504 research outputs found
Does the Second Caustic Ring of Dark Matter Cause the Monoceros Ring of Stars ?
Caustic rings of dark matter were predicted to exist in the plane of the
Galaxy at radii for . The recently
discovered Monoceros Ring of stars is located near the caustic, prompting
us to consider a possible connection between these two objects. We identify two
processes through which the Monoceros Ring of stars may have formed. One
process is the migration of gas to an angular velocity minimum at the caustic
leading to enhanced star formation there. The other is the adiabatic
deformation of star orbits as the caustic slowly grows in mass and radius. The
second process predicts an order 100% enhancement of the density of disk stars
at the location of the caustic ring.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figure
Eccentricity Trap: Trapping of Resonantly Interacting Planets near the Disk Inner Edge
Using orbital integration and analytical arguments, we have found a new
mechanism (an "eccentricity trap") to halt type I migration of planets near the
inner edge of a protoplanetary disk. Because asymmetric eccentricity damping
due to disk-planet interaction on the innermost planet at the disk edge plays a
crucial role in the trap, this mechanism requires continuous eccentricity
excitation and hence works for a resonantly interacting convoy of planets. This
trap is so strong that the edge torque exerted on the innermost planet can
completely halt type I migrations of many outer planets through mutual resonant
perturbations. Consequently, the convoy stays outside the disk edge, as a
whole. We have derived semi-analytical formula for the condition for the
eccentricity trap and predict how many planets are likely to be trapped. We
found that several planets or more should be trapped by this mechanism in
protoplanetary disks that have cavities. It can be responsible for the
formation of non-resonant, multiple, close-in super-Earth systems extending
beyond 0.1AU. Such systems are being revealed by radial velocity observations
to be quite common around solar-type stars.Comment: 24 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
A Lagrangian Integrator for Planetary Accretion and Dynamics (LIPAD)
We presented the first particle based, Lagrangian code that can follow the
collisional/accretional/dynamical evolution of a large number of km-sized
planetesimals through the entire growth process to become planets. We refer to
it as the 'Lagrangian Integrator for Planetary Accretion and Dynamics' or
LIPAD. LIPAD is built on top of SyMBA, which is a symplectic -body
integrator. In order to handle the very large number of planetesimals required
by planet formation simulations, we introduce the concept of a `tracer'
particle. Each tracer is intended to represent a large number of disk particles
on roughly the same orbit and size as one another, and is characterized by
three numbers: the physical radius, the bulk density, and the total mass of the
disk particles represented by the tracer. We developed statistical algorithms
that follow the dynamical and collisional evolution of the tracers due to the
presence of one another. The tracers mainly dynamically interact with the
larger objects (`planetary embryos') in the normal N-body way. LIPAD's greatest
strength is that it can accurately model the wholesale redistribution of
planetesimals due to gravitational interaction with the embryos, which has
recently been shown to significantly affect the growth rate of planetary
embryos . We verify the code via a comprehensive set of tests which compare our
results with those of Eulerian and/or direct N-body codes.Comment: Accepted to the Astronomical Journal. See
http://www.boulder.swri.edu/~hal/LIPAD.html for more detail including
animation
Self-gravitating warped discs around supermassive black holes
We consider warped equilibrium configurations for stellar and gaseous disks
in the Keplerian force-field of a supermassive black hole, assuming that the
