253 research outputs found
Superhumps in V348 Pup
The eclipsing novalike cataclysmic variable star V348 Pup exhibits a
persistent luminosity modulation with a period 6 per cent longer than its 2.44
hour orbital-period (Porb). This has been interpreted as a `positive superhump'
resulting from a slowly precessing non-axisymmetric accretion disc
gravitationally interacting with the secondary. We find a clear modulation of
mid-eclipse times on the superhump period, which agrees well with the
predictions of a simple precessing eccentric disc model. Our modelling shows
that the disc light centre is on the far side of the disc from the donor star
when the superhump reaches maximum light. This phasing suggests a link between
superhumps in V348 Pup and late superhumps in SU UMa systems. Modelling of the
full lightcurve and maximum entropy eclipse mapping both show that the disc
emission is concentrated closer to the white dwarf at superhump maximum than at
superhump minimum. We detect additional signals consistent with the beat
periods between the implied disc precession period and both (1/2)Porb and
(1/3)Porb.Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Doppler Tomography of Dwarf Nova IY UMa during Quiescence
Quiescent Doppler tomography of the newly discovered deeply-eclipsing SU UMa
system IY UMa reveals properties of the region where the accretion stream from
the donor impacts the edge of the disc. A very strong bright spot is produced
and the Keplerian disc emission in the impact region is disrupted or obscured.
The differing properties of Halpha, Hbeta and He I emission will allow physical
parameters of the converging flow region to be studied.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. To appear in Proceedings of Astro-Tomography
Workshop, Brussels, July 2000, Eds. H. Boffin, D. Steeghs, Springer-Verlag
Lecture Notes in Physic
Late superhumps and the stream-disc impact in IY UMa
We use the hot spot eclipse times of the newly discovered deeply-eclipsing
dwarf nova IY UMa to trace out the shape of its disc during the late superhump
era. We find an eccentric disc. We show that the brightness of the stream-disc
impact region varies as expected with |deltaV|^2, where deltaV is the
differential velocity of the stream with respect to the velocity of the disc at
the impact point. We conclude that the hot spot is the source of late superhump
light.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Minor changes
to original content, additional modelling and figure
Heliocentric Escape and Lunar Impact from Near Rectilinear Halo Orbits
Spacecraft departing from the Gateway in a Near Rectilinear Halo Orbit (NRHO) experience gravitational forces from the Moon, the Earth, and the Sun, all of which can be simultaneously significant. These complex dynamics influence the post-separation risk of recontact with the Gateway and the eventual destinations of the departing spacecraft. The current investigation examines the flow of objects leaving NRHOs in the Bicircular Restricted Four-Body Problem, and results are applied to heliocentric escape and lunar impact trajectories in a higher-fidelity ephemeris model. Separation maneuver magnitude, direction, and location are correlated with risk of recontact with the Gateway and successful departure to various destinations
The detection of the donor star in IY UMa
We present the results of a search for the donor star in the high inclination
SU UMa type cataclysmic variable IY UMa. We detect absorption features in the
near infrared consistent with an M type dwarf donor star. Using the skew
mapping technique to exploit the velocity information provided by the 8183-8194
Angstrom Na I absorption doublet, we locate the absorption at the expected
donor velocity of IY UMa.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Simulations of spectral lines from an eccentric precessing accretion disc
Two dimensional SPH simulations of a precessing accretion disc in a q=0.1
binary system (such as XTE J1118+480) reveal complex and continuously varying
shape, kinematics, and dissipation. The stream-disc impact region and disc
spiral density waves are prominent sources of energy dissipation.The dissipated
energy is modulated on the period P_{sh} = ({P_{orb}}^{-1}-{P_{prec}}^{-1}^{-1}
with which the orientation of the disc relative to the mass donor repeats. This
superhump modulation in dissipation energy has a variation in amplitude of ~10%
relative to the total dissipation energy and evolves, repeating exactly only
after a full disc precession cycle. A sharp component in the light curve is
associated with centrifugally expelled material falling back and impacting the
disc. Synthetic trailed spectrograms reveal two distinct "S-wave" features,
produced respectively by the stream gas and the disc gas at the stream-disc
impact shock. These S-waves are non-sinusoidal, and evolve with disc precession
phase. We identify the spiral density wave emission in the trailed spectrogram.
