1,907 research outputs found
Circumstellar Disks revealed by / Flux Variation Gradients
The variability of young stellar objects (YSO) changes their brightness and
color preventing a proper classification in traditional color-color and color
magnitude diagrams. We have explored the feasibility of the flux variation
gradient (FVG) method for YSOs, using and band monitoring data of the
star forming region RCW\,38 obtained at the University Observatory Bochum in
Chile. Simultaneous multi-epoch flux measurements follow a linear relation
for almost all YSOs with large variability
amplitude. The slope gives the mean color temperature of
the varying component. Because is hotter than the dust sublimation
temperature, we have tentatively assigned it to stellar variations. If the
gradient does not meet the origin of the flux-flux diagram, an additional non-
or less-varying component may be required. If the variability amplitude is
larger at the shorter wavelength, e.g. , this component is cooler
than the star (e.g. a circumstellar disk); vice versa, if , the
component is hotter like a scattering halo or even a companion star. We here
present examples of two YSOs, where the FVG implies the presence of a
circumstellar disk; this finding is consistent with additional data at and
. One YSO shows a clear -band excess in the color-color diagram,
while the significance of a -excess in the other YSO depends on the
measurement epoch. Disentangling the contributions of star and disk it turns
out that the two YSOs have huge variability amplitudes (\,mag). The
FVG analysis is a powerful complementary tool to analyze the varying
components of YSOs and worth further exploration of monitoring data at other
wavelengths.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Probing Split Supersymmetry with Cosmic Rays
A striking aspect of the recently proposed split supersymmetry is the
existence of heavy gluinos which are metastable because of the very heavy
squarks which mediate their decay. In this paper we correlate the expected flux
of these particles with the accompanying neutrino flux produced in inelastic
collisions in distant astrophysical sources. We show that an event rate at
the Pierre Auger Observatory of approximately 1 yr for gluino masses of
about 500 GeV is consistent with existing limits on neutrino fluxes. The
extremely low inelasticity of the gluino-containing hadrons in their collisions
with the air molecules makes possible a distinct characterization of the
showers induced in the atmosphere. Should such anomalous events be observed, we
show that their cosmogenic origin, in concert with the requirement that they
reach the Earth before decay, leads to a lower bound on their proper lifetime
of the order of 100 years, and consequently, to a lower bound on the scale of
supersymmetry breaking, GeV. Obtaining
such a bound is not possible in collider experiments.Comment: Version to be published in Phys. Rev.
Photometric reverberation mapping of 3C120
We present the results of a five month monitoring campaign of the local
active galactic nuclei (AGN) 3C120. Observations with a median sampling of two
days were conducted with the robotic 15cm telescope VYSOS-6 located near Cerro
Armazones in Chile. Broad band (B,V) and narrow band (NB) filters were used in
order to measure fluxes of the AGN and the H_beta broad line region (BLR)
emission line. The NB flux is constituted by about 50% continuum and 50% H_beta
emission line. To disentangle line and continuum flux, a synthetic H_beta light
curve was created by subtracting a scaled V-band light curve from the NB light
curve. Here we show that the H_beta emission line responds to continuum
variations with a rest frame lag of 23.6 +/- 1.69 days. We estimate a virial
mass of the central black hole M_BH = 57 +/- 27 * 10^6 solar masses, by
combining the obtained lag with the velocity dispersion of a single
contemporaneous spectrum. Using the flux variation gradient (FVG) method, we
determined the host galaxy subtracted rest frame 5100A luminosity at the time
of our monitoring campaign with an uncertainty of 10% (L_AGN = 6.94 +/- 0.71*
10^43 ergs^-1). Compared with recent spectroscopic reverberation results, 3C120
shifts in the R_BLR - L_AGN diagram remarkably close to the theoretically
expected relation of R-L^0.5. Our results demonstrate the performance of
photometric AGN reverberation mapping, in particular for efficiently
determining the BLR size and the AGN luminosityComment: 11 pages, 11 figures, Published in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Eclipsing high-mass binaries I. Light curves and system parameters for CPD-518946, PISMIS24-1 and HD319702
We present first results of a comprehensive photometric O-star survey
performed with a robotic twin refractor at the Universit\"atssternwarte Bochum
located near Cerro Armazones in Chile. For three high-mass stars, namely
Pismis24-1, CPD-518946 and HD319702, we determined the period through the
Lafler-Kinman algorithm and model the light curves within the framework of the
Roche geometry. For Pismis24-1, a previously known eclipsing binary, we provide
first light curves and determined a photometric period of 2.36 days together
with an orbital inclination of 61.8 degrees. The best-fitting model solution to
the light curves suggest a detached configuration. With a primary temperature
of T1 = 42520K we obtain the temperature of the secondary component as T2 =
41500K. CPD-518946 is another known eclipsing binary for which we present a
revised photometric period of 1.96 days with an orbital inclination of 58.4
degrees. The system has likely a semi-detached configuration and a mass ratio q
= M1/M2 = 2.8. If we adopt a primary temperature of T1 = 34550K we obtain T2 =
21500K for the secondary component. HD319702 is a newly discovered eclipsing
binary member of the young open cluster NGC6334. The system shows well-defined
eclipses favouring a detached configuration with a period of 2.0 days and an
orbital inclination of 67.5 degrees. Combining our photometric result with the
primary spectral type O8 III(f) (T1 = 34000K) we derive a temperature of T2 =
25200K for the secondary component.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
- …