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Dive into the research topics where Mariko Kimura is active.

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Featured researches published by Mariko Kimura.


Nature | 2016

Repetitive patterns in rapid optical variations in the nearby black-hole binary V404 Cygni.

Mariko Kimura; Keisuke Isogai; Taichi Kato; Yoshihiro Ueda; Satoshi Nakahira; Megumi Shidatsu; Teruaki Enoto; Takafumi Hori; Daisaku Nogami; Colin Littlefield; Ryoko Ishioka; Ying-Tung Chen; S.-K. King; Chih Yi Wen; Shiang-Yu Wang; M. J. Lehner; Megan E. Schwamb; Jen Hung Wang; Z.-W. Zhang; Charles Alcock; Tim Axelrod; Federica B. Bianco; Yong Ik Byun; W. P. Chen; Kem H. Cook; Dae-Won Kim; Typhoon Lee; S. L. Marshall; Elena P. Pavlenko; Oksana I. Antonyuk

How black holes accrete surrounding matter is a fundamental yet unsolved question in astrophysics. It is generally believed that matter is absorbed into black holes via accretion disks, the state of which depends primarily on the mass-accretion rate. When this rate approaches the critical rate (the Eddington limit), thermal instability is supposed to occur in the inner disk, causing repetitive patterns of large-amplitude X-ray variability (oscillations) on timescales of minutes to hours. In fact, such oscillations have been observed only in sources with a high mass-accretion rate, such as GRS 1915+105 (refs 2, 3). These large-amplitude, relatively slow timescale, phenomena are thought to have physical origins distinct from those of X-ray or optical variations with small amplitudes and fast timescales (less than about 10 seconds) often observed in other black-hole binaries—for example, XTE J1118+480 (ref. 4) and GX 339−4 (ref. 5). Here we report an extensive multi-colour optical photometric data set of V404 Cygni, an X-ray transient source containing a black hole of nine solar masses (and a companion star) at a distance of 2.4 kiloparsecs (ref. 8). Our data show that optical oscillations on timescales of 100 seconds to 2.5 hours can occur at mass-accretion rates more than ten times lower than previously thought. This suggests that the accretion rate is not the critical parameter for inducing inner-disk instabilities. Instead, we propose that a long orbital period is a key condition for these large-amplitude oscillations, because the outer part of the large disk in binaries with long orbital periods will have surface densities too low to maintain sustained mass accretion to the inner part of the disk. The lack of sustained accretion—not the actual rate—would then be the critical factor causing large-amplitude oscillations in long-period systems.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2016

V1006 Cygni: Dwarf nova showing three types of outbursts and simulating some features of the WZ Sge-type behavior

Taichi Kato; Elena P. Pavlenko; Alisa V. Shchurova; Aleksei A. Sosnovskij; Julia V. Babina; Aleksei V. Baklanov; Sergey Yu. Shugarov; Colin Littlefield; Pavol A. Dubovsky; Igor Kudzej; Roger D. Pickard; Keisuke Isogai; Mariko Kimura; Enrique de Miguel; Tamás Tordai; Drahomir Chochol; Yutaka Maeda; Lewis M. Cook; Ian Miller; Hiroshi Itoh

We observed the 2015 July-August long outburst of V1006 Cyg and established this object to be an SU UMa-type dwarf nova in the period gap. Our observations have confirmed that V1006 Cyg is the second established object showing three types of outbursts (normal, long normal and superoutbursts) after TU Men. We have succeeded in recording the growing stage of superhumps (stage A superhumps) and obtained a mass ratio of 0.26-0.33, which is close to the stability limit of tidal instability. This identification of stage A superhumps demonstrated that superhumps indeed slowly grow in systems near the stability limit, the idea first introduced by Kato et al. 2014, arXiv:1406.6428). The superoutburst showed a temporary dip followed by a rebrightening. The moment of the dip coincided with the stage transition of superhumps, and we suggest that stage C superhumps is related to the start of the cooling wave in the accretion disk. We interpret that the tidal instability was not strong enough to maintain the disk in the hot state when the cooling wave started. We propose that the properties commonly seen in the extreme ends of mass ratios (WZ Sge-type objects and long-period systems) can be understood as a result of weak tidal effect.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2016

Survey of Period Variations of Superhumps in SU UMa-Type Dwarf Novae. VIII: The Eighth Year (2015-2016)

Taichi Kato; Franz-Josef Hambsch; Berto Monard; Tonny Vanmunster; Yutaka Maeda; Ian Miller; Hiroshi Itoh; Seiichiro Kiyota; Keisuke Isogai; Mariko Kimura; Akira Imada; Tamás Tordai; Hidehiko Akazawa; Kenji Tanabe; Noritoshi Otani; Minako Ogi; Kazuko Ando; Naoki Takigawa; Pavol A. Dubovsky; Igor Kudzej; Sergey Yu. Shugarov; Natalia Katysheva; Polina Golysheva; Natalia Gladilina; Drahomir Chochol; Peter Starr; Kiyoshi Kasai; Roger D. Pickard; Enrique de Miguel; Naoto Kojiguchi

