35,071 research outputs found
Dynamical evolution and chronology of the Hygiea asteroid family
The asteroid (10) Hygiea is the fourth largest asteroid of the Main Belt, by
volume and mass, and it is the largest member of its own family. Previous works
investigated the long-term effects of close encounters with (10) Hygiea of
asteroids in the orbital region of the family, and analyzed the taxonomical and
dynamical properties of members of this family. In this paper we apply the
high-quality SDSS-MOC4 taxonomic scheme of DeMeo and Carry (2013) to members of
the Hygiea family core and halo, we obtain an estimate of the minimum time and
number of encounter necessary to obtain a (or 99.7%) compatible
frequency distribution function of changes in proper caused by close
encounters with (10) Hygiea, we study the behavior of asteroids near secular
resonance configurations, in the presence and absence of the Yarkovsky force,
and obtain a first estimate of the age of the family based on orbital diffusion
by the Yarkovsky and YORP effects with two methods.
The Hygiea family is at least 2 Byr old, with an estimated age of Myr and a relatively large initial ejection velocity field,
according to the approach of Vokrouhlick\'{y} et al. (2006a, b). Surprisingly,
we found that the family age can be shortened by 25% if the dynamical
mobility caused by close encounters with (10) Hygiea is also accounted for,
which opens interesting new research lines for the dynamical evolution of
families associated with massive bodies. In our taxonomical analysis of the
Hygiea asteroid family, we also identified a new V-type candidate: the asteroid
(177904) (2005 SV5). If confirmed, this could be the fourth V-type object ever
to be identified in the outer main belt.Comment: 13 page, 15 figures, and 4 table
Dynamical evolution of V-type asteroids in the central main belt
V-type asteroids are associated with basaltic composition, and are supposed
to be fragments of crust of differentiated objects. Most V-type asteroids in
the main belt are found in the inner main belt, and are either current members
of the Vesta dynamical family (Vestoids), or past members that drifted away.
However, several V-type photometric candidates have been recently identified in
the central and outer main belt.
The origin of this large population of V-type objects is not well understood.
Since it seems unlikely that Vestoids crossing the 3J:-1A mean-motion resonance
with Jupiter could account for the whole population of V-type asteroids in the
central and outer main belt, origin from local sources, such as the parent
bodies of the Eunomia, and of the Merxia and Agnia asteroid families, has been
proposed as an alternative mechanism.
In this work we investigated the dynamical evolution of the V-type
photometric candidates in the central main belt, under the effect of
gravitational and non-gravitational forces. Our results show that dynamical
evolution from the parent bodies of the Eunomia and Merxia/Agnia families on
timescales of 2 Byr or more could be responsible for the current orbital
location of most of the low-inclined V-type asteroids.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA
ARES v2 - new features and improved performance
Aims: We present a new upgraded version of ARES. The new version includes a
series of interesting new features such as automatic radial velocity
correction, a fully automatic continuum determination, and an estimation of the
errors for the equivalent widths. Methods: The automatic correction of the
radial velocity is achieved with a simple cross-correlation function, and the
automatic continuum determination, as well as the estimation of the errors,
relies on a new approach to evaluating the spectral noise at the continuum
level. Results: ARES v2 is totally compatible with its predecessor. We show
that the fully automatic continuum determination is consistent with the
previous methods applied for this task. It also presents a significant
improvement on its performance thanks to the implementation of a parallel
computation using the OpenMP library.Comment: 4 pages, 2 Figures; accepted in A&A; ARES Webpage:
www.astro.up.pt/~sousasag/are
Spectral evolution of star clusters in the Large Magellanic Cloud: I. Blue concentrated clusters in the age range 40-300 Myr
Integrated spectroscopy of a sample of 17 blue concentrated Large Magellanic
Cloud (LMC) clusters is presented and its spectral evolution studied. The
spectra span the range ~3600-6800A with a resolution of ~14A FWHM, being used
to determine cluster ages and, in connection with their spatial distribution,
to explore the LMC structure and cluster formation history. Cluster reddening
values were estimated by interpolation, using the available extinction maps. We
used two methods to derive cluster ages: (i) template matching, in which line
strengths and continuum distribution of the cluster spectra were compared and
matched to those of template clusters with known astrophysical properties, and
(ii) equivalent width (EW) method, in which new age/metallicity calibrations
were used together with diagnostic diagrams involving the sum of EWs of
selected spectral lines (KCaII, G band (CH), MgI, Hdelta, Hgamma and Hbeta).
