9 results on '"Lowther, Simon"'
Search Results
2. Measures of selected NZO double stars
- Author
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Lowther, Simon
- Published
- 2010
3. The Spin-Period History of Intermediate Polars
- Author
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Patterson, Joseph, de Miguel, Enrique, Kemp, Jonathan, Dvorak, Shawn, Monard, Berto, Hambsch, Franz-Josef, Vanmunster, Tonny, Skillman, David R., Cejudo, David, Campbell, Tut, Roberts, George, Jones, Jim, Cook, Lewis M., Bolt, Greg, Rea, Robert, Ulowetz, Joseph, Krajci, Thomas, Menzies, Kenneth, Lowther, Simon, Goff, William, Stein, William, Wood, Matt A., Myers, Gordon, Stone, Geoffrey, Uthas, Helena, Karamehmetoglu, Emir, Seargeant, Jim, and McCormick, Jennie
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the detailed history of spin-period changes in five intermediate polars (DQ Herculis, AO Piscium, FO Aquarii, V1223 Sagittarii, and BG Canis Minoris) during the 30-60 years since their original discovery. Most are slowly spinning up, although there are sometimes years-long episodes of spin-down. This is supportive of the idea that the underlying magnetic white dwarfs are near spin equilibrium. In addition to the ~40 stars sharing many properties and defined by their strong, pulsed X-ray emission, there are a few rotating much faster (P<80 s), whose membership in the class is still in doubt -- and who are overdue for closer study., Comment: PDF, 13 pages, 1 table, 2 figures; submitted, ApJ; more info at http://cbastro.org/
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. The KELT Follow-Up Network and Transit False Positive Catalog: Pre-vetted False Positives for TESS
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Collins, Karen A., Collins, Kevin I., Pepper, Joshua, Labadie-Bartz, Jonathan, Stassun, Keivan, Gaudi, B. Scott, Bayliss, Daniel, Bento, Joao, Colón, Knicole D., Feliz, Dax, James, David, Johnson, Marshall C., Kuhn, Rudolf B., Lund, Michael B., Penny, Matthew T., Rodriguez, Joseph E., Siverd, Robert J., Stevens, Daniel J., Yao, Xinyu, Zhou, George, Akshay, Mundra, Aldi, Giulio F., Ashcraft, Cliff, Awiphan, Supachai, Baştürk, Özgür, Baker, David, Beatty, Thomas G., Benni, Paul, Berlind, Perry, Berriman, G. Bruce, Berta-Thompson, Zach, Bieryla, Allyson, Bozza, Valerio, Novati, Sebastiano Calchi, Calkins, Michael L., Cann, Jenna M., Ciardi, David R., Clark, Ian R., Cochran, William D., Cohen, David H., Conti, Dennis, Crepp, Justin R., Curtis, Ivan A., D'Ago, Giuseppe, Diazeguigure, Kenny A., Dressing, Courtney D., Dubois, Franky, Ellingson, Erica, Ellis, Tyler G., Esquerdo, Gilbert A., Evans, Phil, Friedli, Alison, Fukui, Akihiko, Fulton, Benjamin J., Gonzales, Erica J., Good, John C., Gregorio, Joao, Gumusayak, Tolga, Hancock, Daniel A., Harada, Caleb K., Hart, Rhodes, Hintz, Eric G., Jang-Condell, Hannah, Jeffery, Elizabeth J., Jensen, Eric L. N., Jofré, Emiliano, Joner, Michael D., Kar, Aman, Kasper, David H., Keten, Burak, Kielkopf, John F., Komonjinda, Siramas, Kotnik, Cliff, Latham, David W., Leuquire, Jacob, Lewis, Tiffany R., Logie, Ludwig, Lowther, Simon J., MacQueen, Phillip J., Martin, Trevor J., Mawet, Dimitri, McLeod, Kim K., Murawski, Gabriel, Narita, Norio, Nordhausen, Jim, Oberst, Thomas E., Odden, Caroline, Panka, Peter A., Petrucci, Romina, Plavchan, Peter, Quinn, Samuel N., Rau, Steve, Reed, Phillip A., Relles, Howard, Renaud, Joe P., Scarpetta, Gaetano, Sorber, Rebecca L., Spencer, Alex D., Spencer, Michelle, Stephens, Denise C., Stockdale, Chris, Tan, Thiam-Guan, Trueblood, Mark, Trueblood, Patricia, Vanaverbeke, Siegfried, Villanueva Jr., Steven, Warner, Elizabeth M., West, Mary Lou, Yalçınkaya, Selçuk, Yeigh, Rex, and Zambelli, Roberto
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Earth and Planetary Astrophysics - Abstract
The Kilodegree Extremely Little Telescope (KELT) project has been conducting a photometric survey for transiting planets orbiting bright stars for over ten years. The KELT images have a pixel scale of ~23"/pixel---very similar to that of NASA's Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS)---as well as a large point spread function, and the KELT reduction pipeline uses a weighted photometric aperture with radius 3'. At this angular scale, multiple stars are typically blended in the photometric apertures. In order to identify false positives and confirm transiting exoplanets, we have assembled a follow-up network (KELT-FUN) to conduct imaging with higher spatial resolution, cadence, and photometric precision than the KELT telescopes, as well as spectroscopic observations of the candidate host stars. The KELT-FUN team has followed-up over 1,600 planet candidates since 2011, resulting in more than 20 planet discoveries. Excluding ~450 false alarms of non-astrophysical origin (i.e., instrumental noise or systematics), we present an all-sky catalog of the 1,128 bright stars (6
