235 research outputs found
The first binary star evolution model producing a Chandrasekhar mass white dwarf
Today, Type Ia supernovae are essential tools for cosmology, and recognized
as major contributors to the chemical evolution of galaxies. The construction
of detailed supernova progenitor models, however, was so far prevented by
various physical and numerical difficulties in simulating binary systems with
an accreting white dwarf component, e.g., unstable helium shell burning which
may cause significant expansion and mass loss. Here, we present the first
binary evolution calculation which models both stellar components and the
binary interaction simultaneously, and where the white dwarf mass grows up to
the Chandrasekhar limit by mass accretion. Our model starts with a 1.6 Msun
helium star and a 1.0 Msun CO white dwarf in a 0.124 day orbit. Thermally
unstable mass transfer starts when the CO core of the helium star reaches 0.53
Msun, with mass transfer rates of 1...8 times 10^{-6} Msun/yr. The white dwarf
burns the accreted helium steadily until the white dwarf mass has reached ~ 1.3
Msun and weak thermal pulses follow until carbon ignites in the center when the
white dwarf reaches 1.37 Msun. Although the supernova production rate through
this channel is not well known, and this channel can not be the only one as its
progenitor life time is rather short (~ 10^7 - 10^8 yr), our results indicate
that helium star plus white dwarf systems form a reliable route for producing
Type Ia supernovae.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Intraspecific functional trait response to advanced snowmelt suggests increase of growth potential but decrease of seed production in snowbed plant species
In ecological theory, it is currently unclear if intraspecific trait responses to environmental variation are shared across plant species. We use one of the strongest environmental variations in alpine ecosystems, i.e., advanced snowmelt due to climate warming, to answer this question for alpine snowbed plants. Snowbeds are extreme habitats where long-lasting snow cover represents the key environmental factor affecting plant life. Intraspecific variation in plant functional traits is a key to understanding the performance and vulnerability of species in a rapidly changing environment. We sampled snowbed species after an above-average warm winter to assess their phenotypic adjustment to advanced snowmelt, based on differences in the natural snowmelt dynamics with magnitudes reflecting predicted future warming. We measured nine functional traits related to plant growth and reproduction in seven vascular species, comparing snowbeds of early and late snowmelt across four snowbed sites in the southern Alps in Italy. The early snowbeds provide a proxy for the advanced snowmelt caused by climatic warming. Seed production was reduced under advanced snowmelt in all seed-forming snowbed species. Higher specific leaf area (SLA) and lower leaf dry matter content (LDMC) were indicative of improved growth potential in most seed-forming species under advanced snowmelt. We conclude, first, that in the short term, advanced snowmelt can improve snowbed species’ growth potential. However, in the long term, results from other studies hint at increasing competition in case of ongoing improvement of conditions for plant growth under continued future climate warming, representing a risk for snowbed species. Second, a lower seed production can negatively affect the seed rain. A reduction of propagule pressure can be crucial in a context of loss of the present snowbed sites and the formation of new ones at higher altitudes along with climate warming. Finally, our findings encourage using plant functional traits at the intraspecific level across species as a tool to understand the future ecological challenges of plants in changing environments
Type Ib/c supernovae in binary systems I. Evolution and properties of the progenitor stars
We investigate the evolution of Type Ib/c supernova (SN Ib/c) progenitors in
close binary systems, using new evolutionary models that include the effects of
rotation, with initial masses of 12 - 25 Msun for the primary components, and
of single helium stars with initial masses of 2.8 - 20 Msun. We find that,
despite the impact of tidal interaction on the rotation of primary stars, the
amount of angular momentum retained in the core at the presupernova stage in
different binary model sequences converge to a value similar to those found in
previous single star models. This amount is large enough to produce millisecond
pulsars, but too small to produce magnetars or long gamma-ray bursts. We employ
