891 research outputs found
Models for the Observable System Parameters of Ultraluminous X-ray Sources
We investigate the evolution of the properties of model populations of
ultraluminous X-ray sources (ULXs) consisting of a black-hole accretor in a
binary with a donor star. We have computed models corresponding to three
different populations of black-hole binaries; two invoke stellar-mass (~10
Msun) black hole accretors, and the third utilizes intermediate-mass (~1000
Msun) black holes (IMBHs). For each of the three populations, we computed
30,000 binary evolution sequences using a full Henyey stellar evolution code.
The optical flux from the model ULXs includes contributions from the accretion
disk, due to x-ray irradiation as well as intrinsic viscous heating, and that
due to the donor star. We present "probability images" for the ULX systems in
planes of color-magnitude, orbital period vs. X-ray luminosity, and luminosity
vs. evolution time. Estimates of the numbers of ULXs in a typical galaxy as
functions of time and of X-ray luminosity are also presented. Our model CMDs
are compared with six ULX counterparts that have been discussed in the
literature. Overall, the observed systems seem more closely related to model
systems with very high-mass donors (> ~25 Msun) in binaries with IMBH
accretors. However, significant difficulties remain with both the IMBH and
stellar-mass black hole models.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, submitted to ApJ on Oct 05, 200
Mass fluxes for hot stars
In an attempt to understand the extraordinarily small mass-loss rates of
late-type O dwarfs, mass fluxes in the relevant part of (T_{eff}, g)-space are
derived from first principles using a previously-described code for
constructing moving reversing layers. From these mass fluxes, a weak-wind
domain is identified within which a star's rate of mass loss by a
radiatively-driven wind is less than that due to nuclear burning. The five
weak-wind stars recently analysed by Marcolino et al. (2009) fall within or at
the edge of this domain. But although the theoretical mass fluxes for these
stars are ~ 1.4 dex lower than those derived with the formula of Vink et al.
(2000), the observed rates are still not matched, a failure that may reflect
our poor understanding of low-density supersonic outflows.
Mass fluxes are also computed for two strong-wind O4 stars analysed by Bouret
et al. (2005). The predictions agree with the sharply reduced mass loss rates
found when Bouret et al. take wind clumping into account.Comment: Accepted by A&A; 6 pages, 5 figures; minor changes from v
The blue stragglers formed via mass transfer in old open clusters
In this paper, we present the simulations for the primordial blue stragglers
in the old open cluster M67 based on detailed modelling of the evolutionary
processes. The principal aim is to discuss the contribution of mass transfer
between the components of close binaries to the blue straggler population in
M67. First, we followed the evolution of a binary of 1.4M+0.9M.
The synthetic evolutionary track of the binary system revealed that a
primordial blue straggler had a long lifetime in the observed blue straggler
region of color-magnitude diagram. Second, a grid of models for close binary
systems experiencing mass exchange were computed from 1Gyr to 6Gyr in order to
account for primordial blue-straggler formation in a time sequence. Based on
such a grid, Monte-Carlo simulations were applied for the old open cluster M67.
Adopting appropriate orbital parameters, 4 primordial blue stragglers were
predicted by our simulations. This was consistent with the observational fact
that only a few blue stragglers in M67 were binaries with short orbital
periods. An upper boundary of the primordial blue stragglers in the
color-magnitude diagram (CMD) was defined and could be used to distinguish blue
stragglers that were not formed via mass exchange. Using the grid of binary
models, the orbital periods of the primordial BSs could be predicted. Compared
with the observations, it is clear that the mechanism discussed in this work
alone cannot fully predict the blue straggler population in M67. There must be
several other processes also involved in the formation of the observed blue
stragglers in M67.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, A&A accepte
Models of Ultraluminous X-Ray Sources with Intermediate-Mass Black Holes
We have computed models for ultraluminous X-ray sources ("ULXs") consisting
of a black-hole accretor of intermediate mass ("IMBH"; e.g., ~1000 Msun) and a
captured donor star. For each of four different sets of initial donor masses
and orbital separations, we computed 30,000 binary evolution models using a
full Henyey stellar evolution code. To our knowledge this is the first time
that a population of X-ray binaries this large has been carried out with other
than approximation methods, and it serves to demonstrate the feasibility of
this approach to large-scale population studies of mass-transfer binaries. In
the present study, we find that in order to have a plausible efficiency for
producing active ULX systems with IMBHs having luminosities > 10^{40} ergs/sec,
there are two basic requirements for the capture of companion/donor stars.
