February 1-2, 2003(Saturday/Sunday)
Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics
Santa Barbara, California
This will be a two day informal workshop following the Globular
Clusters Conference that ends on Friday. Our intent is to have a
series of 20 minute talks on Saturday, followed by some talks and
discussions on Sunday. We have invited a number of speakers for
Saturday, and we are open to all participants.
If you are interested in speaking or attending, please
REGISTER HERE. The registration deadline is December 6,
and there is no registration fee. We advise you to make
your hotel arrangements promptly -- see the registration
form for details.
Scientific Organizing Committee:
Lars Bildsten(KITP/UCSB)(bildsten@kitp.ucsb.edu)
Deepto Chakrabarty(MIT)(deepto@space.mit.edu)
Gijs Nelemans(IoA/Cambridge)(nelemans@ast.cam.ac.uk )
Invited speakers/participants:
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Lars Bildsten(KITP), Deepto Chakrabarty(MIT), Paul Groot(Nijmegen),
Lee Homer(Washington), Erik Kuulkers(ESTEC), Tom Marsh(Southampton),
Gijs Nelemans(IoA), Joe Patterson(Columbia), Sterl Phinney(Caltech),
Phillipp Podsiadlowski(Oxford), Gavin Ramsay(MSSL),
Saul Rappaport(MIT), Jan-Erik Solheim(Tromso/Oslo), Danny Steeghs(CfA),
Tod Strohmayer(*, GSFC), Brian Warner(Cape Town)
(*) = not confirmed yet
For a list of confirmed attendees, click here.
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SCIENTIFIC OUTLINE:
The dramatic increase in the number of known interacting binaries
with orbital periods below an hour, and the growing advantages of
bringing together three separate communities(AM CVn white dwarf
binaries; neutron star low-mass X-ray binaries; and gravitational
wave astrophysics/LISA), are the motivations for this workshop
meeting. The most relevant developments:
- Recent progress in the AM CVn community includes discoveries
of many new systems that are filling in the period distribution,
possible detection of a number of short period systems with
direct impact, and sufficient statistics on double degenerate
systems to begin to understand AM CVn populations.
- In the neutron star systems, the progress has been triggered
by the recent discovery of two new systems, both of which are
X-ray transients harboring an accreting millisecond pulsar.
In addition, Chandra X-ray spectroscopy of at least one system
suggests a chemically fractionated white dwarf donor which was
previously crystallized, raising a number of interesting questions
about white dwarf cooling and the properties of the donors in
ultracompact systems.
- Both of these classes of system are natural targets for
gravitational wave detection with LISA.
All of these systems share a number of open questions:
- Evolution to make such a system. Frequency of double degenerates,
stability at the onset of mass transfer.
- Accretion disk properties. Thermal stability of He and C/O
accretion disks, spectral lines. Origin and evolution during
outbursts and properties in quiescence.
- Accretion disk precession/superhumps in extreme-mass-ratio systems.
- Gravitational wave emission: many of these are candidates for
direct detection by LISA.
- Properties of the low-mass He or C/O donor: the donor stars are
probably not the cold white dwarfs encountered in standard textbooks.
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