Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
-
- Dartmouth College (10)
- Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (8)
- Tennessee State University (8)
- East Tennessee State University (5)
- Parkland College (4)
-
- Munster Technological University (3)
- West Chester University (3)
- California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo (2)
- City University of New York (CUNY) (2)
- Wayne State University (2)
- Western Washington University (2)
- Chapman University (1)
- College of Saint Benedict and Saint John's University (1)
- Georgia Southern University (1)
- Gettysburg College (1)
- Kennesaw State University (1)
- University of New Mexico (1)
- Western Kentucky University (1)
- Keyword
-
- Astrophysics (8)
- Cosmology and astronomy (8)
- Stars (6)
- Astronomy (5)
- Physics and Astronomy (5)
-
- Galaxies (4)
- Photometry (4)
- Spectroscopic binaries (4)
- Telescopes (4)
- 1.3 PHYSICAL SCIENCES (3)
- Catalogs (3)
- Color (3)
- Cosmic background radiation (3)
- Fundamental stellar parameters (3)
- Openaire (3)
- Spectra (3)
- Spectroscopy (3)
- Accretion (2)
- Astronautics (2)
- BL Lacertae (2)
- Black hole physics (2)
- Brown dwarfs (2)
- Comparative evaluations (2)
- Correlations (2)
- Eclipsing binaries (2)
- Emission (2)
- Gamma rays (2)
- Jets (2)
- Milky way (2)
- Photoionization (2)
- Publication
-
- Dartmouth Scholarship (10)
- Information Systems and Engineering Management Research Publications (8)
- Publications (8)
- ETSU Faculty Works (5)
- Natural Sciences Student Research Presentations (4)
-
- Earth & Space Sciences Faculty Publications (3)
- Physical Sciences Publications (3)
- Physics & Astronomy (2)
- Physics and Astronomy Faculty Research Publications (2)
- Publications and Research (2)
- STAR Program Research Presentations (2)
- Branch Mathematics and Statistics Faculty and Staff Publications (1)
- Department of Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications (1)
- Faculty and Research Publications (1)
- Mathematics, Physics, and Computer Science Faculty Articles and Research (1)
- Physics Faculty Publications (1)
- Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications (1)
- Sabbatical Reports (1)
Articles 1 - 30 of 56
Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Hst Hot-Jupiter Transmission Spectral Survey: Haze In The Atmosphere Of Wasp-6b, Nikolay Nikolov, David K. Sing, Adam S. Burrows, Jonathan J. Fortney, Gregory W. Henry, Frederic Pont, Gilda E. Ballester, Suzanne Aigrain, Paul A. Wilson, Catherine M. Huitson, Neale P. Gibson, Jean-Michel Désert, Alain Lecavelier Des Etangs, Adam P. Showman, Alfred Vidal-Madjar, Hannah R. Wakeford, Kevin J. Zahnle
Hst Hot-Jupiter Transmission Spectral Survey: Haze In The Atmosphere Of Wasp-6b, Nikolay Nikolov, David K. Sing, Adam S. Burrows, Jonathan J. Fortney, Gregory W. Henry, Frederic Pont, Gilda E. Ballester, Suzanne Aigrain, Paul A. Wilson, Catherine M. Huitson, Neale P. Gibson, Jean-Michel Désert, Alain Lecavelier Des Etangs, Adam P. Showman, Alfred Vidal-Madjar, Hannah R. Wakeford, Kevin J. Zahnle
Information Systems and Engineering Management Research Publications
We report Hubble Space Telescope optical to near-infrared transmission spectroscopy of the hot-Jupiter WASP-6b, measured with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph and Spitzer's InfraRed Array Camera. The resulting spectrum covers the range 0.29–4.5 μm. We find evidence for modest stellar activity of WASP-6 and take it into account in the transmission spectrum. The overall main characteristic of the spectrum is an increasing radius as a function of decreasing wavelength corresponding to a change of Δ (Rp / R*) = 0.0071 from 0.33 to 4.5 μm. The spectrum suggests an effective extinction cross-section with a power law of index consistent with …
Kepler Flares Ii: The Temporal Morphology Of White-Light Flares On Gj 1243, James R. A. Davenport, Suzanne L. Hawley, Leslie Hebb, John P. Wisniewski, Adam F. Kowalski, Emily C. Johnson, Michael Malatesta, Jesus Paraza, Marcus Keil, Steven M. Silverberg, Tiffany C. Jansen, Matthew S. Scheffler, Jodi R. Berdis, Daniel M. Larsen, Eric J. Hilton
