619 research outputs found
Spectroscopy of Four Cataclysmic Variables with Periods above 7 Hours
We present spectroscopy of four cataclysmic variables. Using radial velocity
measurements, we find orbital periods for the first time. The stars and their
periods are GY Hya, 0.347230(9) d; SDSS J204448-045929, 1.68(1) d; V392 Hya,
0.324952(5) d; and RX J1951.7+3716, 0.492(1) d. We also detect the spectra of
the secondary stars, estimate their spectral types, and derive distances based
on surface brightness and Roche lobe constraints.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figures, 5 tables, to be published in December 2006 PAS
Zeeman tomography of magnetic white dwarfs. IV, The complex field structure of the polars EF Eridani, BL Hydri and CP Tucanae
Context. The magnetic fields of the accreting white dwarfs in magnetic cataclysmic variables (mCVs) determine the accretion geometries, the emission properties, and the secular evolution of these objects.
Aims. We determine the structure of the surface magnetic fields of the white dwarf primaries in magnetic CVs using Zeeman tomography.
Methods. Our study is based on orbital-phase resolved optical flux and circular polarization spectra of the polars EF Eri, BL Hyi, and CP Tuc obtained with FORS1 at the ESO VLT. An evolutionary algorithm is used to synthesize best fits to these spectra from an
extensive database of pre-computed Zeeman spectra. The general approach has been described in previous papers of this series.
Results. The results achieved with simple geometries as centered or offset dipoles are not satisfactory. Significantly improved fits are obtained for multipole expansions that are truncated at degree lmax = 3 or 5 and include all tesseral and sectoral components with
0 ≤ m ≤ l. The most frequent field strengths of 13, 18, and 10MG for EF Eri, BL Hyi, and CP Tuc, and the ranges of field strength covered are similar for the dipole and multipole models, but only the latter provide access to accreting matter at the right locations on the white dwarf. The results suggest that the field geometries of the white dwarfs in short-period mCVs are quite complex, with
strong contributions from multipoles higher than the dipole in spite of a typical age of the white dwarfs in CVs in excess of 1 Gyr.
Conclusions. It is feasible to derive the surface field structure of an accreting white dwarf from phase-resolved low-state circular spectropolarimetry of sufficiently high signal-to-noise ratio. The fact that independent information is available on the strength and
direction of the field in the accretion spot from high-state observations helps in unraveling the global field structure
Evidence for an oscillation of the magnetic axis of the white dwarf in the polar DP Leonis
From 1979 to 2001, the magnetic axis of the white dwarf in the polar DP Leo
slowly rotated by 50 deg in azimuth, possibly indicating a small asynchronism
between the rotational and orbital periods of the magnetic white dwarf. We have
obtained phase-resolved orbital light curves between 2009 and 2013, which show
that this trend has not continued in recent years. Our data are consistent with
the theoretically predicted oscillation of the magnetic axis of the white dwarf
about an equilibrium orientation, which is defined by the competition between
the accretion torque and the magnetostatic interaction of the primary and
secondary star. Our data indicate an oscillation period of ~60 yr, an amplitude
of about 25 deg, and an equilibrium orientation leading the connecting line of
the two stars by about 7 deg.Comment: Accepted by A&
A Systematic Analysis of Supernova Light in Gamma-Ray Burst Afterglows
We systematically reanalyzed all Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) afterglow data
published through the end of 2002, in an attempt to detect the predicted
supernova light component and to gain statistical insight on its
phenomenological properties. We fit the observed photometric light curves as
the sum of an afterglow, an underlying host galaxy, and a supernova component.
