3,313 research outputs found
Pulsation-induced atmospheric dynamics in M-type AGB stars. Effects on wind properties, photometric variations and near-IR CO line profiles
Wind-driving in asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars is commonly attributed to
a two-step process. First, matter in the stellar atmosphere is levitated by
shock waves, induced by stellar pulsation, and second, this matter is
accelerated by radiation pressure on dust, resulting in a wind. In dynamical
atmosphere and wind models the effects of the stellar pulsation are often
simulated by a simplistic prescription at the inner boundary. We test a sample
of dynamical models for M-type AGB stars, for which we kept the stellar
parameters fixed to values characteristic of a typical Mira variable but varied
the inner boundary condition. The aim was to evaluate the effect on the
resulting atmosphere structure and wind properties. The results of the models
are compared to observed mass-loss rates and wind velocities, photometry, and
radial velocity curves, and to results from 1D radial pulsation models.
Dynamical atmosphere models are calculated, using the DARWIN code for different
combinations of photospheric velocities and luminosity variations. The inner
boundary is changed by introducing an offset between maximum expansion of the
stellar surface and the luminosity and/or by using an asymmetric shape for the
luminosity variation. Models that resulted in realistic wind velocities and
mass-loss rates, when compared to observations, also produced realistic
photometric variations. For the models to also reproduce the characteristic
radial velocity curve present in Mira stars (derived from CO
lines), an overall phase shift of 0.2 between the maxima of the luminosity and
radial variation had to be introduced. We find that a group of models with
different boundary conditions (29 models, including the model with standard
boundary conditions) results in realistic velocities and mass-loss rates, and
in photometric variations
Dust-driven winds of AGB stars: The critical interplay of atmospheric shocks and luminosity variations
Winds of AGB stars are thought to be driven by a combination of
pulsation-induced shock waves and radiation pressure on dust. In dynamic
atmosphere and wind models, the stellar pulsation is often simulated by
prescribing a simple sinusoidal variation in velocity and luminosity at the
inner boundary of the model atmosphere. We experiment with different forms of
the luminosity variation in order to assess the effects on the wind velocity
and mass-loss rate, when progressing from the simple sinusoidal recipe towards
more realistic descriptions. Using state-of-the-art dynamical models of C-rich
AGB stars, a range of different asymmetric shapes of the luminosity variation
and a range of phase shifts of the luminosity variation relative to the radial
variation are tested. These tests are performed on two stellar atmosphere
models. The first model has dust condensation and, as a consequence, a stellar
wind is triggered, while the second model lacks both dust and wind. The first
model with dust and stellar wind is very sensitive to moderate changes in the
luminosity variation. There is a complex relationship between the luminosity
minimum, and dust condensation: changing the phase corresponding to minimum
luminosity can either increase or decrease mass-loss rate and wind velocity.
The luminosity maximum dominates the radiative pressure on the dust, which in
turn, is important for driving the wind. These effects of changed luminosity
variation are coupled with the dust formation. In contrast there is very little
change to the structure of the model without dust. Changing the luminosity
variation, both by introducing a phase shift and by modifying the shape,
influences wind velocity and the mass-loss rate. To improve wind models it
would probably be desirable to extract boundary conditions from 3D dynamical
interior models or stellar pulsation models.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Exploring wind-driving dust species in cool luminous giants II. Constraints from photometry of M-type AGB stars
The heavy mass loss observed in evolved asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars
is usually attributed to a two-stage process: atmospheric levitation by
pulsation-induced shock waves, followed by radiative acceleration of newly
formed dust grains. The dust transfers momentum to the surrounding gas through
collisions and thereby triggers a general outflow. Radiation-hydrodynamical
models of M-type AGB stars suggest that these winds can be driven by photon
scattering -- in contrast to absorption -- on Fe-free silicate grains of sizes
0.1--1\,m. In this paper we study photometric constraints for wind-driving
dust species in M-type AGB stars, as part of an ongoing effort to identify
likely candidates among the grain materials observed in circumstellar
envelopes. To investigate the scenario of stellar winds driven by photon
scattering on dust, and to explore how different optical and chemical
properties of wind-driving dust species affect photometry we focus on two sets
of dynamical models atmospheres: (i) models using a detailed description for
the growth of MgSiO grains, taking into account both scattering and
absorption cross-sections when calculating the radiative acceleration, and (ii)
models using a parameterized dust description, constructed to represent
different chemical and optical dust properties. By comparing synthetic
photometry from these two sets of models to observations of M-type AGB stars we
can provide constraints on the properties of wind-driving dust species.
