6,824 research outputs found
Lithium Production in Companions of Accreting X-Ray Binaries by Neutron Spallation of C,N,O Elements
We examine the processes which could lead to the observed enhancement of Li
and possibly other light elements (Be, B) in the companions of a number of
X-ray novae. We conclude that one of the most promising mechanisms is the
spallation of CNO elements on the surface of the companion induced by the
neutron flux produced in the hot accretion flow onto the compact object. Direct
production of the observed Li and its deposition onto the dwarf companion seem
less likely, mainly because of the possibility of its destruction in the
production region itself and difficulties in its deposition associated with the
configuration of the companion's magnetic field. We discuss other potential
observables of the above scenario.Comment: 23 pages Latex, of which 5 pages of tables, to appear in the
Astrophysical Journal, Vol 512, Feb 10 issu
Non-stationary Rayleigh-Taylor instability in supernovae ejecta
The Rayleigh-Taylor instability plays an important role in the dynamics of
several astronomical objects, in particular, in supernovae (SN) evolution. In
this paper we develop an analytical approach to study the stability analysis of
spherical expansion of the SN ejecta by using a special transformation in the
co-moving coordinate frame. We first study a non-stationary spherical expansion
of a gas shell under the pressure of a central source. Then we analyze its
stability with respect to a no radial, non spherically symmetric perturbation
of the of the shell. We consider the case where the polytropic constant of the
SN shell is and we examine the evolution of a arbitrary shell
perturbation. The dispersion relation is derived. The growth rate of the
perturbation is found and its temporal and spatial evolution is discussed. The
stability domain depends on the ejecta shell thickness, its acceleration, and
the perturbation wavelength.Comment: 16 page
A Possible Explanation of the Radio Afterglow of GRB980519: The Dense Medium Effect
GRB{980519} is characterized by its rapidly declining optical and X-ray
afterglows. Explanations of this behavior include models invoking a dense
medium environment which makes the shock wave evolve quickly into the
sub-relativistic phase, a jet-like outflow, and a wind-shaped circumburst
medium environment. Recently, Frail {et al}. (1999a) found that the latter two
cases are consistent with the radio afterglow of this burst. Here, by
considering the trans-relativistic shock hydrodynamics, we show that the dense
medium model can also account for the radio light curve quite well. The
potential virtue of the dense medium model for GRB{980519} is that it implies a
smaller angular size of the afterglow, which is essential for interpreting the
strong modulation of the radio light curve. Optical extinction due to the dense
medium is not important if the prompt optical-UV flash accompanying the
-ray emission can destroy dust by sublimation out to an appreciable
distance. Comparisons with some other radio afterglows are also discussed.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, a few minor changes made and references up dated,
MNRAS, in pres
Self-consistent stability analysis of spherical shocks.
In this paper, we study self-similar solutions, and their linear stability as well, describing the flow within a spherical shell with finite thickness, expanding according to a power law of time, t q , where q>0. The shell propagates in a medium with initially uniform density and it is bounded by a strong shock wave at its outer border while the inner face is submitted to a time-dependent uniform pressure. For q=2/5, the well-known Sedov–Taylor solution is recovered. In addition, although both accelerated and decelerated shells can be unstable against dynamic perturbations, they exhibit highly different behaviors. Finally, the dispersion relation derived earlier by Vishniac (Vishniac, E.T. in Astrophys. J. 274:152, 1983) for an infinitely thin shell is obtained in the limit of an isothermal shock wave
Measurement of the solenoid magnetic field
We describe the machine used to map the solenoid field and the data sets that were collected. The bulk of the note describes the analysis of this data. A series of small corrections are made; some taken from surveys and some derived from the data itself. Two fitting methods are defined and applied to all data sets. The final result is that the field map at normal operating current can be fitted to a function that obeys Maxwell with an r.m.s. residual of less than 5 Gauss. Systematic errors on the measurement of track sagitta due to the field uncertainty are estimated to be in the range 2.3E-4 to 12E-4, depending on the track rapidity. Finally, the representation of the map in Athena is briefly described
Measurement of the ATLAS solenoid magnetic field
