781 research outputs found
An Optical Study of BG Geminorum: An Ellipsoidal Binary with an Unseen Primar Star
We describe optical photometric and spectroscopic observations of the bright
variable BG Geminorum. Optical photometry shows a pronounced ellipsoidal
variation of the K0 I secondary, with amplitudes of ~0.5 mag at VRI and a
period of 91.645 days. A deep primary eclipse is visible for wavelengths <
4400A; a shallower secondary eclipse is present at longer wavelengths. Eclipse
timings and the radial velocity curve of the K0 secondary star indicate an
interacting binary where a lobe-filling secondary, M_2 ~ 0.5 Msun, transfers
material into a extended disk around a massive primary, M_1 ~ 4.5 Msun. The
primary star is either an early B-type star or a black hole. If it did contain
a black hole, BG Gem would be the longest period black hole binary known by a
factor of 10, as well as the only eclipsing black hole binary system.Comment: 27 pages, includes 8 figures and 5 tables, accepted to A
Spectroscopic and Photometric Study of the Contact Binary BO CVn
We present the results of the study of the contact binary system BO CVn. We
have obtained physical parameters of the components based on combined analysis
of new, multi-color light curves and spectroscopic mass ratio. This is the
first time the latter has been determined for this object. We derived the
contact configuration for the system with a very high filling factor of about
88 percent. We were able to reproduce the observed light curve, namely the flat
bottom of the secondary minimum, only if a third light has been added into the
list of free parameters. The resulting third light contribution is significant,
about 20-24 percent, while the absolute parameters of components are: M1=1.16,
M2=0.39, R1=1.62 and R2=1.00 (in solar units). The O-C diagram shows an upward
parabola which, under the conservative mass transfer assumption, would
correspond to a mass transfer rate of dM/dt = 6.3 \times 10-8M\odot/yr, matter
being transferred from the less massive component to the more massive one. No
cyclic, short-period variations have been found in the O-C diagram (but
longer-term variations remain a possibility)Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication by New
Astronom
Signatures of the disk-jet coupling in the Broad-line Radio Quasar 4C+74.26
Here we explore the disk-jet connection in the broad-line radio quasar
4C+74.26, utilizing the results of the multiwavelength monitoring of the
source. The target is unique in that its radiative output at radio wavelengths
is dominated by a moderately-beamed nuclear jet, at optical frequencies by the
accretion disk, and in the hard X-ray range by the disk corona. Our analysis
reveals a correlation (local and global significance of 96\% and 98\%,
respectively) between the optical and radio bands, with the disk lagging behind
the jet by days. We discuss the possible explanation for this,
speculating that the observed disk and the jet flux changes are generated by
magnetic fluctuations originating within the innermost parts of a truncated
disk, and that the lag is related to a delayed radiative response of the disk
when compared with the propagation timescale of magnetic perturbations along
relativistic outflow. This scenario is supported by the re-analysis of the
NuSTAR data, modelled in terms of a relativistic reflection from the disk
illuminated by the coronal emission, which returns the inner disk radius
. We discuss the global energetics in
the system, arguing that while the accretion proceeds at the Eddington rate,
with the accretion-related bolometric luminosity erg s , the jet total kinetic energy
erg s, inferred from the dynamical
modelling of the giant radio lobes in the source, constitutes only a small
fraction of the available accretion power.Comment: 9 pages and 6 figures, ApJ accepte
Radio and optical intra-day variability observations of five blazars
We carried out a pilot campaign of radio and optical band intra-day
variability (IDV) observations of five blazars (3C66A, S5 0716+714, OJ287,
B0925+504, and BL Lacertae) on December 18--21, 2015 by using the radio
telescope in Effelsberg (Germany) and several optical telescopes in Asia,
Europe, and America. After calibration, the light curves from both 5 GHz radio
band and the optical R band were obtained, although the data were not smoothly
sampled over the sampling period of about four days. We tentatively analyse the
amplitudes and time scales of the variabilities, and any possible periodicity.
The blazars vary significantly in the radio (except 3C66A and BL Lacertae with
only marginal variations) and optical bands on intra- and inter-day time
scales, and the source B0925+504 exhibits a strong quasi-periodic radio
variability. No significant correlation between the radio- and optical-band
variability appears in the five sources, which we attribute to the radio IDV
being dominated by interstellar scintillation whereas the optical variability
comes from the source itself. However, the radio- and optical-band variations
appear to be weakly correlated in some sources and should be investigated based
on well-sampled data from future observations.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, accepted by MNRA
UVSat: a concept of an ultraviolet/optical photometric satellite
Time-series photometry from space in the ultraviolet can be presently done
with only a few platforms, none of which is able to provide wide-field
long-term high-cadence photometry. We present a concept of UVSat, a twin space
telescope which will be capable to perform this kind of photometry, filling an
observational niche. The satellite will host two telescopes, one for
observations in the ultraviolet, the other for observations in the optical
band. We also briefly show what science can be done with UVSat.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in the Proceedings of
the PAS (Proc. of the 2nd BRITE Science conference, Innsbruck
The Role of HE4 in Ovarian Cancer Follow-up: A Review.
Objective: The aim of this review was to analyze the state of the art about HE4 and follow-up in patients treated for ovarian cancer. Methods: A literature search was conducted in the MEDLINE database using the key words "HE4" and "ovarian cancer" and "recurrence" or "relapse" or "follow up." Results: Seven of 28 clinical studies were selected. Four studies were prospective, and all of them were based on a small number of patients (8Y73 women). A failure of HE4 levels to normalize at completion of standard therapy may indicate a poor prognosis, thus suggesting the need of a closer follow-up. Moreover, HE4 showed better sensibility and specificity in the diagnosis of ovarian cancer recurrence with respect to CA-125, being also an earlier indicator of the relapse with a lead time of 5 to 8 months. HE4 showed a better performance in this setting if performed in association with other markers (CA-125, CA-72.4). HE4 seems to be an independent predictive factor for the surgical outcome at secondary cytoreductive surgery and to maintain its prognostic role even after the recurrence. Conclusions: These preliminary data start to suggest a superiority of HE4 over CA-125 in the detection of ovarian cancer recurrence. Moreover, the prognostic role of HE4 could help clinicians to personalize the follow-up program, whereas its predictive role could be useful to plan the treatment of the relapse. The role of HE4 in ovarian cancer follow-up deserves to be further investigated in prospective randomized multicentric studies
Pulsational Mapping of Calcium Across the Surface of a White Dwarf
We constrain the distribution of calcium across the surface of the white
dwarf star G29-38 by combining time series spectroscopy from Gemini-North with
global time series photometry from the Whole Earth Telescope. G29-38 is
actively accreting metals from a known debris disk. Since the metals sink
significantly faster than they mix across the surface, any inhomogeneity in the
accretion process will appear as an inhomogeneity of the metals on the surface
of the star. We measure the flux amplitudes and the calcium equivalent width
amplitudes for two large pulsations excited on G29-38 in 2008. The ratio of
these amplitudes best fits a model for polar accretion of calcium and rules out
equatorial accretion.Comment: Accepted to the Astrophysical Journal. 16 pages, 10 figures
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