First, the donor stars should be massive, i.e., > 8 Msun. Second, the initial
orbital separations, after circularization, should be close, i.e., < 6-30 times
the radius of the donor star when on the main sequence. Even under these
optimistic conditions, we show that the production rate of IMBH-ULX systems may
fall short of the observed values by factors of 10-100.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Ap
Uncertainty Work:Dealing with a Psychiatric Crisis in Two European Community Mental Health Teams
The quest for how to deal with a crisis in a community setting, with the aim of deinstitutionalizing mental health care, and reducing hospitalization and coercion, is important. In this article, we argue that to understand how this can be done, we need to shift the attention from acute moments to daily uncertainty work conducted in community mental health teams. By drawing on an empirical ethics approach, we contrast the modes of caring of two teams in Utrecht and Trieste. Our analysis shows how temporality structures, such as watchful waiting, are important in dealing with the uncertainty of a crisis.</p
Uncertainty Work:Dealing with a Psychiatric Crisis in Two European Community Mental Health Teams
The quest for how to deal with a crisis in a community setting, with the aim of deinstitutionalizing mental health care, and reducing hospitalization and coercion, is important. In this article, we argue that to understand how this can be done, we need to shift the attention from acute moments to daily uncertainty work conducted in community mental health teams. By drawing on an empirical ethics approach, we contrast the modes of caring of two teams in Utrecht and Trieste. Our analysis shows how temporality structures, such as watchful waiting, are important in dealing with the uncertainty of a crisis.</p
Screened thermonuclear reactions and predictive stellar evolution of detached double-lined eclipsing binaries
The low energy fusion cross sections of charged-particle nuclear reactions
(and the respective reaction rates) in stellar plasmas are enhanced due to
plasma screening effects. We study the impact of those effects on predictive
stellar evolution simulations for detached double-lined eclipsing binaries. We
follow the evolution of binary systems (pre-main sequence or main sequence
stars) with precisely determined radii and masses from 1.1Mo to 23Mo (from
their birth until their present state). The results indicate that all the
discrepancies between the screened and unscreened models (in terms of
luminosity, stellar radius, and effective temperature) are within the
observational uncertainties. Moreover, no nucleosynthetic or compositional
variation was found due to screening corrections. Therefore all thermonuclear
screening effects on the charged-particle nuclear reactions that occur in the
binary stars considered in this work (from their birth until their present
state) can be totally disregarded. In other words, all relevant
charged-particle nuclear reactions can be safely assumed to take place in a
vacuum, thus simplifying and accelerating the simulation processes.Comment: 5 RevTex pages,no figures. Accepted for publication in Phys.Rev.
Extent of pollution in planet-bearing stars
(abridged) Search for planets around main-sequence (MS) stars more massive
than the Sun is hindered by their hot and rapidly spinning atmospheres. This
obstacle has been sidestepped by radial-velocity surveys of those stars on
their post-MS evolutionary track (G sub-giant and giant stars). Preliminary
observational findings suggest a deficiency of short-period hot Jupiters around
the observed post MS stars, although the total fraction of them with known
planets appears to increase with their mass. Here we consider the possibility
that some very close- in gas giants or a population of rocky planets may have
either undergone orbital decay or been engulfed by the expanding envelope of
their intermediate-mass host stars. If such events occur during or shortly
after those stars' main sequence evolution when their convection zone remains
relatively shallow, their surface metallicity can be significantly enhanced by
the consumption of one or more gas giants. We show that stars with enriched
veneer and lower-metallicity interior follow slightly modified evolution tracks
as those with the same high surface and interior metallicity. As an example, we
consider HD149026, a marginal post MS 1.3 Msun star. We suggest that its
observed high (nearly twice solar) metallicity may be confined to the surface
layer as a consequence of pollution by the accretion of either a planet similar
to its known 2.7-day-period Saturn-mass planet, which has a 70 Mearth compact
core, or a population of smaller mass planets with a comparable total amount of
heavy elements. It is shown that an enhancement in surface metallicity leads to
a reduction in effective temperature, in increase in radius and a net decrease
in luminosity. The effects of such an enhancement are not negligible in the
determinations of the planet's radius based on the transit light curves.Comment: 25 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Ap
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