Stefan Meingast
University of Vienna
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Publication
Featured researches published by Stefan Meingast.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
Stefan Meingast; J. Alves; Diego Mardones; Paula S. Teixeira; M. Lombardi; J. Großschedl; J. Ascenso; H. Bouy; Jan Forbrich; Alyssa A. Goodman; A. Hacar; Birgit Hasenberger; Jouni Kainulainen; Karolina Kubiak; Charles J. Lada; Elizabeth A. Lada; A. Moitinho; Monika G. Petr-Gotzens; Lara Rodrigues; Carlos G. Román-Zúñiga
Stefan Meingast, et al., “VISION – Vienna survey in Orion”, Astronomy & Astrophysics, Vol. 587, March 2016. This version of record is available online at:https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/abs/2016/02/aa26100-15/aa26100-15.html
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Jan Forbrich; Víctor M. Rivilla; K. M. Menten; Mark J. Reid; Claire J. Chandler; Urvashi Rau; Sanjay Bhatnagar; Scott J. Wolk; Stefan Meingast
We present a deep centimeter-wavelength catalog of the Orion Nebula Cluster (ONC), based on a 30h single-pointing observation with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array in its high-resolution A-configuration using two 1 GHz bands centered at 4.7 GHz and 7.3 GHz. A total of 556 compact sources were detected in a map with a nominal rms noise of 3 muJy/bm, limited by complex source structure and the primary beam response. Compared to previous catalogs, our detections increase the sample of known compact radio sources in the ONC by more than a factor of seven. The new data show complex emission on a wide range of spatial scales. Following a preliminary correction for the wideband primary-beam response, we determine radio spectral indices for 170 sources whose index uncertainties are less than +/-0.5. We compare the radio to the X-ray and near-infrared point-source populations, noting similarities and differences.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
A. Hacar; J. Alves; Jan Forbrich; Stefan Meingast; Karolina Kubiak; J. Großschedl
We compare APOGEE radial velocities (RVs) of young stars in the Orion A cloud with CO line gas emission and find a correlation between the two at large scales in agreement with previous studies. However, at smaller scales we find evidence for the presence of a substructure in the stellar velocity field. Using a friends-of-friends approach we identify 37 stellar groups with almost identical RVs. These groups are not randomly distributed, but form elongated chains or strings of stars with five or more members with low velocity dispersion across lengths of 1−1.5 pc. The similarity between the kinematic properties of the APOGEE strings and the internal velocity field of the chains of dense cores and fibers recently identified in the dense interstellar medium is striking and suggests that for most of the Orion A cloud, young stars keep memory of the parental gas substructure where they originated.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011
G. Handler; Stefan Meingast
Studying stellar pulsations in open clusters offers the possibility to perform ensemble asteroseismology. The reasonable assumption that the cluster members have the same age, distance, and overall metallicity aids in the seismic modelling process and tightly constrains it. Therefore it is important to identify open clusters with many pulsators. New pulsating stars of the Beta Cephei type were searched for among the members of the open cluster NGC 637. Thirty-one hours of time resolved V filter CCD photometry were obtained. The measurements confirmed two previously known variables, and revealed three new Beta Cephei stars plus one more candidate. All four pulsators have amplitudes high enough for easy mode identification and are multiperiodic. With four certain pulsating members, NGC 637 is now among the six open clusters richest in Beta Cephei stars. It is thus an excellent target for ensemble asteroseismology, and to tackle the question what separates pulsating from apparently constant stars in the Beta Cephei domain.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017
Stefan Meingast; M. Lombardi; J. Alves
Dust extinction is the most robust tracer of the gas distribution in the interstellar medium, but measuring extinction is limited by the systematic uncertainties involved in estimating the intrinsic colors to background stars. In this paper we present a new technique, PNICER, that estimates intrinsic colors and extinction for individual stars using unsupervised machine learning algorithms. This new method aims to be free from any priors with respect to the column density and intrinsic color distribution. It is applicable to any combination of parameters and works in arbitrary numbers of dimensions. Furthermore, it is not restricted to color space. Extinction towards single sources is determined by fitting Gaussian Mixture Models along the extinction vector to (extinction-free) control field observations. In this way it becomes possible to describe the extinction for observed sources with probability