313 research outputs found
Spurious Eccentricities of Distorted Binary Components
I discuss the effect of physical distortion on the velocities of close binary
components and how we may use the resulting distortion of velocity curves to
constrain some properties of binary systems, such as inclination and mass
ratio. Precise new velocities for 5 Cet convincingly detect these distortions
with their theoretically predicted phase dependence. We can even use such
distortions of velocity curves to test Lucy's theory of convective gravity
darkening. The observed distortions for TT Hya and 5 Cet require the contact
components of those systems to be gravity darkened, probably somewhat more than
predicted by Lucy's theory but clearly not as much as expected for a radiative
star. These results imply there is no credible evidence for eccentric orbits in
binaries with contact components. I also present some speculative analyses of
the observed properties of a binary encased in a non-rotating common envelope,
if such an object could actually exist, and discuss how the limb darkening of
some recently calculated model atmospheres for giant stars may bias my resuts
for velocity-curve distortions, as well as other results from a wide range of
analyses of binary stars.Comment: 14 pp, 2 tables, 12 fig; under review by Ap
Revealing the Nature of Algol Disks through Optical and UV Spectroscopy, Synthetic Spectra, and Tomography of TT Hydrae
We have developed a systematic procedure to study the disks in Algol-type
binaries using spectroscopic analysis, synthetic spectra, and tomography. We
analyzed 119 H-alpha spectra of TT Hya, an Algol-type eclipsing interacting
binary, collected from 1985-2001. The new radial velocities enabled us to
derive reliable orbital elements, including a small non-zero eccentricity, and
to improve the accuracy of the absolute dimensions of the system. High
resolution IUE spectra were also analyzed to study the formation of the
ultraviolet lines and continuum. Synthetic spectra of the iron curtain using
our new shellspec program enabled us to derive a characteristic disk
temperature of 7000K. We have demonstrated that the UV emission lines seen
during total primary eclipse cannot originate from the accretion disk, but most
likely arise from a hotter disk-stream interaction region.
The synthetic spectra of the stars, disk, and stream allowed us to derive a
lower limit to the mass transfer rate of 2e-10 solar masses per year. Doppler
tomography of the observed H-alpha profiles revealed a distinct accretion disk.
The difference spectra produced by subtracting the synthetic spectra of the
stars resulted in an image of the disk, which virtually disappeared once the
composite synthetic spectra of the stars and disk were used to calculate the
difference spectra. An intensity enhancement of the resulting tomogram revealed
images of the gas stream and an emission arc. We successfully modeled the gas
stream using shellspec and associated the emission arc with an asymmetry in the
accretion disk.Comment: 46 pages, 15 figures, 6 tables, accepted by Ap
Absolute properties of BG Ind - a bright F3 system just leaving the Main Sequence
We present photometric and spectroscopic analysis of the bright detached
eclipsing binary BG Ind. The masses of the components are found to be 1.428 +-
0.008 and 1.293 +- 0.008 Msun and the radii to be 2.290+-0.017 and 1.680+-0.038
Rsun for primary and secondary stars, respectively. Spectra- and
isochrone-fitting coupled with color indices calibration yield
[Fe/H]=-0.2+-0.1. At an age of 2.65+-0.20 Gyr BG Ind is well advanced in the
main-sequence evolutionary phase - in fact, its primary is at TAMS or just
beyond it. Together with three similar systems (BK Peg, BW Aqr and GX Gem) it
offers an interesting opportunity to test the theoretical description of
overshooting in the critical mass range 1.2-1.5 Msun.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, corrected bugs in author lis
ADAR1 Facilitates HIV-1 Replication in Primary CD4+ T Cells.
Unlike resting CD4+ T cells, activated CD4+T cells are highly susceptible to infection of human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1). HIV-1 infects T cells and macrophages without activating the nucleic acid sensors and the anti-viral type I interferon response. Adenosine deaminase acting on RNA 1 (ADAR1) is an RNA editing enzyme that displays antiviral activity against several RNA viruses. Mutations in ADAR1 cause the autoimmune disorder Aicardi-Goutieères syndrome (AGS). This disease is characterized by an inappropriate activation of the interferon-stimulated gene response. Here we show that HIV-1 replication, in ADAR1-deficient CD4+T lymphocytes from AGS patients, is blocked at the level of protein translation. Furthermore, viral protein synthesis block is accompanied by an activation of interferon-stimulated genes. RNA silencing of ADAR1 in Jurkat cells also inhibited HIV-1 protein synthesis. Our data support that HIV-1 requires ADAR1 for efficient replication in human CD4+T cells
Detection of gravity modes in the massive binary V380 Cyg from Kepler spacebased photometry and high-resolution spectroscopy
We report the discovery of low-amplitude gravity-mode oscillations in the
massive binary star V380 Cyg, from 180 d of Kepler custom-aperture space
photometry and 5 months of high-resolution high signal-to-noise spectroscopy.
