52,137 research outputs found
Multi-GeV Neutrino Emission from Magnetized Gamma Ray Bursts
We investigate the expected neutrino emissivity from nuclear collisions in
magnetically dominated collisional models of gamma-ray bursts, motivated by
recent observational and theoretical developments. The results indicate that
significant multi-GeV neutrino fluxes are expected for model parameter values
which are typical of electromagnetically detected bursts. We show that for
detecting at least one muon event in Icecube and its Deep Core sub-array, a
single burst must be near the high end of the luminosity function and at a
redshift . We also calculate the luminosity and distance ranges
that can generate muon events per GRB in the same detectors, which may
be of interest if simultaneously detected electromagnetically, or if measured
with future extensions of Icecube or other neutrino detectors with larger
effective volume and better sensitivity.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, accepted version for Phys.Rev.
Dynamical Electron Mass in a Strong Magnetic Field
Motivated by recent interest in understanding properties of strongly
magnetized matter, we study the dynamical electron mass generated through
approximate chiral symmetry breaking in QED in a strong magnetic field. We
reliably calculate the dynamical electron mass by numerically solving the
nonperturbative Schwinger-Dyson equations in a consistent truncation within the
lowest Landau level approximation. It is shown that the generation of dynamical
electron mass in a strong magnetic field is significantly enhanced by the
perturbative electron mass that explicitly breaks chiral symmetry in the
absence of a magnetic field.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, published versio
High-Resolution Crystal Truncation Rod Scattering: Application to Ultrathin Layers and Buried Interfaces
In crystalline materials, the presence of surfaces or interfaces gives rise to crystal truncation rods (CTRs) in their X‐ray diffraction patterns. While structural properties related to the bulk of a crystal are contained in the intensity and position of Bragg peaks in X‐ray diffraction, CTRs carry detailed information about the atomic structure at the interface. Developments in synchrotron X‐ray sources, instrumentation, and analysis procedures have made CTR measurements into extremely powerful tools to study atomic reconstructions and relaxations occurring in a wide variety of interfacial systems, with relevance to chemical and electronic functionalities. In this review, an overview of the use of CTRs in the study of atomic structure at interfaces is provided. The basic theory, measurement, and analysis of CTRs are covered and applications from the literature are highlighted. Illustrative examples include studies of complex oxide thin films and multilayers
Orientation filtering by growth-velocity competition in zone-melting recrystallization of silicon on SiO_2
We describe a method of controlling the in-plane directions of grains in (100)-textured silicon films produced by zone-melting recrystallization over amorphous SiO2. Grains having in-plane orientation within a narrow range are able to grow through an orientation filter consisting of a pattern of crystallization barriers, while grains having other orientations are occluded. The results of experiments using an orientation filter, and the parameters which optimize filter performance, are reported
Electrodynamics of Magnetars: Implications for the Persistent X-ray Emission and Spindown of the Soft Gamma Repeaters and Anomalous X-ray Pulsars
(ABBREVIATED) We consider the structure of neutron star magnetospheres
threaded by large-scale electrical currents, and the effect of resonant Compton
scattering by the charge carriers (both electrons and ions) on the emergent
X-ray spectra and pulse profiles. In the magnetar model for the SGRs and AXPs,
these currents are maintained by magnetic stresses acting deep inside the star.
We construct self-similar, force-free equilibria of the current-carrying
magnetosphere with a power-law dependence of magnetic field on radius, B ~
r^(-2-p), and show that a large-scale twist softens the radial dependence to p
< 1. The spindown torque acting on the star is thereby increased in comparison
with a vacuum dipole. We comment on the strength of the surface magnetic field
in the SGR and AXP sources, and the implications of this model for the narrow
measured distribution of spin periods. A magnetosphere with a strong twist,
B_\phi/B_\theta = O(1) at the equator, has an optical depth ~ 1 to resonant
cyclotron scattering, independent of frequency (radius), surface magnetic field
strength, or charge/mass ratio of the scattering charge. When electrons and
ions supply the current, the stellar surface is also heated by the impacting
charges at a rate comparable to the observed X-ray output of the SGR and AXP
sources, if B_{dipole} ~ 10^{14} G. Redistribution of the emerging X-ray flux
at the ion and electron cyclotron resonances will significantly modify the
emerging pulse profile and, through the Doppler effect, generate a non-thermal
tail to the X-ray spectrum. The sudden change in the pulse profile of SGR
1900+14 after the 27 August 1998 giant flare is related to an enhanced optical
depth to electron cyclotron scattering, resulting from a sudden twist imparted
to the external magnetic field.Comment: 31 January 2002, minor revisions, new section 5.4.