Kepler Flares Ii: The Temporal Morphology Of White-Light Flares On Gj 1243, James R. A. Davenport, Suzanne L. Hawley, Leslie Hebb, John P. Wisniewski, Adam F. Kowalski, Emily C. Johnson, Michael Malatesta, Jesus Paraza, Marcus Keil, Steven M. Silverberg, Tiffany C. Jansen, Matthew S. Scheffler, Jodi R. Berdis, Daniel M. Larsen, Eric J. Hilton
Physics & Astronomy
We present the largest sample of flares ever compiled for a single M dwarf, the active M4 star GJ 1243. Over 6100 individual flare events, with energies ranging from 1029 to 1033 erg, are found in 11 months of 1 minute cadence data from Kepler. This sample is unique for its completeness and dynamic range. We have developed automated tools for finding flares in short-cadence Kepler light curves, and performed extensive validation and classification of the sample by eye. From this pristine sample of flares we generate a median flare template. This template shows that two exponential …
Cataclysmic Variables In The Superblink Proper Motion Survey, Julie N. Skinner, John R. Thorstensen, Sébastien Lépine
Cataclysmic Variables In The Superblink Proper Motion Survey, Julie N. Skinner, John R. Thorstensen, Sébastien Lépine
Dartmouth Scholarship
We have discovered a new high proper motion cataclysmic variable (CV) in the SUPERBLINK proper motion survey, which is sensitive to stars with proper motions greater than 40 mas yr−1. This CV was selected for follow-up observations as part of a larger search for CVs selected based on proper motions and their near-UV−V and V−Ks colors. We present spectroscopic observations from the 2.4 m Hiltner Telescope at MDM Observatory. The new CVʼs orbital period is near 96 minutes, its spectrum shows the double-peaked Balmer emission lines characteristic of quiescent dwarf novae, and its V magnitude is …
A Deep Proper Motion Catalog Within The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Footprint, Jeffrey A. Munn, Hugh C. Harris, Ted Von Hippel, Mukremin Kilic, James W. Liebert, Kurtis A. Williams, Steven Degenarro, Elizabeth Jeffery, Trudy M. Tilleman
A Deep Proper Motion Catalog Within The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Footprint, Jeffrey A. Munn, Hugh C. Harris, Ted Von Hippel, Mukremin Kilic, James W. Liebert, Kurtis A. Williams, Steven Degenarro, Elizabeth Jeffery, Trudy M. Tilleman
Publications
A new proper motion catalog is presented, combining the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) with second epoch observations in the r band within a portion of the SDSS imaging footprint. The new observations were obtained with the 90prime camera on the Steward Observatory Bok 90 inch telescope, and the Array Camera on the U.S. Naval Observatory, Flagstaff Station, 1.3 m telescope. The catalog covers 1098 square degrees to r = 22.0, an additional 1521 square degrees to r = 20.9, plus a further 488 square degrees of lesser quality data. Statistical errors in the proper motions range from 5 mas …
The First Month Of Evolution Of The Slow-Rising Type Iip Sn 2013ej In M74, S. Valenti, D. Sand, A. Pastorello, M. L. Graham, D. A. Howell, J. T. Parrent
The First Month Of Evolution Of The Slow-Rising Type Iip Sn 2013ej In M74, S. Valenti, D. Sand, A. Pastorello, M. L. Graham, D. A. Howell, J. T. Parrent
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present early photometric and spectroscopic observations of SN 2013ej, a bright Type IIP supernova (SN) in M74. SN 2013ej is one of the closest SNe ever discovered. The available archive images and the early discovery help to constrain the nature of its progenitor. The earliest detection of this explosion was on 2013 July 24.125 ut and our spectroscopic monitoring with the FLOYDS spectrographs began on July 27.7 ut, continuing almost daily for two weeks. Daily optical photometric monitoring was achieved with the 1 m telescopes of the Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope (LCOGT) network, and was complemented by UV …
