9,976 research outputs found
On the Importance of the Interclump Medium for Superionization: O VI Formation in the Wind of Zeta Pup
We have studied superionization and X-ray line formation in the spectra of
Zeta Pup using our new stellar atmosphere code (XCMFGEN) that can be used to
simultaneously analyze optical, UV, and X-ray observations. Here, we present
results on the formation of the O VI ll1032, 1038 doublet. Our simulations,
supported by simple theoretical calculations, show that clumped wind models
that assume void in the interclump space cannot reproduce the observed O VI
profiles. However, enough O VI can be produced if the voids are filled by a low
density gas. The recombination of O VI is very efficient in the dense material
but in the tenuous interclump region an observable amount of O VI can be
maintained. We also find that different UV resonance lines are sensitive to
different density regimes in Zeta Pup : C IV is almost exclusively formed
within the densest regions, while the majority of O VI resides between clumps.
N V is an intermediate case, with contributions from both the tenuous gas and
clumps.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJL, 4 pages with 3 figure
Type-I superconductivity in noncentrosymmetric superconductor AuBe
The noncentrosymmetric superconductor AuBe have been investigated using the
magnetization, resistivity, specific heat, and muon-spin relaxation/rotation
measurements. AuBe crystallizes in the cubic FeSi-type B20 structure with
superconducting transition temperature observed at = 3.2 0.1 K.
The low-temperature specific heat data, (T), indicate a weakly-coupled
fully gapped BCS superconductivity with an isotropic energy gap
2 = 3.76, which is close to the BCS value of 3.52.
Interestingly, type-I superconductivity is inferred from the SR
measurements, which is in contrast with the earlier reports of type-II
superconductivity in AuBe. The Ginzburg-Landau parameter is = 0.4
1/. The transverse-field SR data transformed in the maximum
entropy spectra depicting the internal magnetic field probability distribution,
P(H), also confirms the absence of the mixed state in AuBe. The thermodynamic
critical field, , calculated to be around 259 Oe. The zero-field SR
results indicate that time-reversal symmetry is preserved and supports a
spin-singlet pairing in the superconducting ground state.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figure
Critical ingredients of supernova Ia radiative-transfer modeling
We explore the physics of SN Ia light curves and spectra using the 1-D
non-LTE time-dependent radiative-transfer code CMFGEN. Rather than adjusting
ejecta properties to match observations, we select as input one "standard" 1-D
Chandrasekhar-mass delayed-detonation hydrodynamical model, and then explore
the sensitivity of radiation and gas properties on radiative-transfer modeling
assumptions. The correct computation of SN Ia radiation is not exclusively a
solution to an "opacity problem", characterized by the treatment of a large
number of lines. It is also key to treat important atomic processes
consistently. Besides handling line blanketing in non-LTE, we show that
including forbidden line transitions of metals is increasingly important for
the temperature and ionization of the gas beyond maximum light. Non-thermal
ionization and excitation are also critical since they affect the color
evolution and the Delta-M15 of our model. While impacting little the bolometric
luminosity, a more complete treatment of decay routes leads to enhanced line
blanketing, e.g., associated with 48Ti in the U and B bands. Overall, we find
that SN Ia radiation properties are influenced in a complicated way by the
atomic data we employ, so that obtaining converged results is a challenge. We
nonetheless obtain a good match to the golden standard type Ia SN 2005cf in the
optical and near-IR, from 5 to 60d after explosion, suggesting that assuming
spherical symmetry is not detrimental to SN Ia radiative-transfer modeling at
these times. Multi-D effects no doubt matter, but they are perhaps less
important than accurately treating non-LTE processes [abridged].Comment: Accepted to MNRA
Constraints on the explosion mechanism and progenitors of type Ia supernovae
Observations of SN 2011fe at early times reveal an evolution analogous to a
fireball model of constant color. In contrast, our unmixed delayed detonations
of Chandrasekhar-mass white dwarfs (DDC series) exhibit a faster brightening
concomitant with a shift in color to the blue. In this paper, we study the
origin of these discrepancies. We find that strong chemical mixing largely
