2,981 research outputs found
Turbulence Time Series Data Hole Filling using Karhunen-Loeve and ARIMA methods
Measurements of optical turbulence time series data using unattended
instruments over long time intervals inevitably lead to data drop-outs or
degraded signals. We present a comparison of methods using both Principal
Component Analysis, which is also known as the Karhunen--Loeve decomposition,
and ARIMA that seek to correct for these event-induced and mechanically-induced
signal drop-outs and degradations. We report on the quality of the correction
by examining the Intrinsic Mode Functions generated by Empirical Mode
Decomposition. The data studied are optical turbulence parameter time series
from a commercial long path length optical anemometer/scintillometer, measured
over several hundred metres in outdoor environments.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, submitted to ICOLAD 2007, City University,
London, U
Binary neutron-star mergers with Whisky and SACRA: First quantitative comparison of results from independent general-relativistic hydrodynamics codes
We present the first quantitative comparison of two independent
general-relativistic hydrodynamics codes, the Whisky code and the SACRA code.
We compare the output of simulations starting from the same initial data and
carried out with the configuration (numerical methods, grid setup, resolution,
gauges) which for each code has been found to give consistent and sufficiently
accurate results, in particular in terms of cleanness of gravitational
waveforms. We focus on the quantities that should be conserved during the
evolution (rest mass, total mass energy, and total angular momentum) and on the
gravitational-wave amplitude and frequency. We find that the results produced
by the two codes agree at a reasonable level, with variations in the different
quantities but always at better than about 10%.Comment: Published on Phys. Rev.
General relativistic radiation hydrodynamics of accretion flows. I: Bondi-Hoyle accretion
We present a new code for performing general-relativistic
radiation-hydrodynamics simulations of accretion flows onto black holes. The
radiation field is treated in the optically-thick approximation, with the
opacity contributed by Thomson scattering and thermal bremsstrahlung. Our
analysis is concentrated on a detailed numerical investigation of hot
two-dimensional, Bondi-Hoyle accretion flows with various Mach numbers. We find
significant differences with respect to purely hydrodynamical evolutions. In
particular, once the system relaxes to a radiation-pressure dominated regime,
the accretion rates become about two orders of magnitude smaller than in the
purely hydrodynamical case, remaining however super-Eddington as are the
luminosities. Furthermore, when increasing the Mach number of the inflowing
gas, the accretion rates become smaller because of the smaller cross section of
the black hole, but the luminosities increase as a result a stronger emission
in the shocked regions. Overall, our approach provides the first
self-consistent calculation of the Bondi-Hoyle luminosity, most of which is
emitted within r~100 M from the black hole, with typical values L/L_Edd ~ 1-7,
and corresponding energy efficiencies eta_BH ~ 0.09-0.5. The possibility of
computing luminosities self-consistently has also allowed us to compare with
the bremsstrahlung luminosity often used in modelling the electromagnetic
counterparts to supermassive black-hole binaries, to find that in the
optically-thick regime these more crude estimates are about 20 times larger
than our radiation-hydrodynamics results.Comment: With updated bibliographyc informatio
Relativistic MHD and black hole excision: Formulation and initial tests
A new algorithm for solving the general relativistic MHD equations is
described in this paper. We design our scheme to incorporate black hole
excision with smooth boundaries, and to simplify solving the combined Einstein
and MHD equations with AMR. The fluid equations are solved using a finite
difference Convex ENO method. Excision is implemented using overlapping grids.
Elliptic and hyperbolic divergence cleaning techniques allow for maximum
flexibility in choosing coordinate systems, and we compare both methods for a
standard problem. Numerical results of standard test problems are presented in
two-dimensional flat space using excision, overlapping grids, and elliptic and
hyperbolic divergence cleaning.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figure
EM counterparts of recoiling black holes: general relativistic simulations of non-Keplerian discs
We investigate the dynamics of a circumbinary disc that responds to the loss
of mass and to the recoil velocity of the black hole produced by the merger of
a binary system of supermassive black holes. We perform the first
two-dimensional general relativistic hydrodynamics simulations of
\textit{extended} non-Keplerian discs and employ a new technique to construct a
"shock detector", thus determining the precise location of the shocks produced
in the accreting disc by the recoiling black hole. In this way we can study how
the properties of the system, such as the spin, mass and recoil velocity of the
black hole, affect the mass accretion rate and are imprinted on the
electromagnetic emission from these sources. We argue that the estimates of the
bremsstrahlung luminosity computed without properly taking into account the
radiation transfer yield cooling times that are unrealistically short. At the
same time we show, through an approximation based on the relativistic
isothermal evolution, that the luminosity produced can reach a peak value above
at about after the merger
of a binary with total mass and persist for several days
at values which are a factor of a few smaller. If confirmed by more
sophisticated calculations such a signal could indeed lead to an
electromagnetic counterpart of the merger of binary black-hole system.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, accepted by A&A, movies available at
http://numrel.aei.mpg.de/Visualisations/Archive/BinaryBlackHoles/EMCounterparts/EMCounterparts.htm
Numerical simulation of small perturbation on an accretion disk due to the collision of a star with the disk near the black hole
In this paper, perturbations of an accretion disk by a star orbiting around a
black hole are studied. We report on a numerical experiment, which has been
carried out by using a parallel-machine code originally developed by D\"{o}nmez
(2004). An initially steady state accretion disk near a non-rotating
(Schwarzschild) black hole interacts with a "star", modeled as an initially
circular region of increased density. Part of the disk is affected by the
interaction. In some cases, a gap develops and shock wave propagates through
the disk. We follow the evolution for order of one dynamical period and we show
how the non-axisymetric density perturbation further evolves and moves
downwards where the material of the disk and the star become eventually
accreted onto the central body.
