813 research outputs found
On essentially non-oscillatory schemes on unstructured meshes: Analysis and implementation
A few years ago, the class of Essentially Non-Oscillatory Schemes for the numerical simulation of hyperbolic equations and systems was constructed. Since then, some extensions have been made to multidimensional simulations of compressible flows, mainly in the context of very regular structured meshes. In this paper, we first recall and improve the results of an earlier paper about non-oscillatory reconstruction on unstructured meshes, emphasizing the effective calculation of the reconstruction. Then we describe a class of numerical schemes on unstructured meshes and give some applications for its third order version. This demonstrates that a higher order of accuracy is indeed obtained, even on very irregular meshes
Molecular Hydrogen Optical Depth Templates for FUSE Data Analysis
The calculation and use of molecular hydrogen optical depth templates to
quickly identify and model molecular hydrogen absorption features longward of
the Lyman edge at 912 Angstroms are described. Such features are commonly
encountered in spectra obtained by the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer
and also in spectra obtained by the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph,
albeit less commonly. Individual templates are calculated containing all the
Lyman and Werner transitions originating from a single rotational state (J'')
of the 0th vibrational level (v'') of the ground electronic state. Templates
are provided with 0.01 Angstrom sampling for doppler parameters ranging from 2
<= b <= 20 km s^-1 and rotational states 0 <= J'' <= 15. Optical depth
templates for excited vibrational states are also available for select doppler
parameters. Each template is calculated for a fiducial column density of
log[N(cm^-2)] = 21 and may be scaled to any column less than this value without
loss of accuracy. These templates will facilitate the determination of the
distribution of molecular hydrogen column density as a function of rotational
level. The use of these templates will free the user from the computationally
intensive task of calculating profiles for a large number of lines and allow
concentration on line profile or curve-of-growth fitting to determine column
densities and doppler parameters. The templates may be downloaded freely from
http://www.pha.jhu.edu/~stephan/h2ools2.htmlComment: 20 pages, 2 tables, 6 figures, submitted to PASP 02-04-2003 Accepted
for publication on 03-05-2003 with revisions, including modified fg1, modifed
fg6 to become fg2 to support improved error discussion. To appear in the June
2003 issue of the PAS
Low Redshift Intergalactic Absorption Lines in the Spectrum of HE0226-4110
We present an analysis of the FUSE and STIS E140M spectra of HE0226-4110
(z=0.495). We detect 56 Lyman absorbers and 5 O VI absorbers. The number of
intervening O VI systems per unit redshift with W>50 m\AA is dN(O VI)/dz~ 11.
The O VI systems unambiguously trace hot gas only in one case. For the 4 other
O VI systems, photoionization and collisional ionization models are viable
options to explain the observed column densities of the O VI and the other
ions. If the O VI systems are mostly photoionized, only a fraction of the
observed O VI will contribute to the baryonic density of the warm-hot ionized
medium (WHIM) along this line of sight. Combining our results with previous
ones, we show that there is a general increase of N(O VI) with increasing b(O
VI). Cooling flow models can reproduce the N-b distribution but fail to
reproduce the observed ionic ratios. A comparison of the number of O I, O II, O
III, O IV, and O VI systems per unit redshift show that the low-z IGM is more
highly ionized than weakly ionized. We confirm that photoionized O VI systems
show a decreasing ionization parameter with increasing H I column density. O VI
absorbers with collisional ionization/photoionization degeneracy follow this
relation, possibly suggesting that they are principally photoionized. We find
that the photoionized O VI systems in the low redshift IGM have a median
abundance of 0.3 solar. We do not find additional Ne VIII systems other than
the one found by Savage et al., although our sensitivity should have allowed
the detection of Ne VIII in O VI systems at T~(0.6-1.3)x10^6 K (if CIE
applies). Since the bulk of the WHIM is believed to be at temperatures T>10^6
K, the hot part of the WHIM remains to be discovered with FUV--EUV metal-line
transitions.Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJS. Full resolution figures
available at
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/ApJ/journal/preprints/ApJS63975.preprint.pd
Physical Properties and Baryonic Content of Low-Redshift Intergalactic Ly-alpha and O VI Absorption Systems: The PG1116+215 Sight Line
We present HST and FUSE observations of the intergalactic absorption toward
PG1116+215 in the 900-3000 A spectral region. We detect 25 Ly-alpha absorbers
at rest-frame equivalent widths W_r > 30 mA, yielding (dN/dz)_Ly-alpha =
154+/-18 over an unblocked redshift path of 0.162. Two additional weak Ly-alpha
absorbers with W_r ~ 15-20 mA are also present. Eight of the Ly-alpha absorbers
have large line widths (b > 40 km/sec). The detection of narrow OVI in the
broad Ly-alpha absorber at z=0.06244 supports the idea that the Ly-alpha
profile is thermally broadened in gas with T > 10^5 K. We find dN/dz ~ 50 for
broad Ly-alpha absorbers with W_r > 30 mA and b > 40 km/sec. If the broad
Ly-alpha lines are dominated by thermal broadening in hot gas, the amount of
baryonic material in these absorbers is enormous, perhaps as much as half the
baryonic mass in the low-redshift universe. We detect OVI absorption in several
of the Ly-alpha clouds along the sight line. Two detections at z=0.13847 and
z=0.16548 are confirmed by the presence of other ions at these redshifts, while
the detections at z=0.04125, 0.05895, 0.05928, and 0.06244 are based upon the
Ly-alpha and OVI detections alone. The information available for 13
low-redshift OVI absorbers with W_r > 50 mA along 5 sight lines yields
(dN/dz)_OVI ~ 14 and Omega_b(OVI) > 0.0027/h_75, assuming a metallicity of 0.1
solar and an OVI ionization fraction < 0.2. The properties and prevalence of
low-redshift OVI absorbers suggest that they too may be a substantial baryon
repository, perhaps containing as much mass as stars and gas inside galaxies.
