2,058 research outputs found
Magnetic field evolution in tidal disruption events
When a star gets tidally disrupted by a supermassive black hole, its magnetic field is expected to pervade its debris. In this paper, we study this process via smoothed particle magnetohydrodynamical simulations of the disruption and early debris evolution including the stellar magnetic field. As the gas stretches into a stream, we show that the magnetic field evolution is strongly dependent on its orientation with respect to the stretching direction. In particular, an alignment of the field lines with the direction of stretching induces an increase of the magnetic energy. For disruptions happening well within the tidal radius, the star compression causes the magnetic field strength to sharply increase by an order of magnitude at the time of pericentre passage. If the disruption is partial, we find evidence for a dynamo process occurring inside the surviving core due to the formation of vortices. This causes an amplification of the magnetic field strength by a factor of \u2dc10. However, this value represents a lower limit since it increases with numerical resolution. For an initial field strength of 1 G, the magnetic field never becomes dynamically important. Instead, the disruption of a star with a strong 1 MG magnetic field produces a debris stream within which magnetic pressure becomes similar to gas pressure a few tens of hours after disruption. If the remnant of one or multiple partial disruptions is eventually fully disrupted, its magnetic field could be large enough to magnetically power the relativistic jet detected from Swift J1644+57. Magnetized streams could also be significantly thickened by magnetic pressure when it overcomes the confining effect of self-gravity
Hyperbolic calorons, monopoles, and instantons
We construct families of SO(3)-symmetric charge 1 instantons and calorons on
the space H^3 x R. We show how the calorons include instantons and hyperbolic
monopoles as limiting cases. We show how Euclidean calorons are the flat space
limit of this family.Comment: 11 pages, no figures 1 reference added Published version available
at: http://www.springerlink.com/content/k0j4815u54303450
Relativistic Heavy--Ion Collisions in the Dynamical String--Parton Model
We develop and extend the dynamical string parton model. This model, which is
based on the salient features of QCD, uses classical Nambu-Got\=o strings with
the endpoints identified as partons, an invariant string breaking model of the
hadronization process, and interactions described as quark-quark interactions.
In this work, the original model is extended to include a phenomenological
quantization of the mass of the strings, an analytical technique for treating
the incident nucleons as a distribution of string configurations determined by
the experimentally measured structure function, the inclusion of the gluonic
content of the nucleon through the introduction of purely gluonic strings, and
the use of a hard parton-parton interaction taken from perturbative QCD
combined with a phenomenological soft interaction. The limited number of
parameters in the model are adjusted to and -- data. Utilizing
these parameters, the first calculations of the model for -- and
-- collisions are presented and found to be in reasonable agreement with
a broad set of data.Comment: 26 pages of text with 23 Postscript figures placed in tex
How big is too big? Critical Shocks for Systemic Failure Cascades
External or internal shocks may lead to the collapse of a system consisting
of many agents. If the shock hits only one agent initially and causes it to
fail, this can induce a cascade of failures among neighoring agents. Several
critical constellations determine whether this cascade remains finite or
reaches the size of the system, i.e. leads to systemic risk. We investigate the
critical parameters for such cascades in a simple model, where agents are
characterized by an individual threshold \theta_i determining their capacity to
handle a load \alpha\theta_i with 1-\alpha being their safety margin. If agents
fail, they redistribute their load equally to K neighboring agents in a regular
network. For three different threshold distributions P(\theta), we derive
analytical results for the size of the cascade, X(t), which is regarded as a
measure of systemic risk, and the time when it stops. We focus on two different
regimes, (i) EEE, an external extreme event where the size of the shock is of
the order of the total capacity of the network, and (ii) RIE, a random internal
event where the size of the shock is of the order of the capacity of an agent.
