1,926 research outputs found
Cosmic abundances: The impact of stellar duplicity
The mass-transfer scenario links chemical peculiarities with stellar
duplicity for an increasing number of stellar classes (classical and dwarf
barium stars, subgiant and giant CH stars, S stars without technetium, yellow
symbiotic stars, WIRRING stars, Abell-35-like nuclei of planetary nebulae...).
Despite these successes, the mass-transfer scenario still faces several
problems: What is the mass-transfer mode? Why orbital elements of dwarf barium
stars do not fully match those of the classical barium stars? What is the
origin of the few non-binary stars among dwarf barium stars? The paper reviews
these open questions.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, to appear in `Cosmic Abundances as Records of
Stellar Evolution and Nucleosynthesis', edited by F.N. Bash, T.G. Barnes, ASP
Conf. Ser., in pres
The Henize sample of S stars. I. The technetium dichotomy
This paper is the first one in a series investigating the properties of the S
stars belonging to the Henize sample (205 S stars with delta<-25 deg. and
R<10.5) in order to derive the respective properties (like galactic
distribution and relative frequencies) of intrinsic (i.e. genuine asymptotic
giant branch) S stars and extrinsic (i.e. post mass-transfer binary) S stars.
High-resolution (R=30 000 to 60 000) spectra covering the range 4230-4270AA
have been obtained for 76 S stars, 8 M stars and 2 symbiotic stars. The 4262AA
and 4238AA blends involving a Tc I line were analysed separately and yield
consistent conclusions regarding the presence or absence of technetium. Only
one `transition' case (Hen 140 = HD 120179, a star where only weak lines of
technetium are detectable) is found in our sample. A resolution greater than R
=30 000 is clearly required in order to derive unambiguous conclusions
concerning the presence or absence of technetium. The Tc/no Tc dichotomy will
be correlated with radial velocity and photometric data in a forthcoming paper.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, Latex, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics main journal. Also available at http://astro.ulb.ac.be
The Henize sample of S stars: IV. New symbiotic stars
The properties of the few symbiotic stars detected among the 66 binary S
stars from the Henize sample are discussed. Two stars (Hen 18 and Hen 121)
exhibit both a strong blue-violet continuum and strong H_alpha emission (FWHM
of 70 km/s), whereas Hen 134 and 137 exhibit weak H_alpha emission. The H_alpha
profiles are typical of non-dusty symbiotic stars belonging to class S-3 as
defined by Van Winckel et al. (1993, A&AS 102, 401). In that class as in the
Henize symbiotic S stars, He I, [N II] or [S II] emission lines are absent,
suggesting that the nebular density is high but the excitation rather low. The
radial velocity of the centre of the H_alpha emission is identical to that of
the companion star (at least for Hen 121 where this can be checked from the
available orbital elements), thus suggesting that the H_alpha emission
originates from gas moving with the companion star. For Hen 121, this is
further confirmed by the disappearance of the ultraviolet Balmer continuum when
the companion is eclipsed by the S star. Hen 121 is thus the second eclipsing
binary star discovered among extrinsic S stars (the first one is HD 35155). A
comparison of the available data on orbital periods and H_alpha emission leads
to the conclusion that H_alpha emission in S stars seems to be restricted to
binary systems with periods in the range 600 - 1000 d, in agreement with the
situation prevailing for red symbiotic stars (excluding symbiotic novae).
