530 research outputs found
Monitoring solar-type stars for luminosity variations
Since 1984, researchers have made more than 1500 differential photometric b (471 nm) and y (551 nm) measurements of three dozen solar-like lower main sequence stars whose chromospheric activity was previosly studied by O. C. Wilson. Here, researchers describe their methodology and the statistical tests used to distinguish intrinsic stellar variability from observational and instrument errors. The incidence of detected variability among the program and comparison stars is summarized. Among the 100 plus pairs of stars measured differentially, only a dozen were found that were unusually constant, with peak-to-peak amplitudes of seasonal mean brightness smaller than 0.3 percent (0.003 mag) over a two-to-three-year interval
Declining rotation curves in interacting galaxies
A declining rotation curve was recently found for the galaxy NGC 3521 by HI synthesis telescope observations (Casertano and van Gorkom 1991). From a comparison of the shapes of rotation curves for a larger sample of galaxies Casertano and van Gorkom argue that this is due to initial properties during the phase of galaxy formation. In several studies of global properties of galaxies, NGC 3521 was always considered a 'normal' unbarred, non-interacting, isolated spiral. However, we present CCD surface photometry that shows at low surface brightness levels the typical signs of interaction or even merging
A Runaway Yellow Supergiant Star in the Small Magellanic Cloud
We recently discovered a yellow supergiant (YSG) in the Small Magellanic
Cloud (SMC) with a heliocentric radial velocity of ~300 km/s which is much
larger than expected for a star in its location in the SMC. This is the first
runaway YSG ever discovered and only the second evolved runaway star discovered
in a different galaxy than the Milky Way. We classify the star as G5-8I, and
use de-reddened broad-band colors with model atmospheres to determine an
effective temperature of 4700+/-250K, consistent with what is expected from its
spectral type. The star's luminosity is then L/Lo ~ 4.2+/-0.1, consistent with
it being a ~30Myr 9Mo star according to the Geneva evolution models. The star
is currently located in the outer portion of the SMC's body, but if the star's
transverse peculiar velocity is similar to its peculiar radial velocity, in
10Myr the star would have moved 1.6 degrees across the disk of the SMC, and
could easily have been born in one of the SMC's star-forming regions. Based on
its large radial velocity, we suggest it originated in a binary system where
the primary exploded as a supernovae thus flinging the runaway star out into
space. Such stars may provide an important mechanism for the dispersal of
heavier elements in galaxies given the large percentage of massive stars that
are runaways. In the future we hope to look into additional evolved runaway
stars that were discovered as part of our other past surveys.Comment: accepted by A
Magnetic inflation and stellar mass. III. revised parameters for the component stars of NSVS 07394765
We perform a new analysis of the M-dwarf–M-dwarf eclipsing binary system NSVS 07394765 in order to investigate the reported hyper-inflated radius of one of the component stars. Our analysis is based on archival photometry from the Wide Angle Search for Planets, new photometry from the 32 cm Command Module
Observatory telescope in Arizona and the 70 cm telescope at Thacher Observatory in California, and new high-resolution infrared spectra obtained with the Immersion Grating Infrared Spectrograph on the Discovery Channel Telescope. The masses and radii we measure for each component star disagree with previously reported measurements. We show that both stars are early M-type main-sequence stars without evidence for youth or hyper-inflation ( = - ☉ M M + 1 0.661 0.036 0.008 , = - ☉ M M + 2 0.608 0.028 0.003 , = - ☉ + R1 0.599 0.019 R 0.032 , = - ☉ + R2 0.625 0.027 R 0.012 ), and
we update the orbital period and eclipse ephemerides for the system. We suggest that the likely cause of the initial hyper-inflated result is the use of moderate-resolution spectroscopy for precise radial velocity measurements.Published versio
K2 reveals pulsed accretion driven by the 2 Myr old hot Jupiter CI Tau b
CI Tau is a young (~2 Myr) classical T Tauri star located in the Taurus star
forming region. Radial velocity observations indicate it hosts a Jupiter-sized
planet with an orbital period of approximately 9 days. In this work, we analyze
time series of CI Tau's photometric variability as seen by K2. The lightcurve
reveals the stellar rotation period to be ~6.6 d. Although there is no evidence
that CI Tau b transits the host star, a ~9 d signature is also present in the
lightcurve. We believe this is most likely caused by planet-disk interactions
which perturb the accretion flow onto the star, resulting in a periodic
modulation of the brightness with the ~9 d period of the planet's orbit.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
- …
