2,494 research outputs found
A CORAVEL radial-velocity monitoring of giant Ba and S stars: spectroscopic orbits and intrinsic variations
This paper provides orbital parameters for 38 barium stars and 10 extrinsic S
stars derived from a decade-long CORAVEL monitoring. Lower bounds on the
orbital period (generally exceeding 10 y) have been obtained for 10 more
systems. Mira S, SC and (Tc-poor) C stars have also been monitored and show
intrinsic radial-velocity variations due to atmospheric phenomena. Tentative
orbital solutions are proposed for 3 stars (S UMa, X Cnc, BD-08:1900) where the
velocity and photometric periods are different. Three stars (RZ Peg, SS Vir and
R CMi) exhibit radial-velocity variations synchronous with the light
variations. Pseudo-orbital solutions have been derived for those stars. In the
case of RZ Peg, a line-doubling phenomenon is observed near maximum light, and
probably reflects the shock wave propagating through the photosphere.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics Supplements, 20 pages, 8 figures, 8 tables
(LaTeX). Also available at:
http://obswww.unige.ch/~udry/cine/barium/barium.htm
A CORAVEL radial-velocity monitoring of S stars: symbiotic activity vs. orbital separation
Orbital elements are presented for the Tc-poor S stars HR 363 (= HD 7351) and
HD 191226. With an orbital period of 4592 d (=12.6 y), HR 363 has the longest
period known among S stars, and yet it is a strong X-ray source. Its X-ray flux
is similar to that of HD 35155, an S star with one of the shortest orbital
periods (640 d). This surprising result is put in perspective with other
diagnostics of binary interaction observed in binary S stars. They reveal that
there is no correlation between the level of binary interaction and the orbital
period. This situation may be accounted for if the wind mass-loss rate from the
giant is the principal factor controlling the activity level in these
(detached) systems, via a stream of matter funneled through the inner Lagragian
point.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics Supplements, 6 pages, 2 figures, 4 tables
(LaTeX A&A). Also available at:
http://obswww.unige.ch/~udry/cine/barium/barium.htm
What Fraction of Sun-like Stars have Planets?
The radial velocities of ~1800 nearby Sun-like stars are currently being
monitored by eight high-sensitivity Doppler exoplanet surveys. Approximately 90
of these stars have been found to host exoplanets massive enough to be
detectable. Thus at least ~5% of target stars possess planets. If we limit our
analysis to target stars that have been monitored the longest (~15 years), ~11%
possess planets. If we limit our analysis to stars monitored the longest and
whose low surface activity allow the most precise velocity measurements, ~25%
possess planets. By identifying trends of the exoplanet mass and period
distributions in a sub-sample of exoplanets less-biased by selection effects,
and linearly extrapolating these trends into regions of parameter space that
have not yet been completely sampled, we find at least ~9% of Sun-like stars
have planets in the mass and orbital period ranges Msin(i) > 0.3 M_Jupiter and
P 0.1
M_Jupiter and P < 60 years. Even this larger area of the mass-period plane is
less than 20% of the area occupied by our planetary system, suggesting that
this estimate is still a lower limit to the true fraction of Sun-like stars
with planets, which may be as large as ~100%.Comment: Conforms to version accepted by ApJ. Color version and movie
available at http://bat.phys.unsw.edu.au/~charley/download/whatfrac
On the functional form of the metallicity-giant planet correlation
It is generally accepted that the presence of a giant planet is strongly
dependent on the stellar metallicity. A stellar mass dependence has also been
investigated, but this dependence does not seem as strong as the metallicity
dependence. Even for metallicity, however, the exact form of the correlation
has not been established. In this paper, we test several scenarios for
describing the frequency of giant planets as a function of its host parameters.
We perform this test on two volume-limited samples (from CORALIE and HARPS). By
using a Bayesian analysis, we quantitatively compared the different scenarios.
We confirm that giant planet frequency is indeed a function of metallicity.
However, there is no statistical difference between a constant or an
exponential function for stars with subsolar metallicities contrary to what has
been previously stated in the literature. The dependence on stellar mass could
neither be confirmed nor be discarded.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, accepted in A&
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