ATLAS is a general purpose detector designed to explore a wide range of physics at the Large Hadron Collider. At the centre of ATLAS is a tracking detector in a 2 T solenoidal magnetic field. This paper describes the machine built to map the field, the data analysis methods, the final results, and their estimated uncertainties. The remotely controlled mapping machine used pneumatic motors with feedback from optical encoders to scan an array of Hall probes over the field volume and log data at more than 20 000 points in a few hours. The data were analysed, making full use of the physical constraints on the field and of our knowledge of the solenoid coil geometry. After a series of small corrections derived from the data itself, the resulting maps were fitted with a function obeying Maxwell's equations. The fit residuals had an r.m.s. less than 0.5 mT and the systematic error on the measurement of track sagitta due to the field uncertainty was estimated to be in the range 0.02 % to 0.12 % depending on the track rapidity
Panchromatic Observations of SN 2011dh Point to a Compact Progenitor Star
We report the discovery and detailed monitoring of X-ray emission associated
with the Type IIb SN 2011dh using data from the Swift and Chandra satellites,
placing it among the best studied X-ray supernovae to date. We further present
millimeter and radio data obtained with the SMA, CARMA, and EVLA during the
first three weeks after explosion. Combining these observations with early
optical photometry, we show that the panchromatic dataset is well-described by
non-thermal synchrotron emission (radio/mm) with inverse Compton scattering
(X-ray) of a thermal population of optical photons. In this scenario, the shock
partition fractions deviate from equipartition by a factor, (e_e/e_B) ~ 30. We
derive the properties of the shockwave and the circumstellar environment and
find a shock velocity, v~0.1c, and a progenitor mass loss rate of ~6e-5
M_sun/yr. These properties are consistent with the sub-class of Type IIb SNe
characterized by compact progenitors (Type cIIb) and dissimilar from those with
extended progenitors (Type eIIb). Furthermore, we consider the early optical
emission in the context of a cooling envelope model to estimate a progenitor
radius of ~1e+11 cm, in line with the expectations for a Type cIIb SN.
Together, these diagnostics are difficult to reconcile with the extended radius
of the putative yellow supergiant progenitor star identified in archival HST
observations, unless the stellar density profile is unusual. Finally, we
searched for the high energy shock breakout pulse using X-ray and gamma-ray
observations obtained during the purported explosion date range. Based on the
compact radius of the progenitor, we estimate that the breakout pulse was
detectable with current instruments but likely missed due to their limited
temporal/spatial coverage. [Abridged]Comment: (27 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables, final version to appear in ApJ
The shallow-decay phase in both optical and x-ray afterglows of Swift GRB 090529A: Energy injection into a wind-type medium?
The energy injection model is usually proposed to interpret the shallow-decay
phase in Swift GRB X-ray afterglows. However, very few GRBs have simultaneous
signatures of energy injection in their optical and X-ray afterglows. Here, we
report optical observations of GRB 090529A from 2000 sec to sec
after the burst, in which an achromatic decay is seen at both wavelengths. The
optical light curve shows a decay from 0.37 to 0.99 with a break at
sec. In the same time interval, the decay indices of the X-ray light curve
changed from 0.04 to 1.2. Comparing these values with the closure relations,
the segment after 3 sec is consistent with the prediction of the
forward shock in an ISM medium without any energy injection. The shallow-decay
phase between 2000 to 3 sec could be due to the external shock in
a wind-type-like medium with an energy injection under the condition of . However, the constraint of the spectral region is not well
consistent with the multi-band observations. For this shallow-decay phase,
other models are also possible, such as energy injection with evolving
microphysical parameters, or a jet viewed off-axis,etc.Comment: 19pages,2gigures, accepted by MNRA
Angular Momentum Conservation Law for Randall-Sundrum Models
In Randall-Sundrum models, by the use of general Noether theorem, the
covariant angular momentum conservation law is obtained with the respect to the
local Lorentz transformations. The angular momentum current has also
superpotential and is therefore identically conserved. The space-like
components of the angular momentum for Randall-Sundrum models are
zero. But the component is infinite.Comment: 10 pages, no figures, accepted by Mod. Phys. Lett.
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