Photometry from wind models with a detailed description for the growth of
MgSiO grains reproduces well both the values and the time-dependent
behavior of observations of M-type AGB stars, providing further support for the
scenario of winds driven by photon scattering on dust.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A. 15 pages, 14 figure
Classifying continuous, real-time e-nose sensor data using a bio-inspired spiking network modelled on the insect olfactory system
In many application domains, conventional e-noses are frequently outperformed in both speed and accuracy by their biological counterparts. Exploring potential bio-inspired improvements, we note a number of neuronal network models have demonstrated some success in classifying static datasets by abstracting the insect olfactory system. However, these designs remain largely unproven in practical
settings, where sensor data is real-time, continuous, potentially noisy, lacks a precise onset signal and
accurate classification requires the inclusion of temporal aspects into the feature set. This investigation
therefore seeks to inform and develop the potential and suitability of biomimetic classifiers for use with typical real-world sensor data. Taking a generic classifier design inspired by the inhibition and
competition in the insect antennal lobe, we apply it to identifying 20 individual chemical odours from
the timeseries of responses of metal oxide sensors. We show that four out of twelve available sensors
and the first 30 s(10%) of the sensors’ continuous response are sufficient to deliver 92% accurate
classification without access to an odour onset signal. In contrast to previous approaches, once
training is complete, sensor signals can be fed continuously into the classifier without requiring
discretization. We conclude that for continuous data there may be a conceptual advantage in using
spiking networks, in particular where time is an essential component of computation. Classification
was achieved in real time using a GPU-accelerated spiking neural network simulator developed in our
group
Abundance analysis for long period variables. Velocity effects studied with O-rich dynamic model atmospheres
(abbreviated) Measuring the surface abundances of AGB stars is an important
tool for studying the effects of nucleosynthesis and mixing in the interior of
low- to intermediate mass stars during their final evolutionary phases. The
atmospheres of AGB stars can be strongly affected by stellar pulsation and the
development of a stellar wind, though, and the abundance determination of these
objects should therefore be based on dynamic model atmospheres. We investigate
the effects of stellar pulsation and mass loss on the appearance of selected
spectral features (line profiles, line intensities) and on the derived
elemental abundances by performing a systematic comparison of hydrostatic and
dynamic model atmospheres. High-resolution synthetic spectra in the near
infrared range were calculated based on two dynamic model atmospheres (at
various phases during the pulsation cycle) as well as a grid of hydrostatic
COMARCS models. Equivalent widths of a selection of atomic and molecular lines
were derived in both cases and compared with each other. In the case of the
dynamic models, the equivalent widths of all investigated features vary over
the pulsation cycle. A consistent reproduction of the derived variations with a
set of hydrostatic models is not possible, but several individual phases and
spectral features can be reproduced well with the help of specific hydrostatic
atmospheric models. In addition, we show that the variations in equivalent
width that we found on the basis of the adopted dynamic model atmospheres agree
qualitatively with observational results for the Mira R Cas over its light
cycle. The findings of our modelling form a starting point to deal with the
problem of abundance determination in strongly dynamic AGB stars (i.e.,
long-period variables).Comment: 13 pages, 22 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Exploring wind-driving dust species in cool luminous giants I. Basic criteria and dynamical models of M-type AGB stars
This work is part of an ongoing effort aiming at identifying the actual
wind-drivers among the dust species observed in circumstellar envelopes. In
particular, we focus on the interplay between a strong stellar radiation field
and the dust formation process. To identify critical properties of potential
wind-driving dust species we use detailed radiation-hydrodynamical models which
include a parameterized dust description, complemented by simple analytical
estimates to help with the physical interpretation of the numerical results.
The adopted dust description is constructed to mimic different chemical and
optical dust properties in order to systematically study the effects of a
realistic radiation field on the second stage of the mass loss mechanism. We
see distinct trends in which combinations of optical and chemical dust
properties are needed to trigger an outflow. Dust species with a low
condensation temperature and a NIR absorption coefficient that decreases
strongly with wavelength will not condense close enough to the stellar surface
to be considered as potential wind-drivers. Our models confirm that metallic
iron and Fe-bearing silicates are not viable as wind-drivers due to their
near-infrared optical properties and resulting large condensation distances.
TiO2 is also excluded as a wind-driver due to the low abundance of Ti. Other
species, such a SiO2 and Al2O3, are less clear-cut cases due to uncertainties
in the optical and chemical data and further work is needed. A strong candidate
is Mg2SiO4 with grain sizes of 0.1-1 micron, where scattering contributes
significantly to the radiative acceleration, as suggested by earlier
theoretical work and supported by recent observations.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figure
Machine learning for automatic prediction of the quality of electrophysiological recordings
The quality of electrophysiological recordings varies a lot due to technical and biological variability and neuroscientists inevitably have to select “good” recordings for further analyses. This procedure is time-consuming and prone to selection biases. Here, we investigate replacing human decisions by a machine learning approach. We define 16 features, such as spike height and width, select the most informative ones using a wrapper method and train a classifier to reproduce the judgement of one of our expert electrophysiologists. Generalisation performance is then assessed on unseen data, classified by the same or by another expert. We observe that the learning machine can be equally, if not more, consistent in its judgements as individual experts amongst each other. Best performance is achieved for a limited number of informative features; the optimal feature set being different from one data set to another. With 80–90% of correct judgements, the performance of the system is very promising within the data sets of each expert but judgments are less reliable when it is used across sets of recordings from different experts. We conclude that the proposed approach is relevant to the selection of electrophysiological recordings, provided parameters are adjusted to different types of experiments and to individual experimenters
Data-driven honeybee antennal lobe model suggests how stimulus-onset asynchrony can aid odour segregation
Insects have a remarkable ability to identify and track odour sources in multi-odour backgrounds. Recent behavioural experiments show that this ability relies on detecting millisecond stimulus asynchronies between odourants that originate from different sources. Honeybees,
Apis mellifera , are able to distinguish mixtures where both odourants arrive at the same time (synchronous mixtures) from those where odourant onsets are staggered (asynchronous mixtures) down to an onset delay of only 6 ms. In this paper we explore this surprising ability in a model of the insects' primary olfactory brain area, the
antennal lobe. We hypothesize that a winner-take-all inhibitory network of local neurons in the antennal lobe has a symmetry-breaking effect, such that the response pattern in projection neurons to an asynchronous mixture is different from the response pattern to the corresponding synchronous mixture for an extended period of time beyond the initial odourant onset where the two mixture conditions actually differ. The prolonged difference between response patterns to synchronous and asynchronous mixtures could facilitate odour segregation in downstream circuits of the olfactory pathway. We present a detailed data-driven model of the bee antennal lobe that reproduces a large data set of experimentally observed physiological odour responses, successfully implements the hypothesised symmetry-breaking mechanism and so demonstrates that this mechanism is consistent with our current knowledge of the olfactory circuits in the bee brain
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