2,082 research outputs found
Seeing, Wind and Outer Scale Effects on Image Quality at the Magellan Telescopes
We present an analysis of the science image quality obtained on the twin 6.5
metre Magellan telescopes over a 1.5 year period, using images of ~10^5 stars.
We find that the telescopes generally obtain significantly better image quality
than the DIMM-measured seeing. This is qualitatively consistent with
expectations for large telescopes, where the wavefront outer scale of the
turbulence spectrum plays a significant role. However, the dominant effect is
found to be wind speed with Magellan outperforming the DIMMs most markedly when
the wind is strongest. Excluding data taken during strong wind conditions (>10
m/s), we find that the Magellan telescopes still significantly outperform the
DIMM seeing, and we estimate the site to have L_0 ~ 25 m on average. We also
report on the first detection of a negative bias in DIMM data. This is found to
occur, as predicted, when the DIMM is affected by certain optical aberrations
and the turbulence profile is dominated by the upper layers of the atmosphere.Comment: Accepted for publication in PASP. 10 pages, 12 figures
The Mass of the Candidate Exoplanet Companion to HD136118 from Hubble Space Telescope Astrometry and High-Precision Radial Velocities
We use Hubble Space Telescope Fine Guidance Sensor astrometry and
high-cadence radial velocities for HD136118 from the HET with archival data
from Lick to determine the complete set of orbital parameters for HD136118b. We
find an orbital inclination for the candidate exoplanet of i_{b} = 163.1 +- 3.0
deg. This establishes the actual mass of the object, M_{b} = 42^{+11}_{-18}
MJup, in contrast to the minimum mass determined from the radial velocity data
only, M_{b}sin{i} ~ 12 MJup. Therefore, the low-mass companion to HD 136118 is
now identified as a likely brown dwarf residing in the "brown dwarf desert".Comment: 35 pages, 12 figures, 10 tables. Accepted for publication in
Astrophysical Journa
A Detailed Observational Analysis of V1324 Sco, the Most Gamma-Ray Luminous Classical Nova to Date
It has recently been discovered that some, if not all, classical novae emit
GeV gamma rays during outburst, but the mechanisms involved in the production
of the gamma rays are still not well understood. We present here a
comprehensive multi-wavelength dataset---from radio to X-rays---for the most
gamma-ray luminous classical nova to-date, V1324 Sco. Using this dataset, we
show that V1324 Sco is a canonical dusty Fe-II type nova, with a maximum ejecta
velocity of 2600 km s and an ejecta mass of few
M. There is also evidence for complex shock interactions, including a
double-peaked radio light curve which shows high brightness temperatures at
early times. To explore why V1324~Sco was so gamma-ray luminous, we present a
model of the nova ejecta featuring strong internal shocks, and find that higher
gamma-ray luminosities result from higher ejecta velocities and/or mass-loss
rates. Comparison of V1324~Sco with other gamma-ray detected novae does not
show clear signatures of either, and we conclude that a larger sample of
similarly well-observed novae is needed to understand the origin and variation
of gamma rays in novae.Comment: 26 pages, 13 figure
Nearby Supernova Factory Observations of SN 2007if: First Total Mass Measurement of a Super-Chandrasekhar-Mass Progenitor
We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of SN 2007if, an
overluminous (M_V = -20.4), red (B-V = 0.16 at B-band maximum), slow-rising
(t_rise = 24 days) type Ia supernova in a very faint (M_g = -14.10) host
galaxy. A spectrum at 5 days past B-band maximum light is a direct match to the
super-Chandrasekhar-mass candidate SN Ia 2003fg, showing Si II and C II at
~9000 km/s. A high signal-to-noise co-addition of the SN spectral time series
reveals no Na I D absorption, suggesting negligible reddening in the host
galaxy, and the late-time color evolution has the same slope as the Lira
relation for normal SNe Ia. The ejecta appear to be well mixed, with no strong
maximum in I-band and a diversity of iron-peak lines appearing in
near-maximum-light spectra. SN2007 if also displays a plateau in the Si II
velocity extending as late as +10 days, which we interpret as evidence for an
overdense shell in the SN ejecta. We calculate the bolometric light curve of
the SN and use it and the \ion{Si}{2} velocity evolution to constrain the mass
of the shell and the underlying SN ejecta, and demonstrate that SN2007 if is
strongly inconsistent with a Chandrasekhar-mass scenario. Within the context of
a "tamped detonation" model appropriate for double-degenerate mergers, and
assuming no host extinction, we estimate the total mass of the system to be 2.4
+/- 0.2 solar masses, with 1.6 +/- 0.1 solar masses of nickel-56 and with
0.3-0.5 solar masses in the form of an envelope of unburned carbon/oxygen. Our
modeling demonstrates that the kinematics of shell entrainment provide a more
efficient mechanism than incomplete nuclear burning for producing the low
velocities typical of super-Chandrasekhar-mass SNeIa.Comment: 23 pages, 13 figures, 4 tables, emulateapj format; v2 fixed some
typos and added a reference; v3 included minor copy-editing changes + fixed
typos in Figure 9, Table 4; accepted to Ap
Is the metallicity of their hosts a good measure of the metallicity of Type Ia supernovae?
