8,553 research outputs found

    Towards an Empirical Determination of the ZZ Ceti Instability Strip

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    We present atmospheric parameters for a large sample of DA white dwarfs that are known to be photometrically constant. For each star, we determine the effective temperature and surface gravity by comparing high signal-to-noise ratio optical spectra to the predictions of detailed model atmosphere calculations. We also report the successful prediction and detection of photometric variability in G232-38 based on similar Teff and log g determinations. The atmospheric parameters derived for this sample of constant stars as well as those for the known sample of bright ZZ Ceti stars (now boosted to a total of 39) have been obtained in a highly homogeneous way. We combine them to study the empirical red and blue edges as well as the purity of the ZZ Ceti instability strip. We find that the red edge is rather well constrained whereas there exists a rather large range of possibilities for the slope of the blue edge. Furthermore, the ZZ Ceti instability strip that results from our analysis contains no nonvariable white dwarfs. Our sample of constant stars is part of a much broader spectroscopic survey of bright (V < 17) DA white dwarfs, which we have recently undertaken. We also present here some preliminary results of this survey. Finally, we revisit the analysis by Mukadam et al. of the variable and nonvariable DA stars uncovered as part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Their erroneous conclusion of an instability strip containing several nonvariable stars is traced back to the low signal-to-noise ratio spectroscopic observations used in that survey.Comment: 43 pages, 2 tables, 14 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa

    Spectral analysis and abundances of the post-HB star HD 76431

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    HD76431 is a slow rotating post-HB star that shows an underabundance of helium by 0.5 dex relative to the solar value. These observational facts suggest that atomic diffusion could be active in its atmosphere. We have used the MMT and Bok spectra to estimate the atmospheric parameters of the target star using the model atmospheres and synthetic spectra calculated with TLUSTY and SYNSPEC. The derived values of the effective temperature, surface gravity, helium abundance are consistent with those obtained by Ramspeck et al. (2001b). It appears that NLTE effect are not important for HD76431. We have used Stokes I spectra from ESPaDOnS at CFHT to perform an abundance analysis and a search for observational evidence of vertical stratification of the abundance of certain elements. The results of our abundance analysis are in good agreement with previously published data with respect to average abundances. Our numerical simulations show that carbon and nitrogen reveal signatures of vertical abundance stratification in the atmosphere of HD76431. It appears that the carbon abundance increases toward the deeper atmospheric layers. Nitrogen also shows a similar behaviour, but in deeper atmospheric layers we obtain a significant dispersion for the estimates of its abundance. To our knowledge, this is the first demonstration of vertical abundance stratification of metals in a post-HB star and up to now it is the hottest star to show such stratification features. We also report the detection of two SiIII and one TiIII emission lines in the spectra of HD76431 that were not detected in previous studies.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Theory of temperature dependence of the Fermi surface-induced splitting of the alloy diffuse-scattering intensity peak

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    The explanation is presented for the temperature dependence of the fourfold intensity peak splitting found recently in diffuse scattering from the disordered Cu3Au alloy. The wavevector and temperature dependence of the self-energy is identified as the origin of the observed behaviour. Two approaches for the calculation of the self-energy, the high-temperature expansion and the alpha-expansion, are proposed. Applied to the Cu3Au alloy, both methods predict the increase of the splitting with temperature, in agreement with the experimental results.Comment: 4 pages, 3 EPS figures, RevTeX, submitted to J. Phys. Condens. Matter (Letter to the Editor

    Signatures of electron-boson coupling in half-metallic ferromagnet Mn5_5Ge3_3: study of electron self-energy Σ(ω)\Sigma(\omega) obtained from infrared spectroscopy

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    We report results of our infrared and optical spectroscopy study of a half-metallic ferromagnet Mn5_5Ge3_3. This compound is currently being investigated as a potential injector of spin polarized currents into germanium. Infrared measurements have been performed over a broad frequency (50 - 50000 cm1^{-1}) and temperature (10 - 300 K) range. From the complex optical conductivity σ(ω)\sigma(\omega) we extract the electron self-energy Σ(ω)\Sigma(\omega). The calculation of Σ(ω)\Sigma(\omega) is based on novel numerical algorithms for solution of systems of non-linear equations. The obtained self-energy provides a new insight into electron correlations in Mn5_5Ge3_3. In particular, it reveals that charge carriers may be coupled to bosonic modes, possibly of magnetic origin

    Diluted Random Fields in Mixed Cyanide Crystals

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    A percolation argument and a dilute compressible random field Ising model are used to present a simple model for mixed cyanide crystals. The model reproduces quantitatively several features of the phase diagrams altough some crude approximations are made. In particular critical thresholds x_c at which ferroelastic first order transitions disappear, are calculated. Moreover, transitions are found to remain first order down to x_c for all mixtures except for bromine, for which the transition becomes continuous. All the results are in full agreement with experimental data.Comment: 8 pages, late

    Detailed Spectroscopic and Photometric Analysis of DQ White Dwarfs

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    We present an analysis of spectroscopic and photometric data for cool DQ white dwarfs based on improved model atmosphere calculations. In particular, we revise the atmospheric parameters of the trigonometric parallax sample of Bergeron et al.(2001), and discuss the astrophysical implications on the temperature scale and mean mass, as well as the chemical evolution of these stars. We also analyze 40 new DQ stars discovered in the first data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey.Comment: 6 pages,3 figures, 14th European Workshop on White Dwarfs, ASP Conference Series, in pres