The latter is modeled using published multi-color light curves of SN 1998bw as
a template. The total sample of afterglows with established redshifts contains
21 bursts (GRB 970228 - GRB 021211). For nine of these GRBs a weak supernova
excess (scaled to SN 1998bw) was found, what makes this to one of the first
samples of high-z core collapse supernovae. Among this sample are all bursts
with redshifts less than ~0.7. These results strongly support the notion that
in fact all afterglows of long-duration GRBs contain light from an associated
supernova. A statistics of the physical parameters of these GRB-supernovae
shows that SN 1998bw was at the bright end of its class, while it was not
special with respect to its light curve shape. Finally, we have searched for a
potential correlation of the supernova luminosities with the properties of the
corresponding bursts and optical afterglows, but we have not found such a
relation.Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures, accepted by ApJ; revised, shortened and updated
compared to version 1; Title slightly changed; all figures showing individual
afterglow light curves removed, as advised by the referee; conclusions
unchange
A long-term optical and X-ray ephemeris of the polar EK Ursae Majoris
We searched for long-term period changes in the polar EK UMa using new
optical data and archival X-ray/EUV data. An optical ephemeris was derived from
data taken remotely with the MONET/N telescope and compared with the X-ray
ephemeris based on Einstein, Rosat, and EUVE data. A three-parameter fit to the
combined data sets yields the epoch, the period, and the phase offset between
the optical minima and the X-ray absorption dips. An added quadratic term is
insignificant and sets a limit to the period change. The derived linear
ephemeris is valid over 30 years and the common optical and X-ray period is
P=0.0795440225(24) days. There is no evidence of long-term O-C variations or a
period change over the past 17 years Delta P = -0.14+-0.50 ms. We suggest that
the observed period is the orbital period and that the system is tightly
synchronized. The limit on Delta P and the phase constancy of the bright part
of the light curve indicate that O-C variations of the type seen in the polars
DP Leo and HU Aqr or the pre-CV NN Ser do not seem to occur in EK UMa. The
X-ray dips lag the optical minima by 9.5+-0.7 deg in azimuth, providing some
insight into the accretion geometry.Comment: 4 pages, 2 Postscript figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
Zeeman tomography of magnetic white dwarfs. III, The 70–80 Megagauss magnetic field of PG 1015+014
Aims. We analyse the magnetic field geometry of the magnetic DA white dwarf PG 1015+014 with our Zeeman tomography method.
Methods. This study is based on rotation-phase resolved optical flux and circular polarization spectra of PG 1015+014 obtained with FORS1
at the ESO VLT. Our tomographic code makes use of an extensive database of pre-computed Zeeman spectra. The general approach has been described in Papers I and II of this series.
Results. The surface field strength distributions for all rotational phases of PG 1015+014 are characterised by a strong peak at 70 MG. A separate peak at 80 MG is seen for about one third of the rotation cycle. Significant contributions to the Zeeman features arise from regions
with field strengths between 50 and 90 MG. We obtain equally good simultaneous fits to the observations, collected in five phase bins, for two different field parametrizations: (i) a superposition of individually tilted and off-centred zonal multipole components; and (ii) a truncated multipole expansion up to degree l = 4 including all zonal and tesseral components. The magnetic fields generated by both parametrizations exhibit a similar global structure of the absolute surface field values, but differ considerably in the topology of the field lines. An effective photospheric temperature of T eff = 10 000 ± 1000 K was found.
Conclusions. Remaining discrepancies between the observations and our best-fit models suggest that additional small-scale structure of the magnetic field exists which our field models are unable to cover due to the restricted number of free parameters
The quest for companions to post-common envelope binaries: III. A reexamination of HW Virginis
We report new mid-eclipse times of the short-period sdB/dM binary HW Vir,
which differ substantially from the times predicted by a previous model. The
proposed orbits of the two planets in that model are found to be unstable. We
present a new secularly stable solution, which involves two companions orbiting
HW VIr with periods of 12.7 yr and 55 +/-15 yr. For orbits coplanar with the
binary, the inner companion is a giant planet with mass M_3 sin i_3 = 14 M_Jup
and the outer one a brown dwarf or low-mass star with a mass of M_4 sin i_4 =
30-120 M_Jup. Using the mercury6 code, we find that such a system would be
stable over more than 10^7 yr, in spite of the sizeable interaction. Our model
fits the observed eclipse-time variations by the light-travel time effect
alone, without invoking any additional process, thereby providing support for
the planetary hypothesis of the eclipse-time variations in close binaries. The
signature of non-Keplerian orbits may be visible in the data.Comment: accepted by A&
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