178 research outputs found
Interaction of meteoric bodies with the terrestrial atmosphere
Meteorite interaction with earth atmosphere and gravitational fiel
Antiquark nuggets as dark matter: New constraints and detection prospects
Current evidence for dark matter in the universe does not exclude heavy
composite nuclear-density objects consisting of bound quarks or antiquarks over
a significant range of masses. Here we analyze one such proposed scenario,
which hypothesizes antiquark nuggets with a range of log10(B) = 24-30 with
specific predictions for spectral emissivity via interactions with normal
matter. We find that, if these objects make up the majority of the dark matter
density in the solar neighborhood, their radiation efficiency in solids is
marginally constrained, due to limits from the total geothermal energy budget
of the Earth. At allowed radiation efficiencies, the number density of such
objects can be constrained to be well below dark matter densities by existing
radio data over a mass range currently not restricted by other methods.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, revised references; submitted to PR
Accessibility of the resources of near Earth space using multi-impulse transfers
Most future concepts for exploration and exploitation of space require a large initial mass in low Earth orbit. Delivering this mass requires overcoming Earth's natural gravity well, which imposes a distinct obstacle to space-faring. An alternative for future space progress is to search for resources in-situ among the near Earth asteroid population. This paper examines the scenario of future utilization of asteroid resources. The near Earth asteroid resources that could be transferred to a bound Earth orbit are determined by integrating the probability of finding asteroids inside the Keplerian orbital element space of the set of transfers with an specific energy smaller than a given threshold. Transfers are defined by a series of impulsive maneuvers and computed using the patched-conic approximation. The results show that even moderately low energy transfers enable access to a large mass of resources
Impact hazard protection efficiency by a small kinetic impactor
In this paper the ability of a small kinetic impactor spacecraft to mitigate an Earth-threatening asteroid is assessed by means of a novel measure of efficiency. This measure estimates the probability of a space system to deflect a single randomly-generated Earth-impacting object to a safe distance from the Earth. This represents a measure of efficiency that is not biased by the orbital parameters of a test-case object. A vast number of virtual Earth-impacting scenarios are investigated by homogenously distributing in orbital space a grid of 17,518 Earth impacting trajectories. The relative frequency of each trajectory is estimated by means Opik’s theory and Bottke’s near Earth objects model. A design of the entire mitigation mission is performed and the largest deflected asteroid computed for each impacting trajectory. The minimum detectable asteroid can also be estimated by an asteroid survey model. The results show that current technology would likely suffice against discovered airburst and local damage threats, whereas larger space systems would be necessary to reliably tackle impact hazard from larger threats. For example, it is shown that only 1,000 kg kinetic impactor would suffice to mitigate the impact threat of 27.1% of objects posing similar threat than that posed by Apophis
A search for L dwarf binary systems
We present analysis of HST Planetary Camera images of twenty L dwarfs
identified in the course of the Two Micron All-Sky Survey. Four of the targets
have faint, red companions at separations between 0.07 and 0.29 arcseconds (1.6
to 7.6 AU). In three cases, the bolometric magnitudes of the components differ
by less than 0.3 magnitudes. Since the cooling rate for brown dwarfs is a
strong function of mass, similarity in luminosities implies comparable masses.
The faint component in the 2M0850 system, however, is over 1.3 magnitudes
fainter than the primary in the I-band, and ~0.8 magnitudes fainter in M(bol).
Indeed, 2M0850B is ~0.8 magnitudes fainter in I than the lowest luminosity L
dwarf currently known, while the absolute magnitude we deduce at J is almost
identical with M_J for Gl 229B. Theoretical models indicate a mass ratio of
\~0.75. The mean separation of the L dwarf binaries in the current sample is
smaller by a factor of two than amongst M dwarfs. We discuss the implications
of these results for the temperature scale in the L/T transition region and for
the binary frequency amongst L dwarfs.Comment: 38 pages, 11 figures; accepted for A
A Hubble Space Telescope ACS Search for Brown Dwarf Binaries in the Pleiades Open Cluster
We present the results of a high-resolution imaging survey for brown dwarf
binaries in the Pleiades open cluster. The observations were carried out with
the Advance Camera for Surveys onboard the Hubble Space Telescope. Our sample
consists of 15 bona-fide brown dwarfs. We confirm 2 binaries and detect their
orbital motion, but we did not resolve any new binary candidates in the
separation range between 5.4AU and 1700AU and masses in the range
0.035--0.065~Msun. Together with the results of our previous study (Martin et
al., 2003), we can derive a visual binary frequency of 13.3\%
for separations greater than 7~AU masses between 0.055--0.065~M_{\sun} and
mass ratios between 0.45--0.91.0. The other observed properties of
Pleiades brown dwarf binaries (distributions of separation and mass ratio)
appear to be similar to their older counterparts in the field.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
Candidate Disk Wide Binaries in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Using SDSS Data Release 6, we construct two independent samples of candidate
stellar wide binaries selected as i) pairs of unresolved sources with angular
separation in the range 3'' - 16'', ii) common proper motion pairs with 5'' -
30'' angular separation, and make them publicly available. These samples are
dominated by disk stars, and we use them to constrain the shape of the