densities. PNICER effectively eliminates known biases found in similar methods and outperforms them in cases of deep observational data where the number of background galaxies is significant, or when a large number of parameters is used to break degeneracies in the intrinsic color distributions. This new method remains computationally competitive, making it possible to correctly de-redden millions of sources within a matter of seconds. With the ever-increasing number of large-scale high-sensitivity imaging surveys, PNICER offers a fast and reliable way to efficiently calculate extinction for arbitrary parameter combinations without prior information on source characteristics. PNICER also offers access to the well-established NICER technique in a simple unified interface and is capable of building extinction maps including the NICEST correction for cloud substructure. PNICER is offered to the community as an open-source software solution and is entirely written in Python.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
Birgit Hasenberger; Jan Forbrich; J. Alves; Scott J. Wolk; Stefan Meingast; Konstantin V. Getman; I. Pillitteri
We characterise the relation between the gas and dust content of the interstellar medium towards young stellar objects in the Orion Nebula Cluster. X-ray observations provide estimates of the absorbing equivalent hydrogen column density N_H based on spectral fits. Near-infrared extinction values are calculated from intrinsic and observed colour magnitudes (J-H) and (H-K_s) as given by the VISTA Orion A survey. A linear fit of the correlation between column density and extinction values A_V yields an estimate of the N_H/A_V ratio. We investigate systematic uncertainties of the results by describing and (if possible) quantifying the influence of circumstellar material and the adopted extinction law, X-ray models, and elemental abundances on the N_H/A_V ratio. Assuming a Galactic extinction law with R_V=3.1 and solar abundances by Anders & Grevesse (1989), we deduce an N_H/A_V ratio of (1.39 +- 0.14) x 10^21 cm^-2 mag^-1 for Class III sources in the Orion Nebula Cluster where the given error does not include systematic uncertainties. This ratio is consistent with similar studies in other star-forming regions and approximately 31% lower than the Galactic value. We find no obvious trends in the spatial distribution of N_H/A_V ratios. Changes in the assumed extinction law and elemental abundances are demonstrated to have a relevant impact on deduced A_V and N_H values, respectively. Large systematic uncertainties associated with metal abundances in the Orion Nebula Cluster represent the primary limitation for the deduction of a definitive N_H/A_V ratio and the physical interpretation of these results.
Astrobiology | 2013
Walter R. Leeb; A. Poppe; E. Hammel; J. Alves; M. Brunner; Stefan Meingast
To draw humankinds attention to its existence, an extraterrestrial civilization could well direct periodic laser pulses toward Earth. We developed a technique capable of detecting a quasi-periodic light signal with an average of less than one photon per pulse within a measurement time of a few tens of milliseconds in the presence of the radiation emitted by an exoplanets host star. Each of the electronic events produced by one or more single-photon avalanche detectors is tagged with precise time-of-arrival information and stored. From this we compute a histogram displaying the frequency of event-time differences in classes with bin widths on the order of a nanosecond. The existence of periodic laser pulses manifests itself in histogram peaks regularly spaced at multiples of the-a priori unknown-pulse repetition frequency. With laser sources simulating both the pulse source and the background radiation, we tested a detection system in the laboratory at a wavelength of 850 nm. We present histograms obtained from various recorded data sequences with the number of photons per pulse, the background photons per pulse period, and the recording time as main parameters. We then simulated a periodic signal hypothetically generated on a planet orbiting a G2V-type star (distance to Earth 500 light-years) and show that the technique is capable of detecting the signal even if the received pulses carry as little as one photon on average on top of the stars background light.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
A. Hacar; M. Tafalla; Jan Forbrich; J. Alves; Stefan Meingast; J. Grossschedl; P. S. Teixeira
Abridged. Are all filaments bundles of fibers? To address this question, we have investigated the gas organization within the paradigmatic Integral Shape Filament (ISF). We combined two new ALMA Cycle 3 mosaics with previous IRAM 30m observations to produce a high-dynamic range N
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
Stefan Meingast; J. Alves; M. Lombardi
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Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015
Walter R. Leeb; J. Alves; Stefan Meingast; M. Brunner
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