Bayesian Analysis For Stellar Evolution With Nine Parameters (Base-9): User's Manual, Ted Von Hippel, Elliot Robinson, Elizabeth Jeffery, Rachel Wagner-Kaiser, Steven Degennaro, Nathan Stein, David Stenning, William H. Jefferys, David Van Dyk
Bayesian Analysis For Stellar Evolution With Nine Parameters (Base-9): User's Manual, Ted Von Hippel, Elliot Robinson, Elizabeth Jeffery, Rachel Wagner-Kaiser, Steven Degennaro, Nathan Stein, David Stenning, William H. Jefferys, David Van Dyk
Publications
BASE-9 is a Bayesian software suite that recovers star cluster and stellar parameters from photometry. BASE-9 is useful for analyzing single-age, single-metallicity star clusters, binaries, or single stars, and for simulating such systems. BASE-9 uses Markov chain Monte Carlo and brute-force numerical integration techniques to estimate the posterior probability distributions for the age, metallicity, helium abundance, distance modulus, and line-of-sight absorption for a cluster, and the mass, binary mass ratio, and cluster membership probability for every stellar object. BASE-9 is provided as open source code on a version-controlled web server. The executables are also available as Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud …
The Power Of Principled Bayesian Methods In The Study Of Stellar Evolution, Ted Von Hippel, David Van Dyk, David Stenning, Elliot Robinson, Elizabeth Jeffery, Nathan Stein, William Jefferys, Erin M. O'Malley
The Power Of Principled Bayesian Methods In The Study Of Stellar Evolution, Ted Von Hippel, David Van Dyk, David Stenning, Elliot Robinson, Elizabeth Jeffery, Nathan Stein, William Jefferys, Erin M. O'Malley
Publications
It takes years of effort employing the best telescopes and in- struments to obtain high-quality stellar photometry, astrometry, and spectroscopy. Stellar evolution models contain the experience of life- times of theoretical calculations and testing. Yet most astronomers fit these valuable models to these precious datasets by eye. We show that a principled Bayesian approach to fitting models to stellar data yields substantially more information over a range of stellar astrophysics. We highlight advances in determining the ages of star clusters, mass ratios of binary stars, limitations in the accuracy of stellar models, post-main-sequence mass loss, and the ages of individual …
The Optical Luminosity Function Of Gamma-Ray Bursts Deduced From Rotse-Iii Observations, X. H. Cui, X. F. Wu, J. J. Wei, F. Yuan, W. K. Zheng, E. W. Liang, C. W. Akerlof, M. C. B. Ashley, H A. Flewelling, E. Göǧüş, T. Güver, Ü. Kızıloǧlu, T. A. Mckay, S. B. Pandey, E. S. Rykoff, W. Rujopakarn, B. E. Schaefer, J. C. Wheeler, Sarah A. Yost
The Optical Luminosity Function Of Gamma-Ray Bursts Deduced From Rotse-Iii Observations, X. H. Cui, X. F. Wu, J. J. Wei, F. Yuan, W. K. Zheng, E. W. Liang, C. W. Akerlof, M. C. B. Ashley, H A. Flewelling, E. Göǧüş, T. Güver, Ü. Kızıloǧlu, T. A. Mckay, S. B. Pandey, E. S. Rykoff, W. Rujopakarn, B. E. Schaefer, J. C. Wheeler, Sarah A. Yost
Physics Faculty Publications
We present the optical luminosity function (LF) of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) estimated from a uniform sample of 58 GRBs from observations with the Robotic Optical Transient Search Experiment III (ROTSE-III). Our GRB sample is divided into two sub-samples: detected afterglows (18 GRBs) and those with upper limits (40 GRBs). We derive R-band fluxes for these two sub-samples 100 s after the onset of the burst. The optical LFs at 100 s are fitted by assuming that the co-moving GRB rate traces the star formation rate. While fitting the optical LFs using Monte Carlo simulations, we take into account the …
Optical Counterparts Of Two Fermi Millisecond Pulsars: Psr J1301+0833 And Psr J1628–3205, Miao Li, Jules P. Halpern, John R. Thorstensen
Optical Counterparts Of Two Fermi Millisecond Pulsars: Psr J1301+0833 And Psr J1628–3205, Miao Li, Jules P. Halpern, John R. Thorstensen
Dartmouth Scholarship
