26 research outputs found
Swift observations of the 2006 outburst of the recurrent nova RS Ophiuchi: III. X-ray spectral modelling
Following the Swift X-ray observations of the 2006 outburst of the recurrent
nova RS Ophiuchi, we developed hydrodynamical models of mass ejection from
which the forward shock velocities were used to estimate the ejecta mass and
velocity. In order to further constrain our model parameters, here we present
synthetic X-ray spectra from our hydrodynamical calculations which we compare
to the Swift data. An extensive set of simulations was carried out to find a
model which best fits the spectra up to 100 days after outburst. We find a good
fit at high energies but require additional absorption to match the low energy
emission. We estimate the ejecta mass to be in the range (2-5) x 10^{-7} solar
masses and the ejection velocity to be greater than 6000 km/s (and probably
closer to 10,000 km/s). We also find that estimates of shock velocity derived
from gas temperatures via standard model fits to the X-ray spectra are much
lower than the true shock velocities.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, Accepted for publication in Ap
A Buffer Stocks Model for Stabilizing Price of Staple Food with Considering the Expectation of Non Speculative Wholesaler
This paper is a study of price stabilization in the
staple food distribution system. All stakeholders experience
market risks due to some possibility causes of price volatility.
Many models of price stabilization had been developed by
employing several approaches such as floor-ceiling prices,
buffer funds, export or import taxes, and subsidies. In the
previous researches, the models were expanded to increase the
purchasing price for producer and decrease the selling price
for consumer. Therefore, the policy can influence the losses for
non-speculative wholesaler that is reflected by the descending
of selling quantity and ascending of the stocks. The objective of
this model is not only to keep the expectation of both producer
and consumer, but also to protect non-speculative wholesaler
from the undesirable result of the stabilization policy. A
nonlinear programming model was addressed to determine the
instruments of intervention program. Moreover, the result
shows that the wholesaler behavior affects the intervention
costs.
Index Terms Buffer stocks, Price stabilization, Nonlinear
programming, Wholesaler behavior
Proof of polar ejection fom the close-binary core of the planetary nebula Abell 63
We present the first detailed kinematical analysis of the planetary nebula
Abell 63, which is known to contain the eclipsing close-binary nucleus UU Sge.
Abell 63 provides an important test case in investigating the role of
close-binary central stars on the evolution of planetary nebulae.
Longslit observations were obtained using the Manchester echelle spectrometer
combined with the 2.1-m San Pedro Martir Telescope. The spectra reveal that the
central bright rim of Abell 63 has a tube-like structure. A deep image shows
collimated lobes extending from the nebula, which are shown to be high-velocity
outflows. The kinematic ages of the nebular rim and the extended lobes are
calculated to be 8400+/-500 years and 12900+/-2800 years, respectively, which
suggests that the lobes were formed at an earlier stage than the nebular rim.
This is consistent with expectations that disk-generated jets form immediately
after the common envelope phase.
A morphological-kinematical model of the central nebula is presented and the
best-fit model is found to have the same inclination as the orbital plane of
the central binary system; this is the first proof that a close-binary system
directly affects the shaping of its nebula. A Hubble-type flow is
well-established in the morphological-kinematical modelling of the observed
line profiles and imagery.
Two possible formation models for the elongated lobes of Abell 63 are
considered (1) a low-density, pressure-driven jet excavates a cavity in the
remnant AGB envelope; (2) high-density bullets form the lobes in a single
ballistic ejection event.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted by MNRAS for publicatio
Swift observations of the 2006 outburst of the recurrent nova RS Ophiuchi: II. 1D hydrodynamical models of wind driven shocks
Following the early Swift X-ray observations of the latest outburst of the
recurrent nova RS Ophiuchi in February 2006 (Paper I), we present new 1D
hydrodynamical models of the system which take into account all three phases of
the remnant evolution. The models suggest a novel way of modelling the system
by treating the outburst as a sudden increase then decrease in wind mass-loss
rate and velocity. The differences between this wind model and previous
Primakoff-type simulations are described. A more complex structure, even in 1D,
is revealed through the presence of both forward and reverse shocks, with a
separating contact discontinuity. The effects of radiative cooling are
investigated and key outburst parameters such as mass-loss rate, ejecta
velocity and mass are varied. The shock velocities as a function of time are
compared to the ones derived in Paper I. We show how the manner in which the
matter is ejected controls the evolution of the shock and that for a
well-cooled remnant, the shock deceleration rate depends on the amount of
energy that is radiated away.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Hubble-type outflows of the high-excitation, poly-polar planetary nebula NGC 6302 -- from expansion proper motions
The ouflowing proper motions of fifteen knots in the dominant northwestern
lobe of the high-excitation poly-polar planetary nebula NGC 6302 have been
determined by comparing their positions relative to those of faint stars in an
image taken at the San Pedro Martir Observatory in 2007 to those in a South
African Astronomical Observatory archival plate obtained by Evans in 1956. The
Hubble-type expansion of this lobe is now directly confirmed in a model
independent way from these measurements. Furthermore, an unambiguous distance
to NGC 6302 of 1.17 +/- 0.14 kpc is now determined. Also all the velocity
vectors of the fifteen knots (and two others) point back to the central source.