    An Orthogonal Modular Approach to Macromonomers Using Clickable Cyclobutenyl Derivatives and RAFT Polymerization

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    A series of cyclobutene-based macromonomers derived from monomethyl ether poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO), poly(ethyl acrylate) (PEA), poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM), and PEO-b-PNIPAM were synthesized by “click” copper-catalyzed azide−alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC) and reversible addition−fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) polymerization. First, original di- and trifunctional cyclobutene precursors with azido, alkyne and/or chain transfer agent were successfully obtained and fully characterized. Azido- and alkyne-functionalized cyclobutenes were then conjugated with modified PEO bearing azido or alkyne groups, resulting in cyclobutene-based PEOs in quantitative conversions as ascertained by NMR spectroscopy and MALDI−TOF mass spectrometry. The new chain transfer agent-terminated cyclobutene was used to mediate the RAFT polymerization of ethyl acrylate and N-isopropylacrylamide. Well-defined polymers with controlled molecular weights (Mn = 3700−11 500 g·mol−1) and narrow molecular weight distributions (PDI = 1.06−1.14) were thus obtained that retain the cyclobutene functionality, demonstrating the orthogonality of the RAFT process toward the cyclobutenyl insaturation. Combination of CuACC and RAFT polymerization was used to afford PEO-b-PNIPAM block copolymer functionalized by a cyclobutene end-group

    Hot DAVs : a probable new class of pulsating white dwarf stars

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    We have discovered a pulsating DA white dwarf at the lower end of the temperature range 45 000–30 000 K where a few helium atmosphere white dwarfs are known. There are now three such pulsators known, suggesting that a new class of theoretically predicted pulsating white dwarf stars exists. We name them the hot DAV stars. From high-speed photometric observations with the ULTRACAM photometer on the 4.2-m William Herschel Telescope, we show that the hydrogen atmosphere white dwarf star WD1017−138 pulsates in at least one mode with a frequency of 1.62 mHz (a period of 624 s). The amplitude of that mode was near 1 mmag at a 10σ confidence level on one night of observation and an 8.4σ confidence level on a second night. The combined data have a confidence level of 11.8σ. This supports the two other detections of hot DAV stars previously reported. From three Very Large Telescope Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph spectra we confirm also that WD1017−138 is a hydrogen atmosphere white dwarf with no trace of helium or metals with Teff = 32 600 K, log g = 7.8 (cgs) and M = 0.55 M⊙. The existence of pulsations in these DA white dwarfs at the cool edge of the 45 000–30 000 K temperature range supports the thin hydrogen layer model for the deficit of helium atmosphere white dwarfs in this range. DA white dwarfs with thick hydrogen layers do not have the superadiabatic, chemically inhomogeneous (μ-gradient) zone that drives pulsation in this temperature range. The potential for higher amplitude hot DAV stars exists; their discovery would open the possibility of a direct test of the explanation for the deficit of helium atmosphere white dwarfs at these temperatures by asteroseismic probing of the atmospheric layers of the hot DAV stars. A search for pulsation in a further 22 candidates with ULTRACAM on the European Southern Observatory New Technology Telescope gave null results for pulsation at precisions in the range 0.5–3 mmag, suggesting that the pulsation amplitudes in such stars are relatively low, hence near the detection limit with the ground-based telescopes used in the surve

    Observations and asteroseismological analysis of the rapid subdwarf B pulsator EC 09582-1137

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    We made photometric and spectroscopic observations of the rapidly pulsating subdwarf B star EC 09582-1137 with the aim of determining the target's fundamental structural parameters from asteroseismology. The new data comprise ~ 30 hours of fast time-series photometry obtained with SUSI2 at the NTT on La Silla, Chile, as well as 1 hour of low-resolution spectroscopy gathered with EMMI, also mounted on the NTT. From the photometry we detected 5 independent harmonic oscillations in the 135-170 s period range with amplitudes up to 0.5% of the mean brightness of the star. In addition, we extracted two periodicities interpreted as components of a rotationally split multiplet that indicate a rotation period of the order of 2-5 days. We also recovered the first harmonic of the dominant pulsation, albeit at an amplitude below the imposed 4-sigma detection threshold. The spectroscopic observations led to the following estimates of the atmospheric parameters of EC 09582-1137: Teff = 34,806+-233 K, log g = 5.80+-0.04, and log[N(He)/N(H)] = - 1.68+-0.06. Using the observed oscillations as input, we searched in model parameter space for unique solutions that present a good fit to the data. Under the assumption that the two dominant observed periodicities correspond to radial or dipole modes, we were able to isolate a well-constrained optimal model that agrees with the atmospheric parameters derived from spectroscopy. The inferred structural parameters of EC 09582-1137 are Teff = 34,806 K (from spectroscopy), log g = 5.788+-0.004, M = 0.485+-0.011 M_solar, log(M_env/M_star) = - 4.39+-0.10, R = 0.147+-0.002 R_solar, and L = 28.6+-1.7 L_solar. We additionally derive the absolute magnitude M_V = 4.44+-0.05 and the distance d = 1460+-66 pc.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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