Using the 1.3 m and 2.4 m Telescopes of the MDM Observatory, we identified the close companions of two eclipsing millisecond radio pulsars that were discovered by the Green Bank Telescope in searches of Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope sources, and measured their light curves. PSR J1301+0833 is a black widow pulsar in a 6.5 hr orbit whose companion star is strongly heated on the side facing the pulsar. It varies from R = 21.8 to R > 24 around the orbit. PSR J1628–3205 is a "redback," a nearly Roche-lobe-filling system in a 5.0 hr orbit whose optical modulation in the range …
Constraints On Very High Energy Emission From Grb 130427a, P. T. Reynolds, Et Al
Constraints On Very High Energy Emission From Grb 130427a, P. T. Reynolds, Et Al
Physical Sciences Publications
Prompt emission from the very fluent and nearby (z = 0.34) gamma-ray burst GRB 130427A was detected by several orbiting telescopes and by ground-based, wide-field-of-view optical transient monitors. Apart from the intensity and proximity of this GRB, it is exceptional due to the extremely long-lived high-energy (100 MeV to 100 GeV) gamma-ray emission, which was detected by the Large Area Telescope on the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope for ~70 ks after the initial burst. The persistent, hard-spectrum, high-energy emission suggests that the highest-energy gamma rays may have been produced via synchrotron self-Compton processes though there is also evidence that …
Absolute Properties Of The Eclipsing Binary Star V501 Herculis, Claud H. Sandberg Lacy, Francis C. Fekel
Absolute Properties Of The Eclipsing Binary Star V501 Herculis, Claud H. Sandberg Lacy, Francis C. Fekel
Information Systems and Engineering Management Research Publications
V501 Her is a well detached G3 eclipsing binary star with a period of 8.597687 days for which we have determined very accurate light and radial-velocity curves using robotic telescopes. Results of these data indicate that the component stars have masses of 1.269 ± 0.004 and 1.211 ± 0.003 solar masses, radii of 2.001 ± 0.003 and 1.511 ± 0.003 solar radii, and temperatures of 5683 ± 100 K and 5720 ± 100 K, respectively. Comparison with the Yonsei–Yale series of evolutionary models results in good agreement at an age of about 5.1 Gyr for a somewhat metal-rich composition. Those …
Evidence Of A Mira-Like Tail And Bow Shock About The Semi-Regular Variable V Cvn From Four Decades Of Polarization Measurements., Hilding Neilson, Richard Ignace, Beverly Smith, Gary Henson, Alyssa Adams
Evidence Of A Mira-Like Tail And Bow Shock About The Semi-Regular Variable V Cvn From Four Decades Of Polarization Measurements., Hilding Neilson, Richard Ignace, Beverly Smith, Gary Henson, Alyssa Adams
ETSU Faculty Works
Polarization is a powerful tool for understanding stellar atmospheres and circumstellar environments. Mira and semi-regular variable stars have been observed for decades and some are known to be polarimetrically variable, however, the semi-regular variable V Canes Venatici displays an unusually large, unexplained amount of polarization. We present ten years of optical polarization observations obtained with the HPOL instrument, supplemented by published observations spanning a total interval of about forty years for V CVn. We find that V CVn shows large polarization variations ranging from 1 - 6%. We also find that for the past forty years the position angle measured …
Search For Higgs Shifts In White Dwarfs, Roberto Onofrio, Gary A. Wegner
Search For Higgs Shifts In White Dwarfs, Roberto Onofrio, Gary A. Wegner
Dartmouth Scholarship
We report on a search for differential shifts between electronic and vibronic transitions in carbon-rich white dwarfs BPM 27606 and Procyon B. The absence of differential shifts within the spectral resolution and taking into account systematic effects such as space motion and pressure shifts allows us to set the first upper bound of astrophysical origin on the coupling between the Higgs field and the Kreschmann curvature invariant. Our analysis provides the basis for a more general methodology to derive bounds to the coupling of long-range scalar fields to curvature invariants in an astrophysical setting complementary to the ones available from …