self-gravity of the disk provides the only acting torques. Modeling the disk as
a collection of concentric circular rings, and computing the torques in the
non-linear regime, we show that stable, strongly warped precessing equilibria
are possible. These solutions exist for a wide range of disk-to-black hole mass
ratios , can span large warp angles of up to ,
have inner and outer boundaries, and extend over a radial range of a factor of
typically two to four. These equilibrium configurations obey a scaling relation
such that in good approximation \phidot/\Omega\propto M_d/M_{bh} where
\phidot is the (retrograde) precession frequency and is a
characteristic orbital frequency in the disk. Stability was determined using
linear perturbation theory and, in a few cases, confirmed by numerical
integration of the equations of motion. Most of the precessing equilibria are
found to be stable, but some are unstable. The main result of this study is
that highly warped disks near black holes can persist for long times without
any persistent forcing other than by their self-gravity. The possible relevance
of this to galactic nuclei is briefly discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 21 figures, published in MNRA
High Atomic Carbon Abundance in Molecular Clouds in the Galactic Center Region
This letter presents a Nyquist-sampled, high-resolution [CI] 3P1-3P0 map of
the -0.2 deg < l < 1.2 deg x -0.1 deg < b < 0 deg region in the Central
Molecular Zone (CMZ) taken with the Atacama Submillimeter Telescope Experiment
(ASTE) 10 m telescope. We have found that molecular clouds in the CMZ can be
classified into two groups according to their [CI]/13CO intensity ratios: a
bulk component consisting with clouds with a low, uniform [CI]/13CO ratio
(0.45) and another component consisting of clouds with high [CI]/13CO ratios (>
0.8). The [CI]-enhanced regions appear in M-0.02-0.07, the circumnuclear disk,
the 180-pc ring and the high velocity compact cloud CO+0.02-0.02. We have
carried out a large velocity gradient (LVG) analysis and have derived the
C^0/CO column density ratio for M-0.02-0.07 as 0.47, which is approximately
twice that of the bulk component of the CMZ (0.26). We propose several
hypotheses on the origin of high C^0 abundance in M-0.02-0.07, including
cosmic-ray/X-ray dissociation and mechanical dissociation of CO in the
pre-existing molecular clouds. We also suggest the possibility that M-0.02-0.07
is a cloud at an early stage of chemical evolution from diffuse gas, which was
possibly formed by the bar-induced mass inflow in the Galactic Center region.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journal Letter
How to make an ultra-faint dwarf spheroidal galaxy: tidal stirring of disky dwarfs with shallow dark matter density profiles
In recent years the Sloan Digital Sky Survey has unraveled a new population
of ultra-faint dwarf galaxies (UFDs) in the vicinity of the Milky Way (MW)
whose origin remains a puzzle. Using a suite of collisionless N-body
simulations, we investigate the formation of UFDs in the context of the tidal
stirring model for the formation of dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the Local
Group (LG). Our simulations are designed to reproduce the tidal interactions
between MW-sized host galaxies and rotationally supported dwarfs embedded in
10^9 M_sun dark matter (DM) halos. We explore a variety of inner density slopes
\rho \propto r^{-\alpha} for the dwarf DM halos, ranging from core-like (\alpha
= 0.2) to cuspy (\alpha = 1), and different dwarf orbital configurations. Our
experiments demonstrate that UFDs can be produced via tidal stirring of disky
dwarfs on relatively tight orbits, consistent with a redshift of accretion by
the host galaxy of z \sim 1, and with intermediate values for the halo inner
density slopes (\rho \propto r^{-0.6}). The inferred slopes are in excellent
agreement with those resulting from both the modeling of the rotation curves of
dwarf galaxies and recent cosmological simulations of dwarf galaxy formation.