the most up-to-date estimate for the Wolf-Rayet mass loss rate, and its
implications for SN Ib/c progenitors are discussed in detail. In terms of
stellar structure, SN Ib/c progenitors in binary systems are predicted to have
a wide range of final masses even up to 7 Msun, with helium envelopes of 0.16 -
1.5 Msun. Our results indicate that, if the lack of helium lines in the spectra
of SNe Ic were due to small amounts of helium, the distribution of both initial
and final masses of SN Ic progenitors should be bimodal. Furthermore, we find
that a thin hydrogen layer (0.001 - 0.01 Msun) is expected to be present in
many SN Ib progenitors at the presupernova stage. We show that the presence of
hydrogen, together with a rather thick helium envelope, can lead to a
significant expansion of some SN Ib/c progenitors by the time of supernova
explosion. This may have important consequences for the shock break-out and
supernova light curve. We also argue that some SN progenitors with thin
hydrogen layers produced via Case AB/B transfer might be related to Type IIb
supernova progenitors with relatively small radii of about 10 Rsun.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, 2 tables, ApJ, in pres
The most massive progenitors of neutron stars: CXO J164710.2-455216
The evolution leading to the formation of a neutron star in the very young
Westerlund 1 star cluster is investigated. The turnoff mass has been estimated
to be 35 Msun, indicating a cluster age ~ 3-5 Myr. The brightest X-ray source
in the cluster, CXO J164710.2-455216, is a slowly spinning (10 s) single
neutron star and potentially a magnetar. Since this source was argued to be a
member of the cluster, the neutron star progenitor must have been very massive
(M_zams > 40 Msun) as noted by Muno et al. (2006). Since such massive stars are
generally believed to form black holes (rather than neutron stars), the
existence of this object poses a challenge for understanding massive star
evolution. We point out while single star progenitors below M_zams < 20 Msun
form neutron stars, binary evolution completely changes the progenitor mass
range. In particular, we demonstrate that mass loss in Roche lobe overflow
enables stars as massive as 50-80 Msun, under favorable conditions, to form
neutron stars. If the very high observed binary fraction of massive stars in
Westerlund 1 (> 70 percent) is considered, it is natural that CXO
J164710.2-455216 was formed in a binary which was disrupted in a supernova
explosion such that it is now found as a single neutron star. Hence, the
existence of a neutron star in a given stellar population does not necessarily
place stringent constraints on progenitor mass when binary interactions are
considered. It is concluded that the existence of a neutron star in Westerlund
1 cluster is fully consistent with the generally accepted framework of stellar
evolution.Comment: 5 pages of text and 4 figures (submitted to Astrophysical Journal
The Italian endemic forest plants: an annotated inventory and synthesis of knowledge
Background and aims – Forests are among the most threatened ecosystems worldwide, and endemic plants are often a vulnerable component of the flora of a given territory. So far, however, understory forest endemics of southern Europe have received little attention and are poorly known for several aspects.
Material and methods – We developed the first list of native vascular plants that are restricted to Italian forests. Available information on taxonomy, regional distribution, ecology, biology, functional traits, and conservation status was collected for each taxon, allowing to identify major knowledge gaps and calculate baseline statistics.
Key results – The list includes 134 taxa, most of which are linked to closed-canopy forest habitats, while the others are also found in margins and gaps. The forest and non-forest Italian endemic flora differed in terms of taxonomic and life-form distribution. The rate and density of forest endemism increased with decreasing latitude and were highest in Sicily, Calabria, and Basilicata, where paleoendemic mono- or oligotypic genera also occur. Endemic phanerophytes were especially numerous on islands. Beech and deciduous oak forests were the most important habitats, but hygrophilous woodlands also host numerous endemics. Overall, the ecology, biology, and functional traits of the forest endemic taxa are still poorly known. The ratio diploids/polyploids was highest in the south and on the islands. Almost 24% of the taxa were assessed as “Critically Endangered”, “Endangered”, or “Vulnerable”, and 24% were categorized as “Data Deficient”, based on the IUCN system. Increasing frequency and intensity of fires was the most frequent threat.
