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Inclination-only dependent lunisolar resonances shape the dynamics of MEO (Medium Earth Orbit) objects over secular time scales (i.e. several decades). Their main effect is to increase an object’s eccentricity, possibly up to a value where the orbit’s perigee meets the Earth’s atmosphere and friction will determine the object’s re-entry. Thus, understanding this mechanism allows the design of low-cost end-of-life disposal strategies which exploit the resonant dynamics. In this proceeding, we will summarize our results in developing an analytic theory for lunisolar resonances and the characterization of diffusion properties along them. On this topic, the techniques proposed are of interest in most problems of secular resonances encountered in Celestial Mechanics.
We analyzed the 3 mm wavelength spectral line survey of 408 clumps from the APEX telescope large area survey of the Galaxy, focusing on the methanol maser transitions. The main goals of this study are (1) to search for new methanol masers, (2) to statistically study the relationship between class I masers and shock tracers, (3) to study the properties between methanol masers and their host clumps, also as a function of their evolutionary stages and, (4) to better constrain the physical conditions using multiple co-spatial line pairs.
We present new results from a 3D modelling code for maser flares which provides the user with control over the physical conditions; maser cloud geometry and orientation; and fast runtime via parallelisation. The statistics of simulated observables suggest that achievable amplification may be dependent on viewpoints of the source and that a randomly placed observer is likely to detect an unremarkable blue- or red-shifted maser unless the line-of-sight direction is optimal for maser amplification. A preliminary model of masers towards π1 Gru based on SPH simulations also shows promising consistency with ALMA observations of high-j SiO transitions from the source.
In this work, we focus on the period-luminosity relation (PLR) of δ Sct stars, in which mode excitation and selection mechanisms are still poorly constrained, and whose structure and oscillations are affected by rotation. We review the PLRs in the recent literature, and add a new inference from a large sample of δ Sct. We highlight the difficulty in identifying the fundamental mode and show that rotation-induced surface effects can impact the measured luminosities, explaining the broadening of the PLR. We derive a tight relation between the low-order large separation and the fundamental radial mode frequency (F0) that holds for rotating stars, thus paving the way towards mode identification. We show that the PLRs we obtain for different samples are compatible with each other and with the recent literature, and with most observed δ Sct stars when taking rotation effects into account. We also find that the highest-amplitude peak in the frequency spectrum corresponds to the fundamental modein most δ Sct, thus shedding some light on their elusive mode selection mechanism.
The ALMA Project is embarking on a partner-wide initiative to at least double, and ultimately quadruple the correlated bandwidth of ALMA by @2030. This initiative is called the ALMA Wideband Sensitivity Upgrade (WSU). In this contribution, I briefly describe the main aspects of the upgrade and status. Then I provide several examples of how the WSU will enhance (sub)millimeter maser science by affording the ability to observe more diagnostic maser transitions (and thermal lines) with a single observation.
In this study, the correlation between 22 GHz water masers and other maser species with far infrared/submillimeter (FIR/sub-mm) sources is investigated. Comparing luminosity to mass ratio (L/M) of FIR/sub-mm clumps linked to different maser species, 22 GHz water masers have significantly lower L/M values than 6.7 GHz methanol and 1665 MHz OH masers. This suggests 22 GHz water masers may precede them in the evolution timeline of SFRs. The close association between water masers and FIR/sub-mm sources provides insight into maser pumping conditions and evolutionary stages.
We took profit of the availability of large catalogs of active galact nuclei (AGNs) selected in the hard X-ray from satellite missions (e. g., INTEGRAL, Swift/BAT) to investigate the relation between the occurrence of water maser emission and the X-ray properties of the nuclei on a statistically meaningful basis. Our studies demonstrate that the hard X-ray selection may significantly enhance the maser detection rate over comparably large optical or infrared surveys. Here, we report on a recent survey to search for water maser emission with the Sardinia Radio Telescope (SRT) in a sample of heavily absorbed AGN taken from the 70 months Swift/BAT catalog.
Planets and stars have liquid layers that can support internal gravity waves and inertial waves respectively restored by the buoyancy and Coriolis forces. Both types of waves are excited by tides, leading to resonantly amplified dissipation. We review the theoretical formalism to compute these resonances and present some challenges and methods to overcome them.
We consider an exoplanetary system consisting of a star and two planets. The masses of the planets are significantly less than the mass of the star. The evolution of the orbital motion of exoplanets is studied within the framework of a double averaged unrestricted three-body problem. The main attention is paid to coplanar configurations, when the star and planets move in a certain plane that preserves a constant position. The possibility of reversing the orbital motion of the inner planet is noted.
