649 research outputs found
The Dual Origin Of The Nitrogen Deficiency In Comets: Selective Volatile Trapping In The Nebula And Postaccretion Radiogenic Heating
We propose a scenario that explains the apparent nitrogen deficiency in comets in away that is consistent with the fact that the surfaces of Pluto and Triton are dominated by nitrogen-rich ice. We use a statistical thermodynamic model to investigate the composition of the successive multiple guest clathrates that may have formed during the cooling of the primordial nebula from the most abundant volatiles present in the gas phase. These clathrates agglomerated with the other ices (pure condensates or stoichiometric hydrates) and formed the building blocks of comets. We report that molecular nitrogen is a poor clathrate former, when we consider a plausible gas-phase composition of the primordial nebula. This implies that its trapping into cometesimals requires a low disk temperature (similar to 20 K) in order to allow the formation of its pure condensate. We find that it is possible to explain the lack of molecular nitrogen in comets as a consequence of their postformation internal heating engendered by the decay of short-lived radiogenic nuclides. This scenario is found to be consistent with the presence of nitrogen-rich ice covers on Pluto and Triton. Our model predicts that comets should present xenon-to-water and krypton-to-water ratios close to solar xenon-to-oxygen and krypton-to-oxygen ratios, respectively. In contrast, the argon-to-water ratio is predicted to be depleted by a factor of similar to 300 in comets compared to solar argon-to-oxygen, as a consequence of poor trapping efficiency and radiogenic heating.CNESJPLAstronom
The Smallest Mass Ratio Young Star Spectroscopic Binaries
Using high resolution near-infrared spectroscopy with the Keck telescope, we
have detected the radial velocity signatures of the cool secondary components
in four optically identified pre-main-sequence, single-lined spectroscopic
binaries. All are weak-lined T Tauri stars with well-defined center of mass
velocities. The mass ratio for one young binary, NTTS 160905-1859, is M2/M1 =
0.18+/-0.01, the smallest yet measured dynamically for a pre-main-sequence
spectroscopic binary. These new results demonstrate the power of infrared
spectroscopy for the dynamical identification of cool secondaries. Visible
light spectroscopy, to date, has not revealed any pre-main-sequence secondary
stars with masses <0.5 M_sun, while two of the young systems reported here are
in that range. We compare our targets with a compilation of the published young
double-lined spectroscopic binaries and discuss our unique contribution to this
sample.Comment: Accepted for publication in the April, 2002, ApJ; 6 figure
Distant activity of comet C/2002 VQ94 (LINEAR): optical spectrophotometric monitoring between 8.4 and 16.8 au from the Sun
Spectrophotometric monitoring of distant comet C/2002 VQ94 (LINEAR) was
performed with the 6-m telescope of SAO RAS and with the 2.5-m Nordic Optical
Telescope between 2008 and 2013. During this period the comet was on the
outbound segment of its orbit, between heliocentric distances of 8.36 au and
16.84 au. Analysis of the spectra revealed the presence of the CO and
N emissions in the cometary coma at a distance of 8.36 au from the Sun.
This distance is larger than ionic emissions have been detected in any previous
objects. Only continuum, with no traces of emissions, was detected in the
spectrum obtained in 2009 when the comet was at a distance of 9.86 au. From the
spectra obtained in 2008, average column densities of 2.0410 mol
cm for N and 3.2610 mol cm for CO were
measured in the cometary coma. The derived values correspond to
N/CO=0.06 within the projected slit. The parameter, which is used as
an indicator of cometary activity, was measured as 2000 cm in 2008, and 800 cm
in 2009 and 2011. The values correspond to dust production rates between 10-20
kg s, 4-6 kg s and 3-5 kg s at 8.36, 9.86, and 13.40 au
respectively. There is an obvious correlation between the decrease of the dust
production rate of the nucleus and the disappearance of the emissions in the
spectrum of C/2002 VQ94 (LINEAR) at heliocentric distances greater than 9 au.