Maximizing Precision Of Variable Star Photometry With Digital Cameras In Suburban Environments, David Hergesheimer
Maximizing Precision Of Variable Star Photometry With Digital Cameras In Suburban Environments, David Hergesheimer
STAR Program Research Presentations
Photometry is the measure of the brightness of an object. When making such measurements on stars, it is done is units of magnitude, which is on a logarithmic scale with a base of ~2.512. Variable star photometry using a commercially available digital camera is not going to be as accurate and precise as equipment used by astronomers, and because of the logarithmic scale of magnitude used, determining how much of an effect different error reduction strategies have is not straightforward, and is best done experimentally.
My research is conducting photometry on variable stars (changing brightness) with a digital camera, and …
Light Pollution Research Through Citizen Science, John Kanemoto
Light Pollution Research Through Citizen Science, John Kanemoto
STAR Program Research Presentations
Light pollution (LP) can disrupt and/or degrade the health of all living things, as well as, their environments. The goal of my research at the NOAO was to check the accuracy of the citizen science LP reporting systems entitled: Globe at Night (GaN), Dark Sky Meter (DSM), and Loss of the Night (LoN). On the GaN webpage, the darkness of the night sky (DotNS) is reported by selecting a magnitude chart. Each magnitude chart has a different density/number of stars around a specific constellation. The greater number of stars implies a darker night sky. Within the DSM iPhone application, a …
Electron-Ion Equilibrium And Shock Precursors In The Northeast Limb Of The Cygnus Loop, Amber A. Medina, John C. Raymond, Richard J. Edgar, Nelson Caldwell, Robert A. Fesen, Dan Milisavljevic
Electron-Ion Equilibrium And Shock Precursors In The Northeast Limb Of The Cygnus Loop, Amber A. Medina, John C. Raymond, Richard J. Edgar, Nelson Caldwell, Robert A. Fesen, Dan Milisavljevic
Dartmouth Scholarship
We present an observational study using high-resolution echelle spectroscopy of collisionless shocks in the Cygnus Loop supernova remnant. Measured Hα line profiles constrain pre-shock heating processes, shock speeds, and electron-ion equilibration (Te /Ti ). The shocks produce faint Hα emission line profiles, which are characterized by narrow and broad components. The narrow component is representative of the pre-shock conditions, while the broad component is produced after charge transfer between neutrals entering the shock and protons in the post-shock gas, thus reflecting the properties of the post-shock gas. We observe a diffuse Hα region extending about 25 …
Constraints Of The Radio-Loud/Radio-Quiet Dichotomy From The Fundamental Plane, David Garofalo, Matthew I. Kim, Damian J. Christian
Constraints Of The Radio-Loud/Radio-Quiet Dichotomy From The Fundamental Plane, David Garofalo, Matthew I. Kim, Damian J. Christian
Faculty and Research Publications
The Fundamental Plane for black hole activity constitutes a tight correlation between jet power, X-ray luminosity, and black hole mass. Under the assumption that a Blandford–Znajek-type mechanism, which relies on black hole spin, contributes non-negligibly to jet production, the sufficiently small scatter in the Fundamental Plane shows that black hole spin differences of |Δa| ∼ 1 are not typical among the active galactic nuclei population. If – as it seems – radio-loud and radio-quiet objects are both faithful to the Fundamental Plane, models of black hole accretion in which the radio-loud/radio-quiet dichotomy is based on a spin dichotomy of a∼1/a∼0, …
Long-Term Monitoring Of Hα Emission Strength And Photometric V Magnitude Of Γ Cas, E. Pollmann, W. Vollmann, Gregory W. Henry
Long-Term Monitoring Of Hα Emission Strength And Photometric V Magnitude Of Γ Cas, E. Pollmann, W. Vollmann, Gregory W. Henry
Information Systems and Engineering Management Research Publications
No abstract provided.
