145 research outputs found
HST/STIS Ultraviolet Imaging of Polar Aurora on Ganymede
We report new observations of the spectrum of Ganymede in the spectral range
1160 - 1720 A made with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) on HST
on 1998 October 30. The observations were undertaken to locate the regions of
the atomic oxygen emissions at 1304 and 1356 A, previously observed with the
GHRS on HST, that Hall et al. (1998) claimed indicated the presence of polar
aurorae on Ganymede. The use of the 2" wide STIS slit, slightly wider than the
disk diameter of Ganymede, produced objective spectra with images of the two
oxygen emissions clearly separated. The OI emissions appear in both
hemispheres, at latitudes above 40 degrees, in accordance with recent Galileo
magnetometer data that indicate the presence of an intrinsic magnetic field
such that Jovian magnetic field lines are linked to the surface of Ganymede
only at high latitudes. Both the brightness and relative north-south intensity
of the emissions varied considerably over the four contiguous orbits (5.5
hours) of observation, presumably due to the changing Jovian plasma environment
at Ganymede. However, the observed longitudinal non-uniformity in the emission
brightness at high latitudes, particularly in the southern hemisphere, and the
lack of pronounced limb brightening near the poles are difficult to understand
with current models. In addition to observed solar HI Lyman-alpha reflected
from the disk, extended Lyman-alpha emission resonantly scattered from a
hydrogen exosphere is detected out to beyond two Ganymede radii from the limb,
and its brightness is consistent with the Galileo UVS measurements of Barth et
al. (1997).Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ, June 1, 200
Systematic detection of magnetic fields in massive, late-type supergiants
We report the systematic detection of magnetic fields in massive (M > 5
M) late-type supergiants, using spectropolarimetric observations
obtained with ESPaDOnS at the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope. Our observations
reveal detectable Stokes V Zeeman signatures in Least-Squares Deconvolved mean
line profiles in one-third of the observed sample of more than 30 stars. The
signatures are sometimes complex, revealing multiple reversals across the line.
The corresponding longitudinal magnetic field is seldom detected, although our
longitudinal field error bars are typically 0.3 G (). These
characteristics suggest topologically complex magnetic fields, presumably
generated by dynamo action. The Stokes V signatures of some targets show clear
time variability, indicating either rotational modulation or intrinsic
evolution of the magnetic field. We also observe a weak correlation between the
unsigned longitudinal magnetic field and the CaII K core emission equivalent
width of the active G2Iab supergiant ~Dra and the G8Ib supergiant
~Gem.Comment: 8 pages, 1 table, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Chemical pattern across the young associations ONC and OB1b
Context. Abundances of iron-peak and alpha-elements are poorly known in
Orion, and the available measurements yield contradictory results. Aims. We
measure accurate and homogeneous elemental abundances of the Orion subgroups
ONC and OB1b, and search for abundance differences across the Orion complex.
Methods. We present FLAMES/UVES spectroscopic observations of 20 members of the
ONC and OB1b. We measured radial velocity, veiling, effective temperature using
two spectroscopic methods, and determined the chemical abundances of Fe, Na,
Al, Si, Ca, Ti, and Ni using the code MOOG. We also performed a new consistent
analysis of spectra previously analyzed by our group. Results. We find three
new binaries in the ONC, two in OB1b, and three non-members in OB1b (two of
them most likely being OB1a/25 Ori members). Veiling only affects one target in
the ONC, and the effective temperatures derived using two spectroscopic
techniques agree within the errors. The ONC and OB1b are characterized by a
small scatter in iron abundance, with mean [Fe/H] values of -0.11+/-0.08 and
-0.05+/-0.05, respectively. We find a small scatter in all the other elemental
abundances. We confirm that P1455 is a metal-rich star in the ONC. Conclusions.