Comparing the properties of observed UFDs with those of their simulated
counterparts, we find remarkable similarities in terms of basic observational
parameters. We conclude that tidal stirring of rotationally supported dwarfs
represents a viable mechanism for the formation of UFDs in the LG environment.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, revised version accepted for publication in ApJ
Letter
Star Formation in Disk Galaxies. I. Formation and Evolution of Giant Molecular Clouds via Gravitational Instability and Cloud Collisions
We investigate the formation and evolution of giant molecular clouds (GMCs)
in a Milky-Way-like disk galaxy with a flat rotation curve. We perform a series
of 3D adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) numerical simulations that follow both the
global evolution on scales of ~20kpc and resolve down to scales ~<10pc with a
multiphase atomic interstellar medium (ISM). In this first study, we omit star
formation and feedback, and focus on the processes of gravitational instability
and cloud collisions and interactions. We define clouds as regions with
n_H>=100cm^-3 and track the evolution of individual clouds as they orbit
through the galaxy from their birth to their eventual destruction via merger or
via destructive collision with another cloud. After ~140Myr a large fraction of
the gas in the disk has fragmented into clouds with masses ~10^6 Msun and a
mass spectrum similar to that of Galactic GMCs. The disk settles into a quasi
steady state in which gravitational scattering of clouds keeps the disk near
the threshold of global gravitational instability. The cloud collision time is
found to be a small fraction, ~1/5, of the orbital time, and this is an
efficient mechanism to inject turbulence into the clouds. This helps to keep
clouds only moderately gravitationally bound, with virial parameters of order
unity. Many other observed GMC properties, such as mass surface density,
angular momentum, velocity dispersion, and vertical distribution, can be
accounted for in this simple model with no stellar feedback.Comment: 21 pages ApJ format, including 16 figures, accepted to Ap
Dense, Parsec-Scale Clumps near the Great Annihilator
We report on Combined Array for Research in Millimeter-Wave Astronomy (CARMA)
and James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) observations toward the Einstein
source 1E 1740.7-2942, a LMXB commonly known as the "Great Annihilator." The
Great Annihilator is known to be near a small, bright molecular cloud on the
sky in a region largely devoid of emission in 12-CO surveys of the Galactic
Center. The region is of interest because it is interior to the dust lanes
which may be the shock zones where atomic gas from HI nuclear disk is converted
into molecular gas. We find that the region is populated with a number of dense
(n ~ 10^5 cm^-3) regions of excited gas with small filling factors, and
estimate that up to 1-3 x 10^5 solar masses of gas can be seen in our maps. The
detection suggests that a significant amount of mass is transported from the
shock zones to the GC star-forming regions in the form of small, dense bundles.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication by the Astrophysical
Journal, abstract abridge
Radiation Pressure Driven Galactic Winds from Self-Gravitating Discs
(Abridged) We study large-scale winds driven from uniformly bright
self-gravitating discs radiating near the Eddington limit. We show that the
ratio of the radiation pressure force to the gravitational force increases with
height above the disc surface to a maximum of twice the value of the ratio at
the disc surface. Thus, uniformly bright self-gravitating discs radiating at
the Eddington limit are fundamentally unstable to driving large-scale winds.
These results contrast with the spherically symmetric case, where
super-Eddington luminosities are required for wind formation. We apply this
theory to galactic winds from rapidly star-forming galaxies that approach the
Eddington limit for dust. For hydrodynamically coupled gas and dust, we find
that the asymptotic velocity of the wind is v_\infty ~ 1.5 v_rot and that
v_\infty SFR^{0.36}, where v_rot is the disc rotation velocity and SFR is the
star formation rate, both of which are in agreement with observations. However,
these results of the model neglect the gravitational potential of the
surrounding dark matter halo and an old passive stellar bulge or extended disc,
which act to decrease v_\infty. A more realistic treatment shows that the flow
can either be unbound, or bound, forming a "fountain flow" with a typical
turning timescale of t_turn ~ 0.1-1 Gyr. We provide quantitative criteria and
scaling relations for assessing whether or not a rapidly star-forming galaxy of
given properties can drive unbound flows via the mechanism described in this
paper. Importantly, we note that because t_turn is longer than the star
formation timescale in the rapidly star-forming galaxies and ULIRGs for which
our theory is most applicable, if rapidly star-forming galaxies are selected as
such, they may be observed to have strong outflows, even though their winds are
eventually bound on large scales.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA
Post-Event Volunteering Legacy: Did the London 2012 Games Induce a Sustainable Volunteer Engagement?
Abstract: The hosting of the London 2012 Olympic Games was seen as an opportunity to harness the enthusiasm of the 70,000 volunteers involved and to provide a post-event volunteer legacy. A total of 77 individuals who had acted as volunteers in London 2012 were contacted approximately four years after the Games and agreed to complete a web-based open-ended survey. The participants were asked to indicate their level of current volunteering engagement and whether volunteering at the Games had an impact on their current volunteering levels. The study found that the London Olympics were the first volunteer experience for most of the volunteers who completed the survey, with the main motivation to volunteer being anything related to the Olympic Games. Just over half of the respondents are currently volunteering. Lack of time is shown to be the main barrier towards further volunteering commitment. Only half of respondents had been contacted by a volunteering scheme after London 2012. The implications of the findings for a potential volunteering legacy are then explored
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