The efficient use of Type Ia supernovae (SNIa) for cosmological studies
requires knowledge of any parameter that can affect their luminosity in either
systematic or statistical ways. Observational samples of SNIa commonly use the
metallicity of the host galaxy, Z_host, as an estimator of the supernova
progenitor metallicity, Z_Ia, that is one of the primary factors affecting SNIa
magnitude. Here, we present a theoretical study of the relationship between
Z_Ia and Z_host. We follow the chemical evolution of homogeneous galaxy models
together with the evolution of the supernova rates in order to evaluate the
metallicity distribution function, MDF(Delta Z), i.e. the probability that the
logarithm of the metallicity of a SNIa exploding now differs in less than Delta
Z from that of its host. We analyse several model galaxies aimed to represent
from active to passive galaxies, including dwarf galaxies prone to experience
supernova driven outflows. We analyse the sensitivity of the MDF to uncertain
ingredients: IMF, star-formation law, stellar lifetime, stellar yields, and
SNIa delay-time distribution. There is a remarkable degree of agreement between
the mean Z_Ia in a galaxy and its Z_host when they both are measured as the CNO
abundance, especially if the DTD peaks at small time delays, while the average
Fe abundance of host and SNIa may differ up to 0.4-0.6 dex in passive galaxies.
The dispersion of Z_Ia in active galaxy models is quite small, meaning that
Z_host is a quite good estimator of the supernova metallicity. Passive galaxies
present a larger dispersion, which is more pronounced in low mass galaxies. We
discuss the use of different metallicity indicators: Fe vs. O, and gas-phase
metallicity vs. stellar metallicity. The results of the application of our
formalism to a galactic catalogue (VESPA) are roughly consistent with our
theoretical estimates. (abridged)Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, accepted for MNRA
EcoDaLo : federating advertisement targeting with linked data
A key source of revenue for the media and entertainmentdomain isad targeting: serving advertisements to a select set of visitorsbased on various captured visitor traits. Compared to global media com-panies such as Google and Facebook that aggregate data from varioussources (and the privacy concerns these aggregations bring), local compa-nies only capture a small number of (high-quality) traits and retrieve anunbalanced small amount of revenue. To increase these local publishers’competitive advantage, they need to join forces, whilst taking the visi-tors’ privacy concerns into account. The EcoDaLo consortium, located in Belgium and consisting of Adlogix, Pebble Media, and Roularta MediaGroup as founding partners, aims to combine local publishers’ data without requiring these partners to share this data across the consortium.Usage of Semantic Web technologies enables a decentralized approachwhere federated querying allows local companies to combine their captured visitor traits, and better target visitors, without aggregating alldata. To increase potential uptake, technical complexity to join this consortium is kept minimal, and established technology is used where possible. This solution was showcased in Belgium which provided the participating partners valuable insights and suggests future research challenges. Perspectives are to enlarge the consortium and provide measurable impact in ad targeting to local publishers
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