859 research outputs found
A Thousand and One Nova Outbursts
Multicycle nova evolution models have been calculated over the past twenty
years, the number being limited by numerical constraints. Here we present a
long-term evolution code that enables a continuous calculation through an
unlimited number of nova cycles for an unlimited evolution time, even up to (or
exceeding) a Hubble time. Starting with two sets of the three independent nova
parameters -- the white dwarf mass, the temperature of its isothermal core, and
the rate of mass transfer on to it -- we have followed the evolution of two
models, with initial masses of 1 and 0.65 solar masses, accretion rates
(constant throughout each calculation) of 1e-11 and 1e-9 solar-masses/yr, and
relatively high initial temperatures (as they are likely to be at the onset of
the outburst phase), through over 1000 and over 3000 cycles, respectively. The
results show that although on the short-term consecutive outbursts are almost
identical, on the long-term scale the characteristics change. This is mainly
due to the changing core temperature, which decreases very similarly to that of
a cooling white dwarf for a time, but at a slower rate thereafter. As the white
dwarf's mass continually decreases, since both models lose more mass than they
accrete, the central pressure decreases accordingly. The outbursts on the
massive white dwarf change gradually from fast to moderately fast, and the
other characteristics (velocity, abundance ratios, isotopic ratios) change,
too. Very slowly, a steady state is reached, where all characteristics, both in
quiescence and in outburst, remain almost constant. For the less massive white
dwarf accreting at a high rate, outbursts are similar throughout the evolution.Comment: To be published in MNRA
Performance issues with photonic beamformers
A photonic beamformer is presented, having smooth behavior. Third-order nonlinearities, resulting from its optoelectronic components, are investigated, with emphasis on their impact on the contrast of imaging radars. This contrast is shown to be severely limited by the induced RF nonlinearities. Limitations on the allowable modulation index are studied for linearly-chirped pulses returned from clutter
Constant Size Molecular Descriptors For Use With Machine Learning
A set of molecular descriptors whose length is independent of molecular size
is developed for machine learning models that target thermodynamic and
electronic properties of molecules. These features are evaluated by monitoring
performance of kernel ridge regression models on well-studied data sets of
small organic molecules. The features include connectivity counts, which
require only the bonding pattern of the molecule, and encoded distances, which
summarize distances between both bonded and non-bonded atoms and so require the
full molecular geometry. In addition to having constant size, these features
summarize information regarding the local environment of atoms and bonds, such
that models can take advantage of similarities resulting from the presence of
similar chemical fragments across molecules. Combining these two types of
features leads to models whose performance is comparable to or better than the
current state of the art. The features introduced here have the advantage of
leading to models that may be trained on smaller molecules and then used
successfully on larger molecules.Comment: 18 pages, 5 figure
Supernova 2012ec: Identification of the progenitor and early monitoring with PESSTO
We present the identification of the progenitor of the Type IIP SN 2012ec in
archival pre-explosion HST WFPC2 and ACS/WFC F814W images. The properties of
the progenitor are further constrained by non-detections in pre-explosion WFPC2
F450W and F606W images. We report a series of early photometric and
spectroscopic observations of SN 2012ec. The r'-band light curve shows a
plateau with M(r')=-17.0. The early spectrum is similar to the Type IIP SN
1999em, with the expansion velocity measured at Halpha absorption minimum of
-11,700 km/s (at 1 day post-discovery). The photometric and spectroscopic
evolution of SN 2012ec shows it to be a Type IIP SN, discovered only a few days
post-explosion (<6d). We derive a luminosity for the progenitor, in comparison
with MARCS model SEDs, of log L/Lsun = 5.15+/-0.19, from which we infer an
initial mass range of 14-22Msun. This is the first SN with an identified
progenitor to be followed by the Public ESO Spectroscopic Survey of Transient
Objects (PESSTO).Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, MNRAS accepte
Interaction-powered supernovae: Rise-time vs. peak-luminosity correlation and the shock-breakout velocity
Interaction of supernova (SN) ejecta with the optically thick circumstellar
medium (CSM) of a progenitor star can result in a bright, long-lived shock
breakout event. Candidates for such SNe include Type IIn and superluminous SNe.
