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Author(s):  
Rubens Tadeu Hock ◽  
Alessandro Luiz Batschauer
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2022 ◽  
pp. 096100062110675
Author(s):  
Abolfazl Asadnia ◽  
Mehrdad CheshmehSohrabi ◽  
Ahmad Shabani ◽  
Asefeh Asemi ◽  
Mohsen Taheri Demneh

Many organizations and businesses are using futurology to keep pace with the ever-increasing changes in the world, as the businesses and organizations need to be updated to achieve organizational and business growth and development. A review of the previous studies has shown that no systematic research has been already conducted on the future of information retrieval systems and the role of library and information science experts in the future of such systems. Therefore, a qualitative study was conducted by reviewing resources, consulting experts, doing interaction analysis, and writing scenarios. The results demonstrated 13 key factors affecting the future of information retrieval systems in the form of two driving forces of social determinism and technological determinism, and four scenarios of Canopus star, Ursa major, Ursa minor, and single star. The results also showed the dominance of technology and social demand and its very important role in the future of information retrieval systems.


2022 ◽  
Vol 924 (2) ◽  
pp. 44
Author(s):  
Erin Aadland ◽  
Philip Massey ◽  
D. John Hillier ◽  
Nidia Morrell

Abstract We present a spectral analysis of four Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) WC-type Wolf–Rayet (WR) stars (BAT99-8, BAT99-9, BAT99-11, and BAT99-52) to shed light on two evolutionary questions surrounding massive stars. The first is: are WO-type WR stars more oxygen enriched than WC-type stars, indicating further chemical evolution, or are the strong high-excitation oxygen lines in WO-type stars an indication of higher temperatures. This study will act as a baseline for answering the question of where WO-type stars fall in WR evolution. Each star’s spectrum, extending from 1100 to 25000 Å, was modeled using cmfgen to determine the star’s physical properties such as luminosity, mass-loss rate, and chemical abundances. The oxygen abundance is a key evolutionary diagnostic, and with higher resolution data and an improved stellar atmosphere code, we found the oxygen abundance to be up to a factor of 5 lower than that of previous studies. The second evolutionary question revolves around the formation of WR stars: do they evolve by themselves or is a close companion star necessary for their formation? Using our derived physical parameters, we compared our results to the Geneva single-star evolutionary models and the Binary Population and Spectral Synthesis (BPASS) binary evolutionary models. We found that both the Geneva solar-metallicity models and BPASS LMC-metallicity models are in agreement with the four WC-type stars, while the Geneva LMC-metallicity models are not. Therefore, these four WC4 stars could have been formed either via binary or single-star evolution.


2021 ◽  
Vol 163 (1) ◽  
pp. 34
Author(s):  
Philip S. Muirhead ◽  
Jason Nordhaus ◽  
Maria R. Drout

Abstract V471 Tau is a post-common-envelope binary consisting of an eclipsing DA white dwarf and a K-type main-sequence star in the Hyades star cluster. We analyzed publicly available photometry and spectroscopy of V471 Tau to revise the stellar and orbital parameters of the system. We used archival K2 photometry, archival Hubble Space Telescope spectroscopy, and published radial-velocity measurements of the K-type star. Employing Gaussian processes to fit for rotational modulation of the system flux by the main-sequence star, we recovered the transits of the white dwarf in front of the main-sequence star for the first time. The transits are shallower than would be expected from purely geometric occultations owing to gravitational microlensing during transit, which places an additional constraint on the white-dwarf mass. Our revised mass and radius for the main-sequence star is consistent with single-star evolutionary models given the age and metallicity of the Hyades. However, as noted previously in the literature, the white dwarf is too massive and too hot to be the result of single-star evolution given the age of the Hyades, and may be the product of a merger scenario. We independently estimate the conditions of the system at the time of common envelope that would result in the measured orbital parameters today.


2021 ◽  
Vol 923 (2) ◽  
pp. 214
Author(s):  
R. Farmer ◽  
E. Laplace ◽  
S. E. de Mink ◽  
S. Justham

Abstract The cosmic origin of carbon, a fundamental building block of life, is still uncertain. Yield predictions for massive stars are almost exclusively based on single-star models, even though a large fraction interact with a binary companion. Using the MESA stellar evolution code, we predict the amount of carbon ejected in the winds and supernovae of single and binary-stripped stars at solar metallicity. We find that binary-stripped stars are twice as efficient at producing carbon (1.5–2.6 times, depending on choices regarding the slope of the initial mass function and black hole formation). We confirm that this is because the convective helium core recedes in stars that have lost their hydrogen envelope, as noted previously. The shrinking of the core disconnects the outermost carbon-rich layers created during the early phase of helium burning from the more central burning regions. The same effect prevents carbon destruction, even when the supernova shock wave passes. The yields are sensitive to the treatment of mixing at convective boundaries, specifically during carbon-shell burning (variations up to 40%), and improving upon this should be a central priority for more reliable yield predictions. The yields are robust (variations less than 0.5%) across our range of explosion assumptions. Black hole formation assumptions are also important, implying that the stellar graveyard now explored by gravitational-wave detections may yield clues to better understand the cosmic carbon production. Our findings also highlight the importance of accounting for binary-stripped stars in chemical yield predictions and motivates further studies of other products of binary interactions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 923 (2) ◽  
pp. 244
Author(s):  
Yoshiki Hatta ◽  
Takashi Sekii ◽  
Masao Takata ◽  
Othman Benomar