Photon acceleration in variable ultra-relativistic outflows and high-energy spectra of Gamma-Ray Bursts
MeV seed photons produced in shocks in a variable ultra-relativistic outflow
gain energy by the Fermi mechanism, because the photons Compton scatter off
relativistically colliding shells. The Fermi-modified high-energy photon
spectrum has a non-universal slope and a universal cutoff. A significant
increase in the total radiative efficiency is possible. In some gamma ray
bursts, most of the power might be emitted at the high-energy cutoff for this
mechanism, which would be close to 100 MeV for outflows with a mean bulk
Lorentz factor of 100.Comment: 8 pages, submitted to ApJ
Spectral Line Broadening and Angular Blurring due to Spacetime Geometry Fluctuations
We treat two possible phenomenological effects of quantum fluctuations of
spacetime geometry: spectral line broadening and angular blurring of the image
of a distance source. A geometrical construction will be used to express both
effects in terms of the Riemann tensor correlation function. We apply the
resulting expressions to study some explicit examples in which the fluctuations
arise from a bath of gravitons in either a squeezed state or a thermal state.
In the case of a squeezed state, one has two limits of interest: a coherent
state which exhibits classical time variation but no fluctuations, and a
squeezed vacuum state, in which the fluctuations are maximized.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figures. Dedicated to Raphael Sorkin on the occasion of
his 60th birthday. (v2: several references added and some minor errors
corrected
Magnetic Photon Splitting: Computations of Proper-time Rates and Spectra
The splitting of photons in the presence of an intense magnetic field has
recently found astrophysical applications in polar cap models of gamma-ray
pulsars and in magnetar scenarios for soft gamma repeaters. Numerical
computation of the polarization-dependent rates of this third order QED process
for arbitrary field strengths and energies below pair creation threshold is
difficult: thus early analyses focused on analytic developments and simpler
asymptotic forms. The recent astrophysical interest spurred the use of the
S-matrix approach by Mentzel, Berg and Wunner to determine splitting rates. In
this paper, we present numerical computations of a full proper-time expression
for the rate of splitting that was obtained by Stoneham, and is exact up to the
pair creation threshold. While the numerical results derived here are in accord
with the earlier asymptotic forms due to Adler, our computed rates still differ
by as much as factors of 3 from the S-matrix re-evaluation of Wilke and Wunner,
reflecting the extreme difficulty of generating accurate S-matrix numerics for
fields below about \teq{4.4\times 10^{13}}Gauss. We find that our proper-time
rates appear very accurate, and exceed Adler's asymptotic specializations
significantly only for photon energies just below pair threshold and for
supercritical fields, but always by less than a factor of around 2.6. We also
provide a useful analytic series expansion for the scattering amplitude valid
at low energies.Comment: 13 pages, AASTeX format, including 3 eps figures, ApJ in pres
Magnetars and pulsars: a missing link
There is growing evidence that soft gamma-ray repeaters (SGRs) and anomalous
X-ray pulsars (AXPs) are isolated neutron stars with superstrong magnetic
fields, i.e., magnetars, marking them a distinguished species from the
conventional species of spindown-powered isolated neutron stars, i.e., radio
pulsars. The current arguments in favor of the magnetar interpretation of
SGR/AXP phenomenology will be outlined, and the two energy sources in
magnetars, i.e. a magnetic dissipation energy and a spindown energy, will be
reviewed. I will then discuss a missing link between magnetars and pulsars,
i.e., lack of the observational evidence of the spindown-powered behaviors in
known magnetars. Some recent theoretical efforts in studying such behaviors
will be reviewed along with some predictions testable in the near future.Comment: Invited talk at the Sixth Pacific Rim Conference on Stellar
Astrophysics, a tribute to Helmut A. Abt, July 11-17, 2002, Xi'an. To appear
in the proceedings (eds. K. S. Cheng, K. C. Leung & T. P. Li
- …
