406 research outputs found
Surprising variations in the rotation of the chemically peculiar stars CU Virginis and V901 Orionis
CU Vir and V901 Ori belong among these few magnetic chemically peculiar stars
whose rotation periods vary on timescales of decades. We aim to study the
stability of the periods in CU Vir and V901 Ori using all accessible
observational data containing phase information. We collected all available
relevant archived observations supplemented with our new measurements of these
stars and analysed the period variations of the stars using a novel method that
allows for the combination of data of diverse sorts. We found that the shapes
of their phase curves were constant, while the periods were changing. Both
stars exhibit alternating intervals of rotational braking and acceleration. The
rotation period of CU Vir was gradually shortening until the year 1968, when it
reached its local minimum of 0.52067198 d. The period then started increasing,
reaching its local maximum of 0.5207163 d in the year 2005. Since that time the
rotation has begun to accelerate again. We also found much smaller period
changes in CU Vir on a timescale of several years. The rotation period of V901
Ori was increasing for the past quarter-century, reaching a maximum of 1.538771
d in the year 2003, when the rotation period began to decrease. A theoretically
unexpected alternating variability of rotation periods in these stars would
remove the spin-down time paradox and brings a new insight into structure and
evolution of magnetic upper-main-sequence stars.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
A Tight Upper Limit on Oscillations in the Ap star Epsilon Ursae Majoris from WIRE Photometry
Observations of Epsilon UMa obtained with the star tracker on the Wide Field
Infrared Explorer (WIRE) satellite during a month in mid-2000 are analyzed.
This is one of the most precise photometry of an Ap star. The amplitude
spectrum is used to set an upper limit of 75 parts per million for the
amplitude of stellar pulsations in this star unless it accidentally oscillates
with a single mode at the satellite orbit, its harmonics or their one day
aliases. This is the tightest limit put on the amplitude of oscillations in an
Ap star. As the rotation period of Epsilon UMa is relatively short (5.1 d), it
cannot be argued that the observations were made at a wrong rotational phase.
Our results thus support the idea that some Ap stars do not pulsate at all.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 2 style files, accepted for publication in ApJ
Symmetry Breaking of Relativistic Multiconfiguration Methods in the Nonrelativistic Limit
The multiconfiguration Dirac-Fock method allows to calculate the state of
relativistic electrons in atoms or molecules. This method has been known for a
long time to provide certain wrong predictions in the nonrelativistic limit. We
study in full mathematical details the nonlinear model obtained in the
nonrelativistic limit for Be-like atoms. We show that the method with sp+pd
configurations in the J=1 sector leads to a symmetry breaking phenomenon in the
sense that the ground state is never an eigenvector of L^2 or S^2. We thereby
complement and clarify some previous studies.Comment: Final version, to appear in Nonlinearity. Nonlinearity (2010) in
pres
Magnetic Doppler imaging of alpha^2 Canum Venaticorum in all four Stokes parameters. Unveiling the hidden complexity of stellar magnetic fields
Strong organized magnetic fields have been studied in the upper main sequence
chemically peculiar stars for more than half a century. However, only recently
have observational methods and numerical techniques become sufficiently mature
to allow us to record and interpret high-resolution four Stokes parameter
spectra, leading to the first assumption-free magnetic field models of these
stars. Here we present a detailed magnetic Doppler imaging analysis of the
spectropolarimetric observations of the prototypical magnetic Ap star alpha^2
CVn. The surface abundance distributions of Fe and Cr and a full vector map of
the stellar magnetic field are reconstructed in a self-consistent inversion
using our state-of-the-art magnetic Doppler imaging code Invers10. We succeeded
in reproducing most of the details of the available spectropolarimetric
observations of alpha^2 CVn with a magnetic map which combines a global
dipolar-like field topology with localized spots of higher field intensity. We
demonstrate that these small-scale magnetic structures are inevitably required
to fit the linear polarization spectra; however, their presence cannot be
inferred from the Stokes I and V observations alone. Our magnetic Doppler
imaging analysis of alpha^2 CVn and previous results for 53 Cam support the
view that the upper main sequence stars can harbour fairly complex surface
magnetic fields which resemble oblique dipoles only at the largest spatial
scales. Spectra in all four Stokes parameters are absolutely essential to
unveil and meaningfully characterize this field complexity in Ap stars. We
therefore suggest that understanding magnetism of stars in other parts of the
H-R diagram is similarly incomplete without investigation of their linear
polarization spectra.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures; Accepted for publication by Astronomy &
Astrophysic
