921 research outputs found
Further constraints on the optical transmission spectrum of HAT-P-1b
We report on novel observations of HAT-P-1 aimed at constraining the optical
transmission spectrum of the atmosphere of its transiting Hot-Jupiter
exoplanet. Ground-based differential spectrophotometry was performed over two
transit windows using the DOLORES spectrograph at the Telescopio Nazionale
Galileo (TNG). Our measurements imply an average planet to star radius ratio
equal to =(0.11590.0005). This result is consistent
with the value obtained from recent near infrared measurements of this object
but differs from previously reported optical measurements being lower by around
4.4 exoplanet scale heights. Analyzing the data over 5 different spectral bins
600\AA wide we observed a single peaked spectrum (3.7 level)
with a blue cut-off corresponding to the blue edge of the broad absorption wing
of sodium and an increased absorption in the region in between 6180-7400\AA. We
also infer that the width of the broad absorption wings due to alkali metals is
likely narrower than the one implied by solar abundance clear atmospheric
models. We interpret the result as evidence that HAT-P-1b has a partially clear
atmosphere at optical wavelengths with a more modest contribution from an
optical absorber than previously reported.Comment: Accepted by Ap
The old and heavy bulge of M31 I. Kinematics and stellar populations
We present new optical long-slit data along 6 position angles of the bulge
region of M31. We derive accurate stellar and gas kinematics reaching 5 arcmin
from the center, where the disk light contribution is always less than 30%, and
out to 8 arcmin along the major axis, where the disk makes 55% of the total
light. We show that the velocity dispersions of McElroy (1983) are severely
underestimated (by up to 50 km/s) and previous dynamical models have
underestimated the stellar mass of M31's bulge by a factor 2. Moreover, the
light-weighted velocity dispersion of the galaxy grows to 166 km/s, thus
reducing the discrepancy between the predicted and measured mass of the black
hole at the center of M31. The kinematic position angle varies with distance,
pointing to triaxiality. We detect gas counterrotation near the bulge minor
axis. We measure eight emission-corrected Lick indices. They are approximately
constant on circles. We derive the age, metallicity and alpha-element
overabundance profiles. Except for the region in the inner arcsecs of the
galaxy, the bulge of M31 is uniformly old (>12 Gyr, with many best-fit ages at
the model grid limit of 15 Gyr), slightly alpha-elements overabundant
([alpha/Fe]~0.2) and at solar metallicity, in agreement with studies of the
resolved stellar components. The predicted u-g, g-r and r-i Sloan color
profiles match reasonably well the dust-corrected observations. The stellar
populations have approximately radially constant mass-to-light ratios (M/L_R ~
4-4.5 for a Kroupa IMF), in agreement with stellar dynamical estimates based on
our new velocity dispersions. In the inner arcsecs the luminosity-weighted age
drops to 4-8 Gyr, while the metallicity increases to above 3 times the solar
value.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Variable stars in the open cluster NGC 6791 and its surrounding field
Aims: This work presents a high--precision variability survey in the field of
the old, super metal-rich open cluster NGC 6791.
Methods: The data sample consists of more than 75,000 high-precision CCD time
series measurements in the V band obtained mainly at the Canada-France-Hawaii
Telescope, with additional data from S. Pedro Martir and Loiano observatories,
over a time span of ten nights. The field covers an area of 42x28 arcmin^2.
Results: We have discovered 260 new variables and re-determined periods and
amplitudes of 70 known variable stars. By means of a photometric evaluation of
the membership in NGC 6791, and a preliminary membership based on the proper
motions, we give a full description of the variable content of the cluster and
surrounding field in the range 16<V<23.5. Accurate periods can be given for the
variables with P<4.0 d, while for ones with longer periods the limited
time-baseline hampered precise determinations. We categorized the entire sample
as follows: 6 pulsating, 3 irregular, 3 cataclysmic, 89 rotational variables
and 61 eclipsing systems; moreover, we detected 168 candidate variables for
which we cannot give a variability class since their periods are much longer
than our time baseline.
