- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/PASP/108/772
- Title:
- uvby-{beta} photometry of A and F southern stars
- Short Name:
- J/PASP/108/772
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Photometric color excesses and distances plus heliocentric coordinates are calculated for 3762 southern A and early-F stars. The present results, combined with those previously published for the Northern Hemisphere, complete the coverage of the spatial distribution of interstellar reddening in the entire solar neighborhood. The new reddening maps show that the interstellar matter within 300pc of the Sun forms a single very large cloud complex that is somewhat asymmetrical with respect to both the galactic center and the galactic plane. This complex is characterized by pronounced local irregularities in both density and spatial extent. The observations further indicate that (1) the cloud complex is not associated with Gould's belt; (2) there exist large regions of the sky devoid of dust; (3) interstellar reddening is negligible at the galactic poles; (4) the role of intercloud dust in the Southern Hemisphere is minor although more important than in the Northern Hemisphere; (5) the Sun is not located in a dust-free, spherically symmetric bubble as previously thought; and (6) the Sun is, however, located in an elongated dust-free region known as the "local trough."
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- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/534/A125
- Title:
- Variability of A- and F-stars from Kepler
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/534/A125
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Kepler spacecraft is providing time series of photometric data with micromagnitude precision for hundreds of A-F type stars. We present a first general characterization of the pulsational behaviour of A-F type stars as observed in the Kepler light curves of a sample of 750 candidate A-F type stars, and observationally investigate the relation between {gamma} Doradus ({gamma} Dor), {delta} Scuti ({delta} Sct), and hybrid stars.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/437/1216
- Title:
- VAST Survey. A-type stars multiplicity
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/437/1216
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- With a combination of adaptive optics imaging and a multi-epoch common proper motion search, we have conducted a large volume-limited (D<=75pc) multiplicity survey of A-type stars, sensitive to companions beyond 30AU. The sample for the Volume-limited A-STar (VAST) survey consists of 435 A-type stars: 363 stars were observed with adaptive optics, 228 stars were searched for wide common proper motion companions and 156 stars were measured with both techniques. The projected separation coverage of the VAST survey extends from 30 to 45000AU. A total of 137 stellar companions were resolved, including 64 new detections from the VAST survey, and the companion star fraction, projected separation distribution and mass ratio distribution were measured. The separation distribution forms a log-normal distribution similar to the solar-type binary distribution, but with a peak shifted to a significantly wider value of 387^+132^_-98_AU. Integrating the fit to the distribution over the 30 to 10000AU observed range, the companion star fraction for A-type stars is estimated as 33.8+/-2.6%. The mass ratio distribution of closer (<125AU) binaries is distinct from that of wider systems, with a flat distribution for close systems and a distribution that tends towards smaller mass ratios for wider binaries. Combining this result with previous spectroscopic surveys of A-type stars gives an estimate of the total companion star fraction of 68.9+/-7.0%. The most complete assessment of higher order multiples was estimated from the 156 star subset of the VAST sample with both adaptive optics and common proper motion measurements, combined with a thorough literature search for companions, yielding a lower limit on the frequency of single, binary, triple, quadruple and quintuple A-type star systems of 56.4_-4.0_^+3.8^, 32.1_-3.5_^+3.9^, 9.0_-1.8_^+2.8^, 1.9_-0.6_^+1.8^ and 0.6_-0.2_^+1.4^ percent, respectively.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/V/30
- Title:
- Velocity Vectors of B and A stars
- Short Name:
- V/30
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- A compilation of proper motions, radial velocities, and apparent magnitudes of B and A stars is combined with the absolute magnitudes and colour excesses from the "Catalogue of estimated astrophysical parameters" by Philip and Egret (at. V/14).
