290 research outputs found
Molecular emission bands in the ultraviolet spectrum of the red rectangle star HD 44179
New observations of the ultraviolet spectrum of HD 44179 are reported. Absorption due to the CO molecule is present in the spectrum with NCO approximately 10 to the 18th power per sq cm. Emission due to either CO or a molecule containing C=C, C=N, C-C, and C-H bonds (or both) is also present
FUSE Spectroscopy of the Two Prototype White Dwarfs With Signatures of a Super-hot Wind
The O VIII phenomenon describes the occurrence of ultra-high ionization absorption lines of the CNO elements (e.g. O VIII, N VII, C VI, and even Ne X) in the optical spectra hot of DO WDs
Mid-Infrared Ethane Emission on Neptune and Uranus
We report 8- to 13-micron spectral observations of Neptune and Uranus from
the NASA Infrared Telescope Facility spanning more than a decade. The
spectroscopic data indicate a steady increase in Neptune's mean atmospheric
12-micron ethane emission from 1985 to 2003, followed by a slight decrease in
2004. The simplest explanation for the intensity variation is an increase in
stratospheric effective temperature from 155 +/- 3 K in 1985 to 176 +/- 3 K in
2003 (an average rate of 1.2 K/year), and subsequent decrease to 165 +/- 3 K in
2004. We also detected variation of the overall spectral structure of the
ethane band, specifically an apparent absorption structure in the central
portion of the band; this structure arises from coarse spectral sampling
coupled with a non-uniform response function within the detector elements. We
also report a probable direct detection of ethane emission on Uranus. The
deduced peak mole fraction is approximately an order of magnitude higher than
previous upper limits for Uranus. The model fit suggests an effective
temperature of 114 +/- 3 K for the globally-averaged stratosphere of Uranus,
which is consistent with recent measurements indicative of seasonal variation.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ. 16 pages, 10 figures, 2 table
Silicate Emission in the TW Hydrae Association
The TW Hydrae Association is the nearest young stellar association. Among its
members are HD 98800, HR 4796A, and TW Hydrae itself, the nearest known
classical T Tauri star. We have observed these three stars spectroscopically
between 3 and 13 microns. In TW Hya the spectrum shows a silicate emission
feature that is similar to many other young stars with protostellar disks. The
11.2 micron feature indicative of significant amounts of crystalline olivine is
not as strong as in some young stars and solar system comets. In HR 4796A, the
thermal emission in the silicate feature is very weak, suggesting little in the
way of (small silicate) grains near the star. The silicate band of HD 98800
(observed by us but also reported by Sylvester and Skinner (1996)) is
intermediate in strength between TW Hya and HR 4796.Comment: 22 pages, 11 figures, LaTeX2e and AAS LaTeX macros v5.0. Accepted for
publication in A
Role of surface microgeometries on electron escape probability and secondary electron yield of metal surfaces
The influence of microgeometries on the Secondary Electron Yield (SEY) of surfaces is investigated. Laser written structures of different aspect ratio (height to width) on a copper surface tuned the SEY of the surface and reduced its value to less than unity. The aspect ratio of microstructures was methodically controlled by varying the laser parameters. The results obtained corroborate a recent theoretical model of SEY reduction as a function of the aspect ratio of microstructures. Nanostructures - which are formed inside the microstructures during the interaction with the laser beam - provided further reduction in SEY comparable to that obtained in the simulation of structures which were coated with an absorptive layer suppressing secondary electron emission
3 - 14 Micron Spectroscopy of Comets C/2002 O4 (Honig), C/2002 V1 (NEAT), C/2002 X5 (Kudo-Fujikawa), C/2002 Y1 (Juels-Holvorcem), 69P/Taylor, and the Relationships among Grain Temperature, Silicate Band Strength and Structure among Comet Families
We report 3 - 13 micron spectroscopy of 4 comets observed between August 2002
and February 2003: C/2002 O4 (Honig) on August 1, 2002, C/2002 V1 (NEAT) on
Jan. 9 and 10, 2003, C/2002 X5 (Kudo-Fujikawa) on Jan. 9 and 10, 2003, and
C/2002 Y1 (Juels-Holvorcem) on Feb. 20, 2003. In addition, we include data
obtained much earlier on 69P/Taylor (February 9, 1998) but not previously
published. For Comets Taylor, Honig, NEAT, and Kudo-Fujikawa, the silicate
