ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
A present prevailing open problem planetary nebulae research, and photoionized gaseous nebulae research at large, is the systematic discrepancies in ionic abundances derived from recombination and collisionally excited lines in many H II regions and planetary nebulae. Peimbert (1967) proposed that these discrepancies were due to temperature fluctuations in the plasma, but the amplitude of such fluctuations remain unexplained by standard phtoionization modeling. In this letter we show that large amplitude temperature oscillations are expected to form in gaseous nebulae photoionized by short-period binary stars. Such stars yield periodically varying ionizing radiation fields, which induce periodic oscilla- tions in the heating-minus-cooling function across the nebula. For flux oscillation periods of a few days any temperature perturbations in the gas with frequencies similar to those of the ionizing source will undergo resonant amplification. In this case, the rate of growth of the perturbations increases with the amplitude of the variations of the ionizing flux and with decreasing nebular equilibrium temperature. We also present a line ratios diagnostic plot that combines [O III] collisional lines and O II recombination lines for diagnosing equilibrium and fluctuation am- plitude temperatures in gaseous nebulae. When applying this diagnostic to the planetary nebula M 1-42 we find an equilibrium temperature of ~6000 K and a resonant temperature fluctuation amplitude (Trtf ) of ~4000 K. This equilibrium temperature is significantly lower than the temperature estimated when temperature perturbations are ignored.
Contact binary systems (also known as W UMa systems) consist of a pair of hydrogen-burning dwarf stars orbiting each other so closely that they share a common envelope. Although they are relatively common, there is as yet no established consensus on
The importance of long-period binaries on the formation and evolution of planetary nebulae is still rather poorly understood, in part due to the lack of central star systems known to comprise such long-period binaries. Here, we report on the latest
SuperWASP light curves for 53 W UMa-type eclipsing binary (EB) candidates, identified in previous work as being close to the contact binary short-period limit, were studied for evidence of period change. The orbital periods of most of the stars were
We present light curves and periods of 53 candidates for short period eclipsing binary stars identified by SuperWASP. These include 48 newly identified objects with periods <2x10^4 seconds (~0.23d), as well as the shortest period binary known with ma
Accurate photometric CoRoT space observations of a secondary seismological target, HD 174884, led to the discovery that this star is an astrophysically important double-lined eclipsing spectroscopic binary in an eccentric orbit (e of about 0.3), unus