701 research outputs found
Keplerian discs around post-AGB stars: a common phenomenon?
Aims: We aim at showing that the broad-band SED characteristics of our sample
of post-AGB stars are best interpreted, assuming the circumstellar dust is
stored in Keplerian rotating passive discs.
Methods: We present a homogeneous and systematic study of the Spectral Energy
Distributions (SEDs) of a sample of 51 post-AGB objects. The selection criteria
to define the whole sample were tuned to cover the broad-band characteristics
of known binary post-AGB stars. The whole sample includes 20 dusty RV Tauri
stars from the General Catalogue of Variable Stars (GCVS). We supplemented our
own Geneva optical photometry with literature data to cover a broad range of
fluxes from the UV to the far-IR.
Results: All the SEDs display very similar characteristics: a large IR excess
with a dust excess starting near the sublimation temperature, irrespective of
the effective temperature of the central star. Moreover, when available, the
long wavelength fluxes show a black-body slope indicative of the presence of a
component of large mm sized grains.
Conclusions: We argue that in all systems, gravitationally bound dusty discs
are present. The discs must be puffed-up to cover a large opening angle for the
central star and we argue that the discs have some similarity with the passive
discs detected around young stellar objects. We interpret the presence of a
disc to be a signature for binarity of the central object, but this will need
confirmation by long-term monitoring of the radial velocities. We argue that
dusty RV Tauri stars are those binaries which happen to be in the Population II
instability strip.Comment: 29 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Entropy and information in neural spike trains: Progress on the sampling problem
The major problem in information theoretic analysis of neural responses and
other biological data is the reliable estimation of entropy--like quantities
from small samples. We apply a recently introduced Bayesian entropy estimator
to synthetic data inspired by experiments, and to real experimental spike
trains. The estimator performs admirably even very deep in the undersampled
regime, where other techniques fail. This opens new possibilities for the
information theoretic analysis of experiments, and may be of general interest
as an example of learning from limited data.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; referee suggested changes, accepted versio
Universal Statistical Behavior of Neural Spike Trains
We construct a model that predicts the statistical properties of spike trains
generated by a sensory neuron. The model describes the combined effects of the
neuron's intrinsic properties, the noise in the surrounding, and the external
driving stimulus. We show that the spike trains exhibit universal statistical
behavior over short times, modulated by a strongly stimulus-dependent behavior
over long times. These predictions are confirmed in experiments on H1, a
motion-sensitive neuron in the fly visual system.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure
Distinct roles for strigolactones in cyst nematode parasitism of Arabidopsis roots
Phytohormones play an essential role in different stages of plant-nematode interactions. Strigolactones (SLs) are a novel class of plant hormones which play an important role in plant development. Furthermore, certain soil-inhabiting organisms exploit this plant molecule as allelochemical. However, whether SLs play a role in plant parasitism by nematodes is as yet unknown. This prompted us to investigate the potential role of SLs in different stages of the nematode life cycle using the beet cyst nematode Heterodera schachtii and Arabidopsis as a model system. We analyzed the effect of SLs on cyst nematode hatching, host attraction and invasion, and the establishment of a feeding relation upon infection of the SL deficient mutant max4-1 and the SL signaling mutant max2-1. In addition, infection assays were performed under phosphate shortage to enhance SL production and in the presence of the synthetic SL analog GR24. From this study, we can conclude that SLs do not contribute to cyst nematode hatching at the levels tested but that they do play a role in host attraction and subsequent invasion in a MAX2 dependent manner. Furthermore, we observed that increased levels of exogenous and endogenous SLs change the root invasion zone. Upon root infection, cyst nematode development was enhanced in both the max2-1 and max4-1 mutants due to the formation of enlarged feeding cells. These data provide evidence for distinct roles of SLs during cyst nematode parasitism of plant roots
Filamentary flow of vortices with infinite tilt modulus in Bi_2Sr_2Ca_1Cu_2O_{8+\delta} single crystal
Using micro-bridge technique, we have studied the vortex dynamics in a very
low temperature region (i.e. T/Tc -> 0) of the B-T phase diagram of
Bi_2Sr_2Ca_1Cu_2O_{8+\delta} single crystal. We distinguish two types of vortex
dynamics near the depinning threshold depending on the magnitude of the
vortex-vortex interactions. For 0.01 <= \mu_0H <= 1T, we show that
current-voltage characteristics (I-V) are strongly dependent on the history of
magnetic field and current cycling. The sharp peak, so called "peak effect"
(PE), observed in \mu_0H-Ic curve is due to a metastable state which can be
removed after current cycling. At low field, I-V curves exhibit steps which
clearly enligth a "fingerprint phenomenon" as it can be seen the current
dependence of the differential resistance Rd = dV/dI. We associate this to
vortices flow through uncorrelated channels for the highly defective lattice.