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- 2018
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5. T Pyxidis: Death by a Thousand Novae
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Patterson, Joseph, Oksanen, Arto, Kemp, Jonathan, Monard, Berto, Rea, Robert, Hambsch, Franz-Josef, McCormick, Jennie, Nelson, Peter, Allen, William, Krajci, Thomas, Lowther, Simon, Dvorak, Shawn, Borgman, Jordan, Richards, Thomas, Myers, Gordon, Harlingten, Caisey, and Bolt, Greg
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report a 20-year campaign to track the 1.8 hour photometric wave in the recurrent nova T Pyxidis, using the global telescope network of the Center for Backyard Astrophysics. During 1996-2011, that wave was highly stable in amplitude and waveform, resembling the orbital wave commonly seen in supersoft binaries. The period, however, was found to increase on a timescale P/P-dot=3x10^5 years. This suggests a mass transfer rate in quiescence of ~10^-7 M_sol/yr, in substantial agreement with the accretion rate based on the star's luminosity. This is ~2000x greater than is typical for cataclysmic variables of that orbital period. During the post-eruption quiescence (2012-2016), the star continued on its merry but mysterious way - similar luminosity, similar P/P-dot (2.4x10^5 years). The orbital signal became vanishingly weak (<0.003 mag) near maximum light of the 2011 eruption. By day 170 of the eruption, near V=11, the orbital signal reappeared with an amplitude of 0.005 mag. It then gradually strengthened to its normal 0.08 mag amplitude, as the star declined to its "quiescent" magnitude of 15.7. During the ~1 year of invisibility and low amplitude, the orbital signal had increased in period by 0.0054(7)%. This is probably a measure of the mass ejected in the nova outburst. For a plausible choice of binary parameters, that mass is at least 3x10^-5 M_sol, and probably more. This represents >300 years of accretion at the pre-outburst rate, but the time between outbursts was only 45 years. Thus the erupting white dwarf seems to have ejected at least 6x more mass than it accreted. If this eruption is typical, the white dwarf must be eroding, rather than growing, in mass. Unless the present series of eruptions is a short-lived episode, the binary dynamics appear to be a mutual suicide pact between the eroding white dwarf and the low-mass secondary, excited ... . (etc., abstract continues), Comment: PDF, 31 pages, 2 tables, 9 figures; in preparation, more info at http://cbastro.org/
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The Death Spiral of T Pyxidis
- Author
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Patterson, Joseph, Oksanen, Arto, Monard, Berto, Rea, Robert, Hambsch, Franz-Josef, McCormick, Jennie, Nelson, Peter, Kemp, Jonathan, Allen, William, Krajci, Thomas, Lowther, Simon, Dvorak, Shawn, Richards, Thomas, Myers, Gordon, and Bolt, Greg
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report a long campaign to track the 1.8 hr photometric wave in the recurrent nova T Pyxidis, using the global telescope network of the Center for Backyard Astrophysics. During 1996-2011, that wave was highly stable in amplitude and waveform, resembling the orbital wave commonly seen in supersoft binaries. The period, however, was found to increase on a timescale P/P-dot=3x10^5 yr. This suggests a mass transfer rate of ~10^-7 M_sol/yr in quiescence. The orbital signal became vanishingly weak (<0.003 mag) near maximum light of the 2011 eruption. After it returned to visibility near V=11, the orbital period had increased by 0.0054(6) %. This is a measure of the mass ejected in the nova outburst. For a plausible choice of binary parameters, that mass is at least 3x10^-5 M_sol, and probably more. This represents >300 yr of accretion at the pre-outburst rate, but the time between outbursts was only 45 yr. Thus the erupting white dwarf seems to have ejected at least 6x more mass than it accreted. If this eruption is typical, the white dwarf must be eroding, rather than growing, in mass -- dashing the star's hopes of ever becoming famous via a supernova explosion. Instead, it seems likely that the binary dynamics are basically a suicide pact between the eroding white dwarf and the low-mass secondary, excited and rapidly whittled down, probably by the white dwarf's EUV radiation., Comment: PDF, 7 pages, 3 figures; to appear in Stella Novae: Past and Future Decades conference proceedings; more info at http://cbastro.org/
- Published
- 2013
7. The Spin-period History of Intermediate Polars
- Author