Instantaneous Doppler maps show how the stream impact moves in velocity space
during an orbit. In our maximum entropy Doppler tomogram the stream impact
region emission is distorted, and the spiral density wave emission is
uppressed. A significant radial velocity modulation of the whole line profile
occurs on the disc precession period. We compare our SPH simulation with a
simple 3D model: the former is appropriate for comparison with emission lines
while the latter is preferable for skewed absorption lines from precessing
discs.Comment: See http://physics.open.ac.uk/FHMR/ for associated movie (avi) files.
The full paper is in MNRAS press. Limited disk space limit of 650k, hence low
resolution figure file
Multi-epoch Spectroscopy of IY UMa: Quiescence, Rise, Normal Outburst & Superoutburst
We exploit rare observations covering the time before and during a normal
outburst in the deeply-eclipsing SU UMa system IY UMa to study the dramatic
changes in the accretion flow and emission at the onset of outburst. Through
Doppler tomography we study the emission distribution, revealing classic
accretion flow behaviour in quiescence, with the stream-disc impact ionizing
the nearby accretion disc. We observe a delay of hours to a couple of days
between the rise in continuum and the rise in the emission lines at the onset
of the outburst. From line profiles and Doppler maps during normal and
superoutburst we conclude that reprocessing of boundary layer radiation is the
dominant emission line mechanism in outburst, and that the normal outburst
began in the outer disc. The stream-disc impact feature (the `orbital hump') in
the H alpha line flux light curve disappears before the onset of the normal
outburst, and may be an observable signal heralding an impending outburst.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of
the Royal Astronomical Societ
A global sampler of single particle tracking solutions for single molecule microscopy.
The dependence on model-fitting to evaluate particle trajectories makes it difficult for single particle tracking (SPT) to resolve the heterogeneous molecular motions typical of cells. We present here a global spatiotemporal sampler for SPT solutions using a Metropolis-Hastings algorithm. The sampler does not find just the most likely solution but also assesses its likelihood and presents alternative solutions. This enables the estimation of the tracking error. Furthermore the algorithm samples the parameters that govern the tracking process and therefore does not require any tweaking by the user. We demonstrate the algorithm on synthetic and single molecule data sets. Metrics for the comparison of SPT are generalised to be applied to a SPT sampler. We illustrate using the example of the diffusion coefficient how the distribution of the tracking solutions can be propagated into a distribution of derived quantities. We also discuss the major challenges that are posed by the realisation of a SPT sampler
Cell density and airspace patterning in the leaf can be manipulated to increase leaf photosynthetic capacity
The pattern of cell division, growth and separation during leaf development determines the pattern and volume of airspace in a leaf. The resulting balance of cellular material and airspace is expected to significantly influence the primary function of the leaf, photosynthesis, and yet the manner and degree to which cell division patterns affect airspace networks and photosynthesis remains largely unexplored. In this paper we investigate the relationship of cell size and patterning, airspace and photosynthesis by promoting and repressing the expression of cell cycle genes in the leaf mesophyll. Using microCT imaging to quantify leaf cellular architecture and fluorescence/gas exchange analysis to measure leaf function, we show that increased cell density in the mesophyll of Arabidopsis can be used to increase leaf photosynthetic capacity. Our analysis suggests that this occurs both by increasing tissue density (decreasing the relative volume of airspace) and by altering the pattern of airspace distribution within the leaf. Our results indicate that cell division patterns influence the photosynthetic performance of a leaf, and that it is possible to engineer improved photosynthesis via this approach
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