473,181 research outputs found
Binaries at Low Metallicity: ranges for case A, B and C mass transfer
The evolution of single stars at low metallicity has attracted a large
interest, while the effect of metallicity on binary evolution remains still
relatively unexplored. We study the effect of metallicity on the number of
binary systems that undergo different cases of mass transfer. We find that
binaries at low metallicity are more likely to start transferring mass after
the onset of central helium burning, often referred to as case C mass transfer.
In other words, the donor star in a metal poor binary is more likely to have
formed a massive CO core before the onset of mass transfer.
At solar metallicity the range of initial binary separations that result in
case C evolution is very small for massive stars, because they do not expand
much after the ignition of helium and because mass loss from the system by
stellar winds causes the orbit to widen, preventing the primary star to fill
its Roche lobe. This effect is likely to have important consequences for the
metallicity dependence of the formation rate of various objects through binary
evolution channels, such as long GRBs, double neutron stars and double white
dwarfs.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of "First Stars III", Santa Fe, New
Mexico, July 16-20, 2007, 3 pages, 3 figure
Active control of spacecraft charging on ATS-5 and ATS-6
Effects on spacecraft ground potential of active emission of charged particles are being investigated through experiments using the ATS-5 and ATS-6 spacecraft. Each spacecraft is equipped with ion engine neutralizers which emit low energy charged particles. Despite great differences in design between the two spacecraft, they attain similar potentials in similar environments. Therefore, effects on spacecraft potential of neutralizer operations can be used to compare the effects of operating the two different neutralizers (hot wire filament and plasma bridge). The neutralizers on both spacecraft were operated in eclipse. Results of these operations are presented and spacecraft responses compared
The first analytical expression to estimate photometric redshifts suggested by a machine
We report the first analytical expression purely constructed by a machine to
determine photometric redshifts () of galaxies. A simple and
reliable functional form is derived using galaxies from the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey Data Release 10 (SDSS-DR10) spectroscopic sample. The method
automatically dropped the and bands, relying only on , and
for the final solution. Applying this expression to other SDSS-DR10
galaxies, with measured spectroscopic redshifts (), we achieved a
mean and a scatter when averaged up to . The method was
also applied to the PHAT0 dataset, confirming the competitiveness of our
results when faced with other methods from the literature. This is the first
use of symbolic regression in cosmology, representing a leap forward in
astronomy-data-mining connection.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Can low metallicity binaries avoid merging?
Rapid mass transfer in a binary system can drive the accreting star out of
thermal equilibrium, causing it to expand. This can lead to a contact system,
strong mass loss from the system and possibly merging of the two stars. In low
metallicity stars the timescale for heat transport is shorter due to the lower
opacity. The accreting star can therefore restore thermal equilibrium more
quickly and possibly avoid contact.
We investigate the effect of accretion onto main sequence stars with
radiative envelopes with different metallicities. We find that a low
metallicity (Z<0.001), 4 solar mass star can endure a 10 to 30 times higher
accretion rate before it reaches a certain radius than a star at solar
metallicity. This could imply that up to two times fewer systems come into
contact during rapid mass transfer when we compare low metallicity. This factor
is uncertain due to the unknown distribution of binary parameters and the
dependence of the mass transfer timescale on metallicity. In a forthcoming
paper we will present analytic fits to models of accreting stars at various
metallicities intended for the use in population synthesis models.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of "First Stars III", Santa Fe, New
Mexico, July 16-20, 2007, 3 pages, 2 figure
Flueric-controller pneumatic stepping motor system
Nutating stepping motor consists of an output rotating gear and a nutating gear. A flueric logic circuit controls the nutating motor. The complete system constitutes a reliable, open loop actuator system with inherently high output stiffness, reasonable slewing speeds and small step size
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