We conclude that the Orion metallicity is not above the solar value. The OB1b
group might be slightly more metal-rich than the ONC; on the other hand, the
two subgroups have similar almost solar abundances of iron-peak and
alpha-elements with a high degree of homogeneity.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysics. 16 figures, 8 table
Astrobiologically Interesting Stars within 10 parsecs of the Sun
The existence of life based on carbon chemistry and water oceans relies upon
planetary properties, chiefly climate stability, and stellar properties, such
as mass, age, metallicity and Galactic orbits. The latter can be well
constrained with present knowledge. We present a detailed, up-to-date
compilation of the atmospheric parameters, chemical composition, multiplicity
and degree of chromospheric activity for the astrobiologically interesting
solar-type stars within 10 parsecs of the Sun. We determine their state of
evolution, masses, ages and space velocities, and produce an optimized list of
candidates that merit serious scientific consideration by the future
space-based interferometry probes aimed at directly detecting Earth-sized
extrasolar planets and seeking spectroscopic infrared biomarkers as evidence of
photosynthetic life. The initially selected stars number 33 solar-type within
the population of 182 stars (excluding late M-dwarfs) closer than 10 pc. A
comprehensive and detailed data compilation for these objects is still
essentially lacking: a considerable amount of recent data has so far gone
unexplored in this context. We present 13 objects as the nearest "biostars",
after eliminating multiple stars, young, chromospherically active, hard X-ray
emitting stars, and low metallicity objects. Three of these "biostars", HD
1581, 109358 and 115617, closely reproduce most of the solar properties and are
considered as premier targets. We show that approximately 7% of the nearby
stars are optimally interesting targets for exobiology.Comment: 36 pages, recommended for publication in Astrobiolog
Lyman‐α imaging of the SO 2 distribution on Io
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94916/1/grl12620.pd
The age of the Galactic thin disk from Th/Eu nucleocosmochronology III. Extended sample
The first determination of the age of the Galactic thin disk from Th/Eu
nucleocosmochronology was accomplished by us in Papers I and II. The present
work aimed at reducing the age uncertainty by expanding the stellar sample with
the inclusion of seven new objects - an increase by 37%. A set of [Th/Eu]
abundance ratios was determined from spectral synthesis and merged with the
results from Paper I. Abundances for the new, extended sample were analyzed
with the aid of a Galactic disk chemical evolution (GDCE) model developed by us
is Paper II. The result was averaged with an estimate obtained in Paper II from
a conjunction of literature data and our GDCE model, providing our final,
adopted disk age T_G = (8.8 +/- 1.7) Gyr with a reduction of 0.1 Gyr (6%) in
the uncertainty. This value is compatible with the most up-to-date white dwarf
age determinations (<~ 10 Gyr). Considering that the halo is currently presumed
to be (13.5 +/- 0.7) Gyr old, our result prompts groups developing Galactic
formation models to include an hiatus of (4.7 +/- 1.8) Gyr between the
formation of halo and disk.Comment: 7 pages, 5 Postscript figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
Observational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particles
Unexpected astrophysical observations can be explained by gravitationally
captured massive particles, which are produced inside the Sun or other Stars
and are accumulated over cosmic times. Their radiative decay in solar outer
space would give rise to a `self-irradiation' of the whole star, providing the
time-independent component of the corona heating source. In analogy with the
Sun-irradiated Earth atmosphere, the temperature and density gradient in the
corona - chromosphere transition region is suggestive for an omnipresent
irradiation of the Sun. The same scenario fits other astrophysical X-ray
observations. The radiative decay of a population of such elusive particles
mimics a hot gas. X-ray observatories, with an unrivalled sensitivity below ~10
keV, can search for such particles. The elongation angle relative to the Sun is
the relevant new parameter.Comment: 35 pages, LaTeX, 9 figures. Accepted by Astroparticle Physic
The age of the Galactic thin disk from Th/Eu nucleocosmochronology I. Determination of [Th/Eu] abundance ratios
The purpose of this work is to resume investigation of Galactic thin disk
dating using nucleocosmochronology with Th/Eu stellar abundance ratios, a theme
absent from the literature since 1990. A stellar sample of 20 disk
dwarfs/subgiants of F5 to G8 spectral types with -0.8 <= [Fe/H] <= +0.3 was
selected. In stars with such spectral types and luminosity classes, spectral
synthesis techniques must be employed if we wish to achieve acceptably accurate
results. A homogeneous, self-consistent set of atmospheric parameters was
determined. Effective temperatures were determined from photometric
calibrations and H-alpha profile fitting; surface gravities were obtained from
Teff, stellar masses and luminosities; microturbulence velocities and
metallicities were obtained from detailed, differential spectroscopic analysis,
relative to the Sun, using equivalent widths of Fe I and Fe II lines. Chemical
abundances of the elements that contaminate the Th and Eu spectral regions (Ti,
V, Cr, Mn, Co, Ni, Ce, Nd, and Sm) were determined through spectroscopic
analysis. Abundance uncertainties were thoroughly scrutinised, their average
value - (0.10 +/- 0.02) dex - being found to be satisfactorily low. Eu and Th
abundances were determined by spectral synthesis of one Eu II line (4129.72 A)
and one Th II line (4019.13 A), taking into account the detailed hyperfine
structures of contaminating Co lines, as well as the hyperfine structure and
isotope shift of the Eu line. Comparison of our abundances with literature data
shows that our results exhibit a similar behaviour, but a considerably lower
scatter (36% lower for Eu, and 61% lower for Th). The [Th/Eu] abundance ratios
thus obtained were used, in the second paper of this series, to determine the
age of the Galactic disk.Comment: 27 pages, 22 Postscript figures, accepted for publication in
Astronomy & Astrophysics, final versio
Discovery of the benchmark metal poor T8 dwarf BD+01 2920B
We have searched the WISE first data release for widely separated (<10,000AU)
late T dwarf companions to Hipparcos and Gliese stars. We have discovered a new
binary system containing a K-band suppressed T8p dwarf WISEP J1423+0116 and the
mildly metal poor ([Fe/H]=-0.38+-0.06) primary BD+01 2920 (Hip 70319), a G1
dwarf at a distance of 17.2pc. This new benchmark has Teff=680+-55K and a mass
of 20-50 Mjup. Its spectral properties are well modelled except for known
discrepancies in the Y and K bands. Based on the well determined metallicity of
its companion, the properties of BD+01 2920B imply that the currently known T
dwarfs are dominated by young low-mass objects. We also present an accurate
proper motion for the T8.5 dwarf WISEP J075003.84+272544.8.Comment: MNRAS, accepted 2012 January 1
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