161 research outputs found
Photometric study of selected cataclysmic variables II. Time-series photometry of nine systems
We present time-series photometry of nine cataclysmic variables: EI UMa,
V844Her, V751 Cyg, V516 Cyg, GZ Cnc, TY Psc, V1315 Aql, ASAS J002511+1217.12,
V1315 Aql and LN UMa. The observations were conducted at various observatories,
covering 170 hours and comprising 7,850 data points in total.
For the majority of targets we confirm previously reported periodicities and
for some of them we give, for the first time, their spectroscopic orbital
periods. For those dwarf-nova systems which we observed during both quiescence
and outburst, the increase in brightness was followed by a decrease in the
amount of flickering. Quasi-periodic oscillations have either been discovered,
or were confirmed. For the eclipsing system V1315 Aql we have covered 9
eclipses, and obtained a refined orbital ephemeris. We find that, during its
long baseline of observations, no change in the orbital period of this system
has occurred. V1315 Aql also shows eclipses of variable depth.Comment: 30 pages, 16 figures, 4 tables. Submitted to JA
Long-Term Optical Monitoring of Eta Carinae. Multiband light curves for a complete orbital period
The periodicity of 5.5 years for some observational events occurring in Eta
Carinae manifests itself across a large wavelength range and has been
associated with its binary nature. These events are supposed to occur when the
binary components are close to periastron. To detect the previous periastron
passage of Eta Car in 2003, we started an intensive, ground-based, optical,
photometric observing campaign. We continued observing the object to monitor
its photometric behavior and variability across the entire orbital cycle. Our
observation program consisted of daily differential photometry from CCD images,
which were acquired using a 0.8 m telescope and a standard BVRI filter set at
La Plata Observatory. The photometry includes the central object and the
surrounding Homunculus nebula. We present up-to-date results of our observing
program, including homogeneous photometric data collected between 2003 and
2008. Our observations demonstrated that Eta Car has continued increasing in
brightness at a constant rate since 1998. In 2006, it reached its brightest
magnitude (V ~ 4.7) since about 1860s. The object then suddenly reverted its
brightening trend, fading to V = 5.0 at the beginning of 2007, and has
maintained a quite steady state since then. We continue the photometric
monitoring of Eta Car in anticipation of the next "periastron passage",
predicted to occur at the beginning of 2009.Comment: Accepted by A&A. The paper contains 3 figures and 2 table
Photometric study of selected cataclysmic variables
We present time-resolved photometry of five relatively poorly-studied
cataclysmic variables: V1193 Ori, LQ Peg, LD 317, V795 Her, and MCT 2347-3144.
The observations were made using four 1m-class telescopes for a total of more
than 250 h of observation and almost 16,000 data points. For LQ Peg WHT
spectroscopic data have been analysed as well.
The light curves show a wide range of variability on different time scales
from minutes to months. We detect for the first time a brightness variation of
0.05 mag in amplitude in V1193 Ori on the same timescale as the orbital period,
which we interpret as the result of the irradiation of the secondary. A 20-min
quasi-periodic oscillation is also detected. The mean brightness of the system
has changed by 0.5 mag on a three-month interval, while the flickering was
halved. In LQ Peg a 0.05 mag modulation was revealed with a period of about 3
h. The flickering was much smaller, of the order of 0.025 mag. A possible
quasi-periodic oscillation could exist near 30 min. For this object, the WHT
spectra are single-peaked and do not show any radial-velocity variations. The
data of LD 317 show a decrease in the mean magnitude of the system. No periodic
signal was detected but this is certainly attributable to the very large
flickering observed: between 0.07 and 0.1 mag. For V795 Her, the 2.8-hour
modulation, thought to be a superhump arising from the precession of the disc,
is present. We show that this modulation is not stable in terms of periodicity,
amplitude, and phase. Finally, for MCT 2347-3144, a clear modulation is seen in
a first dataset obtained in October 2002. This modulation is absent in August
2003, when the system was brighter and showed much more flickering.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures, 7 tables. Accepted for pubication by A&
Instability of LBV-stars against radial oscillations
In this study we consider the nonlinear radial oscillations exciting in
LBV--stars with effective temperatures 1.5e4 K <= Teff <= 3e4 K, bolometric
luminosities 1.2e6 L_odot <= L <= 1.9e6 L_odot and masses 35.7 M_odot <= M <=
49.1 M_odot. Hydrodynamic computations were carried out with initial conditions
obtained from evolutionary sequences of population I stars (X=0.7, Z=0.02) with
initial masses from 70M_odot to 90 M_odot. All hydrodynamical models show
instability against radial oscillations with amplitude growth time comparable
with dynamical time scale of the star. Radial oscillations exist in the form of
nonlinear running waves propagating from the boundary of the compact core to
the upper boundary of the hydrodynamical model. The velocity amplitude of outer
layers is of several hundreds of km/s while the bolometric light amplitude does
not exceed 0.2 mag. Stellar oscillations are not driven by the kappa-mechanism
and are due to the instability of the gas with adiabatic exponent close to the
critical value Gamma_1 = 4/3 due to the large contribution of radiation in the
total pressure. The range of the light variation periods (6 day <= P <= 31 day)
of hydrodynamical models agrees with periods of microvariability observed in
LBV--stars.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Astronomy Letter
Solar-like oscillations in cluster stars
We present a brief overview of the history of attempts to obtain a clear
detection of solar-like oscillations in cluster stars, and discuss the results
on the first clear detection, which was made by the Kepler Asteroseismic