When the star perturbs the steady state accretion disk, the disk around the
black hole is destroyed by the effect of perturbation. The perturbed accretion
disk creates a shock wave during the evolution and it loses angular momentum
when the gas hits on the shock waves. Colliding gas with the shock wave is the
one of the basic mechanism of emitting the rays in the accretion disk. The
series of supernovae occurring in the inner disk could entirely destroy the
disk in that region which leaves a more massive black hole behind, at the
center of galaxies.Comment: 20pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysics and
Space Scienc
Accurate evolutions of inspiralling neutron-star binaries: prompt and delayed collapse to black hole
Binary neutron-star (BNS) systems represent primary sources for the
gravitational-wave (GW) detectors. We present a systematic investigation in
full GR of the dynamics and GW emission from BNS which inspiral and merge,
producing a black hole (BH) surrounded by a torus. Our results represent the
state of the art from several points of view: (i) We use HRSC methods for the
hydrodynamics equations and high-order finite-differencing techniques for the
Einstein equations; (ii) We employ AMR techniques with "moving boxes"; (iii) We
use as initial data BNSs in irrotational quasi-circular orbits; (iv) We exploit
the isolated-horizon formalism to measure the properties of the BHs produced in
the merger; (v) Finally, we use two approaches, based either on gauge-invariant
perturbations or on Weyl scalars, to calculate the GWs. These techniques allow
us to perform accurate evolutions on timescales never reported before (ie ~30
ms) and to provide the first complete description of the inspiral and merger of
a BNS leading to the prompt or delayed formation of a BH and to its ringdown.
We consider either a polytropic or an ideal fluid EOS and show that already
with this idealized EOSs a very interesting phenomenology emerges. In
particular, we show that while high-mass binaries lead to the prompt formation
of a rapidly rotating BH surrounded by a dense torus, lower-mass binaries give
rise to a differentially rotating NS, which undergoes large oscillations and
emits large amounts of GWs. Eventually, also the NS collapses to a rotating BH
surrounded by a torus. Finally, we also show that the use of a non-isentropic
EOS leads to significantly different evolutions, giving rise to a delayed
collapse also with high-mass binaries, as well as to a more intense emission of
GWs and to a geometrically thicker torus.Comment: 35 pages, 29 figures, corrected few typos to match the published
version. High-resolution figures and animations can be found at
http://numrel.aei.mpg.de/Visualisations/Archive/BinaryNeutronStars/Relativistic_Meudon/index.htm
Low-Energy Supersymmetry Breaking from String Flux Compactifications: Benchmark Scenarios
Soft supersymmetry breaking terms were recently derived for type IIB string
flux compactifications with all moduli stabilised. Depending on the choice of
the discrete input parameters of the compactification such as fluxes and ranks
of hidden gauge groups, the string scale was found to have any value between
the TeV and GUT scales. We study the phenomenological implications of these
compactifications at low energy. Three realistic scenarios can be identified
depending on whether the Standard Model lies on D3 or D7 branes and on the
value of the string scale. For the MSSM on D7 branes and the string scale
between 10^12 GeV and 10^17 GeV we find that the LSP is a neutralino, while for
lower scales it is the stop. At the GUT scale the results of the fluxed MSSM
are reproduced, but now with all moduli stabilised. For the MSSM on D3 branes
we identify two realistic scenarios. The first one corresponds to an
intermediate string scale version of split supersymmetry. The second is a
stringy mSUGRA scenario. This requires tuning of the flux parameters to obtain
the GUT scale. Phenomenological constraints from dark matter, (g-2)_mu and
BR(b->s gamma) are considered for the three scenarios. We provide benchmark
points with the MSSM spectrum, making the models suitable for a detailed
phenomenological analysis.Comment: 29 pages, 12 figures, reference adde
Three Dimensional Numerical General Relativistic Hydrodynamics I: Formulations, Methods, and Code Tests
This is the first in a series of papers on the construction and validation of
a three-dimensional code for general relativistic hydrodynamics, and its
application to general relativistic astrophysics. This paper studies the
consistency and convergence of our general relativistic hydrodynamic treatment
and its coupling to the spacetime evolutions described by the full set of
Einstein equations with a perfect fluid source. The numerical treatment of the
general relativistic hydrodynamic equations is based on high resolution shock
capturing schemes. These schemes rely on the characteristic information of the
system. A spectral decomposition for general relativistic hydrodynamics
suitable for a general spacetime metric is presented. Evolutions based on three
different approximate Riemann solvers coupled to four different discretizations
of the Einstein equations are studied and compared. The coupling between the
hydrodynamics and the spacetime (the right and left hand side of the Einstein
equations) is carried out in a treatment which is second order accurate in {\it
both} space and time. Convergence tests for all twelve combinations with a
variety of test beds are studied, showing consistency with the differential
equations and correct convergence properties. The test-beds examined include
shocktubes, Friedmann-Robertson-Walker cosmology tests, evolutions of
self-gravitating compact (TOV) stars, and evolutions of relativistically
boosted TOV stars. Special attention is paid to the numerical evolution of
strongly gravitating objects, e.g., neutron stars, in the full theory of
general relativity, including a simple, yet effective treatment for the surface
region of the star (where the rest mass density is abruptly dropping to zero).Comment: 45 pages RevTeX, 34 figure
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