An eruptive event from within the central torus, approximately 2200 years
previously must have created the high speed lobes of NGC 6302.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, MNRAS in pres
Kinematics of the ring-like nebula SuWt 2
We present the first detailed spatio-kinematical analysis and modelling of
the Southern planetary nebula SuWt 2. This object presents a problem for
current theories of planetary nebula formation and evolution, as it is not
known to contain a central post-main sequence star.
Deep narrowband [NII]6584 images reveal the presence of faint bipolar lobes
emanating fromthe edges of the nebular ring. Longslit observations of the
H-alpha and [NII]6584 emission lines were obtained using EMMI on the 3.6-m
ESO-NTT. The spectra reveal the nebular morphology as a bright torus encircling
the waist of an extended bipolar structure. By deprojection, the inclination of
the ring is found to be 68\degr 2\degr (c.f. ~90\degr for the
double A-type binary believed to lie at the centre of the nebula), and the ring
expansion velocity is found to be 28 km/s.
Our findings are discussed with relation to possible formation scenarios for
SuWt 2. Through comparison of the nebular heliocentric systemic velocity, found
here to be -25 5 km/s, and the heliocentric systemic velocity of the
double A-type binary, we conclude that neither component of the binary could
have been the nebular progenitor. However, we are unable to rule out the
presence of a third component to the system, which would have been the nebula
progenitor.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Evidence for ablated flows in the shell of nova DQ Her
High-resolution longslit Halpha spectra of the shell of the old nova DQ Her
have been obtained with the William Herschel Telescope using the ISIS
spectrograph. An equatorial expansion velocity of 370+/-14 km/s is derived from
the spectra which, in conjunction with a narrowband Halpha image of the
remnant, allows a distance estimate of 525+/-28 pc. An equatorial ring which
exhibits enhanced [NII] emission has also been detected and the inclination
angle of the shell is found to be 86.8+/-0.2 degrees with respect to the line
of sight. The spectra also reveal tails extending from the clumps in the shell,
which have a radial velocity increasing along their length. This suggests the
presence of a stellar wind, collimated in the polar direction, which ablates
fragments of material from the clumps and accelerates them into its stream up
to a terminal velocity of order 800-900 km/s.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figure
Abell 41: shaping of a planetary nebula by a binary central star?
We present the first detailed spatio-kinematical analysis and modelling of
the planetary nebula Abell 41, which is known to contain the well-studied
close-binary system MT Ser. This object represents an important test case in
the study of the evolution of planetary nebulae with binary central stars as
current evolutionary theories predict that the binary plane should be aligned
perpendicular to the symmetry axis of the nebula.
Deep narrowband imaging in the light of [NII], [OIII] and [SII], obtained
using ACAM on the William Herschel Telescope, has been used to investigate the
ionisation structure of Abell 41. Longslit observations of the H-alpha and
[NII] emission were obtained using the Manchester Echelle Spectrometer on the
2.1-m San Pedro M\'artir Telescope. These spectra, combined with the narrowband
imagery, were used to develop a spatio-kinematical model of [NII] emission from
Abell 41. The best fitting model reveals Abell 41 to have a waisted, bipolar
structure with an expansion velocity of ~40km\s at the waist. The symmetry axis
of the model nebula is within 5\degr of perpendicular to the orbital plane of
the central binary system. This provides strong evidence that the close-binary
system, MT Ser, has directly affected the shaping of its nebula, Abell 41.
Although the theoretical link between bipolar planetary nebulae and binary
central stars is long established, this nebula is only the second to have this
link, between nebular symmetry axis and binary plane, proved observationally.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
The morphology and kinematics of the Fine Ring Nebula, planetary nebula Sp 1, and the shaping influence of its binary central star
We present the first detailed spatio-kinematical analysis and modelling of
the planetary nebula Shapley 1 (Sp 1), which is known to contain a close-binary
central star system. Close-binary central stars have been identified as a
likely source of shaping in planetary nebulae, but with little observational
support to date. Deep narrowband imaging in the light of [O III] {\lambda}5007A
suggests the presence of a large bow-shock to the west of the nebula,
indicating that it is undergoing the first stages of an interaction with the
interstellar medium. Further narrowband imaging in the light of H{\alpha}+[NII]
{\lambda}6584A combined with longslit observations of the H{\alpha} emission
have been used to develop a spatio-kinematical model of Sp 1. The model clearly
reveals Sp 1 to be a bipolar, axisymmetric structure viewed almost pole-on. The
symmetry axis of the model nebula is within a few degrees of perpendicular to
the orbital plane of the central binary system - strong evidence that the
central close-binary system has played an important role in shaping the nebula.
Sp 1 is one of very few nebulae to have this link, between nebular symmetry
axis and binary plane, shown observationally.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA