101 research outputs found
Hot stars observed by XMM-Newton I. The catalog and the properties of OB stars
Aims : Following the advent of increasingly sensitive X-ray observatories,
deep observations of early-type stars became possible. However, the results for
only a few objects or clusters have until now been reported and there has been
no large survey comparable to that based upon the ROSAT All-Sky Survey (RASS).
Methods : A limited survey of X-ray sources, consisting of all public XMM
observations (2XMMi) and slew survey data (XMMSL1), is now available. The X-ray
counterparts to hot, massive stars have been searched for in these catalogs.
Results : About 300 OB stars were detected with XMM. Half of them were bright
enough for a spectral analysis to be possible, and we make available the
detailed spectral properties that were derived. The X-ray spectra of O stars
are represented well by low (<1keV) temperature components and seem to indicate
that an absorption column is present in addition to the interstellar
contribution. The X-ray fluxes are well correlated with the bolometric fluxes,
with a scatter comparable to that of the RASS studies and thus larger than
found previously with XMM for some individual clusters. These results contrast
with those of B stars that exhibit a large scatter in the L_X-L_BOL relation,
no additional absorption being found, and the fits indicate a plasma at higher
temperatures. Variability (either within one exposure or between multiple
exposures) was also investigated whenever possible: short-term variations are
far more rare than long-term ones (the former affects a few percent of the
sample, while the latter concerns between one third and two thirds of the
sources). Conclusions : This paper presents the results of the first
high-sensitivity investigation of the overall high-energy properties of a
sizable sample of hot stars.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication by A&
Chandra monitoring of the very massive binary WR20a and the young massive cluster Westerlund2
Results: The two Wolf-Rayet stars WR20a (WN6ha+WN6ha) and WR20b (WN6ha) were
analyzed in detail. They are both very luminous and display very hard spectra,
but WR20b does not seem to vary. On the contrary, WR20a, a known eclipsing,
colliding-wind binary, brightens in the X-ray domain during the eclipses, i.e.
when the collision is seen face-on. This can be explained by the properties of
the wind-wind collision zone, whose high density leads to a large absorbing
column (2 10^24 cm^-2).All twelve O-type stars previously classified
spectroscopically, two eclipsing binaries previously identified and nine newly
identified O-type star candidates are detected in the high energy domain; ten
of them could be analyzed spectroscopically. Four are overluminous, but the
others present typical L_X/L_BOL ratios, suggesting that several O-type objects
are actually binaries. Variability at the ~2sigma level was detected for a
majority of the sources, of unknown origin for the putatively single objects.
Faint, soft, diffuse emission pervades the entire field-of-view but no clear
structure can be identified, even at the position of a blister proposed to be
at the origin of the TeV source HESS J1023-575. Finally, the X-ray properties
of PMS objects were also investigated, in particular the brightest flaring
ones. They provided an additional argument in favor of a large distance (~8kpc)
for the cluster.Comment: accepted by A&A, 10 pages, 7 figures (available in jpg
SENSE: A comparison of photon detection efficiency and optical crosstalk of various SiPM devices
This paper describes a comparison of photon detection efficiency and optical
crosstalk measurements performed by three partners: Geneva University, Catania
Observatory and Nagoya University. The measurements were compared for three
different SiPM devices with different active areas: from 9 up to 93.6
produced by Hamamatsu. The objective of this work is to establish the
measurements and analysis procedures for calculating the main SiPM parameters
and their precision. This work was done in the scope of SENSE project which
aims to build roadmap for the last developments in field of sensors for low
light level detection
An XMM-Newton view of the young open cluster NGC 6231 -- II. The OB star population
In this second paper, we pursue the analysis of the 180 ks XMM-Newton
campaign towards the young open cluster NGC 6231 and we focus on its rich OB
star population. We present a literature-based census of the OB stars in the
field of view with more than one hundred objects, among which 30% can be
associated with an X-ray source. All the O-type stars are detected in the X-ray
domain as soft and reasonably strong emitters. In the 0.5-10.0 keV band, their
X-ray luminosities scale with their bolometric luminosities as . Such a scaling law holds in
the soft (0.5-1.0 keV) and intermediate (1.0-2.5 keV) bands but breaks down in
the hard band. While the two colliding wind binaries in our sample clearly
deviate from this scheme, the remaining O-type objects show a very limited
dispersion (40% or 20% according to whether `cool' dwarfs are included or not),
much smaller than that obtained from previous studies. At our detection