Conclusions: On the basis of photometric considerations, and of the positions
of the stars with respect to the center of the cluster, we inferred that 11 new
variable stars are likely members of the cluster, for 22 stars the membership
is doubtful and 137 are likely non-members. We also detected an outburst of
about 3 mag in the light curve of a very faint blue star belonging to the
cluster and we suggest that this star could be a new U Gem (dwarf nova)
cataclysmic variable.Comment: 24 pages, 19 Figures, A&A accepte
On the HI-Hole and AGB Stellar Population of the Sagittarius Dwarf Irregular Galaxy
Using two HST/ACS data-sets that are separated by ~2 years has allowed us to
derive the relative proper-motion for the Sagittarius dwarf irregular (SagDIG)
and reduce the heavy foreground Galactic contamination. The proper-motion
decontaminated SagDIG catalog provides a much clearer view of the young
red-supergiant and intermediate-age asymptotic giant branch populations. We
report the identification of 3 Milky Way carbon-rich dwarf stars, probably
belonging to the thin disk, and pointing to the high incidence of this class at
low Galactic latitudes. A sub-group of 4 oxygen-rich candidate stars depicts a
faint, red extension of the well-defined SagDIG carbon-rich sequence. The
origin of these oxygen-rich candidate stars remains unclear, reflecting the
uncertainty in the ratio of carbon/oxygen rich stars. SagDIG is also a gas-rich
galaxy characterized by a single large cavity in the gas disk (HI-hole), which
is offset by ~360 pc from the optical centre of the galaxy. We nonetheless
investigate the stellar feedback hypothesis by comparing the proper-motion
cleaned stellar populations within the HI-hole with appropriately selected
comparison regions, having higher HI densities external to the hole. The
comparison shows no significant differences. In particular, the centre of the
HI-hole (and the comparison regions) lack stellar populations younger than ~400
Myr, which are otherwise abundant in the inner body of the galaxy. We conclude
that there is no convincing evidence that the SagDIG HI-hole is the result of
stellar feedback, and that gravitational and thermal instabilities in the gas
are the most likely mechanism for its formation.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 11 pages, 6 jpeg figure
Current status of laboratory and imaging diagnosis of neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis
Necrotizing enterocolitis continues to be a devastating disease process for very low birth weight infants in Neonatal Intensive Care Units. The aetiology and pathogenesis of necrotizing enterocolitis are not definitively understood. It is known that necrotizing enterocolitis is secondary to a complex interaction of multiple factors that results in mucosal damage, which leads to intestinal ischemia and necrosis. Advances in neonatal care, including resuscitation and ventilation support technology, have seen increased survival rates among premature neonates and a concomitant detection in the incidence of this intestinal disease.Diagnosis can be difficult, and identifying infants at the onset of disease remains a challenge. Early diagnosis, which relies on imaging findings, and initiation of prompt therapy are essential to limit morbidity and mortality. Moreover, early management is critical and life-saving.This review summarizes what is known on the laboratory and instrumental diagnostic strategies needed to improve neonatal outcomes and, possibily, to prevent the onset of an overt necrotizing enterocolitis
An HST search for planets in the lower Main Sequence of the globular cluster NGC 6397
Searches for planetary transits carried out in open and globular clusters
have yielded to date only a handful of weak, unconfirmed candidates. These
results have been interpreted either as being insignificant, or as evidence
that the cluster chemical or dynamical environment inhibits the planetary
formation or survival. Most campaigns were limited by small sample statistics
or systematics from ground-based photometry. In this work we performed a search
for transiting planets and variables in a deep stellar field of NGC 6397 imaged
by HST-ACS for 126 orbits. We analyzed 5,078 light curves, including a pure
sample of 2,215 cluster-member M0-M9 dwarfs. The light curves have been
corrected for systematic trends and inspected with several tools. No
high-significance planetary candidate is detected. We compared this null
detection with the most recent results from Kepler, showing that no conclusive
evidence of lower planet incidence can be drawn. However, a very small
photometric jitter is measured for early-M cluster members (<~2 mmag on 98% of
them), which may be worth targeting in the near future with more optimized
campaigns. Twelve variable stars are reported for the first time.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in A&A on
February 16, 2012. Typos corrected. One figure and a short final note adde
VLT multi-epoch radial velocity survey toward NGC 6253. Analysis of three transiting planetary candidates
We measured the radial velocity of 139 stars in the region of NGC 6253,
discussing cluster's membership and binarity in this sample, complementing our
analysis with photometric, proper motion, and radial velocity data available
from previous studies of this cluster, and analyzing three planetary transiting
candidates we found in the field of NGC 6253. Spectra were obtained with the
UVES and GIRAFFE spectrographs at the VLT, during three epochs in August 2008.