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Patterson, Joseph, primary, de Miguel, Enrique, additional, Kemp, Jonathan, additional, Dvorak, Shawn, additional, Monard, Berto, additional, Hambsch, Franz-Josef, additional, Vanmunster, Tonny, additional, Skillman, David R., additional, Cejudo, David, additional, Campbell, Tut, additional, Roberts, George, additional, Jones, Jim, additional, Cook, Lewis M., additional, Bolt, Greg, additional, Rea, Robert, additional, Ulowetz, Joseph, additional, Krajci, Thomas, additional, Menzies, Kenneth, additional, Lowther, Simon, additional, Goff, William, additional, Stein, William, additional, Wood, Matt A., additional, Myers, Gordon, additional, Stone, Geoffrey, additional, Uthas, Helena, additional, Karamehmetoglu, Emir, additional, Seargeant, Jim, additional, and McCormick, Jennie, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The KELT Follow-up Network and Transit False-positive Catalog: Pre-vetted False Positives for TESS
- Author
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Collins, Karen A., primary, Collins, Kevin I., additional, Pepper, Joshua, additional, Labadie-Bartz, Jonathan, additional, Stassun, Keivan G., additional, Gaudi, B. Scott, additional, Bayliss, Daniel, additional, Bento, Joao, additional, COLÓN, Knicole D., additional, Feliz, Dax, additional, James, David, additional, Johnson, Marshall C., additional, Kuhn, Rudolf B., additional, Lund, Michael B., additional, Penny, Matthew T., additional, Rodriguez, Joseph E., additional, Siverd, Robert J., additional, Stevens, Daniel J., additional, Yao, Xinyu, additional, Zhou, George, additional, Akshay, Mundra, additional, Aldi, Giulio F., additional, Ashcraft, Cliff, additional, Awiphan, Supachai, additional, Baştürk, Özgür, additional, Baker, David, additional, Beatty, Thomas G., additional, Benni, Paul, additional, Berlind, Perry, additional, Bruce Berriman, G., additional, Berta-Thompson, Zach, additional, Bieryla, Allyson, additional, Bozza, Valerio, additional, Calchi Novati, Sebastiano, additional, Calkins, Michael L., additional, Cann, Jenna M., additional, Ciardi, David R., additional, Clark, Ian R., additional, Cochran, William D., additional, Cohen, David H., additional, Conti, Dennis, additional, Crepp, Justin R., additional, Curtis, Ivan A., additional, D’Ago, Giuseppe, additional, Diazeguigure, Kenny A., additional, Dressing, Courtney D., additional, Dubois, Franky, additional, Ellingson, Erica, additional, Ellis, Tyler G., additional, Esquerdo, Gilbert A., additional, Evans, Phil, additional, Friedli, Alison, additional, Fukui, Akihiko, additional, Fulton, Benjamin J., additional, Gonzales, Erica J., additional, Good, John C., additional, Gregorio, Joao, additional, Gumusayak, Tolga, additional, Hancock, Daniel A., additional, Harada, Caleb K., additional, Hart, Rhodes, additional, Hintz, Eric G., additional, Jang-Condell, Hannah, additional, Jeffery, Elizabeth J., additional, Jensen, Eric L. N., additional, Jofré, Emiliano, additional, Joner, Michael D., additional, Kar, Aman, additional, Kasper, David H., additional, Keten, Burak, additional, Kielkopf, John F., additional, Komonjinda, Siramas, additional, Kotnik, Cliff, additional, Latham, David W., additional, Leuquire, Jacob, additional, Lewis, Tiffany R., additional, Logie, Ludwig, additional, Lowther, Simon J., additional, Macqueen, Phillip J., additional, Martin, Trevor J., additional, Mawet, Dimitri, additional, Mcleod, Kim K., additional, Murawski, Gabriel, additional, Narita, Norio, additional, Nordhausen, Jim, additional, Oberst, Thomas E., additional, Odden, Caroline, additional, Panka, Peter A., additional, Petrucci, Romina, additional, Plavchan, Peter, additional, Quinn, Samuel N., additional, Rau, Steve, additional, Reed, Phillip A., additional, Relles, Howard, additional, Renaud, Joe P., additional, Scarpetta, Gaetano, additional, Sorber, Rebecca L., additional, Spencer, Alex D., additional, Spencer, Michelle, additional, Stephens, Denise C., additional, Stockdale, Chris, additional, Tan, Thiam-Guan, additional, Trueblood, Mark, additional, Trueblood, Patricia, additional, Vanaverbeke, Siegfried, additional, Villanueva, Steven, additional, Warner, Elizabeth M., additional, Lou West, Mary, additional, Yalçınkaya, Selçuk, additional, Yeigh, Rex, additional, and Zambelli, Roberto, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. T Pyxidis: death by a thousand novae
- Author
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Patterson, Joseph, primary, Oksanen, Arto, additional, Kemp, Jonathan, additional, Monard, Berto, additional, Rea, Robert, additional, Hambsch, Franz-Josef, additional, McCormick, Jennie, additional, Nelson, Peter, additional, Allen, William, additional, Krajci, Thomas, additional, Lowther, Simon, additional, Dvorak, Shawn, additional, Borgman, Jordan, additional, Richards, Thomas, additional, Myers, Gordon, additional, Harlingten, Caisey, additional, and Bolt, Greg, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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