3,552 research outputs found
The morpho-kinematics of the circumstellar envelope around the AGB star EP Aqr
ALMA observations of CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) emissions of the circumstellar
envelope of EP Aqr, an oxygen-rich AGB star, are reported. A thorough analysis
of their properties is presented using an original method based on the
separation of the data-cube into a low velocity component associated with an
equatorial outflow and a faster component associated with a bipolar outflow. A
number of important and new results are obtained concerning the distribution in
space of the effective emissivity, the temperature, the density and the flux of
matter. A mass loss rate of (1.60.4)10 solar masses per year is
measured. The main parameters defining the morphology and kinematics of the
envelope are evaluated and uncertainties inherent to de-projection are
critically discussed. Detailed properties of the equatorial region of the
envelope are presented including a measurement of the line width and a precise
description of the observed inhomogeneity of both morphology and kinematics. In
particular, in addition to the presence of a previously observed spiral
enhancement of the morphology at very small Doppler velocities, a similarly
significant but uncorrelated circular enhancement of the expansion velocity is
revealed, both close to the limit of sensitivity. The results of the analysis
place significant constraints on the parameters of models proposing
descriptions of the mass loss mechanism, but cannot choose among them with
confidence.Comment: 26 pages, 31 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
CO and HI observations of an enigmatic cloud
An isolated HI cloud with peculiar properties has recently been discovered by
Dedes, Dedes, & Kalberla (2008, A&A, 491, L45) with the 300-m Arecibo
telescope, and subsequently imaged with the VLA. It has an angular size of ~6',
and the HI emission has a narrow line profile of width ~ 3 km/s.
We explore the possibility that this cloud could be associated with a
circumstellar envelope ejected by an evolved star.
Observations were made in the rotational lines of CO with the IRAM-30m
telescope, on three positions in the cloud, and a total-power mapping in the HI
line was obtained with the Nancay Radio Telescope.
CO was not detected and seems too underabundant in this cloud to be a
classical late-type star circumstellar envelope. On the other hand, the HI
emission is compatible with the detached-shell model that we developed for
representing the external environments of AGB stars.
We propose that this cloud could be a fossil circumstellar shell left over
from a system that is now in a post-planetary-nebula phase. Nevertheless, we
cannot rule out that it is a Galactic cloud or a member of the Local Group,
although the narrow line profile would be atypical in both cases.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Observation of narrow polar jets in the nascent wind of oxygen-rich AGB star EP Aqr
Using ALMA observations of CO(2-1), SiO(5-4) and
SO(16-17) emissions of the circumstellar envelope
of AGB star EP Aqr, we describe the morpho-kinematics governing the nascent
wind. Main results are: 1) Two narrow polar structures, referred to as jets,
launched from less than 25 au away from the star, build up between 20 au
and 100 au to a velocity of 20 \kms. They fade away at larger
distances and are barely visible in CO data. 2) SO, SiO and CO emissions
explore radial ranges reaching respectively 30 au, 250 au and 1000 au
from the star, preventing the jets to be detected in SO data. 3) Close to
the star photosphere, rotation (undetected in SiO and CO data) and isotropic
radial expansion combine with probable turbulence to produce a broad SO
line profile ( 7.5 \kms\ FWHM). 4) A same axis serves as axis of rotation
close to the star, as jet axis and as axi-symmetry axis at large distances. 5)
A radial wind builds up at distances up to 300 au from the star, with
larger velocity near polar than equatorial latitudes. 6) A sharp depletion of
SiO and CO emissions, starting near the star, rapidly broadens to cover the
whole blue-western quadrant, introducing important asymmetry in the CO and
particularly SiO observations. 7) The C/C abundance ratio is
measured as 92. 8) Plausible interpretations are discussed, in particular
assuming the presence of a companion.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, MNRAS accepte
Circumstellar HI and CO around the carbon stars V1942 Sgr and V CrB
Context. The majority of stars that leave the main sequence are undergoing
extensive mass loss, in particular during the asymptotic giant branch (AGB)
phase of evolution. Observations show that the rate at which this phenomenon
develops differs highly from source to source, so that the time-integrated mass
loss as a function of the initial conditions (mass, metallicity, etc.) and of
the stage of evolution is presently not well understood. Aims. We are
investigating the mass loss history of AGB stars by observing the molecular and
atomic emissions of their circumstellar envelopes. Methods. In this work we
have selected two stars that are on the thermally pulsing phase of the AGB
(TP-AGB) and for which high quality data in the CO rotation lines and in the
atomic hydrogen line at 21 cm could be obained. Results. V1942 Sgr, a carbon
star of the Irregular variability type, shows a complex CO line profile that
may originate from a long-lived wind at a rate of ~ 10^-7 Msol/yr, and from a
young (< 10^4 years) fast outflow at a rate of ~ 5 10^-7 Msol/yr. Intense HI
emission indicates a detached shell with 0.044 Msol of hydrogen. This shell
probably results from the slowing-down, by surrounding matter, of the same
long-lived wind observed in CO that has been active during ~ 6 10^5 years. On
the other hand, the carbon Mira V CrB is presently undergoing mass loss at a
rate of 2 10^-7 Msol/yr, but was not detected in HI. The wind is mostly
molecular, and was active for at most 3 10^4 years, with an integrated mass
loss of at most 6.5 10^-3 Msol. Conclusions. Although both sources are carbon
stars on the TP-AGB, they appear to develop mass loss under very different
conditions, and a high rate of mass loss may not imply a high integrated mass
loss.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astron. Astrophy
12CO emission from EP Aqr: Another example of an axi-symmetric AGB wind?
