72 research outputs found
Abundances of the elements in the solar system
A review of the abundances and condensation temperatures of the elements and
their nuclides in the solar nebula and in chondritic meteorites. Abundances of
the elements in some neighboring stars are also discussed.Comment: 42 pages, 11 tables, 8 figures, chapter, In Landolt- B\"ornstein, New
Series, Vol. VI/4B, Chap. 4.4, J.E. Tr\"umper (ed.), Berlin, Heidelberg, New
York: Springer-Verlag, p. 560-63
The Role of Radioactivities in Astrophysics
I present both a history of radioactivity in astrophysics and an introduction
to the major applications of radioactive abundances to astronomy
Stellar structure and compact objects before 1940: Towards relativistic astrophysics
Since the mid-1920s, different strands of research used stars as "physics
laboratories" for investigating the nature of matter under extreme densities
and pressures, impossible to realize on Earth. To trace this process this paper
is following the evolution of the concept of a dense core in stars, which was
important both for an understanding of stellar evolution and as a testing
ground for the fast-evolving field of nuclear physics. In spite of the divide
between physicists and astrophysicists, some key actors working in the
cross-fertilized soil of overlapping but different scientific cultures
formulated models and tentative theories that gradually evolved into more
realistic and structured astrophysical objects. These investigations culminated
in the first contact with general relativity in 1939, when J. Robert
Oppenheimer and his students George Volkoff and Hartland Snyder systematically
applied the theory to the dense core of a collapsing neutron star. This
pioneering application of Einstein's theory to an astrophysical compact object
can be regarded as a milestone in the path eventually leading to the emergence
of relativistic astrophysics in the early 1960s.Comment: 83 pages, 4 figures, submitted to the European Physical Journal
Nuclear Level Density and the Determination of Thermonuclear Rates for Astrophysics
The prediction of cross sections for nuclei far off stability is crucial in
the field of nuclear astrophysics. We discuss the model mostly employed for
such calculations: the statistical model (Hauser-Feshbach). Special emphasis is
put on the uncertainties arising from nuclear level density descriptions and an
improved global description is presented. Furthermore, criteria for the
applicability of the statistical model are investigated and a "map" for the
applicability of the model to reactions of stable and unstable nuclei with
neutral and charged particles is given.Comment: REVTeX paper + 7 B/W figures + 2 color figures; PRC, in press. Also
available at http://quasar.physik.unibas.ch/preps.htm
A resonant-term-based model including a nascent disk, precession, and oblateness: application to GJ 876
Investigations of two resonant planets orbiting a star or two resonant
satellites orbiting a planet often rely on a few resonant and secular terms in
order to obtain a representative quantitative description of the system's
dynamical evolution. We present a semianalytic model which traces the orbital
evolution of any two resonant bodies in a first- through fourth-order
eccentricity or inclination-based resonance dominated by the resonant and
secular arguments of the user's choosing. By considering the variation of
libration width with different orbital parameters, we identify regions of phase
space which give rise to different resonant ''depths,'' and propose methods to
model libration profiles. We apply the model to the GJ 876 extrasolar planetary
system, quantify the relative importance of the relevant resonant and secular
contributions, and thereby assess the goodness of the common approximation of
representing the system by just the presumably dominant terms. We highlight the
danger in using ''order'' as the metric for accuracy in the orbital solution by
revealing the unnatural libration centers produced by the second-order, but not
first-order, solution, and by demonstrating that the true orbital solution lies
somewhere ''in-between'' the third- and fourth-order solutions. We also present
formulas used to incorporate perturbations from central-body oblateness and
precession, and a protoplanetary or protosatellite thin disk with gaps, into a
resonant system. We quantify these contributions to the GJ 876 system, and
thereby highlight the conditions which must exist for multi-planet exosystems
to be significantly influenced by such factors. We find that massive enough
disks may convert resonant libration into circulation; such disk-induced
signatures may provide constraints for future studies of exoplanet systems.Comment: 39 pages of body text, 21 figures, 5 tables, 1 appendix, accepted for
publication in Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronom
Have Superheavy Elements been Produced in Nature?
We discuss the possibility whether superheavy elements can be produced in
Nature by the astrophysical rapid neutron capture process. To this end we have
performed fully dynamical network r-process calculations assuming an
environment with neutron-to-seed ratio large enough to produce superheavy
nuclei. Our calculations include two sets of nuclear masses and fission
barriers and include all possible fission channels and the associated fission
yield distributions. Our calculations produce superheavy nuclei with A ~ 300
that however decay on timescales of days.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
Recommended from our members
Limitations to Growth of Microorganisms on Uranus, Neptune, and Titan
We have examined a wide range of physical, chemical, and thermal models of the atmosphere of Uranus. In that model, which we believe maximizes favorable conditions for the support of life [Weidenschilling and Lewis, Icarus20, 465–476 (1973)], we find the probability of growth of a contaminant terrestrial microorganisms to be nil. If, as is likely, conditions are even more extreme on Neptune, the probability of contamination of both of the outer planets Uranus and Neptune is nil. The Wiedenschilling and Lewis model guarantees the presence of water droplets through the temperature range 0 to 100°C; other published models add water liquid at higher temperatures or fail to provide liquid water at all within this temperature range. In this model the heavy elements (C, N, O, etc.) are enhanced in Uranus by a factor sufficient to form a deep massive cloud layer of aqueous ammonia solution droplets. We can estimate the probability of growth with respect to the following factors: the presence of stable liquid water, convection of parcels of atmosphere to lethally hot depths, solar energy sources reaching the water layer, organic molecular production by solar ultraviolet light, ammonia concentration at the water cloud level, ionic species distribution, and concentrations at the water cloud level. The evaluation of these factors suggests that most terrestrial life as we know it would be excluded on the basis of any one of them. We know of no organism that would be adapted to all the stringent Uranus conditions simultaneously. The discovery of even a single species of Earth organism that can survive or grow under allowable outer planetary conditions would establish new principles in biology.Titan, the methane-rich moon of Saturn, may be more hospitable for terrestrial organisms than any of the other objects of the outer solar system. Even there we see formidable barriers to the growth of an Earth organism in Titan\u27s atmosphere. We recognize that revision of our views concerning Titan must occur as more is learned about this satellite.We advocate the abandonment, in principle, of the probabilistic approach to the estimation of growth of terrestrial organisms on spacecraft, planets, and satellites in the solar system. We do not support an approach which estimates probabilities of qualitatively unknown phenomena. We recommend a strategy which involves identification and intensive study of those organisms most likely to thrive under known conditions for each of the planets respectively. (Unknown environmental conditions may be allowed to vary optimally.) Some explicit areas for Earth-based experimentation are indicated
Massive Supernovae, Orion Gamma Rays, and the Formation of the Solar System
We discuss the source of the enhanced carbon and oxygen low-energy cosmic-ray flux in the Orion star-forming region and attribute it to the acceleration of the surface layers of a massive supernova, probably of Type Ib. The gamma rays from Orion are produced by that fast CO ejecta. In this model there would be few Orion-like gamma-ray sources in the Galaxy at any one time. We also postulate that a massive supernova produced the short-lived extinct radioactivities injected into the molecular cloud core that produced the solar system. We find that relative to 26Al the other short-lived extinct radioactivities are excessively produced in massive supernovae but are likely to be more attenuated by postexplosion fallback than 26Al. This is a revival of the supernova trigger hypothesis; to obtain the correct dilutions of the extinct radioactivities, the distance from the supernova to the impacted molecular cloud core must be a few parsecs, and the effective projected collecting area of the cloud must be significantly less than normal core radii
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