506 research outputs found
Pico: Parameters for the Impatient Cosmologist
We present a fast, accurate, robust and flexible method of accelerating
parameter estimation. This algorithm, called Pico, can compute the CMB power
spectrum and matter transfer function as well as any computationally expensive
likelihoods in a few milliseconds. By removing these bottlenecks from parameter
estimation codes, Pico decreases their computational time by 1 or 2 orders of
magnitude. Pico has several important properties. First, it is extremely fast
and accurate over a large volume of parameter space. Furthermore, its accuracy
can continue to be improved by using a larger training set. This method is
generalizable to an arbitrary number of cosmological parameters and to any
range of l-values in multipole space. Pico is approximately 3000 times faster
than CAMB for flat models, and approximately 2000 times faster then the WMAP 3
year likelihood code. In this paper, we demonstrate that using Pico to compute
power spectra and likelihoods produces parameter posteriors that are very
similar to those using CAMB and the official WMAP3 code, but in only a fraction
of the time. Pico and an interface to CosmoMC are made publicly available at
http://www.astro.uiuc.edu/~bwandelt/pico/.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figures, submitted to ApJ, LaTeX with emulateap
Collimation of astrophysical jets - the role of the accretion disk magnetic field distribution
We have applied axisymmetric MHD simulations to investigate the impact of the
accretion disk magnetic flux profile on the jet collimation. Using the ZEUS-3D
code modified for magnetic diffusivity, our simulations evolve from an initial
hydrostatic equilibrium state in a force-free magnetic field. Considering a
power law for the disk poloidal magnetic field profile Bp ~ r^{-mu} and for the
disk wind density profile rho ~ r^{-mu_rho} we performed a systematic study
over a wide parameter range mu and mu_rho. We find a degree of collimation
(ratio of mass flow rates in axial and lateral direction) decreasing for
steeper disk magnetic field profiles (increasing mu). Varying the total
magnetic flux doesn't change the degree of jet collimation substantially, it
only affects the time scale of outflow evolution and the terminal jet speed. As
our major result we find a general relation between the collimation degree with
the disk wind magnetization power law exponent. Outflows with high collimation
degree resulting from a flat disk magnetic field profile tend to be unsteady,
producing axially propagating knots as discussed earlier. Depending slightly on
the inflow density profile this unsteady behavior sets in for mu < 0.4. We also
performed simulations of jet formation with artificially enhanced decay of the
toroidal magnetic field in order to investigate the idea of a purely "poloidal
collimation" discussed in the literature. These outflows remain weakly
collimated and propagate with lower velocity. Thanks to our large numerical
grid size (7x14 AU for protostars), we may apply our results to recently
observed hints of jet rotation (DG Tau) indicating a relatively flat disk
magnetic field profile, mu ~ 0.5. In general, our results are applicable to
both stellar and extragalactic sources of MHD jets.Comment: accepted by ApJ, high resolution version under
www.mpia-hd.mpg.de/homes/fendt
Relativistic expansion of a magnetized fluid
We study semi-analytical time-dependent solutions of the relativistic
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) equations for the fields and the fluid emerging from
a spherical source. We assume uniform expansion of the field and the fluid and
a polytropic relation between the density and the pressure of the fluid. The
expansion velocity is small near the base but approaches the speed of light at
the light sphere where the flux terminates. We find self-consistent solutions
for the density and the magnetic flux. The details of the solution depend on
the ratio of the toroidal and the poloidal magnetic field, the ratio of the
energy carried by the fluid and the electromagnetic field and the maximum
velocity it reaches.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures, accepted by Geophysical and Astrophysical Fluid
Dynamic
Ultra-Relativistic Magneto-Hydro-Dynamic Jets in the context of Gamma Ray Bursts
We present a detailed numerical study of the dynamics and evolution of
ultrarelativistic magnetohydrodynamic jets in the black hole-disk system under
extreme magnetization conditions. We find that Lorentz factors of up to 3000
are achieved and derived a modifiedMichel scaling (Gamma ~ sigma) which allows
for a wide variation in the flow Lorentz factor. Pending contamination induced
by mass-entrainment, the linear Michel scaling links modulations in the
ultrarelativistic wind to variations in mass accretion in the disk for a given
magnetization. The jet is asymptotically dominated by the toroidal magnetic
field allowing for efficient collimation. We discuss our solutions (jets) in
the context of Gamma ray bursts and describe the relevant features such as the
high variability in the Lorentz factor and how high collimation angles (~ 0-5
degrees), or cylindrical jets, can be achieved. We isolate a jet instability
mechanism we refer to as the "bottle-neck" instability which essentially relies
on a high magnetization and a recollimation of the magnetic flux surfaces. The
instability occurs at large radii where any dissipation of the magnetic energy
into radiation would in principle result in an optically thin emission.Comment: 31 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to ApJ. Higher Quality figures at
http://www.capca.ucalgary.ca/paper
Rico: An Accurate Cosmological Recombination Code
We present Rico, a code designed to compute the ionization fraction of the
Universe during the epoch of hydrogen and helium recombination with an
unprecedented combination of speed and accuracy. This is accomplished by
training the machine learning code Pico on the calculations of a multi-level
cosmological recombination code which self-consistently includes several
physical processes that were neglected previously. After training, Rico is used
to fit the free electron fraction as a function of the cosmological parameters.
