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The Extragalactic Lens VLBI Imaging Survey (ELVIS) investigating galaxy cores and black holes with gravitational lens central images /Boyce, Edward R. January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusets Institute of Technology (MIT), 2006. / PDF copy of thesis. Includes bibliograpy.
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The warm-hot environment of the Milky WayWilliams, Rik Jackson, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2006. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 134-137).
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Transient radiation emission from astrophysical jetsWong, Yuen-lam. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M. Phil.)--University of Hong Kong, 2007. / Title proper from title frame. Also available in printed format.
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The variability of M dwarfsGoulding, Niall Thomas January 2013 (has links)
M dwarfs have been the subject of renewed interest as potential habitable planet hosts and have increasingly become the targets of planet detection surveys. Currently, however, the number of detections of transiting M dwarf planets remain low. The characterisation of M dwarf activity is an important consideration for such surveys, and provides constraints on the modelling of magnetically active low mass stars. Currently the spottedness of M dwarfs is not well understood owing to their intrinsic faintness and the lack of diagnostics for assessing starspot morphologies and distributions. The WFCAM Transit Survey (WTS) contains long term observations of M dwarfs in the near infra-red and presents an opportunity to study the long term variability of M dwarfs. The M dwarfs in the WTS are identified by use of colour-spectral type relations, and the periodically variable M dwarfs in the sample are detected using a Lomb-Scargle periodogram analysis. A total of 72 periodically variable M dwarfs are found with periods ranging from 0.16 to 90.33 days. The relations between the spectral subtypes, amplitudes and periods are studied and comparisons to earlier works studying M dwarf rotation are made. A number of examples of significant spot evolution are found, which exhibit complex light curve morphologies that vary in form and amplitude over periods of months to years. This provides an indication as to the nature of the spottedness of these stars. Simulations are performed to probe the connection between spot coverage, temperature and light curve amplitude. Using the results from these simulations, the spot coverage fractions of the WTS M dwarfs are estimated and they are found to be heavily spotted. Dynamic models with spots evolving at various average rates are used to explore how spot evolution can drive increased dispersion in the light curves, and to what extent this affects the detectability of periodicity by the method used. It is found that spot evolution can invoke significant noise in an M dwarf light curve, and in combination with photon noise, can in some instances inhibit the detection of a period. In reflection of the results, the relation between the light curve dispersion and spot coverage of the WTS M dwarfs is considered and it is found that more heavily spotted M dwarfs have intrinsically noisier light curves. The morphologies of the light curves produced by the simulations, and the manner in which they evolve, are qualitatively similar to the real M dwarfs in the WTS sample and indicate how models extrapolated from sunspot distributions can explain behaviour seen in active M dwarf light curves.
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