emission band was detected, being approximately 23%, 12%, 15%, and 10%,
respectively, above the continuum. The data for Comet Juels-Holvorcem were of
insufficient quality to detect the presence of a silicate band of comparable
strength to the other three objects, and we place an upper limit of 24% on this
feature. The silicate features in both NEAT and Kudo-Fujikawa contained
structure indicating the presence of crystalline material. Combining these data
with those of other comets, we confirm the correlation between silicate band
strength and grain temperature of Gehrz & Ney (1992) and Williams et al. (1997)
for dynamically new and long period comets, but the majority of Jupiter family
objects may deviate from this relation. The limited data available on Jupiter
family objects suggest that they may have silicate bands that are slightly
different from the former objects. Finally, when compared to the silicate
emission bands observed in pre-main sequence stars, the dynamically new and
long period comets most closely resemble the more evolved stellar systems,
while the limited data (in quantity and quality) on Jupiter family objects seem
to suggest that these have spectra more like the less-evolved stars.Comment: 45 pages, 12 figure
The continued optical to mid-IR evolution of V838 Monocerotis
The eruptive variable V838 Monocerotis gained notoriety in 2002 when it
brightened nine magnitudes in a series of three outbursts and then rapidly
evolved into an extremely cool supergiant. We present optical, near-IR, and
mid-IR spectroscopic and photometric observations of V838 Monocerotis obtained
between 2008 and 2012 at the Apache Point Observatory 3.5m, NASA IRTF 3m, and
Gemini South 8m telescopes. We contemporaneously analyze the optical & IR
spectroscopic properties of V838 Monocerotis to arrive at a revised spectral
type L3 supergiant and effective temperature Teff~2000--2200 K. Because there
are no existing optical observational data for L supergiants in the optical, we
speculate that V838 Monocerotis may represent the prototype for L supergiants
in this wavelength regime. We find a low level of Halpha emission present in
the system, consistent with interaction between V838 Monocerotis and its B3V
binary; however, we cannot rule out a stellar collision as the genesis event,
which could result in the observed Halpha activity. Based upon a two-component
blackbody fit to all wavelengths of our data, we conclude that, as of 2009, a
shell of ejecta surrounded V838 Monocerotis at a radius of R=263+/-10 AU with a
temperature of T=285+/-2 K. This result is consistent with IR interferometric
observations from the same era and predictions from the Lynch et al. model of
the expanding system, which provides a simple framework for understanding this
complicated system.Comment: 6 pages, 2 tables, 6 figures; accepted to A
Evolution from protoplanetary to debris discs: The transition disc around HD 166191
HD 166191 has been identified by several studies as hosting a rare and
extremely bright warm debris disc with an additional outer cool disc component.
However, an alternative interpretation is that the star hosts a disc that is
currently in transition between a full gas disc and a largely gas-free debris
disc. With the help of new optical to mid-IR spectra and Herschel imaging, we
argue that the latter interpretation is supported in several ways: i) we show
that HD 166191 is co-moving with the ~4 Myr-old Herbig Ae star HD 163296,
suggesting that the two have the same age, ii) the disc spectrum of HD 166191
is well matched by a standard radiative transfer model of a gaseous
protoplanetary disc with an inner hole, and iii) the HD 166191 mid-IR silicate
feature is more consistent with similarly primordial objects. We note some
potential issues with the debris disc interpretation that should be considered
for such extreme objects, whose lifetime at the current brightness is mush
shorter than the stellar age, or in the case of the outer component requires a
mass comparable to the solid component of the Solar nebula. These aspects
individually and collectively argue that HD 166191 is a 4-5 Myr old star that
hosts a gaseous transition disc. Though it does not argue in favour of either
scenario, we find strong evidence for 3-5 um disc variability. We place HD
166191 in context with discs at different evolutionary stages, showing that it
is a potentially important object for understanding the protoplanetary to
debris disc transition.Comment: accepted to MNRAS, fixed typos in abstract and axis labe
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