Symbiotic S stars are found among the most evolved extrinsic S stars.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
A CORAVEL radial-velocity monitoring of giant Ba and S stars: spectroscopic orbits and intrinsic variations
This paper provides orbital parameters for 38 barium stars and 10 extrinsic S
stars derived from a decade-long CORAVEL monitoring. Lower bounds on the
orbital period (generally exceeding 10 y) have been obtained for 10 more
systems. Mira S, SC and (Tc-poor) C stars have also been monitored and show
intrinsic radial-velocity variations due to atmospheric phenomena. Tentative
orbital solutions are proposed for 3 stars (S UMa, X Cnc, BD-08:1900) where the
velocity and photometric periods are different. Three stars (RZ Peg, SS Vir and
R CMi) exhibit radial-velocity variations synchronous with the light
variations. Pseudo-orbital solutions have been derived for those stars. In the
case of RZ Peg, a line-doubling phenomenon is observed near maximum light, and
probably reflects the shock wave propagating through the photosphere.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics Supplements, 20 pages, 8 figures, 8 tables
(LaTeX). Also available at:
http://obswww.unige.ch/~udry/cine/barium/barium.htm
Spectroscopic binaries among AGB stars from HERMES/Mercator: the case of V Hya
We report on our search for spectroscopic binaries among a sample of AGB
stars. Observations were carried out in the framework of the monitoring of
radial velocities of (candidate) binary stars performed at the Mercator 1.2m
telescope, using the HERMES spectrograph. We found evidence for duplicity in UV
Cam, TU Tau, BL Ori, VZ Per, T Dra, and V Hya. This short communication focus
on V Hya, found to behave like RV Tau of the b subtype, which are binaries
surrounded by a disc.Comment: Poster presented at IAU Symp. 343 "Why Galaxies Care About AGB
Stars", Vienna, august 201
Temporary Employment Services (Labour Brokers) in South Africa and Namibia
South Africa currently allows labour broking although this area of commerce is problematic. The trade union movement, government and organised business are presently debating the future regulation of this industry. Namibia has experimented with, and failed, to place a legislative ban on labour broking. The Supreme Court of Appeal of Namibia considered International Labour Organisation conventions and provisions of their Constitution before concluding that labour broking should be regulated but not prohibited. In this article it is argued that South African policy makers can gain valuable insights from the Namibian experience. It is submitted that it would be appropriate for Parliament to take cognisance of international and foreign principles and to accept amendments that would provide for stricter regulation for labour broking, rather than placing an outright ban on this economic activity
Some modifications to the SNIP journal impact indicator
The SNIP (source normalized impact per paper) indicator is an indicator of
the citation impact of scientific journals. The indicator, introduced by Henk
Moed in 2010, is included in Elsevier's Scopus database. The SNIP indicator
uses a source normalized approach to correct for differences in citation
practices between scientific fields. The strength of this approach is that it
does not require a field classification system in which the boundaries of
fields are explicitly defined. In this paper, a number of modifications that
will be made to the SNIP indicator are explained, and the advantages of the
resulting revised SNIP indicator are pointed out. It is argued that the
original SNIP indicator has some counterintuitive properties, and it is shown
mathematically that the revised SNIP indicator does not have these properties.
Empirically, the differences between the original SNIP indicator and the
revised one turn out to be relatively small, although some systematic
differences can be observed. Relations with other source normalized indicators
proposed in the literature are discussed as well
IP Eri: A surprising long-period binary system hosting a He white dwarf
We determine the orbital elements for the K0 IV + white dwarf (WD) system IP
Eri, which appears to have a surprisingly long period of 1071 d and a
significant eccentricity of 0.25. Previous spectroscopic analyses of the WD,
based on a distance of 101 pc inferred from its Hipparcos parallax, yielded a
mass of only 0.43 M, implying it to be a helium-core WD. The orbital
properties of IP Eri are similar to those of the newly discovered long-period
subdwarf B star (sdB) binaries, which involve stars with He-burning cores
surrounded by extremely thin H envelopes, and are therefore close relatives to
He WDs. We performed a spectroscopic analysis of high-resolution spectra from
the HERMES/Mercator spectrograph and concluded that the atmospheric parameters
of the K0 component are K, , [Fe/H] = 0.09
and km/s. The detailed abundance analysis focuses on C, N, O
abundances, carbon isotopic ratio, light (Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Ti) and s-process
(Sr, Y, Zr, Ba, La, Ce, Nd) elements. We conclude that IP Eri abundances agree
with those of normal field stars of the same metallicity. The long period and
non-null eccentricity indicate that this system cannot be the end product of a
common-envelope phase; it calls instead for another less catastrophic
binary-evolution channel presented in detail in a companion paper (Siess et al.
2014).Comment: 14 pages, 10 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in A&A
(Update of Table 3, Fig. 8 and text in Sect. 5.1, 5.3 and 6 due to minor
corrections on N and Y II
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