Test Of Models Of The Cosmic Infrared Background With Multiwavelength Observations Of The Blazar 1es 1218+30.4 In 2009, P. T. Reynolds
Test Of Models Of The Cosmic Infrared Background With Multiwavelength Observations Of The Blazar 1es 1218+30.4 In 2009, P. T. Reynolds
Physical Sciences Publications
We present the results of a multi-wavelength campaign targeting the blazar 1ES 1218+30.4 with observations with the 1.3 m McGraw-Hill optical telescope, the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE), the Fermi Gamma-Ray Space Telescope, and the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array System (VERITAS). The RXTE and VERITAS observations were spread over a 13 day period and revealed clear evidence for flux variability, and a strong X-ray and γ-ray flare on 2009 February 26 (MJD 54888). The campaign delivered a well-sampled broadband energy spectrum with simultaneous RXTE and VERITAS very high energy (VHE, >100 GeV) observations, as well as …
Discovery Of X-Ray Pulsations From A Massive Star., Lidia Oskinova, Yael Nazé, Helge Todt, David Huenemoerder, Richard Ignace, Swetlana Hubrig, Wolf-Rainer Hamann
Discovery Of X-Ray Pulsations From A Massive Star., Lidia Oskinova, Yael Nazé, Helge Todt, David Huenemoerder, Richard Ignace, Swetlana Hubrig, Wolf-Rainer Hamann
ETSU Faculty Works
X-ray emission from stars much more massive than the Sun was discovered only 35 years ago. Such stars drive fast stellar winds where shocks can develop, and it is commonly assumed that the X-rays emerge from the shock-heated plasma. Many massive stars additionally pulsate. However, hitherto it was neither theoretically predicted nor observed that these pulsations would affect their X-ray emission. All X-ray pulsars known so far are associated with degenerate objects, either neutron stars or white dwarfs. Here we report the discovery of pulsating X-rays from a non-degenerate object, the massive B-type star ξ1 CMa. This star is a …
The Sdss–2mass–Wise 10 Dimensional Stellar Color Locus, James R. A. Davenport, Željko Ivezić, Andrew C. Becker, John J. Ruan, Nicholas M. Hunt-Walker, Kevin R. Covey, Alexia R. Lewis, Yusra Alsayyad, Lauren M. Anderson
The Sdss–2mass–Wise 10 Dimensional Stellar Color Locus, James R. A. Davenport, Željko Ivezić, Andrew C. Becker, John J. Ruan, Nicholas M. Hunt-Walker, Kevin R. Covey, Alexia R. Lewis, Yusra Alsayyad, Lauren M. Anderson
Physics & Astronomy
We present the fiducial main-sequence stellar locus traced by 10 photometric colours observed by Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS), Two Micron All Sky Survey (2MASS), and Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer(WISE). Median colours are determined using 1052 793 stars with r-band extinction less than 0.125. We use this locus to measure the dust extinction curve relative to the r band, which is consistent with previous measurements in the SDSS and 2MASS bands. The WISE band extinction coefficients are larger than predicted by standard extinction models. Using 13 lines of sight, we find variations in the extinction curve …
Three Moving Groups Detected In The Lamost Dr1 Archive, Zhao J. K., Zhao G., Y. Q. Chen, T. D. Oswalt, K. F. Tan, Y. Zhang
Three Moving Groups Detected In The Lamost Dr1 Archive, Zhao J. K., Zhao G., Y. Q. Chen, T. D. Oswalt, K. F. Tan, Y. Zhang
Publications
