173 research outputs found
Revealing the pulsational properties of the V777 Her star KUV 05134+2605 by its long-term monitoring
Context: KUV 05134+2605 is one of the 21 pulsating DB white dwarfs (V777 Her
or DBV variables) known so far. The detailed investigation of the short-period
and low-amplitude pulsations of these relatively faint targets requires
considerable observational efforts from the ground, long-term single-site or
multisite observations. The observed amplitudes of excited modes undergo
short-term variations in many cases, which makes the determination of pulsation
modes difficult.
Methods: We re-analysed the data already published, and collected new
measurements. We compared the frequency content of the different datasets from
the different epochs and performed various tests to check the reliability of
the frequency determinations. The mean period spacings were investigated with
linear fits to the observed periods, Kolmogorov-Smirnov and Inverse Variance
significance tests, and Fourier analysis of different period sets, including a
Monte Carlo test simulating the effect of alias ambiguities. We employed fully
evolutionary DB white dwarf models for the asteroseismic investigations.
Results: We identified 22 frequencies between 1280 and 2530 microHz. These
form 12 groups, which suggests at least 12 possible frequencies for the
asteroseismic investigations. Thanks to the extended observations, KUV
05134+2605 joined the group of rich white dwarf pulsators. We identified one
triplet and at least one doublet with a ~9 microHz frequency separation, from
which we derived a stellar rotation period of 0.6 d. We determined the mean
period spacings of ~31 and ~18 s for the modes we propose as dipole and
quadrupole, respectively. We found an excellent agreement between the stellar
mass derived from the l=1 period spacing and the period-to-period fits, all
providing M_* = 0.84-0.85 M_Sun solutions. Our study suggests that KUV
05134+2605 is the most massive amongst the known V777 Her stars.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Searching for new white dwarf pulsators for TESS observations at Konkoly Observatory
We present the results of our survey searching for new white dwarf pulsators for observations by the TESS space telescope. We collected photometric time-series data on 14 white dwarf variable candidates at Konkoly Observatory, and found two new bright ZZ Ceti stars, namely EGGR 120 and WD 1310+583. We performed a Fourier analysis of the datasets. In the case of EGGR 120, which was observed on one night only, we found one significant frequency at 1332μHz with 2.3 mmag amplitude. We successfully observed WD 1310+583 on eight nights, and determined 17 significant frequencies in the whole dataset. Seven of them seem to be independent pulsation modes between 634 and 2740μHz, and we performed preliminary asteroseismic investigations of the star utilizing six of these periods. We also identified three new light variables on the fields of white dwarf candidates: an eclipsing binary, a candidate delta Scuti/beta Cephei and a candidate W UMa-type star
Computing the first eigenpair of the p-Laplacian via inverse iteration of sublinear supersolutions
We introduce an iterative method for computing the first eigenpair
for the -Laplacian operator with homogeneous Dirichlet
data as the limit of as , where
is the positive solution of the sublinear Lane-Emden equation
with same boundary data. The method is
shown to work for any smooth, bounded domain. Solutions to the Lane-Emden
problem are obtained through inverse iteration of a super-solution which is
derived from the solution to the torsional creep problem. Convergence of
to is in the -norm and the rate of convergence of
to is at least . Numerical evidence is
presented.Comment: Section 5 was rewritten. Jed Brown was added as autho
Initial Value Problems and Signature Change
We make a rigorous study of classical field equations on a 2-dimensional
signature changing spacetime using the techniques of operator theory. Boundary
conditions at the surface of signature change are determined by forming
self-adjoint extensions of the Schr\"odinger Hamiltonian. We show that the
initial value problem for the Klein--Gordon equation on this spacetime is
ill-posed in the sense that its solutions are unstable. Furthermore, if the
initial data is smooth and compactly supported away from the surface of
signature change, the solution has divergent -norm after finite time.Comment: 33 pages, LaTeX The introduction has been altered, and new work
(relating our previous results to continuous signature change) has been
include
Hilbert Space Structures on the Solution Space of Klein-Gordon Type Evolution Equations
We use the theory of pseudo-Hermitian operators to address the problem of the
construction and classification of positive-definite invariant inner-products
on the space of solutions of a Klein-Gordon type evolution equation. This
involves dealing with the peculiarities of formulating a unitary quantum
dynamics in a Hilbert space with a time-dependent inner product. We apply our
general results to obtain possible Hilbert space structures on the solution
space of the equation of motion for a classical simple harmonic oscillator, a
free Klein-Gordon equation, and the Wheeler-DeWitt equation for the
FRW-massive-real-scalar-field models.Comment: 29 pages, slightly revised version, accepted for publication in
Class. Quantum Gra
MOST light-curve analysis of the gamma Dor pulsator HR 8799, showing resonances and amplitude variations
Context: The central star of the HR 8799 system is a gamma Doradus-type
pulsator. The system harbours four planetary-mass companions detected by direct
imaging, and is a good solar system analogue. The masses of the companions are
not known accurately, because the estimation depends strongly on the age of the
system, which is also not known with sufficient accuracy. Asteroseismic studies
of the star might help to better constrain the age of HR 8799. We organized an
extensive photometric and multi-site spectroscopic observing campaign for
studying the pulsations of the central star.
Aims: The aim of the present study is to investigate the pulsation properties
of HR 8799 in detail via the ultra-precise 47-d-long nearly continuous
photometry obtained with the MOST space telescope, and to find as many
independent pulsation modes as possible, which is the prerequisite of an
asteroseismic age determination.
Methods: We carried out Fourier analysis of the wide-band photometric time
series.
Results: We find that resonance and sudden amplitude changes characterize the
pulsation of HR 8799. The dominant frequency is always at f1 = 1.978 c/d. Many
multiples of one ninth of the dominant frequency appear in the Fourier spectrum
of the MOST data: n/9 f1, where n={1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 14, 17,
18}. Our analysis also reveals that many of these peaks show strong amplitude
decrease and phase variations even on the 47-d time-scale. The dependencies
between the pulsation frequencies of HR 8799 make the planned subsequent
asteroseismic analysis rather difficult. We point out some resemblance between
the light curve of HR 8799 and the modulated pulsation light curves of Blazhko
RR Lyrae stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics. 8 pages, 4
figure
Status of short-pulse KrF amplifier research and development at Hill, Szeged
The small saturation energy density of excimers requires amplifiers of large cross-sections for amplification of short pulses of already medium power. Homogeneous excitation of large volumes of Fluorine-based gas mixtures by discharge pumping is a critical interplay of the properties of both pumping and preionization; generally necessitating an intense, spatially and temporally controlled xray preionization. In the present realization at High Intensity Laser Laboratory (HILL) the stringent intensity requirements of preionization are fulfilled by reducing the pulse duration of the x-ray flash to ~16 ns, and by positioning the x-ray source in the near vicinity of the active volume. By proper choice of the positions of two cylindrical x-ray guns the spatial distribution of preionization can be tuned to (and around) the optimum distribution giving a practical method to compensate for eventual inhomogenities of the E-field of excitation and to tune the discharge to the desired geometry. In this way the realization of a KrF excimer amplifier of ~5 x 4 cm2 cross-section is presented
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