1,962 research outputs found
The Most Magnetic Stars
Observations of magnetic A, B and O stars show that the poloidal magnetic
flux per unit mass has an upper bound of 10^-6.5 G cm^2/g. A similar upper
bound is found for magnetic white dwarfs even though the highest magnetic field
strengths at their surfaces are much larger. For magnetic A and B stars there
also appears to be a well defined lower bound below which the incidence of
magnetism declines rapidly. According to recent hypotheses, both groups of
stars may result from merging stars and owe their strong magnetism to fields
generated by a dynamo mechanism as they merge. We postulate a simple dynamo
that generates magnetic field from differential rotation. The growth of
magnetic fields is limited by the requirement that the poloidal field
stabilizes the toroidal and vice versa. While magnetic torques dissipate the
differential rotation, toroidal field is generated from poloidal by an Omega
dynamo. We further suppose that mechanisms that lead to the decay of toroidal
field lead to the generation of poloidal. Both poloidal and toroidal fields
reach a stable configuration which is independent of the size of small initial
seed fields but proportional to the initial differential rotation. We pose the
hypothesis that strongly magnetic stars form from the merging of two stellar
objects. The highest fields are generated when the merge introduces
differential rotation that amounts to critical break up velocity within the
condensed object. Calibration of a simplistic dynamo model with the observed
maximum flux per unit mass for main-sequence stars and white dwarfs indicates
that about 1.5x10^-4 of the decaying toroidal flux must appear as poloidal. The
highest fields in single white dwarfs are generated when two degenerate cores
merge inside a common envelope or when two white dwarfs merge by
gravitational-radiation angular momentum loss.Comment: accepted by MNRAS 8 pages, 3 figure
Galaxies into the Dark Ages
We consider the capabilities of current and future large facilities operating
at 2\,mm to 3\,mm wavelength to detect and image the [CII] 158\,m line
from galaxies into the cosmic "dark ages" ( to 20). The [CII] line
may prove to be a powerful tool in determining spectroscopic redshifts, and
galaxy dynamics, for the first galaxies. We emphasize that the nature, and even
existence, of such extreme redshift galaxies, remains at the frontier of open
questions in galaxy formation. In 40\,hr, ALMA has the sensitivity to detect
the integrated [CII] line emission from a moderate metallicity, active
star-forming galaxy [; star formation rate (SFR) =
5\,\,yr], at at a significance of 6. The
next-generation Very Large Array (ngVLA) will detect the integrated [CII] line
emission from a Milky-Way like star formation rate galaxy (, SFR = 1\,\,yr), at at a significance
of 6. Imaging simulations show that the ngVLA can determine rotation
dynamics for active star-forming galaxies at , if they exist. Based
on our very limited knowledge of the extreme redshift Universe, we calculate
the count rate in blind, volumetric surveys for [CII] emission at
to 20. The detection rates in blind surveys will be slow (of order unity per
40\,hr pointing). However, the observations are well suited to commensal
searches. We compare [CII] with the [OIII] 88m line, and other ancillary
information in high galaxies that would aid these studies.Comment: 11pages, 8 figures, Accepted for the Astrophysical Journa
Lyman Alpha Emitter Evolution in the Reionization Epoch
Combining cosmological SPH simulations with a previously developed Lyman
Alpha production/transmission model and the Early Reionization Model (ERM,
reionization ends at redshift z~7), we obtain Lyman Alpha and UV Luminosity
Functions (LFs) for Lyman Alpha Emitters (LAEs) for redshifts between 5.7 and
7.6. Matching model results to observations at z~5.7 requires escape fractions
of Lyman Alpha, f_alpha=0.3, and UV (non-ionizing) continuum photons, f_c=0.22,
corresponding to a color excess, E(B-V)=0.15. We find that (i) f_c increases
towards higher redshifts, due the decreasing mean dust content of galaxies,
(ii) the evolution of f_alpha/f_c hints at the dust content of the ISM becoming
progressively inhomogeneous/clumped with decreasing redshift. The clustering
photoionization boost is important during the initial reionization phases but
has little effect on the Lyman Alpha LF for a highly ionized IGM. Halo
(stellar) masses are in the range 10.0 < \log M_h < 11.8 (8.1 < \log M_* <
10.4) with M_h \propto M_*^{0.64}. The star formation rates are between 3-120
solar masses per year, mass-weighted mean ages are greater than 20 Myr at all
redshifts, while the mean stellar metallicity increases from Z=0.12 to 0.22
solar metallicity from z~7.6 to z~5.7; both age and metallicity positively
correlate with stellar mass. The brightest LAEs are all characterized by large
star formation rates and intermediate ages (~200 Myr), while objects in the
faint end of the Lyman Alpha LF show large age and star formation rate spreads.
With no more free parameters, the Spectral Energy Distributions of three LAE at
z~5.7 observed by Lai et al. (2007) are well reproduced by an intermediate age
(182-220 Myr) stellar population and the above E(B-V) value.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted to MNRA
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