364 research outputs found
ISM Simulations: An Overview of Models
Until recently the dynamical evolution of the interstellar medium (ISM) was
simulated using collisional ionization equilibrium (CIE) conditions. However,
the ISM is a dynamical system, in which the plasma is naturally driven out of
equilibrium due to atomic and dynamic processes operating on different
timescales. A step forward in the field comprises a multi-fluid approach taking
into account the joint thermal and dynamical evolutions of the ISM gas.Comment: Overview paper (3 pages) presented by M. Avillez at the Special
Session "Modern views of the interstellar medium", XXVIIIth IAU General
Assembly, August 27-30, 2012, Beijing. Chin
The Generation and Dissipation of Interstellar Turbulence - Results from Large Scale High Resolution Simulations
We study, by means of adaptive mesh refinement hydro- and
magnetohydrodynamical simulations that cover a wide range of scales (from kpc
to sub-parsec), the dimension of the most dissipative structures and the
injection scale of the turbulent interstellar gas, which we find to be about 75
pc, in agreement with observations. This is however smaller than the average
size of superbubbles, but consistent with significant density and pressure
changes in the ISM, which leads to the break-up of bubbles locally and hence to
injection of turbulence. The scalings of the structure functions are consistent
with log-Poisson statistics of supersonic turbulence where energy is dissipated
mainly through shocks. Our simulations are different from previous ones by
other authors as (i) we do not assume an isothermal gas, but have temperature
variations of several orders of magnitude and (ii) we have no artificial
forcing of the fluid with some ad hoc Fourier spectrum, but drive turbulence by
stellar explosions at the Galactic rate, self-regulated by density and
temperature thresholds imposed on the ISM gas.Comment: Five pages and three figures. Accepted for publication in
Astrophysical Journal (Letters
Time-dependent galactic winds I. Structure and evolution of galactic outflows accompanied by cosmic ray acceleration
Cosmic rays are transported out of the galaxy by diffusion and advection due
to streaming along magnetic field lines and resonant scattering off
self-excited MHD waves. Thus momentum is transferred to the plasma via the
frozen-in waves as a mediator assisting the thermal pressure in driving a
galactic wind. The bulk of the Galactic CRs are accelerated by shock waves
generated in SNRs, a significant fraction of which occur in OB associations on
a timescale of several years. We examine the effect of changing boundary
conditions at the base of the galactic wind due to sequential SN explosions on
the outflow. Thus pressure waves will steepen into shock waves leading to in
situ post-acceleration of GCRs. We performed simulations of galactic winds in
flux tube geometry appropriate for disk galaxies, describing the CR
diffusive-advective transport in a hydrodynamical fashion along with the energy
exchange with self-generated MHD waves. Our time-dependent CR hydrodynamic
simulations confirm the existence of time asymptotic outflow solutions (for
constant boundary conditions). It is also found that high-energy particles
escaping from the Galaxy and having a power-law distribution in energy
() similar to the Milky Way with an upper energy cut-off at
eV are subjected to efficient and rapid post-SNR acceleration in
the lower galactic halo up to energies of eV by multiple
shock waves propagating through the halo. The particles can gain energy within
less than kpc from the galactic plane corresponding to flow times less
than years. The mechanism described here offers a natural
solution to explain the power-law distribution of CRs between the "knee" and
the "ankle". The mechanism described here offers a natural and elegant solution
to explain the power-law distribution of CRs between the "knee" and the
"ankle".Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Persistent infection of pets within a household with three Bartonella species.
We monitored by blood culture and immunofluorescence assay (IFA) bartonella infection in one dog and eight cats in a household to determine the prevalence and persistence of the infection as well as its transmissibility to humans. Ectoparasite control was rigorously exercised. During a 3-year period, Bartonella clarridgeiae was recovered from one cat on two occasions, and B. henselae was isolated from another cat on four occasions. During a 16-month period, B. vinsonii subsp. berkhoffii was isolated from the dog on 8 of 10 culture attempts. Despite extensive household contact, the pet owner was seronegative to all three species by IFA for Bartonella-specific immunoglobulin G
The Milky Way's Kiloparsec Scale Wind: A Hybrid Cosmic-Ray and Thermally Driven Outflow
We apply a wind model, driven by combined cosmic-ray and thermal-gas
pressure, to the Milky Way, and show that the observed Galactic diffuse soft
X-ray emission can be better explained by a wind than by previous static gas
models. We find that cosmic-ray pressure is essential to driving the observed
wind. Having thus defined a "best-fit" model for a Galactic wind, we explore
variations in the base parameters and show how the wind's properties vary with
changes in gas pressure, cosmic-ray pressure and density. We demonstrate the
importance of cosmic rays in launching winds, and the effect cosmic rays have
on wind dynamics. In addition, this model adds support to the hypothesis of
Breitschwerdt and collaborators that such a wind may help explain the
relatively small gradient observed in gamma-ray emission as a function of
galactocentric radius.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures; Accepted to Ap
Hemotropic mycoplasmas in little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus).
