580 research outputs found
Magnetic Activity Cycles in the Exoplanet Host Star epsilon Eridani
The active K2 dwarf epsilon Eri has been extensively characterized, both as a
young solar analog and more recently as an exoplanet host star. As one of the
nearest and brightest stars in the sky, it provides an unparalleled opportunity
to constrain stellar dynamo theory beyond the Sun. We confirm and document the
3 year magnetic activity cycle in epsilon Eri originally reported by Hatzes and
coworkers, and we examine the archival data from previous observations spanning
45 years. The data show coexisting 3 year and 13 year periods leading into a
broad activity minimum that resembles a Maunder minimum-like state, followed by
the resurgence of a coherent 3 year cycle. The nearly continuous activity
record suggests the simultaneous operation of two stellar dynamos with cycle
periods of 2.95+/-0.03 years and 12.7+/-0.3 years, which by analogy with the
solar case suggests a revised identification of the dynamo mechanisms that are
responsible for the so-called "active" and "inactive" sequences as proposed by
Bohm-Vitense. Finally, based on the observed properties of epsilon Eri we argue
that the rotational history of the Sun is what makes it an outlier in the
context of magnetic cycles observed in other stars (as also suggested by its Li
depletion), and that a Jovian-mass companion cannot be the universal
explanation for the solar peculiarities.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, 1 table, ApJ Letters (accepted
Stellar Hydrodynamics in Radiative Regions
We present an analysis of the response of a radiative region to waves
generated by a convective region of the star; this wave treatment of the
classical problem of ``overshooting'' gives extra mixing relative to the
treatment traditionally used in stellar evolutionary codes. The interface
between convectively stable and unstable regions is dynamic and nonspherical,
so that the nonturbulent material is driven into motion, even in the absence of
``penetrative overshoot.'' These motions may be described by the theory of
nonspherical stellar pulsations, and are related to motion measured by
helioseismology. Multi-dimensional numerical simulations of convective flow
show puzzling features which we explain by this simplified physical model.
Gravity waves generated at the interface are dissipated, resulting in slow
circulation and mixing seen outside the formal convection zone. The approach
may be extended to deal with rotation and composition gradients. Tests of this
description in the stellar evolution code TYCHO produce carbon stars on the
asymptotic giant branch (AGB), an isochrone age for the Hyades and three young
clusters with lithium depletion ages from brown dwarfs, and lithium and
beryllium depletion consistent with observations of the Hyades and Pleiades,
all without tuning parameters. The insight into the different contributions of
rotational and hydrodynamic mixing processes could have important implications
for realistic simulation of supernovae and other questions in stellar
evolution.Comment: 27 pages, 5 figures, accepted to the Astrophysical Journa
Impact of granulation effects on the use of Balmer lines as temperature indicators
Balmer lines serve as important indicators of stellar effective temperatures
in late-type stellar spectra. One of their modelling uncertainties is the
influence of convective flows on their shape. We aim to characterize the
influence of convection on the wings of Balmer lines. We perform a differential
comparison of synthetic Balmer line profiles obtained from 3D hydrodynamical
model atmospheres and 1D hydrostatic standard ones. The model parameters are
appropriate for F,G,K dwarf and subgiant stars of metallicity ranging from
solar to 1/1000 solar. The shape of the Balmer lines predicted by 3D models can
never be exactly reproduced by a 1D model, irrespective of its effective
temperature. We introduce the concept of a 3D temperature correction, as the
effective temperature difference between a 3D model and a 1D model which
provides the closest match to the 3D profile. The temperature correction is
different for the different members of the Balmer series and depends on the
adopted mixing-length parameter in the 1D model. Among the investigated models,
the 3D correction ranges from -300K to +300K. Horizontal temperature
fluctuations tend to reduce the 3D correction. Accurate effective temperatures