The colors and size of the nucleus of C/2002 VQ94 (LINEAR) were estimated from
the images obtained during the late stage at a heliocentric distance of 16.84
au, when the activity had probable ceased. The B-V and V-R colors were
estimated to be 1.070.05 and 0.540.03 respectively. The effective
nucleus radius of 482 km is in agreement with the previously published
results, obtained from the observations of the comet during its early inactive
stage.Comment: Accepted for publication in Icarus; 19 pages, 4 tables, 9 figure
Frozen to death? -- Detection of comet Hale-Bopp at 30.7 AU
Comet Hale--Bopp (C/1995 O1) has been the single most significant comet
encountered by modern astronomy, still having displayed significant activity at
25.7 AU solar distance in late 2007. It is a puzzling question when and where
this activity will finally cease. Here we present new observations with the ESO
2.2m telescope at La Silla to check the activity of Hale--Bopp at 30.7 AU solar
distance. On 2010-12-04, 26 CCD images were taken with 180 s exposure times for
photometry and morphology. The comet was detected in R and had a total
brightness of 23.3+-0.2 mag, referring to an absolute brightness of
R(1,1,0)=8.3. The profile of the coma was star-like at a seeing of 1.9",
without any evidence of a coma or tail extending farther than 2.5" (=55,000 km
in projection) and exceeding 26.5 mag/arcs^2 surface brightness. The measured
total brightness corresponds to a relative total reflecting surface, a_RC, of
485 km^2, nine times less than three years before. The calculated a_RC value
would imply a nucleus with 60--65 km radius assuming 4% albedo. This size
estimate is in significant contradiction with the previous results scattering
around 35 km. Therefore we suggest that the comet may still be in a low-level
activity, despite the lack of a prominent coma. Alternatively, if the nucleus
is already dormant, the albedo should be as high as 13%, assuming a radius of
35 km. With this observation, Hale--Bopp has been the most distant comet ever
observed, far beyond the orbit of Neptune.Comment: 4 pages, accepted by A&
Transneptunian objects and Centaurs from light curves
We analyze a vast light curve database by obtaining mean rotational
properties of the entire sample, determining the spin frequency distribution
and comparing those data with a simple model based on hydrostatic equilibrium.
For the rotation periods, the mean value obtained is 6.95 h for the whole
sample, 6.88 h for the Trans-neptunian objects (TNOs) alone and 6.75 h for the
Centaurs. From Maxwellian fits to the rotational frequencies distribution the
mean rotation rates are 7.35 h for the entire sample, 7.71 h for the TNOs alone
and 8.95 h for the Centaurs. These results are obtained by taking into account
the criteria of considering a single-peak light curve for objects with
amplitudes lower than 0.15 mag and a double-peak light curve for objects with
variability >0.15mag. The best Maxwellian fits were obtained with the threshold
between 0.10 and 0.15mag. The mean light-curve amplitude for the entire sample
is 0.26 mag, 0.25mag for TNOs only, and 0.26mag for the Centaurs. The amplitude
versus Hv correlation clearly indicates that the smaller (and collisionally
evolved) objects are more elongated than the bigger ones. From the model
results, it appears that hydrostatic equilibrium can explain the statistical
results of almost the entire sample, which means hydrostatic equilibrium is
probably reached by almost all TNOs in the H range [-1,7]. This implies that
for plausible albedos of 0.04 to 0.20, objects with diameters from 300km to
even 100km would likely be in equilibrium. Thus, the great majority of objects
would qualify as being dwarf planets because they would meet the hydrostatic
equilibrium condition. The best model density corresponds to 1100 kg/m3.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures. Astronomy & Astrophysics, in pres
[Fe II] and H2 filaments in the Supernova Remnant G11.2-0.3: Supernova Ejecta and Presupernova Circumstellar Wind
We present the results of near-infrared imaging and spectroscopic
observations of the young, core-collapse supernova remnant (SNR) G11.2-0.3. In
the [Fe II] 1.644 um image, we first discover long, clumpy [Fe II] filaments
within the radio shell of the SNR, together with some faint, knotty features in
the interior of the remnant. We have detected several [Fe II] lines and HI Br-G
line toward the peak position of the bright southeastern [Fe II] filament. The
derived extinction is large (Av=13 mag) and it is the brightest [Fe II]
filament detected toward SNRs to date. By analyzing two [Fe II] 1.644 um images
obtained in 2.2 yrs apart, we detect a proper motion corresponding to an
expansion rate of 0.''035 (0.''013) /yr [or 830 (310) km/s]. We also discover
two small H2 filaments. One is bright and along the SE boundary of the radio
shell, while the other is faint and just outside of its NE boundary. We have
detected H2 (2-1) S(3) line toward the former filament and derive an excitation
temperature of 2,100 K. We suggest that the H2 filaments are dense clumps in a
presupernova circumstellar wind swept up by the SNR shock while the [Fe II]
filaments are probably composed of both shocked wind material and shocked
supernova (SN) ejecta. The distribution of [Fe II] filaments may indicate that
the SN explosion in G11.2-0.3 was asymmetric as in Cassiopeia A. Our results
support the suggestion that G11.2-0.3 is a remnant of a SN IIL/b interacting
with a dense red supergiant wind.Comment: 30 pages with 10 figures, To appear in the Astrophysical Journa
The CFEPS Kuiper Belt Survey: Strategy and Pre-survey Results
We present the data acquisition strategy and characterization procedures for
the Canada-France Ecliptic Plane Survey (CFEPS), a sub-component of the
Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey. The survey began in early 2003
and as of summer 2005 has covered 430 square degrees of sky within a few
degrees of the ecliptic. Moving objects beyond the orbit of Uranus are detected
to a magnitude limit of =23 -- 24 (depending on the image quality). To
track as large a sample as possible and avoid introducing followup bias, we
have developed a multi-epoch observing strategy that is spread over several
years. We present the evolution of the uncertainties in ephemeris position and
orbital elements as the objects progress through the epochs. We then present a
small 10-object sample that was tracked in this manner as part of a preliminary
survey starting a year before the main CFEPS project.