main-sequence photometric parallax relation M_r(r-i) and to study the
properties of wide binary systems. We estimate M_r(r-i) by searching for a
relation that minimizes the difference between distance moduli of primary and
secondary components of wide binary candidates. We model M_r(r-i) by a fourth
degree polynomial and determine the coefficients using Markov Chain Monte Carlo
fitting, independently for each sample. Aided by the derived photometric
parallax relation, we construct a series of high-quality catalogs of candidate
main-sequence binary stars. Using these catalogs, we study the distribution of
semi-major axes of wide binaries, a, in the 2,000 < a < 47,000 AU range. We
find the observations to be well described by the Opik distribution, f(a)~1/a,
for a<a_{break}, where a_{break} increases roughly linearly with the height Z
above the Galactic plane (a_{break}~12,300 Z[kpc]^0.7 AU). The number of wide
binary systems with 100 AU < a < a_{break}, as a fraction of the total number
of stars, decreases from 0.9% at Z=0.5 kpc to 0.5% at Z=3 kpc. The probability
for a star to be in a wide binary system is independent of its color. Given
this color, the companions of red components seem to be drawn randomly from the
stellar luminosity function, while blue components have a larger blue-to-red
companion ratio than expected from luminosity function.Comment: emulateApJ, 47 pages, 28 figures, accepted to Ap
A molecular outflow evidencing star formation activity in the vicinity of the HII region G034.8-0.7 and the SNR W44
This work aims at investigating the molecular gas component in the vicinity
of two young stellar object (YSO) candidates identified at the border of the
HII region G034.8-0.7 that is evolving within a molecular cloud shocked by the
SNR W44. The purpose is to explore signatures of star forming activity in this
complex region. We performed a near and mid infrared study towards the border
of the HII region G034.8-0.7 and observed a 90" X 90" region near 18h 56m 48s,
+01d 18' 45" (J2000) using the Atacama Submillimeter Telescope Experiment
(ASTE) in the 12CO J=3--2, 13CO J=3--2, HCO+ J=4--3 and CS J=7--6 lines with an
angular resolution of 22". Based on the infrared study we propose that the
source 2MASS 18564827+0118471 (IR1 in this work) is a YSO candidate. We
discovered a bipolar 12CO outflow in the direction of the line of sight and a
HCO+ clump towards IR1, confirming that it is a YSO. From the detection of the
CS J=7--6 line we infer the presence of high density (>10^7 cm^-3) and warm
(>60 K) gas towards IR1, probably belonging to the protostellar envelope where
the YSO is forming. We investigated the possible genetic connection of IR1 with
the SNR and the HII region. By comparing the dynamical time of the outflows and
the age of the SNR W44, we conclude that the possibility of the SNR has
triggered the formation of IR1 is unlikely. On the other hand, we suggest that
the expansion of the HII region G034.8-0.7 is responsible for the formation of
IR1 through the "collect and collapse" process.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures. Figures degraded to reduce file size. Accepted
06/02/2009 for publication in A&
Stellar mass map and dark matter distribution in M31
Stellar mass distribution in M31 is estimated using optical and infrared
imaging data. Combining the derived stellar mass model with various kinematical
data, properties of the DM halo of the galaxy are constrained.
SDSS observations through the ugriz filters and the Spitzer imaging at 3.6
microns are used to sample the SED of the galaxy at each imaging pixel.
Intrinsic dust extinction effects are taken into account by using far-infrared
observations. Synthetic SEDs created with different stellar population
synthesis models are fitted to the observed SEDs, providing estimates for the
stellar mass surface density. The stellar mass distribution of the galaxy is
described with a 3D model consisting of a nucleus, a bulge, a disc, a young
disc and a halo component, each following the Einasto density distribution
(relations between different functional forms of the Einasto density
distribution are given in App. B). By comparing the stellar mass distribution
to the observed rotation curve and kinematics of outer globular clusters and
satellite galaxies, the DM halo parameters are estimated.
Stellar population synthesis models suggest that M31 is dominated by old
stars throughout the galaxy. The total stellar mass is (10-15)10^10Msun, 30% of
which is in the bulge and 56% in the disc. None of the tested DM distribution
models can be falsified on the basis of the stellar matter distribution and the
rotation curve of the galaxy. The virial mass of the DM halo is
(0.8-1.1)10^12Msun and the virial radius is 189-213kpc, depending on the DM
distribution. The central density of the DM halo is comparable to that of
nearby dwarf galaxies, low-surface-brightness galaxies and distant massive disc
galaxies, thus the evolution of central DM halo properties seems to be
regulated by similar processes for a broad range of halo masses, environments,
and cosmological epochs.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysic
Can Planets survive Stellar Evolution?
We study the survival of gas planets around stars with masses in the range
1-5 Msun, as these stars evolve off the Main Sequence. We show that planets
with masses smaller than one Jupiter mass do not survive the Planetary Nebula
phase if located initially at orbital distances smaller than (3-5) AU. Planets
more massive than two Jupiter masses around low mass (1 Msun on the Main
Sequence) stars survive the Planetary Nebula stage down to orbital distances of
3 AU. As the star evolves through the Planetary Nebula phase, an evaporation
outflow will be established at the planet's surface. Evaporating planets may be
detected using spectroscopic observations. Planets around white dwarfs with
masses M_WD > 0.7 Msun are generally expected to be found at orbital radii r >
15 AU. If planets are found at smaller orbital radii around massive white
dwarfs, they had to form as the result of the merger of two white dwarfs.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
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