We find that even for large extreme events that exceed the capacity of the
network finite cascades are still possible, if a power-law threshold
distribution is assumed. On the other hand, even small random fluctuations may
lead to full cascades if critical conditions are met. Most importantly, we
demonstrate that the size of the "big" shock is not the problem, as the
systemic risk only varies slightly for changes of 10 to 50 percent of the
external shock. Systemic risk depends much more on ingredients such as the
network topology, the safety margin and the threshold distribution, which gives
hints on how to reduce systemic risk.Comment: 23 pages, 7 Figure
The nova-like nebular optical spectrum of V404 Cygni at the beginning of the 2015 outburst decay
We report on FORS2 optical spectroscopy of the black hole X-ray binary V404 Cygni, performed at the very beginning of its 2015 outburst decay, complemented by quasi-simultaneous Swift X-ray and ultraviolet as well as Rapid Eye Mountain near-infrared observations. Its peculiar spectrum is dominated by a wealth of emission signatures of H i, He i, and higher ionization species, in particular Fe ii. The spectral features are divided between broad redshifted and narrow stationary varieties, the latter being emitted in the outer regions. Continuum and line variability at short time-scale is high, and we find Baldwin effect-like anticorrelations between the full widths at half-maximum and equivalent widths of the broad lines with their local continua. The Balmer decrement H ?/H ? is also abnormally large at 4.61 ± 0.62. We argue that these properties hint at the broad lines being optically thick and arising within a circumbinary component in which shocks between faster optically thick and slower optically thin regions may occur. We associate it to a nova-like nebula formed by the cooling remnant of strong accretion disc winds that turned off when the mass-accretion rate dropped following the last major flare. The Fe ii lines likely arise from the overlap region between this nebula and the companion star winds, whereas we favour the shocks within the nebula as responsible for the optical continuum via self-absorbed optically thin bremsstrahlung. The presence of a near-infrared excess also points towards the contribution of a strongly variable compact jet or a dusty component
ADHM/Nahm Construction of Localized Solitons in Noncommutative Gauge Theories
We study the relationship between ADHM/Nahm construction and ``solution
generating technique'' of BPS solitons in noncommutative gauge theories.
ADHM/Nahm construction and ``solution generating technique'' are the most
strong ways to construct exact BPS solitons. Localized solitons are the
solitons which are generated by the ``solution generating technique.'' The
shift operators which play crucial roles in ``solution generating technique''
naturally appear in ADHM/Nahm construction and we can construct various exact
localized solitons including new solitons: localized periodic instantons
(=localized calorons) and localized doubly-periodic instantons. Nahm
construction also gives rise to BPS fluxons straightforwardly from the
appropriate input Nahm data which is expected from the D-brane picture of BPS
fluxons. We also show that the Fourier-transformed soliton of the localized
caloron in the zero-period limit exactly coincides with the BPS fluxon.Comment: 30 pages, LaTeX, 3 figures; v3: minor changes, references added; v4:
references added, version to appear in PR
European regulatory agenices should employ full time statisticians
No abstract available
The origins and development of Zuwīla, Libyan Sahara: an archaeological and historical overview of an ancient oasis town and caravan centre
Zuwīla in southwestern Libya (Fazzān) was one of the most important early Islamic centres in the Central Sahara, but the archaeological correlates of the written sources for it have been little explored. This paper brings together for the first time a detailed consideration of the relevant historical and archaeological data, together with new AMS radiocarbon dates from several key monuments. The origins of the settlement at Zuwīla were pre-Islamic, but the town gained greater prominence in the early centuries of Arab rule of the Maghrib, culminating with the establishment of an Ibāḍī state ruled by the dynasty of the Banū Khaṭṭāb, with Zuwīla its capital. The historical sources and the accounts of early European travellers are discussed and archaeological work at Zuwīla is described (including the new radiocarbon dates). A short gazetteer of archaeological monuments is provided as an appendix. Comparisons and contrasts are also drawn between Zuwīla and other oases of the ash-Sharqiyāt region of Fazzān. The final section of the paper presents a series of models based on the available evidence, tracing the evolution and decline of this remarkable site
Stability of Spatial Optical Solitons
We present a brief overview of the basic concepts of the soliton stability
theory and discuss some characteristic examples of the instability-induced
soliton dynamics, in application to spatial optical solitons described by the
NLS-type nonlinear models and their generalizations. In particular, we
demonstrate that the soliton internal modes are responsible for the appearance
of the soliton instability, and outline an analytical approach based on a
multi-scale asymptotic technique that allows to analyze the soliton dynamics
near the marginal stability point. We also discuss some results of the rigorous
linear stability analysis of fundamental solitary waves and nonlinear impurity
modes. Finally, we demonstrate that multi-hump vector solitary waves may become
stable in some nonlinear models, and discuss the examples of stable
(1+1)-dimensional composite solitons and (2+1)-dimensional dipole-mode solitons
in a model of two incoherently interacting optical beams.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures; to be published in: "Spatial Optical Solitons",
Eds. W. Torruellas and S. Trillo (Springer, New York
Interaction of N solitons in the massive Thirring model and optical gap system: the Complex Toda Chain Model
Using the Karpman-Solov''ev quasiparticle approach for soliton-soliton
interaction I show that the train propagation of N well separated solitons of
the massive Thirring model is described by the complex Toda chain with N nodes.
For the optical gap system a generalised (non-integrable) complex Toda chain is
derived for description of the train propagation of well separated gap
solitons. These results are in favor of the recently proposed conjecture of
universality of the complex Toda chain.Comment: RevTex, 23 pages, no figures. Submitted to Physical Review
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