While, for example at low redshifts (z<~900), much of the net change in the
ionization fraction can be captured by lowering the hydrogen fudge factor in
Recfast by about 3%, Rico provides a means of effectively using the accurate
ionization history of the full recombination code in the standard cosmological
parameter estimation framework without the need to add new or refined fudge
factors or functions to a simple recombination model. Within the new approach
presented here it is easy to update Rico whenever a more accurate full
recombination code becomes available. Once trained, Rico computes the
cosmological ionization history with negligible fitting error in ~10
milliseconds, a speed-up of at least 10^6 over the full recombination code that
was used here. Also Rico is able to reproduce the ionization history of the
full code to a level well below 0.1%, thereby ensuring that the theoretical
power spectra of CMB fluctuations can be computed to sufficient accuracy and
speed for analysis from upcoming CMB experiments like Planck. Furthermore it
will enable cross-checking different recombination codes across cosmological
parameter space, a comparison that will be very important in order to assure
the accurate interpretation of future cosmic microwave background data.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, submitted to PR
VLBI imaging of a flare in the Crab Nebula: More than just a spot
We report on very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) observations of the
radio emission from the inner region of the Crab Nebula, made at 1.6 GHz and 5
GHz after a recent high-energy flare in this object. The 5 GHz data have
provided only upper limits of 0.4 milli-Jansky (mJy) on the flux density of the
pulsar and 0.4 mJy/beam on the brightness of the putative flaring region. The
1.6 GHz data have enabled imaging the inner regions of the nebula on scales of
up to ~40". The emission from the inner "wisps" is detected for the first time
with VLBI observations. A likely radio counterpart (designated "C1") of the
putative flaring region observed with Chandra and HST is detected in the radio
image, with an estimated flux density of \,mJy and a size of
0.2-0.6". Another compact feature ("C2") is also detected in the VLBI image
closer to the pulsar, with an estimated flux density of 0.4 +- 0.2 mJy and a
size smaller than 0{\farcs}2. Combined with the broad-band SED of the flare,
the radio properties of C1 yield a lower limit of ~0.5 mG for the magnetic
field and a total minimum energy of 1.2*10^41 ergs vested in the flare
(corresponding to using about 0.2% of the pulsar spin-down power). The 1.6 GHz
observations provide upper limits for the brightness (0.2 mJy/beam) and total
flux density (0.4 mJy) of the optical Knot 1 located at 0.6" from the pulsar.
The absolute position of the Crab pulsar is determined, and an estimate of the
pulsar proper motion is obtained.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics; accepted; 10 pages, 8 figure
Molecular outflows in the young open cluster IC348
We present a wide-field survey of the young open cluster IC348 for molecular
H2 outflows. Outflow activity is only found at its south-western limit, where a
new subcluster of embedded sources is in an early phase of its formation. If
the IC348 cluster had been built up by such subclusters forming at different
times, this could explain the large age-spread that Herbig (1998) found for the
IC348 member stars. In addition to several compact groups of H2 knots, our
survey reveals a large north-south oriented outflow, and we identify the newly
discovered far-infrared and mm-object IC348MMS as its source. New deep images
in the 1-0 S(1) line of molecular hydrogen trace the HH211 jet and counterjet
as highly-collimated chains of knots, resembling the interferometric CO and SiO
jets. This jet system appears rotated counter-clockwise by about 3 degrees with
respect to the prominent H2 bow shocks. Furthermore, we resolve HH211-mm as a
double point-like source in the mm-continuum.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Can Protostellar Jets Drive Supersonic Turbulence in Molecular Clouds?
Jets and outflows from young stellar objects are proposed candidates to drive
supersonic turbulence in molecular clouds. Here, we present the results from
multi-dimensional jet simulations where we investigate in detail the energy and
momentum deposition from jets into their surrounding environment and quantify
the character of the excited turbulence with velocity probability density
functions. Our study include jet--clump interaction, transient jets, and
magnetised jets. We find that collimated supersonic jets do not excite
supersonic motions far from the vicinity of the jet. Supersonic fluctuations
are damped quickly and do not spread into the parent cloud. Instead subsonic,
non-compressional modes occupy most of the excited volume. This is a generic
feature which can not be fully circumvented by overdense jets or magnetic
fields. Nevertheless, jets are able to leave strong imprints in their cloud
structure and can disrupt dense clumps. Our results question the ability of
collimated jets to sustain supersonic turbulence in molecular clouds.Comment: 33 pages, 18 figures, accepted by ApJ, version with high resolution
figures at:
http://www.ita.uni-heidelberg.de/~banerjee/publications/jet_paper.pd
The Propagation of Magneto-Centrifugally Launched Jets: I
We present simulations of the propagation of magnetized jets. This work
differs from previous studies in that the cross-sectional distributions of the
jets's state variables are derived from analytical models for
magneto-centrifugal launching. The source is a magnetized rotator whose
properties are specfied as boundary conditions. The jets in these simulations
are considerably more complex than the ``top-hat''constant density etc.
profiles used in previous work. We find that density and magnetic field
stratification (with radius) in the jet leads to new behavior including the
separation of an inner jet core from a low density collar. We find this {\it
jet within a jet} structure, along with the magnetic stresses, leads to
propagation behaviors not observed in previous simulation studies. Our
methodology allows us to compare MHD jets from different types of sources whose
properties could ultimately be derived from the behavior of the propagating
jets.Comment: 42 pages, accepted by the Ap
- âŠ