BackgroundHemotropic mycoplasmas are epicellular erythrocytic bacteria that can cause infectious anemia in some mammalian species. Worldwide, hemotropic mycoplasmas are emerging or re-emerging zoonotic pathogens potentially causing serious and significant health problems in wildlife. The objective of this study was to determine the molecular prevalence of hemotropic Mycoplasma species in little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus) with and without Pseudogymnoascus (Geomyces) destrucans, the causative agent of white nose syndrome (WNS) that causes significant mortality events in bats.MethodsIn order to establish the prevalence of hemotropic Mycoplasma species in a population of 68 little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus) with (n = 53) and without (n = 15) white-nose syndrome (WNS), PCR was performed targeting the 16S rRNA gene.ResultsThe overall prevalence of hemotropic Mycoplasmas in bats was 47%, with similar (p = 0.5725) prevalence between bats with WNS (49%) and without WNS (40%). 16S rDNA sequence analysis (~1,200 bp) supports the presence of a novel hemotropic Mycoplasma species with 91.75% sequence homology with Mycoplasma haemomuris. No differences were found in gene sequences generated from WNS and non-WNS animals.ConclusionsGene sequences generated from WNS and non-WNS animals suggest that little brown bats could serve as a natural reservoir for this potentially novel Mycoplasma species. Currently, there is minimal information about the prevalence, host-specificity, or the route of transmission of hemotropic Mycoplasma spp. among bats. Finally, the potential role of hemotropic Mycoplasma spp. as co-factors in the development of disease manifestations in bats, including WNS in Myotis lucifugus, remains to be elucidated
Time-dependent galactic winds
Cosmic rays (CRs) are transported out of the galaxy by diffusion and
advection due to streaming along magnetic field lines and resonant scattering
off self-excited Magneto-Hydro-Dynamic (MHD) waves. Thus momentum is
transferred to the plasma via the frozen-in waves as a mediator assisting the
thermal pressure in driving a galactic wind. Galactic CRs (GCRs) are
accelerated by shock waves generated in supernova remnants (SNRs), and they
propagate from the disc into the halo. Therefore CR acceleration in the halo
strongly depends on the inner disc boundary conditions. We performed
hydrodynamical simulations of galactic winds in flux tube geometry appropriate
for disc galaxies, describing the CR diffusive-advective transport in a
hydrodynamical fashion (by taking appropriate moments of the Fokker-Planck
equation) along with the energy exchange with self-generated MHD waves. Our
time-dependent CR hydrodynamic simulations confirm that the evolution of
galactic winds with feedback depends on the structure of the galactic halo. In
case of a wind-structured halo, the wind breaks down after the last super nova
(SN) has exploded. The mechanism described here offers a natural and elegant
solution to explain the power-law distribution of CRs between the `knee' and
the `ankle'. The transition will be naturally smooth, because the Galactic CRs
accelerated at SN shocks will be `post-accelerated' by shocks generated at the
inner boundary and travelling through the halo.Comment: Galaxies: evolution -- ISM: jets and outflows -- Galaxies: starburst
-- supernova remnants -- cosmic ray
An XMM-Newton Observation of the Local Bubble Using a Shadowing Filament in the Southern Galactic Hemisphere
We present an analysis of the X-ray spectrum of the Local Bubble, obtained by
simultaneously analyzing spectra from two XMM-Newton pointings on and off an
absorbing filament in the Southern galactic hemisphere (b ~ -45 deg). We use
the difference in the Galactic column density in these two directions to deduce
the contributions of the unabsorbed foreground emission due to the Local
Bubble, and the absorbed emission from the Galactic halo and the extragalactic
background. We find the Local Bubble emission is consistent with emission from
a plasma in collisional ionization equilibrium with a temperature and an emission measure of 0.018 cm^{-6} pc. Our
measured temperature is in good agreement with values obtained from ROSAT
All-Sky Survey data, but is lower than that measured by other recent XMM-Newton
observations of the Local Bubble, which find
(although for some of these observations it is possible that the foreground
emission is contaminated by non-Local Bubble emission from Loop I). The higher
temperature observed towards other directions is inconsistent with our data,
when combined with a FUSE measurement of the Galactic halo O VI intensity. This
therefore suggests that the Local Bubble is thermally anisotropic.
Our data are unable to rule out a non-equilibrium model in which the plasma
is underionized. However, an overionized recombining plasma model, while
observationally acceptable for certain densities and temperatures, generally
gives an implausibly young age for the Local Bubble (\la 6 \times 10^5 yr).Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 16 pages, 9
figure
Metal Enrichment of the Intergalactic Medium in Cosmological Simulations
Observations have established that the diffuse intergalactic medium (IGM) at
z ~ 3 is enriched to ~0.1-1% solar metallicity and that the hot gas in large
clusters of galaxies (ICM) is enriched to 1/3-1/2 solar metallicity at z=0.
Metals in the IGM may have been removed from galaxies (in which they presumably
form) during dynamical encounters between galaxies, by ram-pressure stripping,
by supernova-driven winds, or as radiation-pressure driven dust efflux. This
study develops a method of investigating the chemical enrichment of the IGM and
of galaxies, using already completed cosmological simulations. To these
simulations, we add dust and (gaseous) metals, distributing the dust and metals
in the gas according to three simple parameterized prescriptions, one for each
enrichment mechanism. These prescriptions are formulated to capture the basic
ejection physics, and calibrated when possible with empirical data. Our results
indicate that dynamical removal of metals from >~ 3*10^8 solar mass galaxies
cannot account for the observed metallicity of low-column density Ly-alpha
absorbers, and that dynamical removal from >~ 3*10^10 solar mass galaxies
cannot account for the ICM metallicities. Dynamical removal also fails to
produce a strong enough mass-metallicity relation in galaxies. In contrast,
either wind or radiation-pressure ejection of metals from relatively large
galaxies can plausibly account for all three sets of observations (though it is
unclear whether metals can be distributed uniformly enough in the low-density
regions without overly disturbing the IGM, and whether clusters can be enriched
quite as much as observed). We investigate in detail how our results change
with variations in our assumed parameters, and how results for the different
ejection processes compare. (Abridged)Comment: Minor revision, 1 figure added addressing diffusion of metals after
their ejection. Accepted by ApJ. 31 EmulateApj Pages with 13 embedded
postscript figure
- âŠ