Abstract Nonstandard modeling of KIC 11145123, a possible blue straggler star, has been asteroseismically carried out based on a scheme to compute stellar models with the chemical compositions in their envelopes arbitrarily modified, mimicking the effects of some interactions with other stars through which blue straggler stars are thought to be born. We have constructed a nonstandard model of the star with the following parameters: M = 1.36 M ⊙, Y init = 0.26, Z init = 0.002, and f ovs = 0.027, where f ovs is the extent of overshooting described as an exponentially decaying diffusive process. The modification is down to the depth of r/R ∼ 0.6 and the extent ΔX, which is a difference in surface hydrogen abundance between the envelope-modified and unmodified models, is 0.06. The residuals between the model and the observed frequencies are comparable with those for the previous model computed assuming standard single-star evolution, suggesting that it is possible that the star was born with a relatively ordinary initial helium abundance of ∼0.26 compared with that of the previous models (∼0.30–0.40), then experienced some modification of the chemical compositions and gained helium in the envelope. Detailed analyses of the nonstandard model have implied that the elemental diffusion in the deep radiative region of the star might be much weaker than that assumed in current stellar evolutionary calculations; we need some extra mechanisms inside the star, rendering the star a much more intriguing target to be further investigated.


2021 ◽  
Vol 923 (1) ◽  
pp. 126
Author(s):  
Johan Samsing ◽  
Kenta Hotokezaka

Abstract Theory and observations suggest that single-star evolution is not able to produce black holes with masses in the range 3–5M ⊙ and above ∼45M ⊙, referred to as the lower mass gap and the upper mass gap, respectively. However, it is possible to form black holes in these gaps through mergers of compact objects in, e.g., dense clusters. This implies that if binary mergers are observed in gravitational waves with at least one mass-gap object, then either clusters are effective in assembling binary mergers, or our single-star models have to be revised. Understanding how effective clusters are at populating both mass gaps have therefore major implications for both stellar and gravitational wave astrophysics. In this paper we present a systematic study of how efficient stellar clusters are at populating both mass gaps through in-cluster mergers. For this, we derive a set of closed form relations for describing the evolution of compact object binaries undergoing dynamical interactions and mergers inside their cluster. By considering both static and time-evolving populations, we find in particular that globular clusters are clearly inefficient at populating the lower mass gap in contrast to the upper mass gap. We further describe how these results relate to the characteristic mass, time, and length scales associated with the problem.


2021 ◽  
Vol 162 (6) ◽  
pp. 272
Author(s):  
Xiang-Ning Su ◽  
Ji-Wei Xie ◽  
Ji-Lin Zhou ◽  
Philippe Thebault

Abstract Although the sample of exoplanets in binaries has been greatly expanded, the sample heterogeneity and observational bias are obstacles toward a clear figure of exoplanet demographics in the binary environment. To overcome the obstacles, we conduct a statistical study that focuses on S-type (circumstellar) planetary systems detected by the radial-velocity (RV) method. We try to account for observational biases by estimating, from available RV data, planet detection efficiencies for each individual system. Our main results are as follows. (1) Single (resp. multiple) planetary systems are mostly found in close (wide) binaries with separation a B < (>) ∼ 100–300 au. (2) In binaries, single and multiple-planet systems are similar in 1D distributions of mass and period as well as eccentricity (in contrast to the “eccentricity dichotomy” found in single star systems) but different in the 2D period-mass diagram. Specifically, there is a rectangular-shaped gap in the period-mass diagram of single-planet systems but not for multiples. This gap also depends on binary separation and is more prominent in close binaries. (3) There is a rising upper envelope in the period-mass diagram for planets in wide binaries as well as in single stars but not in close binaries. More specifically, there is a population of massive short-period planets in close binaries but almost absent in wide binaries or single stars. We suggest that enhanced planetary migration, collision and/or ejection in close binaries could be the potential underlying explanation for these three features.


2021 ◽  
Vol 922 (2) ◽  
pp. 177
Author(s):  
Philip Massey ◽  
Kathryn F. Neugent ◽  
Trevor Z. Dorn-Wallenstein ◽  
J. J. Eldridge ◽  
E. R. Stanway ◽  
...  

Abstract Despite the many successes that modern massive star evolutionary theory has enjoyed, reproducing the apparent trend in the relative number of red supergiants (RSGs) and Wolf–Rayet (WR) stars has remained elusive. Previous estimates show the RSG/WR ratio decreasing strongly with increasing metallicity. However, the evolutionary models have always predicted a relatively flat distribution for the RSG/WR ratio. In this paper we reexamine this issue, drawing on recent surveys for RSGs and WRs in the Magellanic Clouds, M31, and M33. The RSG surveys have used Gaia astrometry to eliminate foreground contamination and have separated RSGs from asymptotic giant branch stars using near-infrared colors. The surveys for WRs have utilized interference-filter imaging, photometry, and image subtraction techniques to identify candidates, which have then been confirmed spectroscopically. After carefully matching the observational criteria to the models, we now find good agreement in both the single-star Geneva and binary BPASS models with the new observations. The agreement is better when we shift the RSG effective temperatures derived from J − Ks photometry downwards by 200 K in order to agree with the Levesque TiO effective temperature scale. In an appendix we also present a source list of RSGs for the SMC which includes effective temperatures and luminosities derived from near-infrared 2MASS photometry, in the same manner as used for the other galaxies.


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