9,747 research outputs found
Stellar escapers from M67 can reach solar-like Galactic orbits
We investigate the possibility that the Sun could have been born in M67 by
carrying out -body simulations of M67-like clusters in a time-varying
Galactic environment, and following the galactic orbits of stars that escape
from them. We find that model clusters that occupy similar orbits to M67 today
can be divided up into three groups. Hot clusters are born with a high initial
-velocity, depleted clusters are born on cold orbits but are destroyed by
GMC encounters in the Galactic disc, and scattered clusters are born on cold
orbits and survive with more than 1000 stars at an age of 4.6 Gyr. We find that
all cluster models in all three cluster groups have stellar escapers that are
kinematicaly similar to the Sun. Hot clusters having the lowest such fraction
%, whilst depleted clusters have the highest fraction,
%. We calculate that clusters that are destroyed in the
Galactic disc have a specific frequency of escapers that end up on solar-like
orbits that is 2 times that of escapers from clusters that survive their
journey
The Distribution of X-ray Dips with Orbital Phase in Cygnus X-1
We present results of a comprehensive study of the distribution of absorption
dips with orbital phase in Cygnus X-1. Firstly, the distribution was obtained
using archival data from all major X-ray observatories and corrected for the
selection effect that phase zero (superior conjunction of the black hole) has
been preferentially observed. Dip occurrence was seen to vary strongly with
orbital phase \phi, with a peak at \phi ~ 0.95, i.e. was not symmetric about
phase zero. Secondly, the RXTE ASM has provided continuous coverage of the Low
State of Cygnus X-1 since Sept. 1996, and we have selected dip data based on
increases in hardness ratio. The distribution, with much increased numbers of
dip events, confirms that the peak is at \phi ~ 0.95, and we report the
discovery of a second peak at \phi ~ 0.6. We attribute this peak to absorption
in an accretion stream from the companion star HDE 226868. We have estimated
the ionization parameter at different positions showing that radiative
acceleration of the wind is suppressed by photoionization in particular regions
in the binary system. To obtain the variation of column density with phase, we
make estimates of neutral wind density for the extreme cases that acceleration
of the wind is totally suppressed, or not suppressed at all. An accurate
description will lie between these extremes. In each case, a strong variation
of column density with orbital phase resulted, similar to the variation of dip
occurrence. This provides evidence that formation of the blobs in the wind
which lead to absorption dips depends on the density of the neutral component
in the wind, suggesting possible mechanisms for blob growth.Comment: 9 pages, Latex, 7 ps figures. accepted by MNRA
Firewood, food and niche construction : the potential role of Mesolithic hunter-gatherers in actively structuring Scotland's woodlands.
Over the past few decades the potential role of Mesolithic hunter–gatherers in actively constructing their own niches, through the management of wild plants, has frequently been discussed. It is probable that Mesolithic hunter–gatherers systematically exploited specific woodland resources for food and fuel and influenced the ‘natural’ abundance or distribution of particular species within Mesolithic environments. Though there has been considerable discussion of the pollen evidence for potential small-scale human-woodland manipulation in Mesolithic Scotland, the archaeobotanical evidence for anthropogenic firewood and food selection has not been discussed in this context. This paper assesses the evidence for the active role of Mesolithic hunter–gatherer communities in systematically exploiting and managing woodlands for food and fuel in Scotland. While taphonomic factors may have impacted on the frequency of specific species in archaeobotanical assemblages, it is suggested that hunter–gatherers in Mesolithic Scotland were systematically using woodland plants, and in particular hazel and oak, for food and fuel. It is argued that the pollen evidence for woodland management is equivocal, but hints at the role of hunter–gatherers in shaping the structure of their environments, through the maintenance or creation of woodland clearings for settlement or as part of vegetation management strategies. It is proposed that Mesolithic hunter–gatherers may have actively contributed to niche construction and that the systematic use of hazel and oak as a fuel may reflect the deliberate pruning of hazel trees to increase nut-yields and the inadvertent – or perhaps deliberate – coppicing of hazel and oak during greenwood collection
Benchmark ages for the Gaia benchmark stars
In the era of large-scale surveys of stars in the Milky Way, stellar ages are
crucial for studying the evolution of the Galaxy. But determining ages of field
stars is notoriously difficult; therefore, we attempt to determine benchmark
ages for the extensively studied Gaia benchmark stars which can be used for
validation purposes. By searching the literature for age estimates from
different methods and deriving new ages based on Bayesian isochrone fitting, we
are able to put reliable limits on the ages of 16 out of the 33 benchmark
stars. The giants with well-defined ages are all young, and an expansion of the
sample to include older giants with asteroseismic ages would be beneficial.
Some of the stars have surface parameters inconsistent with isochrones younger
than 16 Gyr. Including -enhancement in the models when relevant
resolves some of these cases, but others clearly highlight discrepancies
between the models and observations. We test the impact of atomic diffusion on
the age estimates by fitting to the actual surface metallicity of the models
instead of the initial value and find that the effect is negligible except for
a single turn-off star. Finally, we show that our ability to determine
isochrone-based ages for large spectroscopic surveys largely mirrors our
ability to determine ages for these benchmark stars, except for stars with
dex since their location in the HR diagram is almost age
insensitive. Hence, isochrone fitting does not constrain their ages given the
typical uncertainties of spectroscopic stellar parameters.Comment: Accepted in MNRAS. 69 pages (18 for main text, 11 for appendix, and
40 for extra figures
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