threshold and within our sample, the sole identified mechanism that produces
significant modulations in the O star X-ray emission is related to wind
interaction. The intrinsic X-ray emission of non-peculiar O-type stars seems
thus constant for a given star and the level of its X-ray emission is
accurately related to the its luminosity or, equivalently, to its wind
properties. Among B-type stars, the detection rate is only about 25% in the
sub-type range B0-B4 and remains mostly uniform throughout the different
sub-populations while it drops significantly at later sub-types. The associated
X-ray spectra are harder than those of O-type stars. Our analysis points
towards the detected emission being associated with a physical PMS companion
>... [see paper for the complete abstract]Comment: 21 pages, 14 figures, Table 2 and Figs 2 to 5 will be available
through the CDS only, accepted for publication by MNRAS, Fig 1 not included
in the present preprint because of size limitation
The first orbital solution for the massive colliding-wind binary HD93162 (=WR25)
Since the discovery, with the EINSTEIN satellite, of strong X-ray emission
associated with HD93162 (=WR25), this object has been predicted to be a
colliding-wind binary system. However, radial-velocity variations that would
prove the suspected binary nature have yet to be found. We spectroscopically
monitored this object to investigate its possible variability to address this
discordance. We compiled the largest available radial-velocity data set for
this star to look for variations that might be due to binary motion. We derived
radial velocities from spectroscopic data acquired mainly between 1994 and
2006, and searched these radial velocities for periodicities using different
numerical methods. For the first time, periodic radial-velocity variations are
detected. Our analysis definitively shows that the Wolf-Rayet star WR25 is an
eccentric binary system with a probable period of about 208 days.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A+
XMM-Newton observations of the sigma Ori cluster. II. Spatial and spectral analysis of the full EPIC field
We present the results of an XMM-Newton observation of the young (~2-4 Myr)
cluster around the hot star sigma Orionis. In a previous paper we presented the
analysis of the RGS spectrum of the central hot star; here we discuss the
results of the analysis of the full EPIC field. We have detected 175 X-ray
sources, 88 of which have been identified with cluster members, including very
low-mass stars down to the substellar limit. We detected eleven new possible
candidate members from the 2MASS catalogue. We find that late-type stars have a
median log L_X/L_bol ~ -3.3, i.e. very close to the saturation limit. We
detected significant variability in ~40% of late-type members or candidates,
including 10 flaring sources; rotational modulation is detected in one K-type
star and possibly in another 3 or 4 stars. Spectral analysis of the brightest
sources shows typical quiescent temperatures in the range T_1 ~ 0.3-0.8 keV and
T_2 ~ 1-3 keV, with subsolar abundances Z ~ 0.1-0.3 Z_sun, similar to what is
found in other star-forming regions and associations. We find no significant
difference in the spectral properties of classical and weak-lined T Tauri
stars, although classical T Tauri stars tend to be less X-ray luminous than
weak-lined T Tauri stars.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, 6 tables. Accepted by A&
Global X-ray properties of the O and B stars in Carina
The key empirical property of the X-ray emission from O stars is a strong
correlation between the bolometric and X-ray luminosities. In the framework of
the Chandra Carina Complex Project, 129 O and B stars have been detected as
X-ray sources; 78 of those, all with spectral type earlier than B3, have enough
counts for at least a rough X-ray spectral characterization. This leads to an
estimate of the Lx/Lbol ratio for an exceptional number of 60 O stars belonging
to the same region and triples the number of Carina massive stars studied
spectroscopically in X-rays. The derived log(Lx/Lbol) is -7.26 for single
objects, with a dispersion of only 0.21dex. Using the properties of hot massive
stars listed in the literature, we compare the X-ray luminosities of different
types of objects. In the case of O stars, the Lx/Lbol ratios are similar for
bright and faint objects, as well as for stars of different luminosity classes
or spectral types. Binaries appear only slightly harder and slightly more
luminous in X-rays than single objects; the differences are not formally
significant (at the 1% level), except for the Lx/Lbol ratio in the medium
(1.0--2.5keV) energy band. Weak-wind objects have similar X-ray luminosities
but they display slightly softer spectra compared to "normal" O stars with the
same bolometric luminosity. Discarding three overluminous objects, we find a
very shallow trend of harder emission in brighter objects. The properties of
the few B stars bright enough to yield some spectral information appear to be
different overall (constant X-ray luminosities, harder spectra), hinting that
another mechanism for producing X-rays, besides wind shocks, might be at work.
