1,818 research outputs found
Numerical simulations of the possible origin of the two sub-parsec scale and counter-rotating stellar disks around SgrA*
We present a high resolution simulation of an idealized model to explain the
origin of the two young, counter-rotating, sub-parsec scale stellar disks
around the supermassive black hole SgrA* at the Center of the Milky Way. In our
model, the collision of a single molecular cloud with a circum-nuclear gas disk
(similar to the one observed presently) leads to multiple streams of gas
flowing towards the black hole and creating accretion disks with angular
momentum depending on the ratio of cloud and circum-nuclear disk material. The
infalling gas creates two inclined, counter-rotating sub-parsec scale accretion
disks around the supermassive black hole with the first disk forming roughly 1
Myr earlier, allowing it to fragment into stars and get dispersed before the
second, counter-rotating disk forms. Fragmentation of the second disk would
lead to the two inclined, counter-rotating stellar disks which are observed at
the Galactic Center. A similar event might be happening again right now at the
Milky Way Galactic Center. Our model predicts that the collision event
generates spiral-like filaments of gas, feeding the Galactic Center prior to
disk formation with a geometry and inflow pattern that is in agreement with the
structure of the so called mini-spiral that has been detected in the Galactic
Center.Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, submitted to Ap
Time-resolved infrared emission from radiation-driven central obscuring structures in Active Galactic Nuclei
The central engines of Seyfert galaxies are thought to be enshrouded by
geometrically thick gas and dust structures. In this article, we derive
observable properties for a self-consistent model of such toroidal gas and dust
distributions, where the geometrical thickness is achieved and maintained with
the help of X-ray heating and radiation pressure due to the central engine.
Spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and images are obtained with the help of
dust continuum radiative transfer calculations with RADMC-3D. For the first
time, we are able to present time-resolved SEDs and images for a physical model
of the central obscurer. Temporal changes are mostly visible at shorter
wavelengths, close to the combined peak of the dust opacity as well as the
central source spectrum and are caused by variations in the column densities of
the generated outflow. Due to the three-component morphology of the
hydrodynamical models -- a thin disc with high density filaments, a surrounding
fluffy component (the obscurer) and a low density outflow along the rotation
axis -- we find dramatic differences depending on wavelength: whereas the
mid-infrared images are dominated by the elongated appearance of the outflow
cone, the long wavelength emission is mainly given by the cold and dense disc
component. Overall, we find good agreement with observed characteristics,
especially for those models, which show clear outflow cones in combination with
a geometrically thick distribution of gas and dust, as well as a geometrically
thin, but high column density disc in the equatorial plane.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Comment on The Evidence for a Pentaquark and Kinematic Reflections
The Regge exchange model used by Dzierba et al. is shown to be questionable,
since the pion pole term is not allowed. Hence the Regge amplitudes in their
calculation are exaggerated. The amount of kinematic reflection in the mass
spectrum of the (nK+) system, which is one decay channel of a possible
pentaquark, is not well justified in the fitting procedure used by Dzierba et
al., as shown by comparison with the (K+K-) invariant mass spectrum, which is
one decay channel of the a_2 and f_2 tensor mesons. While kinematic reflections
are still a concern in some papers that have presented evidence for the
pentaquark, better quantitative calculations are needed to demonstrate the
significance of this effect.Comment: Comment submitted to Phys. Rev. D (no figures
Kinematics of massive star ejecta in the Milky Way as traced by Al
