11,138 research outputs found
Forming a Primordial Star in a Relic HII Region
There has been considerable theoretical debate over whether photoionization
and supernova feedback from the first Population III stars facilitate or
suppress the formation of the next generation of stars. We present results from
an Eulerian adaptive mesh refinement simulation demonstrating the formation of
a primordial star within a region ionized by an earlier nearby star. Despite
the higher temperatures of the ionized gas and its flow out of the dark matter
potential wells, this second star formed within 23 million years of its
neighbor's death. The enhanced electron fraction within the HII region
catalyzes rapid molecular hydrogen formation that leads to faster cooling in
the subsequent star forming halos than in the first halos. This "second
generation" primordial protostar has a much lower accretion rate because,
unlike the first protostar, it forms in a rotationally supported disk of
approx. 10-100 solar masses. This is primarily due to the much higher angular
momentum of the halo in which the second star forms. In contrast to previously
published scenarios, such configurations may allow binaries or multiple systems
of lower mass stars to form. These first high resolution calculations offer
insight into the impact of feedback upon subsequent populations of stars and
clearly demonstrate how primordial chemistry promotes the formation of
subsequent generations of stars even in the presence of the entropy injected by
the first stars into the IGM.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Some revisions, including enhanced discussion of
angular momentum issues. Asrophysical Journal, accepte
The Incidence of Active Galactic Nuclei in Pure Disk Galaxies: The Spitzer View
We have conducted a high-resolution spectroscopic study using Spitzer of 18
bulgeless (Sd/Sdm) galaxies that show no definitive signatures of nuclear
activity in their optical spectra. This is the first systematic mid-IR search
for weak or hidden AGNs in a statistically significant sample of bulgeless disk
galaxies. Based on the detection of the high-ionization [NeV] line, we report
the discovery of an AGN in one out of the 18 galaxies in the sample. This
galaxy, NGC 4178, is a nearby edge-on Sd galaxy, which likely hosts a prominent
nuclear star cluster (NSC). The bolometric luminosity of the AGN inferred from
the [NeV] luminosity is ~ 8e41 ergs/s. This is almost two orders of magnitude
greater than the luminosity of the AGN in NGC 4395, the best studied AGN in a
bulgeless disk galaxy. Assuming that the AGN in NGC 4178 is radiating below the
Eddington limit, the lower mass limit for the black hole is ~ 6e3M_sun. The
fact that none of the other galaxies in the sample shows any evidence for an
AGN demonstrates that while the AGN detection rate based on mid-IR diagnostics
is high (30-40%) in optically quiescent galaxies with pseudobulges, it drops
drastically in Sd/Sdm galaxies. Our observations therefore confirm that AGNs in
completely bulgeless disk galaxies are not hidden in the optical but truly are
rare. Of the three Sd galaxies with AGNs known so far, all have prominent NSCs,
suggesting that in the absence of a well-defined bulge, the galaxy must possess
a NSC in order to host an AGN. While the presence of a NSC appears to be a
requirement for hosting an AGN in bulgeless galaxies, neither the properties of
the NSC nor those of the host galaxy appear exceptional in late-type AGN hosts.
The recipe for forming and growing a central black hole in a bulgeless galaxy
therefore remains unknown.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Getting Hazmat Transportation Back on Track: The Need for Hazmat Liability Reform for Rail Carriers
X-ray Scattering Study of the spin-Peierls transition and soft phonon behavior in TiOCl
We have studied the S=1/2 quasi-one-dimensional antiferromagnet TiOCl using
single crystal x-ray diffraction and inelastic x-ray scattering techniques. The
Ti ions form staggered spin chains which dimerize below Tc1 = 66 K and have an
incommensurate lattice distortion between Tc1 and Tc2 = 92 K. Based on our
measurements of the intensities, wave vectors, and harmonics of the
incommensurate superlattice peaks, we construct a model for the incommensurate
modulation. The results are in good agreement with a soliton lattice model,
though some quantitative discrepancies exist near Tc2. The behavior of the
phonons has been studied using inelastic x-ray scattering with ~2 meV energy
resolution. For the first time, a zone boundary phonon which softens at the
spin-Peierls temperature Tsp has been observed. Our results show reasonably
good quantitative agreement with the Cross-Fisher theory for the phonon
dynamics at wave vectors near the zone boundary and temperatures near Tsp.
