2,917 research outputs found
Hypernovae and light dark matter as possible Galactic positron sources
The electron-positron annihilation source in the Galactic center region has
recently been observed with INTEGRAL/SPI, which shows that this 511 keV source
is strong and its extension is consistent with the Galactic bulge geometry. The
positron production rate, estimated to more than 10 per second, is very
high and raises a challenging question about the nature of the Galactic
positron source. Commonly considered astrophysical positron injectors, namely
type Ia supernovae are rare events and fall short to explain the observed
positron production rate. In this paper, we study the possibility of Galactic
positron production by hypernovae events, exemplified by the recently observed
SN2003dh/GRB030329, an asymmetric explosion of a Wolf-Rayet star associated
with a gamma-ray burst. In these kinds of events, the ejected material becomes
quickly transparent to positrons, which spread out in the interstellar medium.
Non radioactive processes, such as decays of heavy dark matter particles
(neutralinos) predicted by most extensions of the standard model of particle
physics, could also produce positrons as byproducts. However they are expected
to be accompanied by a large flux of high-energy gamma-rays, which were not
observed by EGRET and ground based Tcherenkov experiments. In this context we
explore the possibility of direct positron production by annihilation of light
dark matter particles.Comment: 8 pages, 0 figures, 35th COSPAR, accepted in July 2005 by Elsevier
Science for publication in "Advances in Space Research
Integral and Light Dark Matter
The nature of Dark Matter remains one of the outstanding questions of modern
astrophysics. The success of the Cold Dark Matter cosmological model argues
strongly in favor of a major component of the dark matter being in the form of
elementary particles, not yet discovered. Based on earlier theoretical
considerations, a possible link between the recent SPI/INTEGRAL measurement of
an intense and extended emission of 511 keV photons (positron annihilation)
from the central Galaxy, and this mysterious component of the Universe, has
been established advocating the existence of a light dark matter particle at
variance with the neutralino, in general considered as very heavy. We show that
it can explain the 511 keV emission mapped with SPI/INTEGRAL without
overproducing undesirable signals like high energy gamma-rays arising from
decays, and radio synchrotron photons emitted by high energy
positrons circulating in magnetic fields. Combining the annihilation line
constraint with the cosmological one (i.e. that the relic LDM energy density
reaches about 23% of the density of the Universe), one can restrict the main
properties of the light dark matter particle. Its mass should lie between 1 and
100 MeV, and the required annihilation cross section, velocity dependent,
should be significantly larger than for weak interactions, and may be induced
by the virtual production of a new light neutral spin 1 boson . On
astrophysical grounds, the best target to validate the LDM proposal seems to be
the observation by SPI/INTEGRAL and future gamma ray telescopes of the
annihilation line from the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy and the Palomar-13 globular
cluster, thought to be dominated by dark matter.Comment: 7 pages, 0 figures. To appear in the Proceedings of the 5th INTEGRAL
Workshop: "The INTEGRAL Universe", February 16-20, 2004, Munich, German
Redox and ion-exchange properties in surface-tethered DNA-conducting polymers
A poly(cyclopentadithiophene) matrix modified by DNA covalently fixed to the surface has been designed to study the redox and ion-exchange properties in surface-tethered DNA-conducting polymers. Voltammetric investigations show an improvement in conductivity, originating from DNA modification, probably due to changes in charged-density and size of dopant species. Cyclic voltammetry with concomitant QCM measurements indicate that the mass changes are consistent with an ejection of Na+ cations associated to the anionic phosphate groups, attesting a DNA contribution to the p-doping process. So, in contrast to the classic doping patterns, the p-doping process of surface-tethered DNA-copolymer exhibits a cation-controlled transport mechanism. Impedimetric investigations indicate that for long enough DNA target sequence, nucleic acid preserves certain flexibility and is involved in the p-doping process through a diffusion-like motion. These results give new opportunities for genesensors development and for a better understanding of bioactive conducting surfaces
Experimental results on radiation-induced bulk damage effects in float-zone and epitaxial silicon detectors
A comparative study of the radiation hardness of silicon pad detectors, manufactured from Float-Zone and Epitaxial n-type monocrystals and irradiated with protons and neutrons up to a fluence of 3.5 1014 cm-2 is presented. The results are compared in terms of their reverse current, depletion voltage, and charge collection as a function of fluence during irradiation and as a function of time after irradiation
On the Phenomenology of Hydrodynamic Shear Turbulence
The question of a purely hydrodynamic origin of turbulence in accretion disks
is reexamined, on the basis of a large body of experimental and numerical
evidence on various subcritical (i.e., linearly stable) hydrodynamic flows.
One of the main points of this paper is that the length scale and velocity
fluctuation amplitude which are characteristic of turbulent transport in these
flows scale like , where is the minimal Reynolds number for
the onset of fully developed turbulence. From this scaling, a simple
explanation of the dependence of with relative gap width in subcritical
Couette-Taylor flows is developed. It is also argued that flows in the shearing
sheet limit should be turbulent, and that the lack of turbulence in all such
simulations performed to date is most likely due to a lack of resolution, as a
consequence of the effect of the Coriolis force on the large scale fluctuations
of turbulent flows.
