Circumbinary disks
International Conference Recent Advances in Natural Language Processing, RANLP (2008)
Abstract:
We investigate the phenomenon of circumbinary disks: their stability and potentially insightful use as diagnostic tools of outflows. Our fully 3D simulations investigate the behaviour of circumbinary orbits, exploring binary mass fraction - eccentricity parameter space. The work presented also has implications for exoplanetary astronomy in the existence and determination of stable orbits in binary systems. © Copyright owned by the author(s) under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike Licence.Hydrodynamic simulations of the SS 433-W50 complex
International Conference Recent Advances in Natural Language Processing, RANLP (2008)
Abstract:
The compelling evidence for a connection between SS 433 and W50 has provoked much imagination for decades. There are still many unanswered questions: What was the nature of the progenitor of the compact object in SS 433? What causes the evident re-collimation in SS 433's jets? How recent is SS 433's current precession state? What mass and energy contributions from a possible supernova explosion are required to produce W50? Here we comment on two of our 53 models: (i) featuring the SNR evolution alone, and (ii) the SNR combined with a simple jet model. © Copyright owned by the author(s) under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike Licence.Inflow and outflow from the accretion disc of the microquasar SS433
International Conference Recent Advances in Natural Language Processing, RANLP (2008)
Abstract:
A succession of near-IR spectroscopic observations, taken nightly throughout an entire cycle of SS 433's orbit with UKIRT, reveal (i) the persistent signature of SS 433's accretion disc, having a rotation speed of ∼ 500 kms-1and (ii) confirms the presence of the circumbinary disc recently discovered at optical wavelengths by Blundell, Bowler & Schmidtobreick (2008) and (iii) detects a much faster outflow than has previously been measured from the disc wind. Our relatively high spectral resolution at these near-IR wavelengths has enabled us to deconstruct the different components, and their physical origins, that comprise the Brackett-γ line in this binary system. © Copyright owned by the author(s) under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial- ShareAlike Licence.The globaljetwatch spectrographs: A fibre-fed spectrograph for small telescopes
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering 7014 (2008)
Abstract:
The GlobalJetWatch project (www.globaljetwatch.net) will place small (0.5-metre) commerical telescopes in four schools around the world. Each telescope will be equipped with a custom designed spectrograph, currently being built by the Astrophysics sub-department of the University of Oxford. The scientific goal of the project is to provide continual monitoring of a rosetta stone object, the micro-quasar SS433. In addition,the project has a significant out-reach element, aiming to involve school children on four-continents in front-line astronomical research. The spectrograph is a fibre-fed fixed format cross-dispersed echellete design providing R 6000 spectra from 4300-8500Å in a single exposure. The spectrograph is built almost entirely from off-the-shelf components. The four GlobalJetWatch sites (Australia, India, South Africa,Chile) will be commissioned in 2008/09. Here we present the baseline design of the spectrograph, and initial results from the prototype on-sky commissioning in Oxford.Opacity effects and shock-in-jet modelling of low-level activity in Cygnus X-3
ArXiv 0811.3377 (2008)