An extended catalog of long-periodic terms of the Sun tide-generating potential (STGP ver.2) is released. It contains 2.5 times of such terms than in the first version of the STGP catalog (Cionco et al. 2023). The analysis of the new data is done in order to re-examine the existence of tidal forces of ≈ 11.0-yr and ≈ 22.0-yr period able to excite the observed solar-activity cycles. In several recent studies, such tidal forcings are claimed to be a result of certain combinations of Venus, Earth and Jupiter mean motions with the multipliers (6, −10, 4) and (3, −5, 2), respectively. So, in this contribution, we specifically look for the periodic terms related to these combinations. As a result of these additional investigation we do not confirm any noticeable tidal forcing factors of ≈ 11.0-yr nor ≈ 22.0-yr period in the extended STGP spectrum either.
According to many historical records, 1P/Halley comet was reported to appear in 760 AD. In the same year in Indonesia, the Dinoyo inscription told us the story of the Kanjuruhan kingdom which held a Vedic ceremony to purify a new shrine and statue of Agastya to repel enemy forces (or dispel the epidemic). Many traditions believe that the appearance of a comet is a sign of war, plague/epidemic, death, etc. By applying this understanding to the archaeoastronomical framework, the hypothesis is proposed, that the king’s order which was written on the inscription shows the response to the 1P/Halley comet appearance in 760 AD. There are three ways to examine the hypothesis: by testing the chronological, geographical, and cultural aspects. Through some literature studies and the Stellarium Astronomy Software simulation, the initial research found that the chronological and geographical aspects support the hypothesis.
Fundamental physical quantities of the nuclear regions of the Active Galactic Nuclei can be obtained using megamaser studies. In particular, disk-masers associated with accretion disks around the supermassive black holes are used, through high angular resolution measurements, to trace the disk geometry, to estimate the BH mass and to measure accurate distances to their host galaxies. In this contribution, we present the first results in continuum and spectral-line mode of a high-sensitivity, multi-epoch VLBI study of the nuclear region of the megamaser LINER galaxy IC 485.
Large scale optical and infrared surveys have revealed numbers of accretion-derived stellar features within the halo of the Galaxy. These coherent tail-like features are produced by encounters with satellite dwarf galaxies. We conducted an SiO and H2O maser survey towards O-rich AGBs towards the orbital plane of the Sgr Stellar Stream from 2016. Up to now, maser emissions have been found from 60 sources, most of which are detected for the first time. However, their distances and kinematics suggest they are still disk stars.
We discuss the role that coherence phenomena can have on the intensity variability of spectral lines associated with maser radiation. We do so by introducing the fundamental cooperative radiation phenomenon of (Dicke’s) superradiance and discuss its complementary nature to the maser action, as well as its role in the flaring behaviour of some maser sources. We will consider examples of observational diagnostics that can help discriminate between the two, and identify superradiance as the source of the latter. More precisely, we show how superradiance readily accounts for the different time-scales observed in the multi-wavelength monitoring of the periodic flaring in G9.62+0.20E.
Eight planetary nebulae (PNe) are known to emit OH and/or H2O masers, but there is no report of an SiO maser in this type of objects. We present a search for SiO masers in 16 confirmed and candidate PNe, carried out with the Australia Telescope Compact Array. We found no evidence of association between SiO masers and PNe in our data. Previous detections of thermal SiO emission in PNe show that these molecules can be present in gas phase in this type of objects, but it is not yet clear whether they can be found where the physical conditions are appropriate for maser pumping. We suggest that the best candidates for a new search would be PNe showing high-velocity outflows.
We present dual-frequency VLBI observations of a nearby radio galaxy NGC 4261 at 22 and 43 GHz using the East Asia VLBI Network. In particular, the first sub-pc scale image of the 22 GHz water megamaser line in the circumnuclear region of NGC 4261 is shown. Our results suggest that the megamaser emission in NGC 4261 can be associated with the inner radius of the obscuring disk, as it is proposed for the nearest radio-loud megamaser source NGC 1052. An alternative hypothesis on the megamaser association is the shock region of the interaction between the jet and ambient molecular clouds.
HINOTORI (Hybrid Integration Project in Nobeyama, Triple-band Oriented) has constructed a higher sensitivity 22/43 GHz and a 22/43/86 GHz simultaneous observation systems in the Nobeyama 45-m telescope by introducing new frequency separation filters in the telescope’s quasi-optics. The performance of the observation systems, such as the beam squint, the aperture efficiency, the system noise temperature when inserting the filters, and the phase stability of the signal path have been evaluated. It is indicated that the established systems have sufficient performance for single-dish and VLBI observations. The single-dish observation demonstrations using the triple-band system were successfully conducted in acquiring scientific data including multiple maser lines.