However, not all aspects of the data can be described, such as the strong
overdamping of the soft mode above Tsp. Overall, our results show that TiOCl is
a good realization of a spin-Peierls system, where the phonon softening allows
us to identify the transition temperature as Tsp=Tc2=92 KComment: 14 pages, 14 figure
Fragmentation and the formation of primordial protostars: the possible role of Collision Induced Emission
The mechanisms which could lead to chemo-thermal instabilities and
fragmentation during the formation of primordial protostars are investigated
analytically. We introduce approximations for H2 cooling rates bridging the
optically thin and thick regimes. These allow us to discuss instabilities up to
densities when protostars become optically thick to continuum radiation
(n~10^16 cm^-3). During the collapse, instability arises at two different
stages: at low density (n~10^8-10^11 cm^-3), it is due to fast 3-body reactions
converting H into H2; at high density (n>10^13 cm^-3), it is due to Collisional
Induced Emission (CIE). In agreement with the 3D simulations, we find that the
instability at low densities cannot lead to fragmentation, because fluctuations
do not survive turbulent mixing, and because their growth is slow. The
situation at high density is similar. The CIE-induced instability is as weak as
the low density one, with similar ratios of growth and dynamical time scales.
Fluctuation growth time is longer than free fall time, and fragmentation seems
unlikely. One then expects the first stars to be massive, not to form binaries
nor harbour planets. Nevertheless, full 3D simulations are required. They could
become possible using simplified estimates of radiative transfer effects, which
we show to work very well in the 1D case. This indicates that the effects of
radiative transfer during the initial stages of formation of primordial
protostars can be treated as local corrections to cooling. (Abridged)Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
Evolution and Explosion of Very Massive Primordial Stars
While the modern stellar IMF shows a rapid decline with increasing mass,
theoretical investigations suggest that very massive stars (>100 solar masses)
may have been abundant in the early universe. Other calculations also indicate
that, lacking metals, these same stars reach their late evolutionary stages
without appreciable mass loss. After central helium burning, they encounter the
electron-positron pair instability, collapse, and burn oxygen and silicon
explosively. If sufficient energy is released by the burning, these stars
explode as brilliant supernovae with energies up to 100 times that of an
ordinary core collapse supernova. They also eject up to 50 solar masses of
radioactive Ni56. Stars less massive than 140 solar masses or more massive than
260 solar masses should collapse into black holes instead of exploding, thus
bounding the pair-creation supernovae with regions of stellar mass that are
nucleosynthetically sterile. Pair-instability supernovae might be detectable in
the near infrared out to redshifts of 20 or more and their ashes should leave a
distinctive nucleosynthetic pattern.Comment: 7 pages, including 4 figures; in. proc. MPA/ESO/MPE/USM Joint
Astronomy Conference "Lighthouses of the Universe: The Most Luminous
Celestial Objects and their use for Cosmology
A natural renormalizable model of metastable SUSY breaking
We propose a model of metastable dynamical supersymmetry breaking in which
all scales are generated dynamically. Our construction is a simple variant of
the Intriligator-Seiberg-Shih model, with quark masses induced by
renormalizable couplings to an auxiliary supersymmetric QCD sector. Since all
scales arise from dimensional transmutation, the model has no fundamental
dimensionful parameters. It also does not rely on higher-dimensional operators.Comment: 9 pages; v2: typos correcte
Radiative Transfer in Star Formation: Testing FLD and Hybrid Methods
We perform a comparison between two radiative transfer algorithms commonly
employed in hydrodynamical calculations of star formation: grey flux limited
diffusion and the hybrid scheme, in addition we compare these algorithms to
results from the Monte-Carlo radiative transfer code MOCASSIN. In disc like
density structures the hybrid scheme performs significantly better than the FLD
method in the optically thin regions, with comparable results in optically
thick regions. In the case of a forming high mass star we find the FLD method
significantly underestimates the radiation pressure by a factor of ~100.Comment: 4 Pages; to appear in the proceedings of 'The Labyrinth of Star
Formation', Crete, 18-22 June 201
- …