The redshifts of the OVI absorbers are highly correlated with the redshifts of
galaxies along the sight line, though few of the absorbers lie closer than
600/h_75 kpc to any single galaxy. [abbreviated]Comment: 99 pages, 30 figures, aastex format, ApJS in pres
Discovery of Enhanced Germanium Abundances in Planetary Nebulae with FUSE
We report the discovery of Ge III 1088.46 in the planetary nebulae
(PNe) SwSt 1, BD+303639, NGC 3132, and IC 4593, observed with the Far
Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer. This is the first astronomical detection of
this line and the first measurement of Ge (Z = 32) in PNe. We estimate Ge
abundances using S and Fe as reference elements, for a range of assumptions
about gas-phase depletions. The results indicate that Ge, which is synthesized
in the initial steps of the s-process and therefore can be self-enriched in
PNe, is enhanced by factors of > 3-10. The strongest evidence for enrichment is
seen for PNe with Wolf-Rayet central stars, which are likely to contain heavily
processed material.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Spatial Variability in the Ratio of Interstellar Atomic Deuterium to Hydrogen. I. Observations toward delta Orionis by the Interstellar Medium Absorption Profile Spectrograph
Studies of the abundances of deuterium in different astrophysical sites are
of fundamental importance to answering the question about how much deuterium
was produced during big bang nucleosynthesis and what fraction of it was
destroyed later. With this in mind, we used the Interstellar Medium Absorption
Profile Spectrograph (IMAPS) on the ORFEUS-SPAS II mission to observe at a
wavelength resolution of 4 km/s (FWHM) the L-delta and L-epsilon absorption
features produced by interstellar atomic deuterium in the spectrum of delta Ori
A. A chi-square analysis indicated that 0.96 < N(D I)< 1.45e15 cm^{-2} at a 90%
level of confidence, and the gas is at a temperature of about 6000K. To obtain
an accurate value of N(H I) needed for a determination of the atomic ratio of D
to H, we measured the L-alpha absorption features in 57 spectra of delta Ori in
the IUE archive. From our measurement of N(H I)= 1.56e20 cm^{-2}, we found that
N(D I)/N(H I)= 7.4(+1.9,-1.3)e-6 (90% confidence). Our result for D/H contrasts
with the more general finding along other lines of sight that D/H is
approximately 1.5e-5. The underabundance of D toward delta Ori A is not
accompanied by an overabundance of N or O relative to H, as one might expect if
the gas were subjected to more stellar processing than usual.Comment: 37 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to the Astrophysical Journa
Are Giant Planets Forming Around HR 4796A?
We have obtained FUSE and HST STIS spectra of HR 4796A, a nearby 8 Myr old
main sequence star that possesses a dusty circumstellar disk whose inclination
has been constrained from high resolution near-infrared observations to be ~17
deg from edge-on. We searched for circumstellar absorption in the ground states
of C II at 1036.3 A, O I at 1039.2 A, Zn II at 2026.1 A, Lyman series H2, and
CO (A-X) and failed to detect any of these species. We place upper limits on
the column densities and infer upper limits on the gas masses assuming that the
gas is in hydrostatic equilibrium, is well-mixed, and has a temperature, Tgas ~
65 K. Our measurements suggest that this system possesses very little molecular
gas. Therefore, we infer an upper limit for the gas:dust ratio (<4.0) assuming
that the gas is atomic. We measure less gas in this system than is required to
form the envelope of Jupiter.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures (including 1 color figure), accepted for
publication in Ap
A Pressure-Based Model for Two-Phase Flows Under Generic Equations of State
We present a diffuse interface method for a pressure-based Baer-Nunziato type model for compressible two-phase flows, which allows the use of generic equations of state to describe each phase. The model is made dimensionless by means of a special pressure scaling that recovers the correct scaling of the discrete governing equations in the zero Mach limit, and overcomes the difficulties related to the lack of a clear notion of reference speed of sound in non-equilibrium two-phase flows. The model is equipped with pressure and velocity relaxation terms to impose the mechanical equilibrium between phases after their independent evolution. Two different finite volume schemes are presented. First, a 1D semi-implicit staggered scheme is introduced to show the capability of the model to work with the Peng-Robinson EOS when each phase evolves close to the saturation curve. Then, a preliminary 2D explicit scheme, which does not include the relaxation terms, is presented as a first step toward the development of an unstructured 2D scheme for compressible two-phase flows at all Mach numbers. The validity of the preliminary 2D monolithic implementation of the hyperbolic operator is illustrated through the simulation of a shock-bubble interaction with air and helium. © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG
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