Thomas R. Geballe
University of Hawaii at Manoa
312 Papers
4.5K Citations
Thomas R. Geballe is an academic researcher from University of Hawaii at Manoa. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stars & Brown dwarf. The author has an hindex of 71, co-authored 301 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Infrared spectroscopy of CK Vulpeculae: revealing a remarkably powerful blast from the past
Dipankar Banerjee,Thomas R. Geballe,A. Evans,Melissa Shahbandeh,C. E. Woodward,Robert D. Gehrz,S. P. S. Eyres,S. G. Starrfield,Albert A. Zijlstra +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed that CK~Vul belongs to the class of Intermediate Luminosity Optical Transients (ILOTs), objects which bridge the luminosity gap between novae and supernovae.
The sub-millimetre evolution of V4334 Sgr (Sakurai's Object)
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report the results of monitoring of V4334 Sgr (Sakurai's Object) at 450 microns and 850 microns with SCUBA on the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope.
5
The Multiple Pre-main-sequence System PR Ori and the Associated HH 305 Flow
Bo Reipurth,George H. Herbig,John Bally,Thomas R. Geballe,Brendan P. Bowler,A. C. Raga,Hsin-Fang Chiang,M. S. Connelley,C. Aspin +8 more
Abstract: A detailed imaging and spectroscopic analysis is presented of the little-studied T Tauri star PR Ori and its associated Herbig–Haro flow HH 305, located on the outskirts of the L1641-N cluster in Orion. PR Ori is shown to be a multiple system, where the A component is a close 0.″077 binary, and the B component, at a distance of 3.″50, is the driver of the large Herbig–Haro flow. A low-luminosity source, here called C, is located 9.″3 to the southeast and is shown spectroscopically to be straddling the stellar/brown dwarf boundary. The corresponding separations in projection are 32, 1450, and 3900 au, respectively. Although PR Ori A is a weak-line T Tauri star, high-resolution optical spectra reveal high-velocity outflowing winds and, at the same time, material infalling with speeds up to 200 km s−1. PR Ori B shows a similar combination of outflow and infall but is a strong Hα emission star, with a major near-infrared excess that dominates the luminosity of the system at wavelengths longer than ∼5 μm. HH 305 displays three pairs of knots symmetrically on either side of PR Ori, with higher velocities near the source and gradually decreasing velocities with increasing distance from the source. The innermost knots show bubble-like morphologies, very different from a collimated jet, with the northern lobe redshifted and the southern lobe blueshifted. The origin and nature of this unusual Herbig–Haro flow is discussed.
5
•Journal Article
Post AGB candidates : selection and IR properties
TL;DR: In this article, les proprietes d'un echantillon de 25 supergeantes, selectionnees sur les owners de deux post-AGB connues, HR 4049 and HD 213985, sont analysees.
4