3,394 research outputs found

    Tomographic Simulations of Accretion Disks in Cataclysmic Variables - Flickering and Wind

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    Both continuum and emission line flickering are phenomena directly associated with the mass accretion process. In this work we simulate accretion disk Doppler maps including the effects of winds and flickering flares. Synthetic flickering Doppler maps are calculated and the effect of the flickering parameters on the maps is explored. Jets and winds occur in many astrophysical objects where accretion disks are present. Jets are generally absent among the cataclysmic variables (CVs), but there is evidence of mass loss by wind in many objects. CVs are ideal objects to study accretion disks and consequently to study the wind associated with these disks. We also present simulations of accretion disks including the presence of a wind with orbital phase resolution. Synthetic H-alpha line profiles in the optical region are obtained and their corresponding Doppler maps are calculated. The effect of the wind simulation parameters on the wind line profiles is also explored. From this study we verified that optically thick lines and/or emission by diffuse material into the primary Roche lobe are necessary to generate single peaked line profiles, often seen in CVs. The future accounting of these effects is suggested for interpreting Doppler tomography reconstructions.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure

    A grid of Synthetic Spectra for Hot DA White Dwarfs and Its Application in Stellar Population Synthesis

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    In this work we present a grid of LTE and non-LTE synthetic spectra of hot DA white dwarfs (WDs). In addition to its usefulness for the determination of fundamental stellar parameters of isolated WDs and in binaries, this grid will be of interest for the construction of theoretical libraries for stellar studies from integrated light. The spectral grid covers both a wide temperature and gravity range, with 17,000 K <= T_eff <= 100,000 K and 7.0 <= log(g) <= 9.5. The stellar models are built for pure hydrogen and the spectra cover a wavelength range from 900 A to 2.5 microns. Additionally, we derive synthetic HST/ACS, HST/WFC3, Bessel UBVRI and SDSS magnitudes. The grid was also used to model integrated spectral energy distributions of simple stellar populations and our modeling suggests that DAs might be detectable in ultraviolet bands for populations older than ~8 Gyr.Comment: to be published in The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Serie

    Lexical development in early bilinguals: Approaching early bilingualism development in the case of Spanish-Basque bilinguals

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    Early bilingual toddlers who were exposed to English and Spanish from the very beginning were taken in order to participate in a study about lexical and grammatical development by using the MacArthur-Bates’ CDI in a study carried out by Marchman et al. (2004). The MacArthur-Bates’ CDI is a parental questionnaire that allows to know the lexical and grammatical development of a child in a given language. Over and above some factors, what was striking was that every child presented the same characteristics: everyone reported stronger relationships between lexicon and grammar within language, and weaker relationships across language. The aim of the current study was to show that in the case of 5 children, who were exposed to both Spanish and Basque from the very beginning, within language lexical-grammatical associations were stronger than across languages lexical-grammatical associations by using the IDHC and KGNZ. These two instruments are the different CDI adaptations in Spanish and Basque, respectively, owing to the different properties Spanish and Basque have. For this reason, in order to come across with the lexical-grammatical relations, in the current study the focus has been established in the clothes and body parts section in the vocabulary part, then in the section how the child uses and understands the language, and then in the grammatical part words endings, verbs and ML3. Results have shown that in every child’s case within language relationships in Spanish and in Basque were stronger while across language relations were weaker, as happened in Marchman et al. (2004). Furthermore, methodological difficulties while completing the children’s questionnaires in this study were found, so suggestions for further research in this kind of situation have been proposed

    Low-mass eclipsing binaries in the WFCAM Transit Survey : The persistence of the M-dwarf radius inflation problem

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    This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. © 2018 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.We present the characterization of five new short-period low-mass eclipsing binaries (LMEBs) from the WFCAM Transit Survey. The analysis was performed by using the photometric WFCAM J-mag data and additional low- and intermediate-resolution spectroscopic data to obtain both orbital and physical properties of the studied sample. The light curves and the measured radial velocity curves were modelled simultaneously with the JKTEBOP code, with Markov chain MonteCarlo simulations for the error estimates. The best-model fit have revealed that the investigated detached binaries are in very close orbits, with orbital separations of 2.9 ≤ a ≤ 6.7R⊙ and short periods of 0.59 ≤ Porb ≤ 1.72 d, approximately. We have derived stellar masses between 0.24 and 0.72M⊙ and radii ranging from 0.42 to 0.67 R⊙. The great majority of the LMEBs in our sample has an estimated radius far from the predicted values according to evolutionary models. The components with derived masses of M < 0.6M⊙ present a radius inflation of ~9 per cent or more. This general behaviour follows the trend of inflation for partially radiative stars proposed previously. These systems add to the increasing sample of low-mass stellar radii that are not well-reproduced by stellarmodels. They further highlight the need to understand the magnetic activity and physical state of small stars. Missions like TESS will provide many such systems to perform high-precision radius measurements to tightly constrain low-mass stellar evolution models.Peer reviewe

    New Families of Diptera (Insecta) from the Azores Islands: Opomyzidade and Aulacigastridae.

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    Geomyza tripuntacta Fallén, 1820 (Opomyzidade) and Aulacigaster falcata Papp, 1997 (Aulacigastridae) are quoted for the first time for the Azores adding two new families to the Diptera fauna of the Azorean Archipelago

    Detection of the secondary eclipse of Qatar-1b in the Ks band

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    Qatar-1b is a close-orbiting hot Jupiter (Rp1.18R_p\simeq 1.18 RJR_J, Mp1.33M_p\simeq 1.33 MJM_J) around a metal-rich K-dwarf, with orbital separation and period of 0.023 AU and 1.42 days. We have observed the secondary eclipse of this exoplanet in the Ks band with the objective of deriving a brightness temperature for the planet and providing further constraints to the orbital configuration of the system. We obtained near-infrared photometric data from the ground by using the OMEGA2000 instrument at the 3.5 m telescope at Calar Alto (Spain) in staring mode, with the telescope defocused. We have used principal component analysis (PCA) to identify correlated systematic trends in the data. A Markov chain Monte Carlo analysis was performed to model the correlated systematics and fit for the secondary eclipse of Qatar-1b using a previously developed occultation model. We adopted the prayer bead method to assess the effect of red noise on the derived parameters. We measured a secondary eclipse depth of 0.196%0.051%+0.071%0.196\%^{+0.071\%}_{-0.051\%}, which indicates a brightness temperature in the Ks band for the planet of 1885168+2121885^{+212}_{-168} K. We also measured a small deviation in the central phase of the secondary eclipse of 0.00790.0043+0.0162-0.0079^{+0.0162}_{-0.0043}, which leads to a value for ecosωe\cos{\omega} of 0.01230.0067+0.0252-0.0123^{+0.0252}_{-0.0067}. However, this last result needs to be confirmed with more data.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
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