The mean radial velocity of the cluster is -29.11+/-0.85 km/s. Using both
radial velocities and proper motions we found 35 cluster's members, among which
12 are likely cluster's close binary systems. One star may have a sub-stellar
companion, requiring a more intensive follow-up. Our results are in good
agreement with past radial velocity and photometric measurements. Furthermore,
using our photometry, astrometry and spectroscopy we identified a new sub-giant
branch eclipsing binary system, member of the cluster. The cluster's close
binary frequency at 29% +/- 9% (34% +/-10% once including long period
binaries), appears higher than the field binary frequency equal to (22% +/- 5%,
though these estimates are still consistent within the uncertainties. Among the
three transiting planetary candidates the brightest one (V=15.26) is worth to
be more intensively investigated with higher percision spectroscopy. We
discussed the possibility to detect sub-stellar companions (brown dwarfs and
planets) with the radial velocity technique (both with UVES/GIRAFFE and HARPS)
around turn-off stars of old open clusters [abridged].Comment: 25 pages, 18 figures, 8 tables. Accepted for publication in A&
Pu\uf2 la misura della densit\ue0 tumorale essere considerata un parametro attendibile nella valutazione della risposta ai trattamenti antiangiogenetici ed un fattore predittivo della PFS nell'HCC avanzato?
The Navier–Stokes Equation with Time Quasi-Periodic External Force: Existence and Stability of Quasi-Periodic Solutions
We prove the existence of small amplitude, time-quasi-periodic solutions (invariant tori) for the incompressible Navier-Stokes equation on the d-dimensional torus T-d, with a small, quasi-periodic in time external force. We also show that they are orbitally and asymptotically stable in H-s (for s large enough). More precisely, for any initial datum which is close to the invariant torus, there exists a unique global in time solution which stays close to the invariant torus for all times. Moreover, the solution converges asymptotically to the invariant torus for t ->+infinity, with an exponential rate of convergence O(e(-alpha t)) for any arbitrary alpha is an element of(0, 1)
Dust properties in M31.I.Basic properties and a discussion on age-dependent dust heating
Context. Spitzer Space Telescope observations and dust emission models are
used to discuss the distribution of dust and its characteristics in M31.
Together with GALEX FUV, NUV, and SDSS images we studied the age dependence of
the dust heating process. Methods.Spitzer IRAC/MIPS maps of M31 were matched
together and compared to dust emission models allowing to constrain the dust
mass, the intensity of the mean radiation field, the abundance of Polycyclic
Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAH) particles. The total infrared emission (TIR) was
analyzed in function of UV and Optical colors and compared to predictions of
models which consider the age-dependent dust heating. Results. We demonstrate
that cold-dust component emission dominates the infrared spectral energy
distribution of M31. The mean intensity of the radiation field heating the dust
is low (typically U<2, where U=1 is the value in the solar surrounding). Due to
the lack of submillimetric measurements the dust mass (M_{dust}) is only weakly
constrained by the infrared spectrum. We show that across the spiral-ring
structure of M31 a fraction >3% of the total dust mass is in PAHs. UV and
optical colors are correlated to (TIR/FUV) ratios in \sim 670 pc-sized regions
overall the disk of M31, although deviating from the IRX-beta relationship for
starburst galaxies. We derived that in 83% of the regions analyzed across the
10kpc ring more than 50% of the energy absorbed by the dust is rediated at
\lambda > 4000 \AA and that dust in M31 appears mainly heated by populations a
few Gyr old even across the star-forming ring. The attenuation is varying
radially peaking near 10kpc and decreasing faster in the inner regions of M31
than in the outer regions. We finally derived the attenuation map of M31 at
6"/px resolution (\sim 100 pc/px along the plane of M31).[abridged]Comment: 21 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Only low
resolution images included, full resolution images will be avaiable in the
journal electronic version. Fig.14 and Fig.17 will be avaiable via CD
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