We analyze the kinematics of thick disk and halo stars observed by the Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fiber Spectroscopic Telescope. We have constructed a sample of 7993 F, G, and K nearby main-sequence stars (d < 2 kpc) with estimates of position (x, y, z) and space velocity (U, V, W) based on color and proper motion from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey DR9 catalog. Three “phase-space overdensities” are identified in (V,√U2 + 2V 2) with significance levels of σ > 3. Two of them (the Hyades–Pleiades stream …
Faraday Rotation Effects For Diagnosing Magnetism In Bubble Environments., Richard Ignace
Faraday Rotation Effects For Diagnosing Magnetism In Bubble Environments., Richard Ignace
ETSU Faculty Works
Faraday rotation is a process by which the position angle (PA) of background linearly polarized light is rotated when passing through an ionized and magnetized medium. The effect is sensitive to the line-of-sight magnetic field in conjunction with the electron density. This contribution highlights diagnostic possibilities of inferring the magnetic field (or absence thereof) in and around wind-blown bubbles from the Faraday effect. Three cases are described as illustrations: a stellar toroidal magnetic field, a shocked interstellar magnetic field, and an interstellar magnetic field within an ionized bubble.
Absolute Properties Of The Eclipsing Binary Star Ap Andromedae, Claud H. Sandberg Lacy, Guillermo Torres, Francis C. Fekel, Matthew W. Muterspaugh
Absolute Properties Of The Eclipsing Binary Star Ap Andromedae, Claud H. Sandberg Lacy, Guillermo Torres, Francis C. Fekel, Matthew W. Muterspaugh
Information Systems and Engineering Management Research Publications
AP And is a well-detached F5 eclipsing binary star for which only a very limited amount of information was available before this publication. We have obtained very extensive measurements of the light curve (19,097 differential V magnitude observations) and a radial velocity curve (83 spectroscopic observations) which allow us to fit orbits and determine the absolute properties of the components very accurately: masses of 1.277 ± 0.004 and 1.251 ± 0.004 M☉, radii of 1.233 ± 0.006 and 1.1953 ± 0.005 R☉, and temperatures of 6565 ± 150 K and 6495 ± 150 K. The distance to the system is …
Continuum Polarization In Circumstellar Media, Richard Ignace
Continuum Polarization In Circumstellar Media, Richard Ignace
ETSU Faculty Works
See http://www.asu.cas.cz/~wg2prague/
The White Dwarfs Within 25 Pc Of The Sun: Kinematics And Spectroscopic Subtypes, Edward M. Sion, J. B. Holberg, Terry D. Oswalt, George P. Mccook, Richard Wasatonic, Janine Myszka
The White Dwarfs Within 25 Pc Of The Sun: Kinematics And Spectroscopic Subtypes, Edward M. Sion, J. B. Holberg, Terry D. Oswalt, George P. Mccook, Richard Wasatonic, Janine Myszka
Publications
We present the fractional distribution of spectroscopic subtypes, range and distribution of surface temperatures, and kinematical properties of the white dwarfs (WDs) within 25 pc of the Sun. There is no convincing evidence of halo WDs in the total 25 pc sample of 224 WDs. There is also little to suggest the presence of genuine thick disk subcomponent members within 25 pc. It appears that the entire 25 pc sample likely belongs to the thin disk. We also find no significant kinematic differences with respect to spectroscopic subtypes. The total DA to non-DA ratio of the 25 pc sample is …
The Link Between Shocks, Turbulence And Magnetic Reconnection In Collisionless Plasmas, H. Karimabadi, V. Roytershteyn, H. X. Vu, Y. Omelchenko, J. Scudder, W. Daughton, A. Dimmock, Katariina (Heidi) Nykyri, Et Al.
