213 research outputs found

    Secondary Perturbation Effects in Keplerian Accretion Disks: Elliptical Instability

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    Origin of turbulence in cold accretion disks, particularly in 3D, which is expected to be hydrodynamic but not magnetohydrodynamic, is a big puzzle. While the flow must exhibit some turbulence in support of the transfer of mass inward and angular momentum outward, according to the linear perturbation theory it should always be stable. We demonstrate that the 3D secondary disturbance to the primarily perturbed disk which exhibits elliptical vortices into the system solves the problem. This result is essentially applicable to the outer region of accretion disks in active galactic nuclei where the gas is significantly cold and neutral in charge and the magnetic Reynolds number is smaller than 10^4.Comment: 3 pages; contribution to appear in the Proceedings of the MG11 Meeting on General Relativity, Berlin, July 23-29, 2006; prepared on the basis of the talk presented in the meetin

    General relativity and relativistic astrophysics

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    Einstein established the theory of general relativity and the corresponding field equation in 1915 and its vacuum solutions were obtained by Schwarzschild and Kerr for, respectively, static and rotating black holes, in 1916 and 1963, respectively. They are, however, still playing an indispensable role, even after 100 years of their original discovery, to explain high energy astrophysical phenomena. Application of the solutions of Einstein's equation to resolve astrophysical phenomena has formed an important branch, namely relativistic astrophysics. I devote this article to enlightening some of the current astrophysical problems based on general relativity. However, there seem to be some issues with regard to explaining certain astrophysical phenomena based on Einstein's theory alone. I show that Einstein's theory and its modified form, both are necessary to explain modern astrophysical processes, in particular, those related to compact objects.Comment: 15 pages including 3 figures and 4 tables; published for a special section in Current Science dedicated to 100 years of general relativity, edited by B. Mukhopadhyay (IISc) and T. P. Singh (TIFR). arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1603.0013

    Nucleosynthesis Around Black Holes

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    Study of nucleosynthesis in accretion disks around black holes was initiated by Chakrabarti et al. (1987). In the present work we do the similar analysis using the state-of-the-art disk model, namely, Advective Accretion Disks. During the infall, matter temperature and density are generally increased which are first computed. These quantities are used to obtain local changes in composition, amount of nuclear energy released or absorbed, etc. under various inflow conditions. In the cases where the magnetic viscosity is dominant neutron torus may be formed. We also talk about the fate of Li^7 and D during the accretion. The outflowing winds from the disk could carry the new isotopes produced by nucleosynthesis and contaminate the surroundings. From the degree of contamination, one could pinpoint the inflow parameters.Comment: 9 Latex pages and 2 Figures. crckapb.st

    Possible Neutrino-Antineutrino Oscillation Under Gravity and its Consequences

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    We show that under gravity the effective masses for neutrino and antineutrino are different which opens a possible window of neutrino-antineutrino oscillation even if the rest masses of the corresponding eigenstates are same. This is due to CPT violation and possible to demonstrate if the neutrino mass eigenstates are expressed as a combination of neutrino and antineutrino eigenstates, as of the neutral kaon system, with the plausible breaking of lepton number conservation. In early universe, in presence of various lepton number violating processes, this oscillation might lead to neutrino-antineutrino asymmetry which resulted baryogenesis from the B-L symmetry by electro-weak sphaleron processes. On the other hand, for Majorana neutrinos, this oscillation is expected to affect the inner edge of neutrino dominated accretion disks around a compact object by influencing the neutrino sphere which controls the accretion dynamics, and then the related type-II supernova evolution and the r-process nucleosynthesis.Comment: 3 pages; contribution to appear in the Proceedings of the MG11 Meeting on General Relativity, Berlin, July 23-29, 2006; prepared on the basis of the talk presented in the meeting; new version with updated reference

    Stability of accretion disk around rotating black holes

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    I discuss the stability of accretion disks when the black hole is considered to be rotating. I show, how the fluid properties get changed for different choices of angular momentum of black holes. I treat the problem in pseudo-Newtonian approach with a suitable potential from Kerr geometry. When the angular momentum of a black hole is considered to be significant, the valid disk parameter region affects and a disk may become unstable. Also the possibility of shock in an accretion disk around rotating black holes is checked. When the black hole is chosen to be rotating, the sonic locations of the accretion disk get shifted or disappear, making the disk unstable by means of loosing entropy. To bring the disk in a stable situation, the angular momentum of the accreting matter has to be reduced/enhanced (for co/counter-rotating disk) by means of some physical process.Comment: 3 latex pages including 2 figures; to appear in the proceedings of X Marcel Grossmann Meeting, Rio de Janeiro, 20-26 July 2003; on the basis of talk presente
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