If some of these SNe are powered by interaction, then there should be a
relation between their peak luminosity, bolometric light-curve rise time, and
shock-breakout velocity. Given that the shock velocity during shock breakout is
not measured, we expect a correlation, with a significant spread, between the
rise time and the peak luminosity of these SNe. Here, we present a sample of 15
SNe IIn for which we have good constraints on their rise time and peak
luminosity from observations obtained using the Palomar Transient Factory. We
report on a possible correlation between the R-band rise time and peak
luminosity of these SNe, with a false-alarm probability of 3%. Assuming that
these SNe are powered by interaction, combining these observables and theory
allows us to deduce lower limits on the shock-breakout velocity. The lower
limits on the shock velocity we find are consistent with what is expected for
SNe (i.e., ~10^4 km/s). This supports the suggestion that the early-time light
curves of SNe IIn are caused by shock breakout in a dense CSM. We note that
such a correlation can arise from other physical mechanisms. Performing such a
test on other classes of SNe (e.g., superluminous SNe) can be used to rule out
the interaction model for a class of events.Comment: Accepted to ApJ, 6 page
On the fermionic T-duality of the AdS_4 \times CP^3 sigma-model
In this note we consider a fermionic T-duality of the coset realization of
the type IIA sigma-model on AdS_4 \times CP^3 with respect to the three flat
directions in AdS_4, six of the fermionic coordinates and three of the CP^3
directions. We show that the Buscher procedure fails as it leads to a singular
transformation and discuss the result and its implications.Comment: LaTeX2e, 9 pages, no figures, JHEP style; v2: minor clarifications;
v3: typos fixed, matches the published versio
Performance issues with photonic beamformers
A photonic beamformer is presented, having smooth behavior. Third-order nonlinearities, resulting from its optoelectronic components, are investigated, with emphasis on their impact on the contrast of imaging radars. This contrast is shown to be severely limited by the induced RF nonlinearities. Limitations on the allowable modulation index are studied for linearly-chirped pulses returned from clutter
An outburst from a massive star 40 days before a supernova explosion
Various lines of evidence suggest that very massive stars experience extreme
mass-loss episodes shortly before they explode as a supernova. Interestingly,
several models predict such pre-explosion outbursts. Establishing a causal
connection between these mass-loss episodes and the final supernova explosion
will provide a novel way to study pre-supernova massive-star evolution. Here we
report on observations of a remarkable mass-loss event detected 40 days prior
to the explosion of the Type IIn supernova SN 2010mc (PTF 10tel). Our
photometric and spectroscopic data suggest that this event is a result of an
energetic outburst, radiating at least 6x10^47 erg of energy, and releasing
about 0.01 Solar mass at typical velocities of 2000 km/s. We show that the
temporal proximity of the mass-loss outburst and the supernova explosion
implies a causal connection between them. Moreover, we find that the outburst
luminosity and velocity are consistent with the predictions of the wave-driven
pulsation model and disfavor alternative suggestions.Comment: Nature 494, 65, including supplementary informatio
Search for precursor eruptions among Type IIb supernovae
The progenitor stars of several Type IIb supernovae (SNe) show indications
for extended hydrogen envelopes. These envelopes might be the outcome of
luminous energetic pre-explosion events, so-called precursor eruptions. We use
the Palomar Transient Factory (PTF) pre-explosion observations of a sample of
27 nearby Type IIb SNe to look for such precursors during the final years prior
to the SN explosion. No precursors are found when combining the observations in
15-day bins, and we calculate the absolute-magnitude-dependent upper limit on
the precursor rate. At the 90% confidence level, Type IIb SNe have on average
precursors as bright as absolute -band magnitude in the final
3.5 years before the explosion and events over the final year. In
contrast, precursors among SNe IIn have a times higher rate. The
kinetic energy required to unbind a low-mass stellar envelope is comparable to
the radiated energy of a few-weeks-long precursor which would be detectable for
the closest SNe in our sample. Therefore, mass ejections, if they are common in
such SNe, are radiatively inefficient or have durations longer than months.
Indeed, when using 60-day bins a faint precursor candidate is detected prior to
SN 2012cs (% false-alarm probability). We also report the detection of
the progenitor of SN 2011dh which does not show detectable variability over the
final two years before the explosion. The suggested progenitor of SN 2012P is
still present, and hence is likely a compact star cluster, or an unrelated
object.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
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