225 research outputs found
Modelling the components of binaries in Hyades: The dependence of the mixing-length parameter on stellar mass
We present our findings based on a detailed analysis for the binaries of the
Hyades, in which the masses of the components are well known. We fit the models
of components of a binary system to the observations so as to give the observed
total V and B-V of that system and the observed slope of the main-sequence in
the corresponding parts. According to our findings, there is a very definite
relationship between the mixing-length parameter and the stellar mass. The
fitting formula for this relationship can be given as , which is valid for stellar masses greater than
0.77 M_sun. While no strict information is gathered for the chemical
composition of the cluster, as a result of degeneracy in the colour-magnitude
diagram, by adopting Z=0.033 and using models for the components of 70 Tau and
theta^2 Tau we find the hydrogen abundance to be X=0.676 and the age to be 670
Myr. If we assume that Z=0.024, then X=0.718 and the age is 720 Myr. Our
findings concerning the mixing length parameter are valid for both sets of the
solution. For both components of the active binary system V818 Tau, the
differences between radii of the models with Z=0.024 and the observed radii are
only about 4 percent. More generally, the effective temperatures of the models
of low mass stars in the binary systems studied are in good agreement with
those determined by spectroscopic methods.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Driving and damping mechanisms in hybrid pressure-gravity modes pulsators
We study the energetic aspects of hybrid pressure-gravity modes pulsations.
The case of hybrid beta Cephei-SPB pulsators is considered with special
attention. In addition to the already known sensitivity of the driving
mechanism to the heavy elements mixture (mainly the iron abundance), we show
that the characteristics of the propagation and evanescent regions play also a
major role, determining the extension of the stable gap in the frequency domain
between the unstable low order pressure and high order gravity modes. Finally,
we consider the case of hybrid delta Sct-gamma Dor pulsators.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures, in the proceedings of the Helas II Conference:
"Helioseismology, Asteroseismology and MHD Connections", Goettingen, August
200
Periodic mass loss episodes due to an oscillation mode with variable amplitude in the hot supergiant HD50064
We aim to interpret the photometric and spectroscopic variability of the
luminous blue variable supergiant HD\,50064 ().CoRoT space photometry
and follow-up high-resolution spectroscopy, with a time base of 137\,d and
169\,d, respectively, was gathered, analysed and interpreted using standard
time series analysis and light curve modelling methods as well as spectral line
diagnostics.The space photometry reveals one period of 37\,d, which undergoes a
sudden amplitude change with a factor 1.6. The pulsation period is confirmed in
the spectroscopy, which additionally reveals metal line radial velocity values
differing by km\,s depending on the spectral line and on the
epoch. We estimate \teff13\,500\,K, \logg1.5 from the equivalent
width of Si lines. The Balmer lines reveal that the star undergoes episodes of
changing mass loss on a time scale similar to the changes in the photometric
and spectroscopic variability, with an average value of (in M\,yr). We tentatively interpret the 37\,d
period as due to a strange mode oscillation.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics Letter
Serial FEM/XFEM-Based Update of Preoperative Brain Images Using Intraoperative MRI
Current neuronavigation systems cannot adapt to changing intraoperative conditions over time. To overcome this limitation, we present an experimental end-to-end system capable of updating 3D preoperative images in the presence of brain shift and successive resections. The heart of our system is a nonrigid registration technique using a biomechanical model, driven by the deformations of key surfaces tracked in successive intraoperative images. The biomechanical model is deformed using FEM or XFEM, depending on the type of deformation under consideration, namely, brain shift or resection. We describe the operation of our system on two patient cases, each comprising five intraoperative MR images, and we demonstrate that our approach significantly improves the alignment of nonrigidly registered images
Solar-like oscillations in a massive star
Seismology of stars provides insight into the physical mechanisms taking
place in their interior, with modes of oscillation probing different layers.
