18,489 research outputs found

    Chemical Abundances from the Continuum

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    The calculation of solar absolute fluxes in the near-UV is revisited, discussing in some detail recent updates in theoretical calculations of bound-free opacity from metals. Modest changes in the abundances of elements such as Mg and the iron-peak elements have a significant impact on the atmospheric structure, and therefore self-consistent calculations are necessary. With small adjustments to the solar photospheric composition, we are able to reproduce fairly well the observed solar fluxes between 200 and 270 nm, and between 300 and 420 nm, but find too much absorption in the 270-290 nm window. A comparison between our reference 1D model and a 3D time-dependent hydrodynamical simulation indicates that the continuum flux is only weakly sensitive to 3D effects, with corrections reaching <10% in the near-UV, and <2% in the optical.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the conference A Stellar Journey, a symposium in celebration of Bengt Gustafsson's 65th birthday, June 23-27, 2008, Uppsal

    Virasoro and KdV

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    Fe I line shifts in the optical spectrum of the Sun

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    New improvements in the measurement of both the optical solar spectrum and laboratory wavelengths for lines of neutral iron are combined to extract central wavelength shifts for 1446 lines observed in the Sun. This provides the largest available database of accurate solar wavelengths useful as a reference for comparison with other solar-type stars. It is shown how the velocity shifts correlate with line strength, approaching a constant value, close to zero, for lines with equivalent widths larger than 200 mA.Comment: Latex file (5 pages), uses l-aa.sty and epsfig.sty (included); 3 Postscript figures, 1 ASCII table, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Supplement Serie

    Variation in normal mood state influences sensitivity to dynamic changes in emotional expression

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    Acknowlegements We would like to thank Dr Douglas Martin for providing useful comments on an earlier draft. Thanks also to Kostadin Karavasilev for help with some of the data collection.Peer reviewedPostprin

    Bridging Model and Observed Stellar Spectra

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    Accurate model stellar fluxes are key for the analysis of observations of individual stars or stellar populations. Model spectra differ from real stellar spectra due to limitations of the input physical data and adopted simplifications, but can be empirically calibrated to maximise their resemblance to actual stellar spectra. I describe a least-squares procedure of general use and test it on the MILES library.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Velocities from Cross-Correlation: A Guide for Self-Improvement

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    The measurement of Doppler velocity shifts in spectra is a ubiquitous theme in astronomy, usually handled by computing the cross-correlation of the signals, and finding the location of its maximum. This paper addresses the problem of the determination of wavelength or velocity shifts among multiple spectra of the same, or very similar, objects. We implement the classical cross-correlation method and experiment with several simple models to determine the location of the maximum of the cross-correlation function. We propose a new technique, 'self-improvement', to refine the derived solutions by requiring that the relative velocity for any given pair of spectra is consistent with all others. By exploiting all available information, spectroscopic surveys involving large numbers of similar objects may improve their precision significantly. As an example, we simulate the analysis of a survey of G-type stars with the SDSS instrumentation. Applying 'self-improvement' refines relative radial velocities by more than 50% at low signal-to-noise ratio. The concept is equally applicable to the problem of combining a series of spectroscopic observations of the same object, each with a different Doppler velocity or instrument-related offset, into a single spectrum with an enhanced signal-to-noise ratio.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, uses emulateapj.cls; to appear in the Astronomical Journal; see http://hebe.as.utexas.edu/stools/ to obtain the companion softwar
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