cannot be derived from the wings of Balmer lines, unless the effects of
convection are properly accounted for. The 3D models offer a physically well
justified way of doing so. The use of 1D models treating convection with the
mixing-length theory do not appear to be suitable for this purpose. In
particular, there are indications that it is not possible to determine a single
value of the mixing-length parameter which will optimally reproduce the Balmer
lines for any choice of atmospheric parameters.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Direct detection of a substellar companion to the young nearby star PZ Telescopii
Aims: We study the formation of substellar objects (exoplanets and brown
dwarfs) as companions to young nearby stars. Methods: With high contrast AO
imaging obtained with NACO at ESO's VLT we search for faint
companion-candidates around our targets, whose companionship can be confirmed
with astrometry. Results: In the course of our imaging campaign we found a
faint substellar companion of the nearby pre-main sequence star PZ Tel, a
member of the beta Pic moving group. The companion is 5-6 mag fainter than its
host star in JHK and is located at a separation of only 0.3 arcsec (or 15 AU of
projected separation) north-east of PZ Tel. Within three NACO observing epochs
we could confirm common proper motion (>39 sigma) and detected orbital motion
of PZ Tel B around its primary (>37 sigma). The photometry of the newly found
companion is consistent with a brown dwarf with a mass of 24 to 40 MJup, at the
distance (50 pc) and age (8-20 Myr) of PZ Tel. The effective temperature of the
companion, derived from its photometry, ranges between 2500 and 2700 K, which
corresponds to a spectral type between M6 and M8. After beta Pic b, PZ Tel B is
the second closest substellar companion imaged directly around a young star.Comment: accepted for publication in A&A Letter
XHIP-II: Clusters and associations
Context. In the absence of complete kinematic data it has not previously been
possible to furnish accurate lists of member stars for all moving groups. There
has been an unresolved dispute concerning the apparent inconsistency of the
Hipparcos parallax distance to the Pleiades.
Aims. To find improved candidate lists for clusters and associations
represented among Hipparcos stars, to establish distances, and to cast light on
the Pleiades distance anomaly.
Methods. We use a six dimensional fitting procedure to identify candidates,
and plot CMDs for 20 of the nearest groups. We calculate the mean parallax
distance for all groups.
Results. We identify lists of candidates and calculated parallax distances
for 42 clusters and 45 associations represented within the Hipparcos catalogue.
We find agreement between parallax distance and photometric distances for the
most important clusters. For single stars in the Pleiades we find mean parallax
distance 125.6 \pm 4.2 pc and photometric distance 132 \pm 3 pc calibrated to
nearby groups of similar in age and composition. This gives no reason to doubt
either the Hipparcos database or stellar evolutionary theory.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy Letters, 10 pages, 2 fig
The Hubble Space Telescope Treasury Program on the Orion Nebula Cluster
The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) Treasury Program on the Orion Nebula Cluster
has used 104 orbits of HST time to image the Great Orion Nebula region with the
Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), the Wide-Field/Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2)
and the Near Infrared Camera and Multi Object Spectrograph (NICMOS) instruments
in 11 filters ranging from the U-band to the H-band equivalent of HST. The
program has been intended to perform the definitive study of the stellar
component of the ONC at visible wavelengths, addressing key questions like the
cluster IMF, age spread, mass accretion, binarity and cirumstellar disk
evolution. The scanning pattern allowed to cover a contiguous field of
approximately 600 square arcminutes with both ACS and WFPC2, with a typical
exposure time of approximately 11 minutes per ACS filter, corresponding to a
point source depth AB(F435W) = 25.8 and AB(F775W)=25.2 with 0.2 magnitudes of
photometric error. We describe the observations, data reduction and data
products, including images, source catalogs and tools for quick look preview.
