424 research outputs found
On the possible existence of short-period g-mode instabilities powered by nuclear burning shells in post-AGB H-deficient (PG1159-type) stars
We present a pulsational stability analysis of hot post-AGB H-deficient
pre-white dwarf stars with active He-burning shells. The stellar models
employed are state-of-the-art equilibrium structures representative of PG1159
stars derived from the complete evolution of the progenitor stars. On the basis
of fully nonadiabatic pulsation computations, we confirmed theoretical evidence
for the existence of a separate PG1159 instability strip in the diagram characterized by short-period -modes excited by the
-mechanism. This instability strip partially overlaps the already
known GW Vir instability strip of intermediate/long period -modes
destabilized by the classical -mechanism acting on the partial
ionization of C and/or O in the envelope of PG1159 stars. We found that PG1159
stars characterized by thick He-rich envelopes and located inside this
overlapping region could exhibit both short and intermediate/long periods
simultaneously. we study the particular case of VV 47, a pulsating planetary
nebula nucleus that has been reported to exhibit a series of unusually short
pulsation periods. We found that the long periods exhibited by VV 47 can be
readily explained by the classical -mechanism, while the observed
short-period branch below s could correspond to modes triggered
by the He-burning shell through the -mechanism, although more
observational work is needed to confirm the reality of these short-period
modes. Were the existence of short-period -modes in this star convincingly
confirmed by future observations, VV 47 could be the first known pulsating star
in which both the -mechanism and the -mechanism of mode
driving are simultaneously operating.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables. To be published in The Astrophysical
Journa
Gain and time resolution of 45 m thin Low Gain Avalanche Detectors before and after irradiation up to a fluence of n/cm
Low Gain Avalanche Detectors (LGADs) are silicon sensors with a built-in
charge multiplication layer providing a gain of typically 10 to 50. Due to the
combination of high signal-to-noise ratio and short rise time, thin LGADs
provide good time resolutions.
LGADs with an active thickness of about 45 m were produced at CNM
Barcelona. Their gains and time resolutions were studied in beam tests for two
different multiplication layer implantation doses, as well as before and after
irradiation with neutrons up to n/cm.
The gain showed the expected decrease at a fixed voltage for a lower initial
implantation dose, as well as for a higher fluence due to effective acceptor
removal in the multiplication layer. Time resolutions below 30 ps were obtained
at the highest applied voltages for both implantation doses before irradiation.
Also after an intermediate fluence of n/cm, similar
values were measured since a higher applicable reverse bias voltage could
recover most of the pre-irradiation gain. At n/cm, the
time resolution at the maximum applicable voltage of 620 V during the beam test
was measured to be 57 ps since the voltage stability was not good enough to
compensate for the gain layer loss. The time resolutions were found to follow
approximately a universal function of gain for all implantation doses and
fluences.Comment: 17 page
On the excitation of PG1159-type pulsations
Stability properties are presented of dipole and quadrupole nonradial
oscillation modes of model stars that experienced a late helium shell flash on
their way to the white-dwarf cooling domain. The computed instability domains
are compared with the observed hot variable central stars of planetary nebulae
and the GW Vir pulsators.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Precise Modeling of the Exoplanet Host Star and CoRoT Main Target HD 52265
This paper presents a detailed and precise study of the characteristics of
the Exoplanet Host Star and CoRoT main target HD 52265, as derived from
asteroseismic studies. The results are compared with previous estimates, with a
comprehensive summary and discussion. The basic method is similar to that
previously used by the Toulouse group for solar-type stars. Models are computed
with various initial chemical compositions and the computed p-mode frequencies
are compared with the observed ones. All models include atomic diffusion and
the importance of radiative accelerations is discussed. Several tests are used,
including the usual frequency combinations and the fits of the \'echelle
diagrams. The possible surface effects are introduced and discussed. Automatic
codes are also used to find the best model for this star (SEEK, AMP) and their
results are compared with that obtained with the detailed method. We find
precise results for the mass, radius and age of this star, as well as its
effective temperature and luminosity. We also give an estimate of the initial
