operations in early 2003. These sources include X-ray binaries, Active Galactic Nuclei, cataclysmic variables, etc. Amongst the X-ray binaries, the true nature of many of these sources has remained largely elusive, though they seem to make up a population of highly absorbed high-mass X-ray binaries. One of these new sources, IGR J19140+0951, was serendipitously discovered on 2003 Mar 6 during an observation of the galactic microquasar GRS 1915+105. We observed IGR J19140+0951 with UKIRT in order to identify the infrared counterpart. Here we present the H- and K-band spectra. We determined that the companion is a B0.5-type bright supergiant in a wind-fed system, at a distance \la 5 kpc.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Phase-resolved optical and X-ray spectroscopy of low-mass X-ray binary X1822-371

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    (Abridged) X1822-371 is the prototypical accretion disc corona X-ray source, a low-mass X-ray binary viewed at very high inclination, thereby allowing the disc structure and extended disc coronal regions to be visible. We study the structure of the accretion disc in X1822-371 by modelling the phase-resolved spectra both in optical and X-ray regime. We analyse high time resolution optical ESO/VLT spectra of X1822-371 to study the variability in the emission line profiles. In addition, we use data from XMM-Newton space observatory to study phase-resolved as well as high resolution X-ray spectra. We apply the Doppler tomography technique to reconstruct a map of the optical emission distribution in the system. We fit multi-component models to the X-ray spectra. We find that our results from both the optical and X-ray analysis can be explained with a model where the accretion disc has a thick rim in the region where the accretion stream impacts the disc. The behaviour of the H_beta line complex implies that some of the accreting matter creates an outburst around the accretion stream impact location and that the resulting outflow of matter moves both away from the accretion disc and towards the centre of the disc. Such behaviour can be explained by an almost isotropic outflow of matter from the accretion stream impact region. The optical emission lines of HeII 4686 and 5411 show double peaked profiles, typical for an accretion disc at high inclination. However, their velocities are slower than expected for an accretion disc in a system like X1822-371. This, combined with the fact that the HeII emission lines do not get eclipsed during the partial eclipse in the continuum, suggests that the line emission does not originate in the orbital plane and is more likely to come from above the accretion disc, for example the accretion disc wind.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in A&

    The coronal FeXXI 1354.094 line in AB Doradus

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    The active late-type star AB Doradus was observed in February 1996 with the Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph of the Hubble Space Telescope using the low resolution G140L grating. The observations covered one half of the star's rotation cycle (P = 0.514 d) with 11.5 min time resolution. The strong coronal Fe XXI 1354.094 line formed at 10^7 K was analysed and its emission measure (EM) derived. This EM is much higher than that derived from recent XMM-Newton observations (Guedel et al. 2001), and earlier EXOSAT (Collier Cameron et al. 1988) and ASCA/EUVE (Mewe et al. 1996) data, as well, requiring a variability by a factor of 5. The physical reason for the variability remains unknown, since (outside flares) the observed broad band variability of AB Dor is much smaller.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, accepted for Astronomy and Astrophysics, May 200

    Origin of solar torsional oscillations

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    Helioseismology has revealed many details of solar differential rotation and also its time variation, known as torsional oscillations. So far there is no generally accepted theoretical explanation for torsional oscillations, even though a close relation to the solar activity cycle is evident. On the theoretical side non-kinematic dynamo models (including the Lorentz force feedback on differential rotation) have been used to explain torsional oscillations. In this paper we use a slightly different approach by forcing torsional oscillations in a mean field differential rotation model. Our aim is not a fully self-consistent model but rather to point out a few general properties of torsional oscillations and their possible origin that are independent from a particular dynamo model. We find that the poleward propagating high latitude branch of the torsional oscillations can be explained as a response of the coupled differential rotation / meridional flow system to periodic forcing in mid-latitudes, of either mechanical (Lorentz force) or thermal nature. The speed of the poleward propagation sets constraints on the value of the turbulent viscosity in the solar convection zone to be less than 3x10^8 m^2/s. We also show that the equatorward propagating low latitude branch is very unlikely a consequence of mechanical forcing (Lorentz force) alone, but rather of thermal origin due to the Taylor-Proudman theorem.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures. accepted by Astrophys.

    The Orbital Period And Time-Variable Asymmetric Accretion Disk In The X-Ray Binary MSs 1603.6+2600 (=UW Coronae Borealis)

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    We present CCD photometry of the low-mass X-ray binary UW Coronae Borealis (UW CrB). Its light curve shows eclipses at a period near 111 minutes, but the eclipses vary in depth and shape and often disappear. Restricting our analysis to the deeper eclipses, we find the orbital period to be 110: 976722 +/- 0: 000012 minutes, but the times of mideclipse can deviate by more than 0.025 in phase from the best-fit ephemeris. There is an additional large-amplitude variation with a period of 112: 58 +/- 0: 03 minutes reminiscent of the superhumps seen in the light curves of some cataclysmic variables. The variations of the eclipse morphology are not random, repeating at a period near 5.5 days, and the shape of the superhump-like modulation also varies at this period. We interpret the light curve as the eclipse of the accretion disk around the neutron star by the secondary star. The surface brightness of the accretion disk is strongly asymmetric and highly variable, producing the variations of the eclipse morphology and times of mideclipse. A model in which the distribution of surface brightness is elliptical and precesses at the 5.5 day period reproduces the eclipse depths and the times of mideclipse reasonably well. As 112.6 minutes is the beat period between 110.97672 minutes and 5.5 days, the superhump-like variability is closely related to the precessing elliptical disk, but the causal relationship is unclear.NSF AST 02-06029National Institutes of HealthAstronom
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