resolves the photometric mismatch at early times, but it leads to an enhanced
line broadening that contrasts, for example, with the markedly narrow SiII6355A
line of SN 2011fe. We also explore an alternative configuration with
pulsational-delayed detonations (PDDEL model series). Because of the pulsation,
PDDEL models retain more unburnt carbon, have little mass at high velocity, and
have a much hotter outer ejecta after the explosion. The pulsation does not
influence the inner ejecta, so PDDEL and DDC models exhibit similar radiative
properties beyond maximum. However, at early times, PDDEL models show bluer
optical colors and a higher luminosity, even for weak mixing. Their early-time
radiation is derived primarily from the initial shock-deposited energy in the
outer ejecta rather than radioactive decay heating. Furthermore, PDDEL models
show short-lived CII lines, reminiscent of SN 2013dy. They typically exhibit
lines that are weaker, narrower, and of near-constant width, reminiscent of SN
2011fe. In addition to multi-dimensional effects, varying configurations for
such ``pulsations" offer a source of spectral diversity amongst SNe Ia. PDDEL
and DDC models also provide one explanation for low- and high-velocity gradient
SNe Ia.Comment: Accepted to MNRA
Further Criteria for the Existence of Steady Line-Driven Winds
In Paper I, we showed that steady line-driven disk wind solutions can exist
by using "simple" models that mimic the disk environment. Here I extend the
concepts introduced in Paper I and discuss many details of the analysis of the
steady/unsteady nature of 1D line-driven winds. This work confirms the results
and conclusions of Paper I, and is thus consistent with the steady nature of
the 1D streamline line-driven disk wind models of Murray and collaborators and
the 2.5D line-driven disk wind models of Pereyra and collaborators. When
including gas pressures effects, as is routinely done in time-dependent
numerical models, I find that the spatial dependence of the nozzle function
continues to play a key role in determining the steady/unsteady nature of
supersonic line-driven wind solutions. I show here that the
existence/nonexistence of local wind solutions can be proved through the nozzle
function without integrating the equation of motion. This work sets a detailed
framework with which we will analyze, in a following paper, more realistic
models than the "simple" models of Paper I.Comment: 30 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication by The Astrophysical
Journa
Synthetic line and continuum linear-polarisation signatures of axisymmetric type II supernova ejecta
We present synthetic single-line and continuum linear-polarisation signatures
due to electron scattering in axially-symmetric Type II supernovae (SNe) which
we calculate using a Monte Carlo and a long-characteristic radiative-transfer
code. Aspherical ejecta are produced by prescribing a latitudinal scaling or
stretching of SN ejecta inputs obtained from 1-D non-LTE time-dependent
calculations. We study polarisation signatures as a function of inclination,
shape factor, wavelength, line identity, post-explosion time. At early times,
cancellation and optical-depth effects make the polarisation intrinsically low,
causing complicated sign reversals with inclination or continuum wavelength,
and across line profiles. While the line polarisation is positive (negative)
for an oblate (prolate) morphology at the peak and in the red wing, the
continuum polarisation may be of any sign. These complex polarisation
variations are produced not just by the asymmetric distribution of scatterers
but also of the flux. Our early-time signatures are in contradiction with
predictions for a centrally illuminated aspherical nebula, although this
becomes a better approximation at nebular times. For a fixed asymmetry, our
synthetic continuum polarisation is generally low, may evolve non-monotonically
during the plateau phase, but it systematically rises as the ejecta become
optically thin. Changes in polarization over time do not necessarily imply a
change in the asymmetry of the ejecta. The SN structure (e.g.,
density/ionization) critically influences the level of polarisation.
Importantly, a low polarisation (<0.5%) at early times does not necessarily
imply a low degree of asymmetry as usually assumed. Asphericity influences
line-profile morphology and the luminosity, which may compromise the accuracy
of SN characteristics inferred from these.Comment: 25 pages, 23 figures, accepted to MNRA
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