The derived cluster ages range from 40Myr (NGC2130 and SL237) to 300Myr
(NGC1932 and SL709), a good agreement between the results of the two methods
being obtained. Combining the present sample with additional ones indicates
that cluster deprojected distances from the LMC center are related to age in
the sense that inner clusters tend to be younger. Spectral libraries of star
clusters are useful datasets for spectral classifications and extraction of
parameter information for target star clusters and galaxies. The present
cluster sample complements previous ones, in an effort to gather a spectral
library with several clusters per age bin.Comment: 13 pages, 22 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Natural inflation in 5D warped backgrounds
In light of the five-year data from the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe
(WMAP), we discuss models of inflation based on the pseudo Nambu-Goldstone
potential predicted in five-dimensional gauge theories for different
backgrounds: flat Minkowski, anti-de Sitter, and dilatonic spacetime. In this
framework, the inflaton potential is naturally flat due to shift symmetries and
the mass scales associated with it are related to 5D geometrical quantities.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures; matches version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Experimental analysis of lateral impact on planar brittle material: spatial properties of the cracks
The breakup of glass and alumina plates due to planar impacts on one of their
lateral sides is studied. Particular attention is given to investigating the
spatial location of the cracks within the plates. Analysis based on a
phenomenological model suggests that bifurcations along the cracks' paths are
more likely to take place closer to the impact region than far away from it, i.
e., the bifurcation probability seems to lower as the perpendicular distance
from the impacted lateral in- creases. It is also found that many observables
are not sensitive to the plate material used in this work, as long as the
fragment multiplicities corresponding to the fragmentation of the plates are
similar. This gives support to the universal properties of the fragmentation
process reported in for- mer experiments. However, even under the just
mentioned circumstances, some spatial observables are capable of distinguishing
the material of which the plates are made and, therefore, it suggests that this
universality should be carefully investigated
Third and fourth degree collisional moments for inelastic Maxwell models
The third and fourth degree collisional moments for -dimensional inelastic
Maxwell models are exactly evaluated in terms of the velocity moments, with
explicit expressions for the associated eigenvalues and cross coefficients as
functions of the coefficient of normal restitution. The results are applied to
the analysis of the time evolution of the moments (scaled with the thermal
speed) in the free cooling problem. It is observed that the characteristic
relaxation time toward the homogeneous cooling state decreases as the
anisotropy of the corresponding moment increases. In particular, in contrast to
what happens in the one-dimensional case, all the anisotropic moments of degree
equal to or less than four vanish in the homogeneous cooling state for .Comment: 15 pages, 3 figures; v2: addition of two new reference
The CORALIE survey for southern extra-solar planets. X. A Hot Jupiter orbiting HD73256
Recent radial-velocity measurements obtained with the CORALIE spectrograph on
the 1.2-m Euler Swiss telescope at La Silla unveil the presence of a new
Jovian-mass Hot Jupiter around HD 73256. The 1.85-M_Jup planet moves on an
extremely short-period (P=2.5486 d), quasi-circular orbit. The best Keplerian
orbital solution is presented together with an unsuccessful photometric
planetary-transit search performed with the SAT Danish telescope at La Silla.
Over the time span of the observations, the photometric follow-up of the
candidate has nevertheless revealed a P=14-d photometric periodicity
corresponding to the rotational period of the star. This variation as well as
the radial-velocity jitter around the Keplerian solution are shown to be
related to the fair activity level known for HD 73256.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures. Accepted in A&
- …