170 research outputs found
Atmospheric scintillation in astronomical photometry
Scintillation noise due to the Earth's turbulent atmosphere can be a dominant noise source in high-precision astronomical photometry when observing bright targets from the ground. Here we describe the phenomenon of scintillation from its physical origins to its effect on photometry. We show that Young's scintillation-noise approximation used by many astronomers tends to underestimate the median scintillation noise at several major observatories around the world. We show that using median atmospheric optical turbulence profiles, which are now available for most sites, provides a better estimate of the expected scintillation noise and that real-time turbulence profiles can be used to precisely characterize the scintillation-noise component of contemporaneous photometric measurements. This will enable a better understanding and calibration of photometric noise sources and the effectiveness of scintillation correction techniques. We also provide new equations for calculating scintillation noise, including for extremely large telescopes where the scintillation noise will actually be lower than previously thought. These equations highlight the fact that scintillation noise and shot noise have the same dependence on exposure time and so if an observation is scintillation limited, it will be scintillation limited for all exposure times. The ratio of scintillation noise to shot noise is also only weakly dependent on telescope diameter and so a bigger telescope may not yield a reduction in fractional scintillation noise
Searching for nova shells around cataclysmic variables -- II. A second campaign
We report on our second campaign to search for old nova shells around cataclysmic variables (CVs). Our aim was to test the theory that nova eruptions cause cycles in the mass transfer rates of CVs. These mass transfer cycles change the behaviour of CVs during their intereruption periods. We examined Hα images of 47 objects and found no new shells around any of the targets. Combining our latest results with those of our previous campaign (Sahman et al.), and the searches by Schmidtobreick et al. and Pagnotta & Zurek, we estimate that the nova-like phase of the mass transfer cycle lasts âŒ3000âyr
The mass and radius of the M dwarf companion to GD 448
We present spectroscopy and photometry of GD 448, a detached white dwarf - M dwarf binary with a period of 2.47 h. We find that the Na I 8200-Ă
feature is composed of narrow emission lines, owing to irradiation of the M dwarf by the white dwarf, within broad absorption lines that are essentially unaffected by heating. Combined with an improved spectroscopic orbit and gravitational redshift measurement from spectra of the Hα line, we are able to derive masses for the white dwarf and M dwarf directly (0.41 ± 0.01 and 0.096 ± 0.004 Mâ, respectively). We use a simple model of the Ca II emission lines to establish the radius of the M dwarf assuming the emission from its surface to be proportional to the incident flux per unit area from the white dwarf. The radius derived is 0.125 ± 0.020 Râ. The M dwarf appears to be a normal main-sequence star in terms of its mass and radius, and is less than half the size of its Roche lobe. The thermal time-scale of the M dwarf is much longer than the cooling age of the white dwarf, so we conclude that the M dwarf was unaffected by the common-envelope phase. The anomalous width of the Hα emission from the M dwarf remains to be explained, but the strength of the line may be due to X-ray heating of the M dwarf owing to accretion on to the white dwarf from the M dwarf wind
Roche tomography of cataclysmic variables: I. artefacts and techniques
Roche tomography is a technique used for imaging the Roche-lobe filling
secondary stars in cataclysmic variables (CVs). In order to interpret Roche
tomograms correctly, one must determine whether features in the reconstruction
are real, or due to statistical or systematic errors. We explore the effects of
systematic errors using reconstructions of simulated datasets and show that
systematic errors result in characteristic distortions of the final
reconstructions that can be identified and corrected. In addition, we present a
new method of estimating statistical errors on tomographic reconstructions
using a Monte-Carlo bootstrapping algorithm and show this method to be much
more reliable than Monte-Carlo methods which `jiggle' the data points in
accordance with the size of their error bars.Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
WASP 1628+10-an EL CVn-type binary with a very low mass stripped red giant star and multiperiodic pulsations
The star 1SWASP J162842.31+101416.7 (WASP 1628+10) is one of several EL CVn-type
stars recently identified using the Wide Angle Search for Planets (WASP) data base, i.e. an
eclipsing binary star in which an A-type dwarf star (WASP 1628+10 A) eclipses the remnant
of a disrupted red giant star (WASP 1628+10 B). We have measured the masses, radii and
luminosities of the stars in WASP 1628+10 using photometry obtained in three bands (u
,
g
, r
) with the ULTRACAM instrument and medium-resolution spectroscopy. The properties
of the remnant are well matched by models for stars in a rarely observed state evolving to
higher effective temperatures at nearly constant luminosity prior to becoming a very low mass
white dwarf composed almost entirely of helium, i.e. we confirm that WASP 1628+10 B
is a precursor of a helium white dwarf (pre-He-WD). WASP 1628+10 A appears to be a