These results imply that accretion flows should be turbulent through
hydrodynamic processes. If this is the case, the Shakura-Sunyaev
parameter is constrained to lie in the range in accretion
disks, depending on unknown features of the mechanism which sustains
turbulence. Whether the hydrodynamic source of turbulence is more efficient
than the MHD one where present is an open question.Comment: 31 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Hybridization-induced interfacial changes detected by non-Faradaic impedimetric measurements compared to Faradaic approach
A biosensor for direct label-free DNA detection based on a polythiophene matrix is investigated by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). Impedimetric experiments are performed with and without redox probe in solution. The non-Faradaic impedance measurements reveal two relaxation processes located at 50 Hz and 5 kHz, respectively. The first relaxation process, located at low frequencies, allows to detect biorecognition events by measuring the phase angle decrease, in accordance with a hindrance of the polaronic conduction. The second relaxation process, located at 5 kHz and originating from DNA modification, seems to increase with the length of the target sequence. These results suggest that this loaded support provides a platform for impedimetric detection of hybridization at high frequencies, leading to less time-consuming detection procedure. For a better understanding, results obtained in non-Faradaic mode are compared with Faradaic approach
Waves and Instabilities in Accretion Disks: MHD Spectroscopic Analysis
A complete analytical and numerical treatment of all magnetohydrodynamic
waves and instabilities for radially stratified, magnetized accretion disks is
presented. The instabilities are a possible source of anomalous transport.
While recovering results on known hydrodynamicand both weak- and strong-field
magnetohydrodynamic perturbations, the full magnetohydrodynamic spectra for a
realistic accretion disk model demonstrates a much richer variety of
instabilities accessible to the plasma than previously realized. We show that
both weakly and strongly magnetized accretion disks are prone to strong
non-axisymmetric instabilities.The ability to characterize all waves arising in
accretion disks holds great promise for magnetohydrodynamic spectroscopic
analysis.Comment: FOM-Institute for plasma physics "Rijnhuizen", Nieuwegein, the
Netherlands 12 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in ApJ
Transport of Cosmic Rays in Chaotic Magnetic Fields
The transport of charged particles in disorganised magnetic fields is an
important issue which concerns the propagation of cosmic rays of all energies
in a variety of astrophysical environments, such as the interplanetary,
interstellar and even extra-galactic media, as well as the efficiency of Fermi
acceleration processes. We have performed detailed numerical experiments using
Monte-Carlo simulations of particle propagation in stochastic magnetic fields
in order to measure the parallel and transverse spatial diffusion coefficients
and the pitch angle scattering time as a function of rigidity and strength of
the turbulent magnetic component. We confirm the extrapolation to high
turbulence levels of the scaling predicted by the quasi-linear approximation
for the scattering frequency and parallel diffusion coefficient at low
rigidity. We show that the widely used Bohm diffusion coefficient does not
provide a satisfactory approximation to diffusion even in the extreme case
where the mean field vanishes. We find that diffusion also takes place for
particles with Larmor radii larger than the coherence length of the turbulence.
We argue that transverse diffusion is much more effective than predicted by the
quasi-linear approximation, and appears compatible with chaotic magnetic
diffusion of the field lines. We provide numerical estimates of the Kolmogorov
length and magnetic line diffusion coefficient as a function of the level of
turbulence. Finally we comment on applications of our results to astrophysical
turbulence and the acceleration of high energy cosmic rays in supernovae
remnants, in super-bubbles, and in jets and hot spots of powerful
radio-galaxies.Comment: To be published in Physical Review D, 20 pages 9 figure
The effects of discreteness of galactic cosmic rays sources
Most studies of GeV Galactic Cosmic Rays (GCR) nuclei assume a steady
state/continuous distribution for the sources of cosmic rays, but this
distribution is actually discrete in time and in space. The current progress in
our understanding of cosmic ray physics (acceleration, propagation), the
required consistency in explaining several GCRs manifestation (nuclei,
,...) as well as the precision of present and future space missions
(e.g. INTEGRAL, AMS, AGILE, GLAST) point towards the necessity to go beyond
this approximation. A steady state semi-analytical model that describes well
many nuclei data has been developed in the past years based on this
approximation, as well as others. We wish to extend it to a time dependent
version, including discrete sources. As a first step, the validity of several
approximations of the model we use are checked to validate the approach: i) the
effect of the radial variation of the interstellar gas density is inspected and
ii) the effect of a specific modeling for the galactic wind (linear vs
constant) is discussed. In a second step, the approximation of using continuous
sources in space is considered. This is completed by a study of time
discreteness through the time-dependent version of the propagation equation. A
new analytical solution of this equation for instantaneous point-like sources,
including the effect of escape, galactic wind and spallation, is presented.
Application of time and space discretness to definite propagation conditions
and realistic distributions of sources will be presented in a future paper.Comment: final version, 8 figures, accepted in ApJ. A misprint in fig 8 labels
has been correcte
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