81 research outputs found
The Snake - a Reconnecting Coil in a Twisted Magnetic Flux Tube
We propose that the curious Galactic Center filament known as ``The Snake''
is a twisted giant magnetic flux tube, anchored in rotating molecular clouds.
The MHD kink instability generates coils in the tube and subsequent magnetic
reconnection injects relativistic electrons. Electrons diffuse away from a coil
at an energy-dependent rate producing a flat spectral index at large distances
from it. Our fit to the data of \citet{gray95a} shows that the magnetic field
is large compared to the ambient
field, indicating that the flux tube is force-free. If the {\em relative} level
of turbulence in the Snake and the general interstellar medium are similar,
then electrons have been diffusing in the Snake for about , comparable to the timescale at which magnetic energy is annihilated in the
major kink. Estimates of the magnetic field in the G359.19-0.05 molecular
complex are similar to our estimate of the magnetic field in the Snake
suggesting a strong connection between the physics of the anchoring molecular
regions and the Snake. We suggest that the physical processes considered here
may be relevant to many of the radio filaments near the Galactic Center. We
also suggest further observations of the Snake and other filaments that would
be useful for obtaining further insights into the physics of these objects.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figur
The Centaurus A Northern Middle Lobe as a Buoyant Bubble
We model the northern middle radio lobe of Centaurus A (NGC 5128) as a
buoyant bubble of plasma deposited by an intermittently active jet. The extent
of the rise of the bubble and its morphology imply that the ratio of its
density to that of the surrounding ISM is less than 10^{-2}, consistent with
our knowledge of extragalactic jets and minimal entrainment into the precursor
radio lobe. Using the morphology of the lobe to date the beginning of its rise
through the atmosphere of Centaurus A, we conclude that the bubble has been
rising for approximately 140Myr. This time scale is consistent with that
proposed by Quillen et al. (1993) for the settling of post-merger gas into the
presently observed large scale disk in NGC 5128, suggesting a strong connection
between the delayed re-establishment of radio emission and the merger of NGC
5128 with a small gas-rich galaxy. This suggests a connection, for radio
galaxies in general, between mergers and the delayed onset of radio emission.
In our model, the elongated X-ray emission region discovered by Feigelson et
al. (1981), part of which coincides with the northern middle lobe, is thermal
gas that originates from the ISM below the bubble and that has been uplifted
and compressed. The "large-scale jet" appearing in the radio images of Morganti
et al. (1999) may be the result of the same pressure gradients that cause the
uplift of the thermal gas, acting on much lighter plasma, or may represent a
jet that did not turn off completely when the northern middle lobe started to
buoyantly rise. We propose that the adjacent emission line knots (the "outer
filaments") and star-forming regions result from the disturbance, in particular
the thermal trunk, caused by the bubble moving through the extended atmosphere
of NGC 5128.Comment: 38 pages, 13 figures, submitted to ApJ; a version with higher
resolution figures is available at
http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/~saxton/papers/cena.pd
Enhanced MHD transport in astrophysical accretion flows: turbulence, winds and jets
Astrophysical accretion is arguably the most prevalent physical process in
the Universe; it occurs during the birth and death of individual stars and
plays a pivotal role in the evolution of entire galaxies. Accretion onto a
black hole, in particular, is also the most efficient mechanism known in
nature, converting up to 40% of accreting rest mass energy into spectacular
forms such as high-energy (X-ray and gamma-ray) emission and relativistic jets.