The new data are of unprecedented quality and allowed to improve the orbital
and fundamental parameters for this binary. The orbital solution was subtracted
from the photometric data and led to the detection of periodic intrinsic
variability with frequencies of which some are multiples of the orbital
frequency and others are not. Spectral disentangling allowed the detection of
line-profile variability in the primary. With our discovery of intrinsic
variability interpreted as gravity mode oscillations, V380 Cyg becomes an
important laboratory for future seismic tuning of the near-core physics in
massive B-type stars.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS
Letter
Multi-site, multi-year monitoring of the oscillating Algol-type eclipsing binary CT Her
We present the results of a multi-site photometric campaign carried out in
2004-2008 for the Algol-type eclipsing binary system CT Her, the primary
component of which shows Delta Scuti-type oscillations. Our data consist of
differential light curves collected in the filters B and V which have been
analysed using the method of Wilson-Devinney (PHOEBE). After identification of
an adequate binary model and removal of the best-matching light curve solution,
we performed a Fourier analysis of the residual B and V light curves to
investigate the pulsational behaviour. We confirm the presence of rapid
pulsations with a main period of 27.2 min. Up to eight significant frequencies
with semi-amplitudes in the range 3 to 1 mmag were detected, all of which
surprisingly lie in the frequency range 43.5-53.5 c\d. This result is
independent from the choice of the primary's effective temperature (8200 or
8700 K) since the light curve models for the binary are very similar in both
cases. This is yet another case of a complex frequency spectrum observed for an
accreting Delta Scuti-type star (after Y Cam). In addition, we demonstrate that
the amplitudes of several of these pulsation frequencies show evidence of
variability on time scales as short as 1-2 years, perhaps even less. Moreover,
our analysis takes into account some recently acquired spectra, from which we
obtained the corresponding radial velocities for the years 2007-2009.
Investigation of the O-C diagram shows that further monitoring of the epochs of
eclipse minima of CT Her will cast a new light on the evolution of its orbital
period.Comment: 13 pages, 13 encapsulated Postscript figures. Tables~3, 4, 9 and 12
will be available in electronic form only. Astronomy and Astrophysics, in
process (2011). Replaced the abstract with its final versio
The EVIL-MC Model for Ellipsoidal Variations of Planet-Hosting Stars and Applications to the HAT-P-7 System
We present a new model for Ellipsoidal Variations Induced by a Low-Mass
Companion, the EVIL-MC model. We employ several approximations appropriate for
planetary systems to substantially increase the computational efficiency of our
model relative to more general ellipsoidal variation models and improve upon
the accuracy of simpler models. This new approach gives us a unique ability to
rapidly and accurately determine planetary system parameters. We use the
EVIL-MC model to analyze Kepler Quarter 0-2 (Q0-2) observations of the HAT-P-7
system, an F-type star orbited by a nearly Jupiter-mass companion. Our analysis
corroborates previous estimates of the planet-star mass ratio q = (1.10 +/-
0.06) x 10^(-3), and we have revised the planet's dayside brightness
temperature to 2680 +10/-20 K. We also find a large difference between the day-
and nightside planetary flux, with little nightside emission. Preliminary
dynamical+radiative modeling of the atmosphere indicates this result is
qualitatively consistent with high altitude absorption of stellar heating.
Similar analyses of Kepler and CoRoT photometry of other planets using EVIL-MC
will play a key role in providing constraints on the properties of many
extrasolar systems, especially given the limited resources for follow-up and
characterization of these systems. However, as we highlight, there are
important degeneracies between the contributions from ellipsoidal variations
and planetary emission and reflection. Consequently, for many of the hottest
and brightest Kepler and CoRoT planets, accurate estimates of the planetary
emission and reflection, diagnostic of atmospheric heat budgets, will require
accurate modeling of the photometric contribution from the stellar ellipsoidal
variation.Comment: Accepted to ApJ; minor revisions to original submission; An IDL
version of the EVIL-MC model is publicly available at
http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/~bjackson/idl_code/index.htm
Super congruences and Euler numbers
Let be a prime. We prove that
, where E_0,E_1,E_2,... are Euler numbers. Our new approach is of
combinatorial nature. We also formulate many conjectures concerning super
congruences and relate most of them to Euler numbers or Bernoulli numbers.
Motivated by our investigation of super congruences, we also raise a conjecture
on 7 new series for , and the constant
(with (-) the Jacobi symbol), two of which are
and
\sum_{k>0}(15k-4)(-27)^{k-1}/(k^3\binom{2k}{k}^2\binom{3k}k)=K.$
Eclipsing binaries in open clusters. III. V621 Per in chi Persei
V621 Persei is a detached eclipsing binary in the open cluster chi Persei
which is composed of an early B-type giant star and a main sequence secondary
component. From high-resolution spectroscopic observations and radial
velocities from the literature, we determine the orbital period to be 25.5 days
and the primary velocity semiamplitude to be K = 64.5 +/- 0.4 km/s. No trace of
the secondary star has been found in the spectrum. We solve the discovery light
curves of this totally-eclipsing binary and find that the surface gravity of
the secondary star is log(g_B) = 4.244 +/- 0.054 (cm/s). We compare the
absolute masses and radii of the two stars in the mass--radius diagram, for
different possible values of the primary surface gravity, to the predictions of
stellar models. We find that log(g_A) is approximately 3.55, in agreement with
values found from fitting Balmer lines with synthetic profiles. The expected
masses of the two stars are 12 Msun and 6 Msun, and the expected radii are 10
Rsun and 3 Rsun. The primary component is near the blue loop stage in its
evolution.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS (10 pages, 5 figures
Cue interaction and judgments of causality: Contributions of causal and associative processes
In four experiments, the predictions made by causal model theory and the Rescorla-Wagner model were tested by using a cue interaction paradigm that measures the relative response to a given event based on the influence or salience of an alternative event. Experiments 1 and 2 uncorrelated two variables that have typically been confounded in the literature (causal order and the number of cues and outcomes) and demonstrated that overall contingency judgments are influenced by the causal structure of the events. Experiment 3 showed that trial-by-trial prediction responses, a second measure of causal assessment, were not influenced by the causal structure of the described events. Experiment 4 revealed that participants became less sensitive to the influence of the causal structure in both their ratings and their predictions as trials progressed. Thus, two experiments provided evidence for high-level (causal reasoning) processes, and two experiments provided evidence for low-level (associative) processes. We argue that both factors influence causal assessment, depending on what is being asked about the events and participants' experience with those events
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