2,658 research outputs found
Response of the warm absorber cloud to a variable nuclear flux in active galactic nuclei
Recent modeling of the warm absorber in active galactic nuclei has proved the
usefulness of constant total (gas plus radiation) pressure models, which are
highly stratified in temperature and density. We explore the consistency of
those models when the typical variation of the flux from the central source is
taken into account. We perform a variability study of the warm absorber
response, based on timescales and our photoionization code TITAN. We show that
the ionization and recombination timescales are much shorter than the dynamical
timescale. Clouds very close to the central black hole will maintain their
equilibrium since the characteristic variability timescales of the nuclear
source are longer than cloud timescales. For more distant clouds, the density
structure has no time to vary, in response to the variations of the temperature
or ionization structure, and such clouds will show the departure from the
constant pressure equilibrium. We explore the impact of this departure on the
observed properties of the transmitted spectrum and soft X-ray variability: (i)
non uniform velocities, of the order of sound speed, appear due to pressure
gradients, up to typical values of 100 km/s. These velocities lead to the
broadening of lines. This broadening is usually observed and very difficult to
explain otherwise. (ii) Energy-dependent fractional variability amplitude in
soft X-ray range has a broader hump around ~ 1-2 keV, and (iv) the plot of the
equivalent hydrogen column density vs. ionization parameter is steeper than for
equilibrium clouds. The results have the character of a preliminary study and
should be supplemented in the future with full time-dependent radiation
transfer and dynamical computations.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication by Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Frequency-Domain Measurement of the Spin Imbalance Lifetime in Superconductors
We have measured the lifetime of spin imbalances in the quasiparticle
population of a superconductor () in the frequency domain. A
time-dependent spin imbalance is created by injecting spin-polarised electrons
at finite excitation frequencies into a thin-film mesoscopic superconductor
(Al) in an in-plane magnetic field (in the Pauli limit). The time-averaged
value of the spin imbalance signal as a function of excitation frequency,
shows a cut-off at . The spin imbalance
lifetime is relatively constant in the accessible ranges of temperatures, with
perhaps a slight increase with increasing magnetic field. Taking into account
sample thickness effects, is consistent with previous measurements and
of the order of the electron-electron scattering time . Our data are
qualitatively well-described by a theoretical model taking into account all
quasiparticle tunnelling processes from a normal metal into a superconductor.Comment: Includes Supplementary Informatio
The mass loss of C-rich giants
(Shortened version): The mass loss rates, expansion velocities and
dust-to-gas density ratios from millimetric observations of 119 carbon-rich
giants are compared, as functions of stellar parameters, to the predictions of
recent hydrodynamical models. Distances and luminosities previously estimated
from HIPPARCOS data, masses from pulsations and C/O abundance ratios from
spectroscopy, and effective temperatures from a new homogeneous scale, are
used. Predicted and observed mass loss rates agree fairly well, as functions of
effective temperature.(shortened). Four stars with detached shells, i.e.
episodic strong mass loss, and five cool infrared carbon-rich stars with
optically-thick dust shells, have mass loss rates much larger than predicted
values.(shortened). Recent drift models can contribute to minimize the
discrepancy since they include more dust. Simple approximate formulae are
proposed.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, electronic table 3 (2 files included in the
archive), A&A, accepted 23 July 200
Mid-infrared sub-wavelength grating mirror design: tolerance and influence of technological constraints
High polarization selective Si/SiO2 mid-infrared sub-wavelength grating
mirrors with large bandwidth adapted to VCSEL integration are compared. These
mirrors have been automatically designed for operation at \lambda = 2.3 m
by an optimization algorithm which maximizes a specially defined quality
factor. Several technological constraints in relation with the grating
manufacturing process have been imposed within the optimization algorithm and
their impact on the optical properties of the mirror have been evaluated.
Furthermore, through the tolerance computation of the different dimensions of
the structure, the robustness with respect to fabrication errors has been
tested. Finally, it appears that the increase of the optical performances of
the mirror imposes a less tolerant design with severer technological
constraints resulting in a more stringent control of the manufacturing process.Comment: The final publication is available at
http://iopscience.iop.org/2040-8986/13/12/125502
Superconductor spintronics: Modeling spin and charge accumulation in out-of-equilibrium NS junctions subjected to Zeeman magnetic fields
We study the spin and charge accumulation in junctions between a
superconductor and a ferromagnet or a normal metal in the presence of a Zeeman
magnetic field, when the junction is taken out of equilibrium by applying a
voltage bias. We write down the most general form for the spin and charge
current in such junctions, taking into account all spin-resolved possible
tunneling processes. We make use of these forms to calculate the spin
accumulation in NS junctions subjected to a DC bias, and to an AC bias,
sinusoidal or rectangular. We observe that in the limit of negligeable changes
on the superconducting gap, the NS dynamical conductance is insensitive to spin
imbalance. Therefore to probe the spin accumulation in the superconductor, one
needs to separate the injection and detection point, i. e. the electrical spin
detection must be non-local. We address also the effect of the spin
accumulation induced in the normal leads by driving a spin current and its
effects on the detection of the spin accumulation in the superconductor.
Finally, we investigate the out-of-equilibrium spin susceptibility of the SC,
and we show that it deviates drastically from it's equilibrium value
The puzzle of the soft X-ray excess in AGN: absorption or reflection?
The 2-10 keV continuum of AGN is generally well represented by a single power
law. However, at smaller energies the continuum displays an excess with respect
to the extrapolation of this power law, called the ''soft X-ray excess''. Until
now this soft X-ray excess was attributed, either to reflection of the hard
X-ray source by the accretion disk, or to the presence of an additional
comptonizing medium, giving a steep spectrum. An alternative solution proposed
by Gierlinski and Done (2004) is that a single power law well represents both
the soft and the hard X-ray emission and the impression of the soft X-ray
excess is due to absorption of a primary power law by a relativistic wind. We
examine the advantages and drawbacks of reflection versus absorption models,
and we conclude that the observed spectra can be well modeled, either by
absorption (for a strong excess), or by reflection (for a weak excess). However
the physical conditions required by the absorption models do not seem very
realistic: we would prefer an ''hybrid model''.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, abstracts SF2A-2005, published by EDP-Sciences
Conference Serie
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