Whilst magnetic fields are thought to be ultimately responsible for these
phenomena, our understanding of the microphysics of MHD turbulence in accretion
flows as well as large-scale MHD outflows remains far from complete. We present
a new theoretical model for astrophysical disk accretion which considers
enhanced vertical transport of momentum and energy by MHD winds and jets, as
well as transport resulting from MHD turbulence. We also describe new global,
3D simulations that we are currently developing to investigate the extent to
which non-ideal MHD effects may explain how small-scale, turbulent fields
(generated by the magnetorotational instability -- MRI) might evolve into
large-scale, ordered fields that produce a magnetized corona and/or jets where
the highest energy phenomena necessarily originate.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures. Minor revision, published version: Proc 14th
International Congress on Plasma Physics, Fukuoka, Japan, Sep 200
The fine structure constant and the speed of light
Recently, Davies, Davis and Lineweaver have concluded that a possible detection of a cosmological variation in the fine structure constant, a = e[superscript 2] /ħc (where e is the electronic charge, ħ is the reduced Planck constant and c is the speed of light) implies that the speed of light decreases as the Universe expands. In examining the two competing reasons for the variation of this fundamental parameter – an increase in the electronic charge or a decrease in the speed of light – they argued against the former by considering the thermodynamics of charged black holes. However, their argument is based upon a misapplication of the principles of black hole thermodynamics. A possible variation in α does not mandate a changing speed of light
Multi-epoch Sub-arcsecond [Fe II] Spectroimaging of the DG Tau Outflows with NIFS. II. On the Nature of the Bipolar Outflow Asymmetry
The origin of bipolar outflow asymmetry in young stellar objects (YSOs)
remains poorly understood. It may be due to an intrinsically asymmetric outflow
launch mechanism, or it may be caused by the effects of the ambient medium
surrounding the YSO. Answering this question is an important step in
understanding outflow launching. We have investigated the bipolar outflows
driven by the T Tauri star DG Tauri on scales of hundreds of AU, using the
Near-infrared Integral Field Spectrograph (NIFS) on Gemini North. The
approaching outflow consists of a well-collimated jet, nested within a
lower-velocity disc wind. The receding outflow is composed of a
single-component bubble-like structure. We analyse the kinemat- ics of the
receding outflow using kinetic models, and determine that it is a
quasi-stationary bubble with an expanding internal velocity field. We propose
that this bubble forms because the receding counterjet from DG Tau is
obstructed by a clumpy ambient medium above the circumstellar disc surface,
based on similarities between this structure and those found in the modeling of
active galactic nuclei outflows. We find evidence of interaction between the
obscured counterjet and clumpy ambient material, which we attribute to the
large molecular envelope around the DG Tau system. An analytical model of a
momentum-driven bubble is shown to be consistent with our interpretation. We
conclude that the bipolar outflow from DG Tau is intrinsically symmetric, and
the observed asymmetries are due to environmental effects. This mechanism can
potentially be used to explain the observed bipolar asymmetries in other YSO
outflows.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Interactions of Jets with Inhomogeneous Cloudy Media
We present two-dimensional slab-jet simulations of jets in inhomogeneous
media consisting of a tenuous hot medium populated with a small filling factor
by warm, dense clouds. The simulations are relevant to the structure and
dynamics of sources such as Gigahertz Peak Spectrum and Compact Steep Spectrum
radio galaxies, High Redshift Radio Galaxies and radio galaxies in cooling
flows. The jets are disrupted to a degree depending upon the filling factor of
the clouds. With a small filling factor, the jet retains some forward momentum
but also forms a halo or bubble around the source. At larger filling factors
channels are formed in the cloud distribution through which the jet plasma
flows and a hierarchical structure consisting of nested lobes and an outer
enclosing bubble results. We suggest that the CSS quasar 3C48 is an example of
a low filling factor jet - interstellar medium interaction whilst M87 may be an
example of the higher filling factor type of interaction. Jet disruption occurs
primarily as a result of Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities driven by turbulence in
the radio cocoon not through direct jet-cloud interactions, although there are
some examples of these. In all radio galaxies whose morphology may be the
result of jet interactions with an inhomogeneous interstellar medium we expect
that the dense clouds will be optically observable as a result of radiative
shocks driven by the pressure of the radio cocoon. We also expect that the
radio galaxies will possess faint haloes of radio emitting material well beyond
the observable jet structure.Comment: 21 pages, 16 figures, submitted to MNRAS. A version with full
resolution figures is available at:
http://www.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/~cjs2/pdf/cloudy_hue.pd
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