Continuing the project described by Kato et al. (2009, arXiv:0905.1757), we collected times of superhump maxima for 128 SU UMa-type dwarf novae observed mainly during the 2015-2016 season and characterized these objects. The data have improved the distribution of orbital periods, the relation between the orbital period and the variation of superhumps, the relation between period variations and the rebrightening type in WZ Sge-type objects. Coupled with new measurements of mass ratios using growing stages of superhumps, we now have a clearer and statistically greatly improved evolutionary path near the terminal stage of evolution of cataclysmic variables. Three objects (V452 Cas, KK Tel, ASASSN-15cl) appear to have slowly growing superhumps, which is proposed to reflect the slow growth of the 3:1 resonance near the stability border. ASASSN-15sl, ASASSN-15ux, SDSS J074859.55+312512.6 and CRTS J200331.3-284941 are newly identified eclipsing SU UMa-type (or WZ Sge-type) dwarf novae. ASASSN-15cy has a short (~0.050 d) superhump period and appears to belong to EI Psc-type objects with compact secondaries having an evolved core. ASASSN-15gn, ASASSN-15hn, ASASSN-15kh and ASASSN-16bu are candidate period bouncers with superhump periods longer than 0.06 d. We have newly obtained superhump periods for 79 objects and 13 orbital periods, including periods from early superhumps. In order that the future observations will be more astrophysically beneficial and rewarding to observers, we propose guidelines how to organize observations of various superoutbursts.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2015

How does a secular instability grow in a hyperaccretion flow

Mariko Kimura; Shin Mineshige; Norita Kawanaka

Hyperaccretion flows with mass accretion rates far above the Eddington rate have an N-shaped equilibrium curve on the


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

Erratum: Rapid Optical Variations Correlated with X-rays in the 2015 Second Outburst of V404 Cygni (GS 2023+338)

Mariko Kimura; Taichi Kato; Keisuke Isogai; Hyungsuk Tak; Megumi Shidatsu; Hiroshi Itoh; Tamás Tordai; Kiyoshi Kasai; William N. Goff; Seiichiro Kiyota; Roger D. Pickard; Katsura Matsumoto; Naoto Kojiguchi; Yuki Sugiura; Eiji Yamada; Taiki Tatsumi; Atsushi Miyashita; Pavol A. Dubovsky; Igor Kudzej; Enrique de Miguel; William Stein; Yutaka Maeda; Elena P. Pavlenko; Aleksei A. Sosnovskij; Julia V. Babina; Lewis M. Cook; Daisaku Nogami

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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2016

ASASSN-15jd: WZ Sge-type star with intermediate superoutburst between single and double ones

Mariko Kimura; Keisuke Isogai; Taichi Kato; Akira Imada; Naoto Kojiguchi; Yuki Sugiura; Daiki Fukushima; Nao Takeda; Katsura Matsumoto; Shawn Dvorak; Tonny Vanmunster; Pavol A. Dubovsky; Igor Kudzej; Ian Miller; Elena P. Pavlenko; Julia V. Babina; Oksana I. Antonyuk; Aleksei V. Baklanov; William Stein; Maksim V. Andreev; Tamás Tordai; Hiroshi Itoh; Roger D. Pickard; Daisaku Nogami

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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2016

RZ Leonis Minoris bridging between ER Ursae Majoris-type dwarf nova and nova-like system

Taichi Kato; Ryoko Ishioka; Keisuke Isogai; Mariko Kimura; Akira Imada; Ian Miller; Kazunari Masumoto; Hirochika Nishino; Naoto Kojiguchi; Miho Kawabata; Daisuke Sakai; Yuki Sugiura; Hisami Furukawa; Kenta Yamamura; Hiroshi Kobayashi; Katsura Matsumoto; Shiang-Yu Wang; Yi Chou; Chow-Choong Ngeow; W. P. Chen; Neelam Panwar; C. C. Lin; Hsiang-Yao Hsiao; Jhen-Kuei Guo; Chien-Cheng Lin; Chingis Omarov; Anatoly Kusakin; Maxim Krugov; Donn R. Starkey; Elena P. Pavlenko

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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2016

Unexpected superoutburst and rebrightening of AL Comae Berenices in 2015

Mariko Kimura; Taichi Kato; Akira Imada; Kai Ikuta; Keisuke Isogai; Pavol A. Dubovsky; Seiichiro Kiyota; Roger D. Pickard; Ian Miller; Elena P. Pavlenko; Aleksei A. Sosnovskij; Shawn Dvorak; Daisaku Nogami

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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2018

On the nature of long-period dwarf novae with rare and low-amplitude outbursts

Mariko Kimura; Taichi Kato; Hiroyuki Maehara; Ryoko Ishioka; Berto Monard; Kazuhiro Nakajima; Geoff Stone; Elena P. Pavlenko; Oksana I. Antonyuk; Nikolai V. Pit; Aleksei A. Sosnovskij; Natalia Katysheva; Michael W. Richmond; R. Michel; Katsura Matsumoto; Naoto Kojiguchi; Yuki Sugiura; Shihei Tei; Kenta Yamamura; Lewis M. Cook; Richard Sabo; Ian Miller; William N. Goff; Seiichiro Kiyota; Sergey Yu. Shugarov; Polina Golysheva; Olga Vozyakova; Stephen M. Brincat; Hiroshi Itoh; Tamás Tordai

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Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2018

ASASSN-16dt and ASASSN-16hg: Promising candidate period bouncers

Mariko Kimura; Keisuke Isogai; Taichi Kato; Kenta Taguchi; Yasuyuki Wakamatsu; Franz-Josef Hambsch; Berto Monard; Gordon Myers; Shawn Dvorak; Peter Starr; Stephen M. Brincat; Enrique de Miguel; Joseph Ulowetz; Hiroshi Itoh; Geoff Stone; Daisaku Nogami

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Ian Miller

American Association of Variable Star Observers

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Roger D. Pickard

British Astronomical Association

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