Low-amplitude acoustic oscillations excited by turbulent convection were
detected four decades ago in the Sun and more recently in low-mass
main-sequence stars. Using data gathered by the Convection Rotation and
Planetary Transits mission, we report here on the detection of solar-like
oscillations in a massive star, V1449 Aql, which is a known large-amplitude (b
Cephei) pulsator.Comment: Published in Sience, 19 June 2009, vol. 324, p. 154
An asteroseismic study of the O9V star HD 46202 from CoRoT space-based photometry
The O9V star HD 46202, which is a member of the young open cluster NGC 2244,
was observed by the CoRoT satellite in October/November 2008 during a short run
of 34 days. From the very high-precision light curve, we clearly detect beta
Cep-like pulsation frequencies with amplitudes of ~0.1 mmag and below. A
comparison with stellar models was performed using a chi^2 as a measure for the
goodness-of-fit between the observed and theoretically computed frequencies.
The physical parameters of our best-fitting models are compatible with the ones
deduced spectroscopically. A core overshooting parameter alpha_ov = 0.10 +-
0.05 pressure scale height is required. None of the observed frequencies are
theoretically excited with the input physics used in our study. More
theoretical work is thus needed to overcome this shortcoming in how we
understand the excitation mechanism of pulsation modes in such a massive star.
A similar excitation problem has also been encountered for certain pulsation
modes in beta Cep stars recently modelled asteroseismically.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics on 17/12/2010,
9 pages, 7 figures, 4 table
The underlying physical meaning of the relation
Asteroseismology of stars that exhibit solar-like oscillations are enjoying a
growing interest with the wealth of observational results obtained with the
CoRoT and Kepler missions. In this framework, scaling laws between
asteroseismic quantities and stellar parameters are becoming essential tools to
study a rich variety of stars. However, the physical underlying mechanisms of
those scaling laws are still poorly known. Our objective is to provide a
theoretical basis for the scaling between the frequency of the maximum in the
power spectrum () of solar-like oscillations and the cut-off
frequency (). Using the SoHO GOLF observations together with
theoretical considerations, we first confirm that the maximum of the height in
oscillation power spectrum is determined by the so-called \emph{plateau} of the
damping rates. The physical origin of the plateau can be traced to the
destabilizing effect of the Lagrangian perturbation of entropy in the
upper-most layers which becomes important when the modal period and the local
thermal relaxation time-scale are comparable. Based on this analysis, we then
find a linear relation between and , with a
coefficient that depends on the ratio of the Mach number of the exciting
turbulence to the third power to the mixing-length parameter.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figures. Accepted in A&
Solar-like oscillations in massive main-sequence stars. I. Asteroseismic signatures of the driving and damping regions
Motivated by the recent detection of stochastically excited modes in the
massive star V1449 Aql (Belkacem et al., 2009b), already known to be a
Cephei, we theoretically investigate the driving by turbulent convection. By
using a full non-adiabatic computation of the damping rates, together with a
computation of the energy injection rates, we provide an estimate of the
amplitudes of modes excited by both the convective region induced by the iron
opacity bump and the convective core. Despite uncertainties in the dynamical
properties of such convective regions, we demonstrate that both are able to
efficiently excite modes above the CoRoT observational threshold and the
solar amplitudes. In addition, we emphasise the potential asteroseismic
diagnostics provided by each convective region, which we hope will help to
identify the one responsible for solar-like oscillations, and to give
constraints on this convective zone. A forthcoming work will be dedicated to an
extended investigation of the likelihood of solar-like oscillations across the
Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figures, accepter in A&
Solar-like oscillations in cluster stars
We present a brief overview of the history of attempts to obtain a clear
detection of solar-like oscillations in cluster stars, and discuss the results
on the first clear detection, which was made by the Kepler Asteroseismic
Science Consortium (KASC) Working Group 2.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, accepted by Astronomische Nachrichte
CoRoT observations of O stars: diverse origins of variability
Six O-type stars were observed continuously by the CoRoT satellite during a
34.3-day run. The unprecedented quality of the data allows us to detect even
low-amplitude stellar pulsations in some of these stars (HD 46202 and the
binaries HD 46149 and Plaskett's star). These cover both opacity-driven modes
and solar-like stochastic oscillations, both of importance to the
asteroseismological modelling of O stars. Additional effects can be seen in the
CoRoT light curves, such as binarity and rotational modulation. Some of the
hottest O-type stars (HD 46223, HD 46150 and HD 46966) are dominated by the
presence of red-noise: we speculate that this is related to a sub-surface
convection zone.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, conference paper. To be published in "Four
decades of Research on Massive Stars", Astronomical Society of the Pacific.
Eds. C. Robert, N. St-Louis and L. Drisse
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