Conclusions – This work can contribute to implement the European forest plant species list and serve as a basis for further research on a unique biological heritage of the continent. However, more knowledge about these globally rare taxa is needed, to support their conservation in changing forest landscapes
The massive eclipsing LMC Wolf-Rayet binary BAT99-129. 1 Orbital parameters, hydrogen content and spectroscopic characteristics
BAT99-129 in the LMC is one among a handful of extra-galactic eclipsing
Wolf-Rayet binaries known. We present blue, medium-resolution, phase-dependent
NTT-EMMI spectra of this system that allow us to separate the spectra of the
two components of the binary and to obtain a reliable orbital solution for both
stars. We assign an O5V spectral type to the companion, and WN3(h)a to the
Wolf-Rayet component. We discuss the spectroscopic characteristics of the
system: luminosity ratio, radii, rotation velocities. We find a possible
oversynchronous rotation velocity for the O star. Surprisingly, the extracted
Wolf-Rayet spectrum clearly shows the presence of blueshifted absorption lines,
similar to what has been found in all single hot WN stars in the SMC and some
in the LMC. We also discuss the presence of such intrinsic lines in the context
of hydrogen in SMC and LMC Wolf-Rayet stars, WR+O binary evolution and GRB
progenitors. Altogether, BAT99~129 is the extragalactic counterpart of the
well-known Galactic WR binary V444 Cygni.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted by A&A for publicatio
Context-dependent plant traits drive fine-scale species persistence in old-growth forests
Questions: we studied old growth beech forest vegetation in Permanent Monitoring Plots
(PMPs) located in Italy, with the following questions: is species turnover the main
component of the observed changes or the present species assemblages is an
impoverished sub-sets of the former ones?; 2) how compositional changes are reflected
by specific plant functional traits?
Location: we selected 4 PMPs (50 x 50 m) of the CONECOFOR network, placed along a
latitudinal and climatic gradient in Italy, from south to north: CALABRIA03, CAMPANIA04,
ABRUZZO01 and VENETO20.
Methods: presence/absence of herb layer species were recorded in 100 permanent
micro-plots of 50 x 50 cm over 12 years (1999-2011). For all sampled species we chose a
set of 8 easy-to-measure functional traits. We compared the persistence, nestedness and
turnover components of compositional changes. The role of plant traits explaining species
persistence were analyzed by classification and regression tree.
Results: Analysis in species diversity reveal antithetical ecological phenomena due to the
diversity and complexity of the 4 different forest stands. ABRUZZO01 and CALABRIA03
show a clear nestedness trends over time with persistent species in ABR01 having higher
seed mass and persistent species in CALABRIA03 having scleromorphic leaves and
mesoporphic leaves, with large below-ground budbank. On the other hand, VENETO20
and CAMPANIA04 exibit a significant turnover trends over the 12 years characterized by
persistent species in VENETO20 having helomorphic leaves, while in CAMPANIA04 large
below-ground budbank and smaller SLA were the most important traits for species
survival.
Conclusion: Fine-scale approach highlight different mechanisms for the maintenance of
species diversity in different complex forest systems driven significantly by specific traits,
influenced by context-dependent factors
Topography of the Dolomites modulates range dynamics of narrow endemic plants under climate change
open9noClimate change is expected to threaten endemic plants in the Alps. In this context, the factors that may modulate species responses are rarely investigated at a local scale. We analyzed eight alpine narrow endemics of the Dolomites (southeastern Alps) under different predicted climate change scenarios at fine spatial resolutions. We tested possible differences in elevation, topographic heterogeneity and velocity of climate change among areas of gained, lost, or stable climatic habitat. The negative impact of climate change ranged from moderate to severe, depending on scenario and species. Generally, range loss occurred at the lowest elevations, while gained and stable areas were located at highest elevations. For six of the species, climate change velocity had higher values in stable and gained areas than in lost ones. Our findings support the role of topographic heterogeneity in maintaining climatic microrefugia, however, the peculiar topography of the Dolomites, characterized by high altitude plateaus, resulted in high climate change velocity in areas of projected future climatic suitability. Our study supports the usefulness of multiple predictors of spatio-temporal range dynamics for regional climate-adapted management and eventual assisted colonization planning to not overlook or overestimate the potential impact of climate change locally.openRota F.; Casazza G.; Genova G.; Midolo G.; Prosser F.; Bertolli A.; Wilhalm T.; Nascimbene J.; Wellstein C.Rota, F.; Casazza, G.; Genova, G.; Midolo, G.; Prosser, F.; Bertolli, A.; Wilhalm, T.; Nascimbene, J.; Wellstein, C
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