The CO(1-0) and (2-1) emission of the circumstellar envelope of the AGB star
EP Aqr has been observed using the IRAM PdBI and the IRAM 30-m telescope. The
line profiles reveal the presence of two distinct components centered on the
star velocity, a broad component extending up to ~10 km/s and a narrow
component indicating an expansion velocity of ~2 km/s. An early analysis of
these data was performed under the assumption of isotropic winds. The present
study revisits this interpretation by assuming instead a bipolar outflow nearly
aligned with the line of sight. A satisfactory description of the observed flux
densities is obtained with a radial expansion velocity increasing from ~2 km/s
at the equator to ~10 km/s near the poles. The angular aperture of the bipolar
outflow is ~45 deg with respect to the star axis, which makes an angle of ~13
deg with the line of sight. A detailed study of the CO(1-0) to CO(2-1) flux
ratio reveals a significant dependence of the temperature on the star latitude,
smaller and steeper at the poles than at the equator at large distances from
the star. Under the hypothesis of radial expansion and of rotation invariance
about the star axis, the effective density has been evaluated in space as a
function of star coordinates. Evidence is found for an enhancement of the
effective density in the northern hemisphere of the star at angular distances
in excess of ~3" and covering the whole longitudinal range. The peak velocity
of the narrow component is observed to vary slightly with position on the sky,
a variation consistent with the model and understood as the effect of the
inclination of the star axis with respect to the line of sight. While the
phenomenological model presented here reproduces well the general features of
the observations, significant differences are also revealed, which would
require a better spatial resolution to be properly described.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
An Anatomy of Racial and Ethnic Trends in Male Earnings
Progress in narrowing black-white earnings differences has been far from continuous, with some of the apparent progress resulting from labor force withdrawal among lower-skilled African Americans. This paper builds on prior research and documents racial and ethnic differences in male earnings from 1950 through 2010 using data from the decennial census and American Community Surveys. Emphasis is given to annual rather than weekly or hourly earnings. Treatment of imputed earnings greatly affects measured outcomes. We take a quantile approach, providing evidence on medians and other percentiles of the distribution. Black male joblessness rose to over 40% in 2010, the median black-white earnings gap being the largest in at least sixty years. The experience of black men contrasts with that of Hispanic men during the last decade, who exhibited earnings growth similar to white men. Black men are being left behind economically, a process exacerbated by weak labor market conditions
An overview of the "Color Game" App project
The Color Game gaming app (2018–2019) invited players from all over the world to invent a visual language without words. Participants took part in a referential communication task where a Sender had to indicate a colour to a Receiver, with the help of black and white symbols. They could freely choose which other players they interacted with, and play repeatedly with their chosen contacts. This paper presents the Color Game dataset, accessible at https://osf.io/9yc25/, which records all interactions between app players. In its final cleaned-up version, the dataset contains 347,606 games by 2,535 players, from more than 100 different countries, speaking 80 different languages. This companion paper describes the app’s workings and history.1. General description 2. Preregistered predictions & projects 2.1. Preregistration process 2.2. The projects 2.2.1. FRIENDS (https://osf.io/y2vak/). 2.2.2. INFORMATION (https://osf.io/7y9pn/). 2.2.3. LANGUAGE (https://osf.io/a8bge/). 2.2.4. PRIORS (https://osf.io/dqhtv/). 2.2.5. SALIENCE (https://osf.io/f9xzq/) 2.2.6. TREES (https://osf.io/r7n32/). 2.3. Open-ended exploration 3. Open data & code 3.1. The Color Game dataset repository 3.2. Exclusion and inclusion criteria: preregistered rules 3.3. Exclusion and inclusion criteria: departures from the preregistered rules 3.4. Other datasets 3.5. Open code 4. Color Game deployment log 5. Descriptive and exploratory analyses 6. Acknowledgements 7. Creative Commons Licence 8. Data privacy Reference
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