43,574 research outputs found
Subdwarf B stars from the common envelope ejection channel
From the canonical binary scenario, the majority of sdBs are produced from
low-mass stars with degenerate cores where helium is ignited in a way of
flashes. Due to numerical difficulties, the models of produced sdBs are
generally constructed from more massive stars with non-degenerate cores,
leaving several uncertainties on the exact characteristics of sdB stars.
Employing MESA, we systematically studied the characteristics of sdBs produced
from the common envelope (CE) ejection channel, and found that the sdB stars
produced from the CE ejection channel appear to form two distinct groups on the
effective temperature-gravity diagram. One group (the flash-mixing model)
almost has no H-rich envelope and crows at the hottest temperature end of the
extremely horizontal branch (EHB), while the other group has significant H-rich
envelope and spreads over the whole canonical EHB region. The key factor for
the dichotomy of the sdB properties is the development of convection during the
first helium flash, which is determined by the interior structure of the star
after the CE ejection. For a given initial stellar mass and a given core mass
at the onset of the CE, if the CE ejection stops early, the star has a
relatively massive H-rich envelope, resulting in a canonical sdB generally. The
fact of only a few short-orbital-period sdB binaries being in the flash-mixing
sdB region and the lack of He-rich sdBs in short-orbital-period binaries
indicate that the flash mixing is not very often in the products of the CE
ejection. A falling back process after the CE ejection, similar to that
happened in nova, is an appropriate way of increasing the envelope mass, then
prevents the flash mixing.Comment: accepted by A&A 12 pages, 11 figure
A Sino-German 6cm polarisation survey of the Galactic plane - VIII. Small-diameter sources
Information of small-diameter sources is extracted from the Sino-German 6cm
polarisation survey of the Galactic plane carried out with the Urumqi 25-m
telescope. We performed two-dimensional elliptical Gaussian fits to the 6cm
maps to obtain a list of sources with total-intensity and polarised flux
densities. The source list contains 3832 sources with a fitted diameter smaller
than 16 arcmin and a peak flux density exceeding 30 mJy, so about 5 times the
rms noise, of the total-intensity data. The cumulative source count indicates
completeness for flux densities exceeding about 60 mJy. We identify 125
linearly polarised sources at 6cm with a peak polarisation flux density greater
than 10 mJy, so about 3 times the rms noise, of the polarised-intensity data.
Despite lacking compact steep spectrum sources, the 6cm catalogue lists about
20 percent more sources than the Effelsberg 21cm source catalogue at the same
angular resolution and for the same area. Most of the faint 6cm sources must
have a flat spectrum and are either HII regions or extragalactic. When compared
with the Green Bank 6cm (GB6) catalogue, we obtain higher flux densities for a
number of extended sources with complex structures. Polarised 6cm sources
density are uniformly distributed in Galactic latitude. Their number density
decreases towards the inner Galaxy. More than 80 percent of the polarised
sources are most likely extragalactic. With a few exceptions, the sources have
a higher percentage polarisation at 6cm than at 21cm. Depolarisation seems to
occur mostly within the sources with a minor contribution from the Galactic
foreground emission.Comment: A&A accepted, 9 pages, 5 figures, Tables 1 and 2 are accessible from
http://zmtt.bao.ac.cn/6cm
Relaxing the Irrevocability Requirement for Online Graph Algorithms
Online graph problems are considered in models where the irrevocability
requirement is relaxed. Motivated by practical examples where, for example,
there is a cost associated with building a facility and no extra cost
associated with doing it later, we consider the Late Accept model, where a
request can be accepted at a later point, but any acceptance is irrevocable.
Similarly, we also consider a Late Reject model, where an accepted request can
later be rejected, but any rejection is irrevocable (this is sometimes called
preemption). Finally, we consider the Late Accept/Reject model, where late
accepts and rejects are both allowed, but any late reject is irrevocable. For
Independent Set, the Late Accept/Reject model is necessary to obtain a constant
competitive ratio, but for Vertex Cover the Late Accept model is sufficient and
for Minimum Spanning Forest the Late Reject model is sufficient. The Matching
problem has a competitive ratio of 2, but in the Late Accept/Reject model, its
competitive ratio is 3/2
Magnetic fields of the W4 superbubble
Superbubbles and supershells are the channels for transferring mass and
energy from the Galactic disk to the halo. Magnetic fields are believed to play
a vital role in their evolution. We study the radio continuum and polarized
emission properties of the W4 superbubble to determine its magnetic field
strength. New sensitive radio continuum observations were made at 6 cm, 11 cm,
and 21 cm. The total intensity measurements were used to derive the radio
spectrum of the W4 superbubble. The linear polarization data were analysed to
determine the magnetic field properties within the bubble shells. The
observations show a multi-shell structure of the W4 superbubble. A flat radio
continuum spectrum that stems from optically thin thermal emission is derived
from 1.4 GHz to 4.8 GHz. By fitting a passive Faraday screen model and
considering the filling factor fne , we obtain the thermal electron density ne
= 1.0/\sqrt{fne} (\pm5%) cm^-3 and the strength of the line-of-sight component
of the magnetic field B// = -5.0/\sqrt{fne} (\pm10%) {\mu}G (i.e. pointing away
from us) within the western shell of the W4 superbubble. When the known tilted
geometry of the W4 superbubble is considered, the total magnetic field Btot in
its western shell is greater than 12 {\mu}G. The electron density and the
magnetic field are lower and weaker in the high-latitude parts of the
superbubble. The rotation measure is found to be positive in the eastern shell
but negative in the western shell of the W4 superbubble, which is consistent
with the case that the magnetic field in the Perseus arm is lifted up from the
plane towards high latitudes. The magnetic field strength and the electron
density we derived for the W4 superbubble are important parameters for
evolution models of superbubbles breaking out of the Galactic plane.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
- …