870 research outputs found
Optical Spectroscopy of X-Mega targets in the Carina Nebula - VI. FO 15: a new O-Type double-lined eclipsing binary
We report the discovery of a new O-type double-lined spectroscopic binary
with a short orbital period of 1.4 days. We find the primary component of this
binary, FO 15, to have an approximate spectral type O5.5Vz, i.e. a
Zero-Age-Main-Sequence star. The secondary appears to be of spectral type
O9.5V. We have performed a numerical model fit to the public ASAS photometry,
which shows that FO 15 is also an eclipsing binary. We find an orbital
inclination of ~ 80 deg. From a simultaneous light-curve and radial velocity
solution we find the masses and radii of the two components to be 30 +/- 1 and
16 +/- 1 solar masses and 7.5 +/- 0.5 and 5.3 +/- 0.5 solar radii. These radii,
and hence also the luminosities, are smaller than those of normal O-type stars,
but similar to recently born ZAMS O-type stars. The absolute magnitudes derived
from our analysis locate FO 15 at the same distance as Eta Carinae. From
Chandra and XMM X-ray images we also find that there are two close X-ray
sources, one coincident with FO 15 and another one without optical counterpart.
This latter seems to be a highly variable source, presumably due to a
pre-main-sequence stellar neighbour of FO 15.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRAS.
Higher resolution version available at
http://lilen.fcaglp.unlp.edu.ar/papers2006.htm
Neutral Gas Bubbles Surrounding Southern Optical Ring Nebulae: Anon(WR23) and RCW52
Utilizando datos interferom étricos de la l ínea de 21 cm del H I analizamos la distribuci ón del hidr ógeno neutroen la vecindad de las nebulosas anillo ópticas alrededor de las estrellas WR23 (WC6) y LS 1887 (O8V). Identificamos sendas burbujas de gas neutro interestelar asociadas a las nebulosas anillo Anon(WR23) y RCW52.Based on interferometric H I 21 cm line data we analyze the distribution of the neutral hydrogen in the environsof the optical ring nebulae around WR23 (WC6) and LS 1887 (O8V). We identify the interstellar atomic gasbubbles associated with the optical ring nebulae Anon(WR23) and RCW52
Can a charged ring levitate a neutral, polarizable object? Can Earnshaw's Theorem be extended to such objects?
Stable electrostatic levitation and trapping of a neutral, polarizable object
by a charged ring is shown to be theoretically impossible. Earnshaw's Theorem
precludes the existence of such a stable, neutral particle trap.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
Optical spectroscopy of X-MEGA targets I. CPD -59 2635: A New Double-Lined O type Binary in the Carina Nebula
Optical spectroscopy of CPD -59 2635, one of the O-type stars in the open cluster Trumpler 16 in the Carina Nebula, reveals this star to be a double-lined binary system. We have obtained the first radial velocity orbit for this system, consisting of a circular solution with a period of 2.2999 days and semi amplitudes of 208 and 273 km/s. This results in minimum masses of 15 and 11 Msol for the binary components of CPD -59 2635, which we classified as O8V and O9.5V, though spectral type variations of the order of 1 subclass, that we identify as the Struve-Sahade effect, seem to be present in both components. From ROSAT HRI observations of CPD -59 2635 we determine a luminosity ratio log(L_x/L_bol)~ -7, which is similar to that observed for other O-type stars in the Carina Nebula region. No evidence of light variations is present in the available optical or X-rays data sets
WR bubbles and HeII emission
We present the very first high quality images of the HeII 4686 emission in
three high excitation nebulae of the Magellanic Clouds. A fourth high
excitation nebula, situated around the WR star BAT99-2, was analysed in a
previous letter. Using VLT FORS data, we investigate the morphology of the ring
nebulae around the early-type WN stars BAT99-49 & AB7. We derive the total HeII
fluxes for each object and compare them with the most recent theoretical WR
models. Using Halpha, [OIII] and HeI 5876 images along with long-slit
spectroscopy, we investigate the physical properties of these ring nebulae and
find only moderate chemical enrichment. We also surveyed seven other LMC WR
stars but we failed to detect any HeII emission but note that the nebula around
BAT99-11 shows a N/O ratio and an oxygen abundance slightly lower than the LMC
values, while the nebula around BAT99-134 presents moderate chemical enrichment
similar to the one seen near BAT99-2, 49 and AB7. The third high excitation
nebula presented in this paper, N44C, does not harbor stars hotter than mid-O
main sequence stars. It was suggested to be a fossil X-ray nebula ionized but
our observations of N44C reveal no substantial changes in the excitation
compared to previous results reported in the literature.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures (7 in jpg), accepted by A&A, also available from
http://vela.astro.ulg.ac.be/Preprints/P81/index.htm
Pismis 24-1: The Stellar Upper Mass Limit Preserved
Is there a stellar upper mass limit? Recent statistical work seems to indicate that there is and that it is in the vicinity of 150 solar masses. In this paper we use HST and ground-based data to investigate the brightest members of the cluster Pismis 24, which was previously inferred to have a mass greater than 200 solar masses, in apparent disagreement with that limit. We determine that Pismis 24-1 is composed of at least three objects, the resolved Pismis 24-1SW and the unresolved spectroscopic binary Pismis 24-1NE. The evolutionary zero-age masses of those two objects and that of the nearby Pismis 24-17 are all approximately 100 solar masses, very large but under the stellar upper mass limit
Hubble Space Telescope Imaging of the WR 38/WR38a Cluster
We are conducting a high angular resolution imaging survey of Galactic
Wolf-Rayet stars using the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 aboard the Hubble
Space Telescope. We have found a small stellar cluster associated with the
faint, close pair WR 38 and WR 38a. We present astrometric measurements and
photometry in the wide-band F336W (U), F439W (B), and F555W (V) filter system
for these cluster and nearby stars. We compare their colors and magnitudes with
calibrated model results for reddened stars to identify seven probable main
sequence members of the cluster. A least-squares fit of the colors and
magnitudes of this set yields a cluster reddening of E(B-V) = 1.45 +/- 0.14 mag
and a distance of 3.7^{+3.8}_{-1.2} kpc. We discuss the relationship of this
cluster to other objects along the line of sight, and we argue that the
distance probably lies in the range 5 - 8 kpc (but is not as great as 14.5 kpc
distance recently advocated by Shorlin, Turner, & Pedreros). At a distance of 8
kpc, the cluster would reside in a dense region of the Carina spiral arm, close
to a giant molecular cloud and the starburst cluster NGC 3603.Comment: Submitted to AJ, 24 pages, 3 figures Content is significantly change
- …