Indeed, as field sufficiently increase, these peaks merge giving broader ones
indicating a crossover from filamentaty strings to braid river like in which
vortex-vortex interactions becomes significant. As confirmed by the
discontinuity in the critical exponent value \beta determined in the vicinity
of the threshold current using the power-law scaling V (I-Ic)^\beta with a
crossover from \beta = 2.2 to \beta = 1.2. The strong vortex correlation along
the c-axis has been clearly demonstrated using the dc-flux-transformer geometry
for transport measurements which confirms the pseudo-2D behaviour of the FLL.
Our transport studies are in good agreement with recent simulations results of
2D elastic objects driven by repulsive interactions through a random pinning
potential
Stellar population synthesis of post-AGB stars: the s-process in MACHO47.2496.8
The low-metallicity RV Tauri star MACHO47.2496.8, recently discovered in the
Large Magellanic Cloud, is highly enriched in carbon and heavy elements
produced by the slow neutron capture process (s-process), and is most probably
a genuine post-C(N-type) asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star. We use the
analysis of the abundances of MACHO47.2496.8 to constrain free parameters in
AGB models. We test which values of the free parameters describing uncertain
physical mechanisms in AGB stars, namely the third dredge-up and the features
of the 13C neutron source, produce models that better match the abundances
observed in MACHO47.2496.8. We carry out stellar population synthesis coupled
with s-process nucleosynthesis using a synthetic stellar evolution code. The
s-process ratios observed in MACHO47.2496.8 can be matched by the same models
that explain the s-process ratios of Galactic AGB and post-AGB stars of
metallicity > Z_sun/10, except for the choice of the effectiveness of 13C as a
neutron source, which has to be lower by roughly a factor of 3 to 6. The less
effective neutron source for lower metallicities is also required when
comparing population synthesis results to observations of Galactic halo
-enhanced stars, such as Pb stars. The 12C/13C ratio in MACHO47.2496.8
cannot be matched simultaneously and requires the occurrence of extra-mixing
processes. The confirmed trend of the decreased efficiency of the 13C neutron
source with metallicity requires an explanation from AGB s-process models. The
present work is to date the first comparison between theoretical models and the
detailed abundances of an extragalactic post-AGB star.Comment: accepted for publication on Astronomy & Astrophysics Letter
Strong dust processing in circumstellar discs around 6 RV Tauri stars. Are dusty RV Tauri stars all binaries?
We present extended Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs) of seven classical
RV Tauri stars, using newly obtained submillimetre continuum measurements and
Geneva optical photometry supplemented with literature data. The broad-band
SEDs show a large IR excess with a black-body slope at long wavelengths in six
of the seven stars, R Sct being the noticeable exception. This long wavelength
slope is best explained assuming the presence of a dust component of large
grains in the circumstellar material. We show that the most likely distribution
of the circumstellar dust around the six systems is that the dust resides in a
disc. Moreover, very small outflow velocities are needed to explain the
presence of dust near the sublimation temperature and we speculate that the
discs are Keplerian. The structure and evolution of these compact discs are as
yet not understood but a likely prerequisite for their formation is that the
dusty RV Tauri stars are binaries.Comment: 10 pages, will be published in A&
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