In particular, we provide ACS photometry for 3399 stars, most of them detected
at multiple epochs, WFPC2 photometry for 1643 stars, 1021 of them detected in
the U-band, and NICMOS JH photometry for 2116 stars. We summarize the early
science results that have been presented in a number of papers. The final set
of images and the photometric catalogs are publicly available through the
archive as High Level Science Products at the STScI Multimission Archive hosted
by the Space Telescope Science Institute.Comment: Accepted for publication on the Astrophysical Journal Supplement
Series, March 27, 201
Asteroseismology of solar-type stars with K2
We present the first detections by the NASA K2 Mission of oscillations in
solar-type stars, using short-cadence data collected during K2 Campaign\,1
(C1). We understand the asteroseismic detection thresholds for C1-like levels
of photometric performance, and we can detect oscillations in subgiants having
dominant oscillation frequencies around . Changes to the
operation of the fine-guidance sensors are expected to give significant
improvements in the high-frequency performance from C3 onwards. A reduction in
the excess high-frequency noise by a factor of two-and-a-half in amplitude
would bring main-sequence stars with dominant oscillation frequencies as high
as into play as potential asteroseismic targets for
K2.Comment: Accepted for publication in PASP; 16 pages, 2 figure
Rotational velocities of nearby young stars
Stellar rotation is a crucial parameter driving stellar magnetism, activity
and mixing of chemical elements. Furthermore, the evolution of stellar rotation
is coupled to the evolution of circumstellar disks. Disk-braking mechanisms are
believed to be responsible for rotational deceleration during the accretion
phase, and rotational spin-up during the contraction phase after decoupling
from the disk for fast rotators arriving at the ZAMS. We investigate the
projected rotational velocities vsini of a sample of young stars with respect
to the stellar mass and disk evolutionary state to search for possible
indications of disk-braking mechanisms. We analyse the stellar spectra of 220
nearby (mostly <100pc) young (2-600 Myr) stars for their vsini, stellar age,
Halpha emission, and accretion rates. The stars have been observed with FEROS
and HARPS in La Silla, Chile. The spectra have been cross-correlated with
appropriate theoretical templates. We build a new calibration to be able to
derive vsini values from the cross-correlated spectra. Stellar ages are
estimated from the LiI equivalent width at 6708 Ang. The equivalent width and
width at 10% height of the Halpha emission are measured to identify accretors
and used to estimate accretion rates. The vsini is then analysed with respect
to the evolutionary state of the circumstellar disks to search for indications
of disk-braking mechanisms in accretors. We find that the broad vsini
distribution of our targets extends to rotation velocities of up to more than
100 km/s and peaks at a value of 7.8+-1.2 km/s, and that ~70% of our stars show
vsini<30 km/s. Furthermore, we can find indications for disk-braking in
accretors and rotational spin-up of stars which are decoupled from their disks.
In addition, we show that a number of young stars are suitable for precise
radial-velocity measurements for planet-search surveys.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The cold origin of the warm dust around epsilon Eridani
Context: The K2V star eps Eri hosts one known inner planet, an outer Kuiper
belt analog, and an inner disk of warm dust. Spitzer/IRS measurements indicate
that the warm dust is present at distances as close as a few AU from the star.
Its origin is puzzling, since an "asteroid belt" that could produce this dust
would be unstable because of the known inner planet. Aims: Here we test the
hypothesis that the observed warm dust is generated by collisions in the outer
belt and is transported inward by Poynting-Robertson (P-R) drag and strong
stellar winds. Methods: We simulated a steady-state distribution of dust
particles outside 10AU with a collisional code and in the inner region (r<10AU)
with single-particle numerical integrations. By assuming homogeneous spherical
dust grains composed of water ice and silicate, we calculated the thermal
emission of the dust and compared it with observations. We investigated two
different orbital configurations for the inner planet inferred from RV
measurements, one with a highly eccentric orbit of e=0.7 and another one with a
moderate one of e=0.25. We also produced a simulation without a planet.
Results: Our models can reproduce the shape and magnitude of the observed SED
from mid-IR to sub-mm wavelengths, as well as the Spitzer/MIPS radial
brightness profiles. The best-fit dust composition includes both ice and
silicates. The results are similar for the two possible planetary orbits and
without a planet. Conclusions: The observed warm dust in the system can indeed
stem from the outer belt and be transported inward by P-R and stellar wind
drag. The inner planet has little effect on the distribution of dust, so that
the planetary orbit could not be constrained. Reasonable agreement between the
model and observations can only be achieved by relaxing the assumption of
purely silicate dust and assuming a mixture of silicate and ice in comparable
amounts.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, abstract abridge
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