Context. Massive stars form in groups and their winds and supernova explosions create superbubbles up to kpc in size. The fate of their ejecta is of vital importance for the dynamics of the interstellar medium, for chemical evolution models, and the chemical enrichment of galactic halos and the intergalactic medium. However, ejecta kinematics and the characteristic scales in space and time have not been explored in great detail beyond ~10 Ka. Aims: Through measurement of radioactive 26Al with its decay time constant at ~106 years, we aim to trace the kinematics of cumulative massive-star and supernova ejecta independent of the uncertain gas parameters over million-year time scales. Our goal is to identify the mixing time scale and the spatio-kinematics of such ejecta from the pc to kpc scale in our Milky Way. Methods: We use the SPI spectrometer on the INTEGRAL observatory and its observations along the Galactic ridge to trace the detailed line shape systematics of the 1808.63 keV gamma-ray line from 26Al decay. We determine line centroids and compare these to Doppler shift expectations from large-scale systematic rotation around the Galaxy centre, as observed in other Galactic objects. Results: We measure the radial velocities of gas traced by 26Al, averaged over the line of sight, as a function of Galactic longitude. We find substantially higher velocities than expected from Galactic rotation, the average bulk velocity being ~200 km s-1 larger than predicted from Galactic rotation. The observed radial velocity spread implies a Doppler broadening of the gamma-ray line that is consistent with our measurements of the overall line width. We can reproduce the observed characteristics with 26Al sources located along the inner spiral arms, when we add a global blow-out preference into the forward direction away from arms into the inter-arm region, as is expected when massive stars are offset towards the spiral-arm leading edge. With the known connection of superbubbles to the gaseous halo, this implies angular-momentum transfer in the disk-halo system and consequently also radial gas flows. The structure of the interstellar gas above the disk affects how ionizing radiation may escape and ionize intergalactic gas.Peer reviewe
The Structure of Dark Matter Haloes in Dwarf Galaxies
Recent observations indicate that dark matter haloes have flat central
density profiles. Cosmological simulations with non-baryonic dark matter
predict however self similar haloes with central density cusps. This
contradiction has lead to the conclusion that dark matter must be baryonic.
Here it is shown that the dark matter haloes of dwarf spiral galaxies represent
a one parameter family with self similar density profiles. The observed global
halo parameters are coupled with each other through simple scaling relations
which can be explained by the standard cold dark matter model if one assumes
that all the haloes formed from density fluctuations with the same primordial
amplitude. We find that the finite central halo densities correlate with the
other global parameters. This result rules out scenarios where the flat halo
cores formed subsequently through violent dynamical processes in the baryonic
component. These cores instead provide important information on the origin and
nature of dark matter in dwarf galaxies.Comment: uuencoded Z-compressed postscript file, 10 pages, 3 figures included,
to appear in ApJ Letter
The life cycle of starbursting circumnuclear gas discs
High-resolution observations from the sub-mm to the optical wavelength regime
resolve the central few 100pc region of nearby galaxies in great detail. They
reveal a large diversity of features: thick gas and stellar discs, nuclear
starbursts, in- and outflows, central activity, jet interaction, etc.
Concentrating on the role circumnuclear discs play in the life cycles of
galactic nuclei, we employ 3D adaptive mesh refinement hydrodynamical
simulations with the RAMSES code to self-consistently trace the evolution from
a quasi-stable gas disc, undergoing gravitational (Toomre) instability, the
formation of clumps and stars and the disc's subsequent, partial dispersal via
stellar feedback. Our approach builds upon the observational finding that many
nearby Seyfert galaxies have undergone intense nuclear starbursts in their
recent past and in many nearby sources star formation is concentrated in a
handful of clumps on a few 100pc distant from the galactic centre. We show that
such observations can be understood as the result of gravitational
instabilities in dense circumnuclear discs. By comparing these simulations to
available integral field unit observations of a sample of nearby galactic
nuclei, we find consistent gas and stellar masses, kinematics, star formation
and outflow properties. Important ingredients in the simulations are the
self-consistent treatment of star formation and the dynamical evolution of the
stellar distribution as well as the modelling of a delay time distribution for
the supernova feedback. The knowledge of the resulting simulated density
structure and kinematics on pc scale is vital for understanding inflow and
feedback processes towards galactic scales.Comment: accepted by MNRA
Model Analysis of the Electroproduction Reaction on the Proton
Recent CLAS data on the electroproduction off protons at
1.3W1.57 GeV and 0.250.6 GeV have been analyzed using
a meson-baryon phenomenological model. By fitting nine 1-fold differential
cross section data for each and bin, the charged double pion
electroproduction mechanisms are identified from their manifestations in the
observables. We have extracted the cross sections from amplitudes of each of