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/475/677
- Title:
- X-ray emission from A-type stars
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/475/677
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Being fully radiative, stars of spectral type A are not expected to harbor magnetic dynamos and hence such stars are not expected to produce X-ray emission. Indeed, while the X-ray detection rate of such stars in X-ray surveys is low, it is not zero and some of the brighter A-type stars have been detected on different occasions and with different instruments. To study systematically the puzzle of the X-ray emitting A-type stars, we carried out an X-ray study of all A-type stars listed in the Bright Star Catalogue using the ROSAT public data archive. We found a total of 312 bright A-type stars positionally associated with ROSAT X-ray sources; we analyzed the X-ray light curves as well as searched for evidence of RV variations to identify possible late-type companions producing the X-ray emission. In this paper we present a list of X-ray active A-type stars, including the collected data about multiplicity, X-ray luminosity and spectral peculiarities.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/AJ/162/153
- Title:
- X-ray properties of A,B-types, T-Tauri stars & YSOs
- Short Name:
- J/AJ/162/153
- Date:
- 15 Mar 2022
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We use X-ray and infrared observations to study the properties of three classes of young stars in the Carina Nebula: intermediate-mass (2-5M{sun}) pre-main-sequence stars (IMPS; i.e., intermediate-mass T Tauri stars), late-B and A stars on the zero-age main sequence (AB), and lower-mass T Tauri stars (TTS). We divide our sources among these three subclassifications and further identify disk-bearing young stellar objects versus diskless sources with no detectable infrared (IR) excess emission using IR (1-8{mu}m) spectral energy distribution modeling. We then perform X-ray spectral fitting to determine the hydrogen-absorbing column density (N_H_), absorption-corrected X-ray luminosity (L_X_), and coronal plasma temperature (kT) for each source. We find that the X-ray spectra of both IMPS and TTS are characterized by similar kT and N_H_, and on average L_X_/L_bol_~4x10^-4^. IMPS are systematically more luminous in X-rays (by ~0.3dex) than all other subclassifications, with median L_X_=2.5x10^31^erg/s, while AB stars of similar masses have X-ray emission consistent with TTS companions. These lines of evidence converge on a magnetocoronal flaring source for IMPS X-ray emission, a scaled-up version of the TTS emission mechanism. IMPS therefore provide powerful probes of isochronal ages for the first ~10Myr in the evolution of a massive stellar population, because their intrinsic, coronal X-ray emission decays rapidly after they commence evolving along radiative tracks. We suggest that the most luminous (in both X-rays and IR) IMPS could be used to place empirical constraints on the location of the intermediate-mass stellar birth line.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/726/18
- Title:
- Young intermediate-mass stars in W5
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/726/18
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present the results of a survey of young intermediate-mass stars (age<5Myr, 1.5M_{sun}_<M*<=15M_{sun}_) in the W5 massive star-forming region. We use combined optical, near-infrared, and Spitzer Space Telescope photometry and optical spectroscopy to define a sample of stars of spectral types A and B and examine their infrared excess properties. We find objects with infrared excesses characteristic of optically thick disks, i.e., Herbig AeBe stars. These stars are rare: <1.5% of the entire spectroscopic sample of A and B stars, and absent among stars more massive than 2.4M_{sun}_. 7.5% of the A and B stars possess infrared excesses in a variety of morphologies that suggest their disks are in some transitional phase between an initial, optically thick accretion state and later evolutionary states. We identify four morphological classes based on the wavelength dependence of the observed excess emission above theoretical photospheric levels: (1) the optically thick disks; (2) disks with an optically thin excess over the wavelength range 2-24um, similar to that shown by Classical Be stars; (3) disks that are optically thin in their inner regions based on their infrared excess at 2-8um and optically thick in their outer regions based on the magnitude of the observed excess emission at 24um; (4) disks that exhibit empty inner regions (no excess emission at {lambda}<8um) and some measurable excess emission at 24um. A sub-class of disks exhibit no significant excess emission at {lambda}<=5.8um, have excess emission only in the Spitzer 8um band and no detection at 24um. We discuss these spectral energy distribution types, and suggest physical models for disks exhibiting these emission patterns and additional observations to test these theories.