normal A2 V star with a mass of 1.36 ± 0.05 M. By fitting models to the spectrum of this
star around the Hγ line we find that it has an effective temperature Teff, A = 7500 ± 200 K
and a metallicity [Fe/H] = â0.3 ± 0.3. The mass of WASP 1628+10 B is only 0.135 ±
0.02 M. The effective temperature of this pre-He-WD is approximately 9200 K. The ULTRACAM
photometry of WASP 1628+10 shows variability at several frequencies around
40 cycles dâ1, which is typical for ÎŽ Sct-type pulsations often observed in early A-type stars
like WASP 1628+10 A. We also observe frequencies near 114 and 129 cycles dâ1, much
higher than the frequencies normally seen in ÎŽ Sct stars. Additional photometry through the
primary eclipse will be required to confirm that these higher frequencies are due to pulsations
in WASP 1628+10 B. If confirmed, this would be only the second known example of a
pre-He-WD showing high-frequency pulsations
First measurement of the total gravitational quadrupole moment of a black widow companion
We present the first measurement of the gravitational quadrupole moment of the companion star of a spider pulsar, namely the black widow PSR J2051â0827. To this end, we have re-analysed radio timing data using a new model that is able to account for periastron precession caused by tidal and centrifugal deformations of the star as well as by general relativity. The model allows for a time-varying component of the quadrupole moment, thus self-consistently accounting for the ill-understood orbital period variations observed in these systems. Our analysis results in the first detection of orbital precession in a spider system at ÏË=â68â.6+0â.9â0â.5 yrâ1 and the most accurate determination of orbital eccentricity for PSR J2051â0827 with e = (4.2 ± 0.1) Ă 10â5. We show that the variable quadrupole component is about 100 times smaller than the average quadrupole moment QÂŻ=â2.2+0.6â1Ă1041 kgm2â . We discuss how accurate modelling of high-precision optical light curves of the companion star will allow its apsidal motion constant to be derived from our results
Years of RXTE Monitoring of Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 4U 0142+61: Long-Term Variability
We report on 10 years of monitoring of the 8.7-s Anomalous X-ray Pulsar 4U
0142+61 using the Rossi X-Ray Timing Explorer (RXTE). This pulsar exhibited
stable rotation from 2000 March until 2006 February: the RMS phase residual for
a spin-down model which includes nu, nudot, and nuddot is 2.3%. We report a
possible phase-coherent timing solution valid over a 10-yr span extending back
to March 1996. A glitch may have occured between 1998 and 2000, but is not
required by the existing timing data. The pulse profile has been evolving since
2000. In particular, the dip of emission between its two peaks got shallower
between 2002 and 2006, as if the profile were evolving back to its pre-2000
morphology, following an earlier event, which possibly also included the glitch
suggested by the timing data. These profile variations are seen in the 2-4 keV
band but not in 6-8 keV. We also detect a slow increase in the pulsed flux
between 2002 May and 2004 December, such that it has risen by 36+/-3% over 2.6
years in the 2-10 keV band. The pulsed flux variability and the narrow-band
pulse profile changes present interesting challenges to aspects of the magnetar
model.Comment: 28 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Ap
PTF1 J085713+331843, a new post common-envelope binary in the orbital period gap of cataclysmic variables
We report the discovery and analysis of PTF1 J085713+331843, a new eclipsing post common-envelope detached white-dwarf red-dwarf binary with a 2.5h orbital period discovered by the Palomar Transient Factory. ULTRACAM multicolour photometry over multiple orbital periods reveals a light curve with a deep flat-bottomed primary eclipse and a strong reflection effect. Phase-resolved spectroscopy shows broad Balmer absorption lines from the DA white dwarf and phase-dependent Balmer emission lines originating on the irradiated side of the red dwarf. The temperature of the DA white dwarf is K and the spectral type of the red dwarf is M3-5. A combined modelling of the light curve and the radial velocity variations results in a white dwarf mass of and radius of , and a red dwarf mass and radius of and . The system is either a detached cataclysmic variable or has emerged like from the common envelope phase at nearly its current orbital period. In Myr, this system will become a cataclysmic variable in the period gap
The donor star radial velocity curve in the cataclysmic variable GYÂ Cnc confirms white dwarf eclipse modelling mass
A large number of white dwarf and donor masses in cataclysmic variables have been found via modelling the primary eclipse,
a method that relies on untested assumptions. Recent measurements of the mass of the white dwarf in the cataclysmic variable GY Cnc, obtained via modelling its ultraviolet spectrum, conflict with the mass obtained via modelling the eclipse light curve. Here we measure the radial velocity of the absorption lines from the donor star in GY Cnc to be Kabs = 280 ± 2 km sâ1, in
excellent agreement with the prediction based on the masses derived from modelling the eclipse light curve. It is possible that
the white dwarf mass derived from the ultraviolet spectrum of GY Cnc is affected by the difficulty of disentangling the white
dwarf spectrum from the accretion disc spectrum
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