The Link Between Shocks, Turbulence And Magnetic Reconnection In Collisionless Plasmas, H. Karimabadi, V. Roytershteyn, H. X. Vu, Y. Omelchenko, J. Scudder, W. Daughton, A. Dimmock, Katariina (Heidi) Nykyri, Et Al.
Publications
Global hybrid (electron fluid, kinetic ions) and fully kinetic simulations of the magnetosphere have been used to show surprising interconnection between shocks, turbulence and magnetic reconnection. In particular collisionless shocks with their reflected ions that can get upstream before retransmission can generate previously unforeseen phenomena in the post shocked flows: (i) formation of reconnecting current sheets and magnetic islands with sizes up to tens of ion inertial length. (ii) Generation of large scale low frequency electromagnetic waves that are compressed and amplified as they cross the shock. These 'wavefronts' maintain their integrity for tens of ion cyclotron times but eventually …
Characterizing The Quiescent X-Ray Variability Of The Black Hole Low-Mass X-Ray Binary V404 Cyg, F Bernardini, E. M. Cackett
Characterizing The Quiescent X-Ray Variability Of The Black Hole Low-Mass X-Ray Binary V404 Cyg, F Bernardini, E. M. Cackett
Physics and Astronomy Faculty Research Publications
We conducted the first long-term (75 d) X-ray monitoring of the black hole low-mass X-ray binary V404 Cyg, with the goal of understanding and characterizing its variability during quiescence. The X-ray light curve of V404 Cyg shows several flares on time-scales of hours with a count rate change of a factor of about 5–8. The root-mean-square variability isFvar = 57.0 ± 3.2 per cent. The first-order structure function is consistent with both a power spectrum of index −1 (flicker noise), or with a power spectrum of index 0 (white noise), implying that the light curve is variable on …
A Chandra Grating Observation Of The Dusty Wolf-Rayet Star Wr 48a, Svetozar A. Zhekov, Marc Gagne, Stephen L. Skinner
A Chandra Grating Observation Of The Dusty Wolf-Rayet Star Wr 48a, Svetozar A. Zhekov, Marc Gagne, Stephen L. Skinner
Earth & Space Sciences Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Transit Timing Analysis In The Hat-P-32 System, M. Seeliger, D. P. Dimitrov, D. Kjurkchieva, M. Mallonn, M. Fernandez, M. Kitze, V. Casanova, G. Maciejewski, J. M. Ohlert, J. G. Schmidt, A. Pannicke, D. Puchalski, E. Gogus, T. Guver, S. Bilir, T. Ak, M. M. Hohle, T. O.B. Schmidt, R. Errmann, E.L.N. Jensen, D. H. Cohen, Laurence A. Marschall, G. Saral, I. Bernt, E. Derman, C. Galan, R. Neuhauser
Transit Timing Analysis In The Hat-P-32 System, M. Seeliger, D. P. Dimitrov, D. Kjurkchieva, M. Mallonn, M. Fernandez, M. Kitze, V. Casanova, G. Maciejewski, J. M. Ohlert, J. G. Schmidt, A. Pannicke, D. Puchalski, E. Gogus, T. Guver, S. Bilir, T. Ak, M. M. Hohle, T. O.B. Schmidt, R. Errmann, E.L.N. Jensen, D. H. Cohen, Laurence A. Marschall, G. Saral, I. Bernt, E. Derman, C. Galan, R. Neuhauser
Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications
We present the results of 45 transit observations obtained for the transiting exoplanet HATP- 32b. The transits have been observed using several telescopes mainly throughout the YETI (Young Exoplanet Transit Initiative) network. In 25 cases, complete transit light curves with a timing precision better than 1.4 min have been obtained. These light curves have been used to refine the system properties, namely inclination i, planet-to-star radius ratio Rp/Rs, and the ratio between the semimajor axis and the stellar radius a/Rs. First analyses by Hartman et al. suggests the existence of a second planet in the system, thus we tried to …