helium abundance. These results are important for the characterization of the
star-planet system.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, 7 tables, to be published in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Evaluation des mesures du Grenelle de l'Environnement sur le parc de logements - Rapport pour le Conseil Général du Développement Durable, ministère de l'Ecologie
La France s'est engagée à réduire les consommations d'énergie du parc des bâtiments existants de 38 % en 2020 par rapport à 2008, objectif " Grenelle -38 % ", et à diviser les émissions de CO2 par quatre en 2050 par rapport à 1990, objectif " Facteur 4 ". Pour atteindre ces objectifs, le Grenelle de l'environnement a mis en avant un certain nombre de leviers réglementaires et incitatifs. Cette étude, réalisée par le CIRED pour le compte du CGDD, a pour objectif d'analyser l'impact de ces différents instruments sur la consommation d'énergie pour le chauffage. Mesures existantes (crédit d'impôt développement durable, éco-prêt à taux zéro, réglementation thermique) et mesures supplémentaires (obligation de rénovation, contribution climat énergie) sont évaluées grâce au modèle Res-IRF du CIRED. Ce modèle prend en compte l'efficacité énergétique des logements et leur évolution dans le temps sous l'effet de rénovations ; il modélise également de façon originale les comportements de chauffage des ménages. Les premières simulations suggèrent que les politiques considérées ne suffisent pas à atteindre les objectifs ambitieux fixés par la France. Ces résultats sont sensibles aux hypothèses retenues. En introduisant des hypothèses plus optimistes (ex : prix des rénovations plus faible) et en prenant en compte des facteurs complémentaires au modèle (ex : bois), un travail de ré-estimation sur la base du modèle du CIRED a permis d'obtenir des résultats plus proches des objectifs du Grenelle
On the systematics of asteroseismological mass determinations of PG1159 stars
We analyze systematics in the asteroseismological mass determination methods
in pulsating PG 1159 stars. We compare the seismic masses resulting from the
comparison of the observed mean period spacings with the usually adopted
asymptotic period spacings, and the average of the computed period spacings.
Computations are based on full PG1159 evolutionary models with stellar masses
ranging from 0.530 to 0.741 Mo that take into account the complete evolution of
progenitor stars. We conclude that asteroseismology is a precise and powerful
technique that determines the masses to a high internal accuracy, but it
depends on the adopted mass determination method. In particular, we find that
in the case of pulsating PG 1159 stars characterized by short pulsation
periods, like PG 2131+066 and PG 0122+200, the employment of the asymptotic
period spacings overestimates the stellar mass by about 0.06 Mo as compared
with inferences from the average of the period spacings. In this case, the
discrepancy between asteroseismological and spectroscopical masses is markedly
reduced when use is made of the mean period spacing instead of the asymptotic
period spacing.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, 1 table. To be published in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
New nonadiabatic pulsation computations on full PG1159 evolutionary models: the theoretical GW Vir instability strip revisited
We reexamine the theoretical instability domain of pulsating PG1159 stars (GW
Vir variables). We performed an extensive g-mode stability analysis on PG1159
evolutionary models with stellar masses ranging from 0.530 to 0.741 Mo for
which the complete evolutionary stages of their progenitors from the ZAMS,
through the thermally pulsing AGB and born-again phases to the domain of the
PG1159 stars have been considered. We found that pulsations in PG1159 stars are
excited by the kappa-mechanism due to partial ionization of carbon and oxygen,
and that no composition gradients are needed between the surface layers and the
driving region, much in agreement with previous studies. We show, for the first
time, the existence of a red edge of the instability strip at high
luminosities. We found that all of the GW Vir stars lay within our theoretical
instability strip. Our results suggest a qualitative good agreement between the
observed and the predicted ranges of unstable periods of individual stars.
Finally, we found that generally the seismic masses (derived from the period
spacing) of GW Vir stars are somewhat different from the masses suggested by
evolutionary tracks coupled with spectroscopy. Improvements in the evolution
during the thermally pulsing AGB phase and/or during the core helium burning
stage and early AGB could help to alleviate the persisting discrepancies.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. To be published in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Solar-like oscillations in the G9.5 subgiant beta Aquilae
An interesting asteroseismic target is the G9.5 IV solar-like star beta Aql.
