7,482 research outputs found
One loop light-cone QCD, effective action for reggeized gluons and QCD RFT calculus
The effective action for reggeized gluons is based on the gluodynamic
Yang-Mills Lagrangian with external current for longitudinal gluons added, see
[1]. On the base of classical solutions, obtained in [2], the one-loop
corrections to this effective action in light-cone gauge are calculated. The
RFT calculus for reggeized gluons similarly to the RFT introduced in [3] is
proposed and discussed. The correctness of the results is verified by
calculation of the propagator of and reggeized gluons fields
and application of the obtained results is discussed as well.Comment: 24 page
Timing and Spectral Properties of X-ray Emission from the Converging Flows onto Black hole: Monte-Carlo Simulations
We demonstrate that a X-ray spectrum of a converging inflow (CI) onto a black
hole is the sum of a thermal (disk) component and the convolution of some
fraction of this component with the Comptonization spread (Green's) function.
The latter component is seen as an extended power law at energies much higher
than the characteristic energy of the soft photons. We show that the high
energy photon production (source function) in the CI atmosphere is distributed
with the characteristic maximum at about the photon bending radius, 1.5r_S,
independently of the seed (soft) photon distribution. We show that high
frequency oscillations of the soft photon source in this region lead to the
oscillations of the high energy part of the spectrum but not of the thermal
component. The high frequency oscillations of the inner region are not
significant in the thermal component of the spectrum. We further demonstrate
that Doppler and recoil effects (which are responsible for the formation of the
CI spectrum) are related to the hard (positive) and soft (negative) time lags
between the soft and hard photon energy channels respectively.Comment: 9 pages and 4 figures, to be published in the Astrophysical Journal
Letter
Comptomization and radiation spectra of X-ray sources. Calculation of the Monte Carlo method
The results of computations of the Comptomization of low frequency radiation in weakly relativistic plasma are presented. The influence of photoabsorption by iron ions on a hard X-ray spectrum is considered
On the application of the effective action approach to amplitudes with reggeon splitting
Application of the effective action approach to amplitudes with loop
integration is studied for collisions on two and three centers with possible
gluon emission. A rule is formulated for the integration around pole
singularities in the induced vertices which brings the results in agreement
with the QCD. It is demonstrated that the amplitudes can be restored from the
purely transverse picture by introducing the standard Feynman propagators for
intermediate gluons and quarks.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures; submitted to Eur.Phys.Jour.
Diffractive scattering on the deuteron projectile in the NLO: triple interaction of reggeized gluons
High-mass diffractive production of protons on the deuteron target is studied
in the next-to-leading order (NLO) of the perturbative QCD in the BFKL
approach. The non-trivial part of the NLO contributions coming from the triple
interactions of the exchanged reggeons is considered. Analytic formulas are
presented and shown to be infrared free and so ready for practical calculation.Comment: 28 pages, 2 figures; to be published in Eur.Phys.Jour.
Inverse Compton scattering in mildly relativistic plasma
We investigated the effect of inverse Compton scattering in mildly
relativistic static and moving plasmas with low optical depth using Monte Carlo
simulations, and calculated the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect in the cosmic
background radiation. Our semi-analytic method is based on a separation of
photon diffusion in frequency and real space. We use Monte Carlo simulation to
derive the intensity and frequency of the scattered photons for a monochromatic
incoming radiation. The outgoing spectrum is determined by integrating over the
spectrum of the incoming radiation using the intensity to determine the correct
weight. This method makes it possible to study the emerging radiation as a
function of frequency and direction. As a first application we have studied the
effects of finite optical depth and gas infall on the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect
(not possible with the extended Kompaneets equation) and discuss the parameter
range in which the Boltzmann equation and its expansions can be used. For high
temperature clusters ( keV) relativistic corrections based
on a fifth order expansion of the extended Kompaneets equation seriously
underestimate the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect at high frequencies. The
contribution from plasma infall is less important for reasonable velocities. We
give a convenient analytical expression for the dependence of the cross-over
frequency on temperature, optical depth, and gas infall speed. Optical depth
effects are often more important than relativistic corrections, and should be
taken into account for high-precision work, but are smaller than the typical
kinematic effect from cluster radial velocities.Comment: LateX, 30 pages and 11 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
X-ray Spectral Signatures of the Photon Bubble Model for Ultraluminous X-ray Sources
The nature of ultraluminous X-ray sources in nearby galaxies is one of the
major open questions in modern X-ray astrophysics. One possible explanation for
these objects is an inhomogeneous, radiation dominated accretion disk around a
black hole -- the so-called ``photon bubble'' model. While
previous studies of this model have focused primarily on its
radiation-hydrodynamics aspects, in this paper, we provide an analysis of its
X-ray spectral (continuum and possible edge and line) characteristics. Compton
reflection between high and low density regions in the disk may provide the key
to distinguishing this model from others, such as accretion onto an
intermediate mass black hole. We couple a Monte Carlo/Fokker-Planck radiation
transport code with the XSTAR code for reflection to simulate the photon
spectra produced in a photon bubble model for ULXs. We find that reflection
components tend to be very weak and in most cases not observable, and make
predictions for the shape of the high-energy Comptonizing spectra. In many
cases the Comptonization dominates the spectra even down to a few keV.
In one simulation, a \sim 9 \kev feature was found, which may be considered a
signature of photon bubbles in ULXs; furthermore, we make predictions of high
energy power-laws which may be observed by future instruments.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
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