However, it must be stressed that the earliest and X-ray brightest amongst
these few detected objects are similar to the latest O stars, suggesting a
possibly smooth transition between the two processes.Comment: 30 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for the ApJS Special Issue on the
Chandra Carina Complex Project (CCCP), scheduled for publication in May 2011.
All 16 CCCP Special Issue papers are available at
http://cochise.astro.psu.edu/Carina_public/special_issue.html through 2011 at
leas
The Physics of Cluster Mergers
Clusters of galaxies generally form by the gravitational merger of smaller
clusters and groups. Major cluster mergers are the most energetic events in the
Universe since the Big Bang. Some of the basic physical properties of mergers
will be discussed, with an emphasis on simple analytic arguments rather than
numerical simulations. Semi-analytic estimates of merger rates are reviewed,
and a simple treatment of the kinematics of binary mergers is given. Mergers
drive shocks into the intracluster medium, and these shocks heat the gas and
should also accelerate nonthermal relativistic particles. X-ray observations of
shocks can be used to determine the geometry and kinematics of the merger. Many
clusters contain cooling flow cores; the hydrodynamical interactions of these
cores with the hotter, less dense gas during mergers are discussed. As a result
of particle acceleration in shocks, clusters of galaxies should contain very
large populations of relativistic electrons and ions. Electrons with Lorentz
factors gamma~300 (energies E = gamma m_e c^2 ~ 150 MeV) are expected to be
particularly common. Observations and models for the radio, extreme
ultraviolet, hard X-ray, and gamma-ray emission from nonthermal particles
accelerated in these mergers are described.Comment: 38 pages with 9 embedded Postscript figures. To appear in Merging
Processes in Clusters of Galaxies, edited by L. Feretti, I. M. Gioia, and G.
Giovannini (Dordrecht: Kluwer), in press (2001
The first X-ray survey of Galactic Luminous Blue Variables
Aims: The X-ray emission of massive stars has been studied when these objects
are in their main-sequence phase, as well as in their Wolf-Rayet phase.
However, the X-ray properties of the transitional Luminous Blue Variable (LBV)
phase remain unknown. Methods: Using a dedicated but limited XMM survey as well
as archival XMM and Chandra observations, we performed the first X-ray survey
of LBVs: about half of the known LBVs or candidate LBVs are studied. Results:
Apart from the well known X-ray sources eta Car and Cyg OB2 #12, four
additional LBVs are detected in this survey, though some doubt remains on the
association with the X-ray source for two of these. For the other LBVs, upper
limits on the flux were derived, down to for
PCyg. This variety in the strength of the X-ray emission is discussed, with
particular emphasis on the potential influence of binarity.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, accepted by A&
Ethylene supports colonization of plant roots by the mutualistic fungus Piriformospora indica
The mutualistic basidiomycete Piriformospora indica colonizes roots of mono- and dicotyledonous plants, and thereby improves plant health and yield. Given the capability of P. indica to colonize a broad range of hosts, it must be anticipated that the fungus has evolved efficient strategies to overcome plant immunity and to establish a proper environment for nutrient acquisition and reproduction. Global gene expression studies in barley identified various ethylene synthesis and signaling components that were differentially regulated in P. indica-colonized roots. Based on these findings we examined the impact of ethylene in the symbiotic association. The data presented here suggest that P. indica induces ethylene synthesis in barley and Arabidopsis roots during colonization. Moreover, impaired ethylene signaling resulted in reduced root colonization, Arabidopsis mutants exhibiting constitutive ethylene signaling, -synthesis or ethylene-related defense were hyper-susceptible to P. indica. Our data suggest that ethylene signaling is required for symbiotic root colonization by P. indica
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