This is an ideal target for asteroseismic investigations, because precise
astrometric measurements are available from Hipparcos that greatly help in
constraining the theoretical interpretation of the results. The star was
observed during six nights in August 2009 by means of the high-resolution
\'echelle spectrograph SARG operating with the TNG 3.58 m Italian telescope on
the Canary Islands, exploiting the iodine cell technique. We present the result
and the detailed analysis of high-precision radial velocity measurements, where
the possibility of detecting time individual p-mode frequencies for the first
and deriving their corresponding asymptotic values will be discussed. The
time-series analysis carried out from \sim 800 collected spectra shows the
typical p-mode frequency pattern with a maximum centered at 416 \muHz. In the
frequency range 300 - 600 \muHz we identified for the first time six high S/N
(\gtrsim 3.5) modes with l = 0,2 and 11 < n < 16 and three possible candidates
for mixed modes (l = 1), although the p-mode identification for this type of
star appears to be quite difficult owing to a substantial presence of avoided
crossings. The large frequency separation and the surface term from the set of
identified modes by means of the asymptotic relation were derived for the first
time. Their values are \Delta \nu = 29.56 \pm 0.10 \muHz and \epsilon = 1.29
\pm 0.04, consistent with expectations. The most likely value for the small
separation is \delta\nu_{02} = 2.55 \pm 0.71 \muHz.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables, accepted by A&
Asteroseismological constraints on the coolest GW Vir variable star (PG 1159-type)PG 0122+200
We present an asteroseismological study on PG 0122+200, the coolest known
pulsating PG1159 (GW Vir) star. Our results are based on an augmented set of
the full PG1159 evolutionary models recently presented by Miller Bertolami &
Althaus (2006). We perform extensive computations of adiabatic g-mode pulsation
periods on PG1159 evolutionary models with stellar masses ranging from 0.530 to
0.741 Msun. We derive a stellar mass of 0.626 Msun from a comparison between
the observed period spacing and the computed asymptotic period spacing, and a
stellar mass of 0.567 Msun by comparing the observed period spacing with the
average of the computed period spacing. We also find, on the basis of a
period-fit procedure, an asteroseismological model representative of PG
0122+200 which is able to reproduce the observed period pattern with an average
of the period differences of 0.88 s. The model has an effective temperature of
81500 K, a stellar mass of 0.556 Msun, a surface gravity log g= 7.65, a stellar
luminosity and radius of log(L/Lsun)= 1.14 and log(R/Rsun)= -1.73,
respectively, and a He-rich envelope thickness of Menv= 0.019 Msun. We derive a
seismic distance of about 614 pc and a parallax of about 1.6 mas. The results
of the period-fit analysis carried out in this work suggest that the
asteroseismological mass of PG 0122+200 could be 6-20 % lower than thought
hitherto and in closer agreement (to within 5 %) with the spectroscopic mass.
This result suggests that a reasonable consistency between the stellar mass
values obtained from spectroscopy and asteroseismology can be expected when
detailed PG1159 evolutionary models are considered.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. To be published in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Verification of the Kepler Input Catalog from Asteroseismology of Solar-type Stars
We calculate precise stellar radii and surface gravities from the
asteroseismic analysis of over 500 solar-type pulsating stars observed by the
Kepler space telescope. These physical stellar properties are compared with
those given in the Kepler Input Catalog (KIC), determined from ground-based
multi-color photometry. For the stars in our sample, we find general agreement
but we detect an average overestimation bias of 0.23 dex in the KIC
determination of log (g) for stars with log (g)_KIC > 4.0 dex, and a resultant
underestimation bias of up to 50% in the KIC radii estimates for stars with
R_KIC < 2 R sun. Part of the difference may arise from selection bias in the
asteroseismic sample; nevertheless, this result implies there may be fewer
stars characterized in the KIC with R ~ 1 R sun than is suggested by the
physical properties in the KIC. Furthermore, if the radius estimates are taken
from the KIC for these affected stars and then used to calculate the size of
transiting planets, a similar underestimation bias may be applied to the
planetary radii.Comment: Published in The Astrophysical Journal Letter
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