We describe the CFEPS survey simulator, to be released in 2006, which allows
theoretical models of the Kuiper Belt to be compared with the survey
discoveries since CFEPS has a well-documented pointing history with
characterized detection efficiencies as a function of magnitude and rate of
motion on the sky. Using the pre-survey objects we illustrate the usage of the
simulator in modeling the classical Kuiper Belt.Comment: to be submitted to Icaru
An Association in the Aquila Star-Forming Region: High Resolution Infrared Spectroscopy of T Tauri Stars
We present the properties of a group of young stars associated with the
well-studied T Tauri star system AS 353, located in the Aquila star-forming
region. The association is identified using radial velocity measurements of
sample objects selected from the Herbig and Bell Catalog based on their spatial
proximity to AS 353. Radial velocities of nine objects were measured from
multi-epoch high-resolution (R~30,000) H-band spectra obtained with NIRSPEC on
Keck II. High-resolution K-band spectra were also obtained for most of the
sample objects. Spectral types and rotational velocities are determined for all
objects in the sample. The multi-epoch H-band spectra were examined for radial
velocity variations in order to detect possible spectroscopic binaries. Eight
of the nine objects have radial velocities that are consistent within the
1-sigma scatter of the sample. From their mean of -8.6 km/s these eight objects
have a standard deviation of 2 km/s, which suggests that the sample stars are
related. The ninth object shows significant radial velocity variations between
epochs, characteristic of a spectroscopic binary. The overall multiplicity of
the sample is high; we observed 13 stars in seven systems, identifying three
new candidate binary components in this project. Many of the spectra reveal
hydrogen emission lines typical of strong accretion processes, indicating that
most of these objects harbor circumstellar disks and are less than a few
million years old. We discuss possible interpretations of the enigmatic pure
emission line spectrum of HBC 684. This work represents the highest spectral
resolution infrared observations to date of these intriguing, nearby young
stars.Comment: 7 figures, accepted to Astrophysical Journa
A Multiplicity Census of Young Stars in Chamaeleon I
We present the results of a multiplicity survey of 126 stars spanning ~0.1-3
solar masses in the ~2-Myr-old Chamaeleon I star-forming region, based on
adaptive optics imaging with the ESO Very Large Telescope. Our observations
have revealed 30 binaries and 6 triples, of which 19 and 4, respectively, are
new discoveries. The overall multiplicity fraction we find for Cha I (~30%) is
similar to those reported for other dispersed young associations, but
significantly higher than seen in denser clusters and the field, for comparable
samples. Both the frequency and the maximum separation of Cha I binaries
decline with decreasing mass, while the mass ratios approach unity; conversely,
tighter pairs are more likely to be equal mass. We confirm that brown dwarf
companions to stars are rare, even at young ages at wide separations. Based on
follow-up spectroscopy of two low-mass substellar companion candidates, we
conclude that both are likely background stars. The overall multiplicity
fraction in Cha I is in rough agreement with numerical simulations of cloud
collapse and fragmentation, but its observed mass dependence is less steep than
predicted. The paucity of higher-order multiples, in particular, provides a
stringent constraint on the simulations, and seems to indicate a low level of
turbulence in the prestellar cores in Cha I.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
An Upper Bound on the Flux Ratio of rho CrB's Companion at 1.6um
We use high resolution infrared spectroscopy to investigate the 2001 report
by Gatewood and colleagues that rho CrB's candidate extrasolar planet companion
is really a low-mass star with mass 0.14+-0.05 Msun. We do not detect evidence
of such a companion; the upper bounds on the (companion/primary) flux ratio at
1.6 microns are less than 0.0024 and 0.005 at the 90 and 99% confidence levels,
respectively. Using the H-band mass-luminosity relationship calculated by
Baraffe and colleagues, the corresponding upper limits on the companion mass
are 0.11 and 0.15 Msun. Our results indicate that the infrared spectroscopic
technique can detect companions in binaries with flux ratios as low as 0.01 to
0.02.Comment: 22 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in the Astronomical
Journa
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