the considered isobar channels as well as from their coherent sum. We also
obtained non-resonant partial wave amplitudes of all contributing isobar
channels which could be useful for advancing a complete coupled-channel
analysis of all meson electroproduction data.Comment: Experiment Numbers: E93-006, E94-005 Group: Hall
Connecting Angular Momentum and Galactic Dynamics: The complex Interplay between Spin, Mass, and Morphology
The evolution and distribution of the angular momentum of dark matter (DM)
halos have been discussed in several studies over the past decades. In
particular, the idea arose that angular momentum conservation should allow to
infer the total angular momentum of the entire DM halo from measuring the
angular momentum of the baryonic component, which is populating the center of
the halo, especially for disk galaxies. To test this idea and to understand the
connection between the angular momentum of the DM halo and its galaxy, we use
the Magneticum simulations. We successfully produce populations of spheroidal
and disk galaxies self-consistently. Thus, we are able to study the dependence
of galactic properties on their morphology. We find that (1) the specific
angular momentum of stars in disk and spheroidal galaxies as a function of
their stellar mass compares well with observational results; (2) the specific
angular momentum of the stars in disk galaxies is slightly smaller compared to
the specific angular momentum of the cold gas, in good agreement with
observations; (3) simulations including the baryonic component show a dichotomy
in the specific stellar angular momentum distribution when splitting the
galaxies according to their morphological type (this dichotomy can also be seen
in the spin parameter, where disk galaxies populate halos with slightly larger
spin compared to spheroidal galaxies); (4) disk galaxies preferentially
populate halos in which the angular momentum vector of the DM component in the
central part shows a better alignment to the angular momentum vector of the
entire halo; and (5) the specific angular momentum of the cold gas in disk
galaxies is approximately 40 percent smaller than the specific angular momentum
of the total DM halo and shows a significant scatter.Comment: 25 pages, accepted by ApJ, www.magneticum.or
Can multistate dark matter annihilation explain the high-energy cosmic ray lepton anomalies?
Multistate dark matter (DM) models with small mass splittings and couplings
to light hidden sector bosons have been proposed as an explanation for the
PAMELA/Fermi/H.E.S.S. high-energy lepton excesses. We investigate this proposal
over a wide range of DM density profiles, in the framework of concrete models
with doublet or triplet dark matter and a hidden SU(2) gauge sector that mixes
with standard model hypercharge. The gauge coupling is bounded from below by
the DM relic density, and the Sommerfeld enhancement factor is explicitly
computable for given values of the DM and gauge boson masses M, mu and the
(largest) dark matter mass splitting delta M_{12}. Sommerfeld enhancement is
stronger at the galactic center than near the Sun because of the radial
dependence of the DM velocity profile, which strengthens the inverse Compton
(IC) gamma ray constraints relative to usual assumptions. We find that the
PAMELA/Fermi/H.E.S.S. lepton excesses are marginally compatible with the model
predictions, and with CMB and Fermi gamma ray constraints, for M ~ 800 GeV, mu
~ 200 MeV, and a dark matter profile with noncuspy Einasto parameters alpha >
0.20, r_s ~ 30 kpc. We also find that the annihilating DM must provide only a
subdominant (< 0.4) component of the total DM mass density, since otherwise the
boost factor due to Sommerfeld enhancement is too large.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures; v2: Corrected branching ratio for ground state
DM annihilations into leptons, leading to boost factors that are larger than
allowed. Added explicit results for doublet DM model. Some conclusions
changed; main conclusion of tension between inverse Compton constraints and
N-body simulations of halo profiles is unchange
Self-Consistent Data Analysis of the Proton Structure Function g1 and Extraction of its Moments
The reanalysis of all available world data on the longitudinal asymmetry A||
is presented. The proton structure function g1 was extracted within a unique
framework of data inputs and assumptions. These data allowed for a reliable
evaluation of moments of the structure function g1 in the Q2 range from 0.2 up
to 30 GeV2. The Q2 evolution of the moments was studied in QCD by means of
Operator Product Expansion (OPE).Comment: Proceeding of 3rd International Symposium on the
Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn Sum Rule and its extensions, Old Dominion University,
Norfolk, Virginia June 2-5, 200
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