11,281 research outputs found
Bright hot impacts by erupted fragments falling back on the Sun: UV redshifts in stellar accretion
A solar eruption after a flare on 7 Jun 2011 produced EUV-bright impacts of
fallbacks far from the eruption site, observed with the Solar Dynamics
Observatory. These impacts can be taken as a template for the impact of stellar
accretion flows. Broad red-shifted UV lines have been commonly observed in
young accreting stars. Here we study the emission from the impacts in the
Atmospheric Imaging Assembly's UV channels and compare the inferred velocity
distribution to stellar observations. We model the impacts with 2D hydrodynamic
simulations. We find that the localised UV 1600A emission and its timing with
respect to the EUV emission can be explained by the impact of a cloud of
fragments. The first impacts produce strong initial upflows. The following
fragments are hit and shocked by these upflows. The UV emission comes mostly
from the shocked front shell of the fragments while they are still falling, and
is therefore redshifted when observed from above. The EUV emission instead
continues from the hot surface layer that is fed by the impacts. Fragmented
accretion can therefore explain broad redshifted UV lines (e.g. C IV 1550A) to
speeds around 400 km/s observed in accreting young stellar objects.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures (movies available upon request), accepted for
publicatio
The Effectiveness of Experienced and Inexperienced Teachers as Shown by Student Achievement
The large number of students who enrolled in the colleges of the United States after World War II brought many unusual problems to college administrators. The influx of students was so great that the teaching personnel had to be rapidly increased. Many inexperienced teachers had to be employed. It is probable that temporary staff members included many whose training and other traits would have barred them from teaching except during such an emergency. This condition provided an excellent opportunity for testing many hypotheses that could not have been tested under prevailing college conditions in normal times. One of the important issues at that time was the effectiveness of experienced and inexperienced teachers on the future academic achievements of their students. The purpose of this paper is to indicate the effectiveness of experienced and inexperienced teachers as shown by student achievement in calculus
Redshifted X-rays from the material accreting onto TW Hya: evidence of a low-latitude accretion spot
High resolution spectroscopy, providing constraints on plasma motions and
temperatures, is a powerful means to investigate the structure of accretion
streams in CTTS. In particular, the accretion shock region, where the accreting
material is heated to temperatures of a few MK as it continues its inward bulk
motion, can be probed by X-ray spectroscopy. To attempt to detect for the first
time the motion of this X-ray-emitting post-shock material, we searched for a
Doppler shift in the deep Chandra/HETGS observation of the CTTS TW Hya. This
test should unveil the nature of this X-ray emitting plasma component in CTTS,
and constrain the accretion stream geometry. We searched for a Doppler shift in
the X-ray emission from TW Hya with two different methods, by measuring the
position of a selected sample of emission lines, and by fitting the whole TW
Hya X-ray spectrum, allowing the line-of-sight velocity to vary. We found that
the plasma at T~2-4 MK has a line-of-sight velocity of 38.3+/-5.1 km/s with
respect to the stellar photosphere. This result definitively confirms that this
X-ray-emitting material originates in the post-shock region, at the base of the
accretion stream, and not in coronal structures. The comparison of the observed
velocity along the line of sight, 38.3+/-5.1 km/s, with the inferred intrinsic
velocity of the post shock of TW Hya, v_post~110-120 km/s, indicates that the
footpoints of the accretion streams on TW Hya are located at low latitudes on
the stellar surface. Our results indicate that complex magnetic field
geometries, such as that of TW Hya, permit low-latitude accretion spots.
Moreover, since on TW Hya the redshift of the soft X-ray emission is very
similar to that of the narrow component of the CIV resonance doublet at 1550
Ang, as found by Ardila et al. (2013), then the plasma at 2-4 MK and that at
0.1 MK likely originate in the same post-shock regions.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics; 2nd version
after language editor corrections; 16 pages, 8 figures, 6 table
- …