Science Consortium (KASC) Working Group 2.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, accepted by Astronomische Nachrichte
The POINT-AGAPE survey II: An Unrestricted Search for Microlensing Events towards M31
An automated search is carried out for microlensing events using a catalogue
of 44554 variable superpixel lightcurves derived from our three-year monitoring
program of M31. Each step of our candidate selection is objective and
reproducible by a computer. Our search is unrestricted, in the sense that it
has no explicit timescale cut. So, it must overcome the awkward problem of
distinguishing long-timescale microlensing events from long-period stellar
variables. The basis of the selection algorithm is the fitting of the
superpixel lightcurves to two different theoretical models, using variable star
and blended microlensing templates. Only if microlensing is preferred is an
event retained as a possible candidate. Further cuts are made with regard to
(i) sampling, (ii) goodness of fit of the peak to a Paczynski curve, (iii)
consistency of the microlensing hypothesis with the absence of a resolved
source, (iv) achromaticity, (v) position in the colour-magnitude diagram and
(vi) signal-to-noise ratio. Our results are reported in terms of first-level
candidates, which are the most trustworthy, and second-level candidates, which
are possible microlensing but have lower signal-to-noise and are more
questionable. The pipeline leaves just 3 first-level candidates, all of which
have very short full-width half-maximum timescale (<5 days) and 3 second-level
candidates, which have timescales of 31, 36 and 51 days respectively. We also
show 16 third-level lightcurves, as an illustration of the events that just
fail the threshold for designation as microlensing candidates. They are almost
certainly mainly variable stars. Two of the 3 first-level candidates correspond
to known events (PA 00-S3 and PA 00-S4) already reported by the POINT-AGAPE
project. The remaining first-level candidate is new.Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, MNRAS, to appea
Catalog of Galactic Beta Cephei Stars
We present an extensive and up-to-date catalog of Galactic Beta Cephei stars.
This catalog is intended to give a comprehensive overview of observational
characteristics of all known Beta Cephei stars. 93 stars could be confirmed to
be Beta Cephei stars. For some stars we re-analyzed published data or conducted
our own analyses. 61 stars were rejected from the final Beta Cephei list, and
77 stars are suspected to be Beta Cephei stars. A list of critically selected
pulsation frequencies for confirmed Beta Cephei stars is also presented. We
analyze the Beta Cephei stars as a group, such as the distributions of their
spectral types, projected rotational velocities, radial velocities, pulsation
periods, and Galactic coordinates. We confirm that the majority of these stars
are multiperiodic pulsators. We show that, besides two exceptions, the Beta
Cephei stars with high pulsation amplitudes are slow rotators. We construct a
theoretical HR diagram that suggests that almost all 93 Beta Cephei stars are
MS objects. We discuss the observational boundaries of Beta Cephei pulsation
and their physical parameters. We corroborate that the excited pulsation modes
are near to the radial fundamental mode in frequency and we show that the mass
distribution of the stars peaks at 12 solar masses. We point out that the
theoretical instability strip of the Beta Cephei stars is filled neither at the
cool nor at the hot end and attempt to explain this observation
An X-ray investigation of the NGC346 field in the SMC (1) : the LBV HD5980 and the NGC346 cluster
We present results from a Chandra observation of the NGC346 cluster. This
cluster contains numerous massive stars and is responsible for the ionization
of N66, the most luminous HII region and the largest star formation region in
the SMC. In this first paper, we will focus on the characteristics of the main
objects of the field. The NGC346 cluster itself shows only relatively faint
X-ray emission (with L_X^{unabs} ~ 1.5 times 10^{34} erg s^{-1}), tightly
correlated with the core of the cluster. In the field also lies HD5980, a LBV
star in a binary (or possibly a triple system) that is detected for the first
time at X-ray energies. The star is X-ray bright, with an unabsorbed luminosity
of L_X^{unabs} ~ 1.7 times 10^{34} erg s^{-1}, but needs to be monitored
further to investigate its X-ray variability over a complete 19d orbital cycle.
The high X-ray luminosity may be associated either with colliding winds in the
binary system or with the 1994 eruption. HD5980 is surrounded by a region of
diffuse X-ray emission, which is a supernova remnant. While it may be only a
chance alignment with HD5980, such a spatial coincidence may indicate that the
remnant is indeed related to this peculiar massive star.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figures (3 in jpg and 6 in ps), to be published in Ap
A Changing Wind Collision
We report on the first detection of a global change in the X-ray emitting properties of a wind–wind collision, thanks to XMM-Newton observations of the massive Small Magellenic Cloud (SMC) system HD 5980. While its light curve had remained unchanged between 2000 and 2005, the X-ray flux has now increased by a factor of ~2.5, and slightly hardened. The new observations also extend the observational coverage over the entire orbit, pinpointing the light-curve shape. It has not varied much despite the large overall brightening, and a tight correlation of fluxes with orbital separation is found without any hysteresis effect. Moreover, the absence of eclipses and of absorption effects related to orientation suggests a large size for the X-ray emitting region. Simple analytical models of the wind–wind collision, considering the varying wind properties of the eruptive component in HD 5980, are able to reproduce the recent hardening and the flux-separation relationship, at least qualitatively, but they predict a hardening at apastron and little change in mean flux, contrary to observations. The brightness change could then possibly be related to a recently theorized phenomenon linked to the varying strength of thin-shell instabilities in shocked wind regions
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