A systematic review on health resilience to economic crises
Background The health effects of recent economic crises differ markedly by population group. The objective of this systematic review is to examine evidence from longitudinal studies on factors influencing resilience for any health outcome or health behaviour among the general population living in countries exposed to financial crises. Methods We systematically reviewed studies from six electronic databases (EMBASE, Global Health, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Scopus, Web of Science) which used quantitative longitudinal study designs and included: (i) exposure to an economic crisis; (ii) changes in health outcomes/behaviours over time; (iii) statistical tests of associations of health risk and/or protective factors with health outcomes/behaviours. The quality of the selected studies was appraised using the Quality Assessment Tool for Quantitative Studies. PRISMA reporting guidelines were followed. Results From 14,584 retrieved records, 22 studies met the eligibility criteria. These studies were conducted across 10 countries in Asia, Europe and North America over the past two decades. Ten socio-demographic factors that increased or protected against health risk were identified: gender, age, education, marital status, household size, employment/occupation, income/ financial constraints, personal beliefs, health status, area of residence, and social relations. These studies addressed physical health, mortality, suicide and suicide attempts, mental health, and health behaviours. Women’s mental health appeared more susceptible to crises than men’s. Lower income levels were associated with greater increases in cardiovascular disease, mortality and worse mental health. Employment status was associated with changes in mental health. Associations with age, marital status, and education were less consistent, although higher education was associated with healthier behaviours. Conclusions Despite widespread rhetoric about the importance of resilience, there was a dearth of studies which operationalised resilience factors. Future conceptual and empirical research is needed to develop the epidemiology of resilience
Emergence of Bulk CsCl Structure in (CsCl)nCs+ Cluster Ions
The emergence of CsCl bulk structure in (CsCl)nCs+ cluster ions is
investigated using a mixed quantum-mechanical/semiempirical theoretical
approach. We find that rhombic dodecahedral fragments (with bulk CsCl symmetry)
are more stable than rock-salt fragments after the completion of the fifth
rhombic dodecahedral atomic shell. From this size (n=184) on, a new set of
magic numbers should appear in the experimental mass spectra. We also propose
another experimental test for this transition, which explicitely involves the
electronic structure of the cluster. Finally, we perform more detailed
calculations in the size range n=31--33, where recent experimental
investigations have found indications of the presence of rhombic dodecahedral
(CsCl)32Cs+ isomers in the cluster beams.Comment: LaTeX file. 6 pages and 4 pictures. Accepted for publication in Phys.
Rev.
Revisiting the Rigidly Rotating Magnetosphere model for sigma Ori E. I. Observations and Data Analysis
We have obtained 18 new high-resolution spectropolarimetric observations of
the B2Vp star sigma Ori E with both the Narval and ESPaDOnS
spectropolarimeters. The aim of these observations is to test, with modern
data, the assumptions of the Rigidly Rotating Magnetosphere (RRM) model of
Townsend & Owocki (2005), applied to the specific case of sigma Ori E by
Townsend et al. (2005). This model includes a substantially offset dipole
magnetic field configuration, and approximately reproduces previous
observational variations in longitudinal field strength, photometric
brightness, and Halpha emission. We analyze new spectroscopy, including H I, He
I, C II, Si III and Fe III lines, confirming the diversity of variability in
photospheric lines, as well as the double S-wave variation of circumstellar
hydrogen. Using the multiline analysis method of Least-Squares Deconvolution
(LSD), new, more precise longitudinal magnetic field measurements reveal a
substantial variance between the shapes of the observed and RRM model
time-varying field. The phase resolved Stokes V profiles of He I 5876 A and
6678 A lines are fit poorly by synthetic profiles computed from the magnetic
topology assumed by Townsend et al. (2005). These results challenge the offset
dipole field configuration assumed in the application of the RRM model to sigma
Ori E, and indicate that future models of its magnetic field should also
include complex, higher-order components.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Correlation effects in MgO and CaO: Cohesive energies and lattice constants
A recently proposed computational scheme based on local increments has been
applied to the calculation of correlation contributions to the cohesive energy
of the CaO crystal. Using ab-initio quantum chemical methods for evaluating
individual increments, we obtain 80% of the difference between the experimental
and Hartree-Fock cohesive energies. Lattice constants corrected for correlation
effects deviate by less than 1% from experimental values, in the case of MgO
and CaO.Comment: LaTeX, 4 figure
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