652 research outputs found
Trans-Relativistic Supernovae, Circumstellar Gamma-Ray Bursts, and Supernova 1998bw
Supernova (SN) 1998bw and gamma-ray burst (GRB) 980425 offer the first direct
evidence that supernovae are the progenitors of some GRBs. However, this burst
was unusually dim, smooth and soft compared to other bursts with known
afterglows. Whether it should be considered a prototype for cosmological GRBs
depends largely on whether the supernova explosion and burst were asymmetrical
or can be modeled as spherical. We address this question by treating the
acceleration of the supernova shock in the outermost layers of the stellar
envelope, the transition to relativistic flow, and the subsequent expansion
(and further acceleration) of the ejecta into the surrounding medium. We find
that GRB 980425 could plausibly have been produced by a collision between the
relativistic ejecta from SN 1998bw and the star's pre-supernova wind; the model
requires no significant asymmetry. This event therefore belongs to a dim
subclass of GRBs and is not a prototype for jet-like cosmological GRBs.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Gamma 2001, eds. S. Ritz, N.
Gehrels, and C. Shrade
Bipolar molecular outflows driven by hydromagnetic protostellar winds
We demonstrate that magnetically-collimated protostellar winds will sweep
ambient material into thin, radiative, momentum-conserving shells whose
features reproduce those commonly observed in bipolar molecular outflows. We
find the typical position-velocity and mass-velocity relations to occur in
outflows in a wide variety of ambient density distributions, regardless of the
time histories of their driving winds.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, submitted to ApJ
Area Invariance of Apparent Horizons under Arbitrary Boosts
It is a well known analytic result in general relativity that the
2-dimensional area of the apparent horizon of a black hole remains invariant
regardless of the motion of the observer, and in fact is independent of the slice, which can be quite arbitrary in general relativity.
Nonetheless the explicit computation of horizon area is often substantially
more difficult in some frames (complicated by the coordinate form of the
metric), than in other frames. Here we give an explicit demonstration for very
restricted metric forms of (Schwarzschild and Kerr) vacuum black holes. In the
Kerr-Schild coordinate expression for these spacetimes they have an explicit
Lorentz-invariant form. We consider {\it boosted} versions with the black hole
moving through the coordinate system. Since these are stationary black hole
spacetimes, the apparent horizons are two dimensional cross sections of their
event horizons, so we compute the areas of apparent horizons in the boosted
space with (boosted) , and obtain the same result as in the
unboosted case. Note that while the invariance of area is generic, we deal only
with black holes in the Kerr-Schild form, and consider only one particularly
simple change of slicing which amounts to a boost. Even with these restrictions
we find that the results illuminate the physics of the horizon as a null
surface and provide a useful pedagogical tool. As far as we can determine, this
is the first explicit calculation of this type demonstrating the area
invariance of horizons. Further, these calculations are directly relevant to
transformations that arise in computational representation of moving black
holes. We present an application of this result to initial data for boosted
black holes.Comment: 19 pages, 3 figures. Added a new section and 2 plots along with a
coautho
Closed Universes With Black Holes But No Event Horizons As a Solution to the Black Hole Information Problem
We show it is possible for the information paradox in black hole evaporation
to be resolved classically. Using standard junction conditions, we attach the
general closed spherically symmetric dust metric to a spacetime satisfying all
standard energy conditions but with a single point future c-boundary. The
resulting Omega Point spacetime, which has NO event horizons, nevertheless has
black hole type trapped surfaces and hence black holes. But since there are no
event horizons, information eventually escapes from the black holes. We show
that a scalar quintessence field with an appropriate exponential potential near
the final singularity would give rise to an Omega Point final singularity.Comment: 27 pages in LaTex2e, no figure
The Trans-Relativistic Blast Wave Model for SN 1998bw and GRB 980425
The spatiotemporal coincidence of supernova (SN) 1998bw and gamma-ray burst
(GRB) 980425 and this supernova's unusual optical and radio properties have
prompted many theoretical models that produce GRBs from supernovae. We review
the salient features of our simple, spherical model in which an energetic
supernova explosion shock accelerates a small fraction of the progenitor's
stellar envelope to mildly relativistic velocities. This material carries
sufficient energy to produce a weak GRB and a bright radio supernova through an
external shock against a dense stellar wind.Comment: 3 pages, To appear in Proceedings of the 20th Texas Symposium on
Relativistic Astrophysics, eds. J. C. Wheeler & H. Martel, AI
Radiation from low-momentum zoom-whirl orbits
We study zoom-whirl behaviour of equal mass, non-spinning black hole binaries
in full general relativity. The magnitude of the linear momentum of the initial
data is fixed to that of a quasi-circular orbit, and its direction is varied.
We find a global maximum in radiated energy for a configuration which completes
roughly one orbit. The radiated energy in this case exceeds the value of a
quasi-circular binary with the same momentum by 15%. The direction parameter
only requires minor tuning for the localization of the maximum. There is
non-trivial dependence of the energy radiated on eccentricity (several local
maxima and minima). Correlations with orbital dynamics shortly before merger
are discussed. While being strongly gauge dependent, these findings are
intuitive from a physical point of view and support basic ideas about the
efficiency of gravitational radiation from a binary system.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, Amaldi8 conference proceedings as publishe
The near-infrared reflected spectrum of source I in Orion-KL
Source I in the Orion-KL nebula is believed to be the nearest example of a
massive star still in the main accretion phase. It is thus one of the best
cases for studying the properties of massive protostars to constrain high-mass
star formation theories. Near-infrared radiation from source I escapes through
the cavity opened by the OMC1 outflow and is scattered by dust towards our line
of sight. The reflected spectrum offers a unique possibility of observing the
emission from the innermost regions of the system and probing the nature of
source I and its immediate surroundings. We obtained moderately high
spectral-resolution (R~9000) observations of the near-infrared diffuse emission
in several locations around source I/Orion-KL. We observed a widespread rich
absorption line spectrum that we compare with cool stellar photospheres and
protostellar accretion disk models. The spectrum is broadly similar to strongly
veiled, cool, low-gravity stellar photospheres in the range Teff~3500-4500 K,
luminosity class I-III. An exact match explaining all features has not been
found, and a plausible explanation is that a range of different temperatures
contribute to the observed absorption spectrum. The 1D velocity dispersions
implied by the absorption spectra, sigma~30 km/s, can be explained by the
emission from a disk around a massive, mstar~10 Msun, protostar that is
accreting at a high rate, mdot~3x10^{-3} Msun/yr. Our observations suggest that
the near-infrared reflection spectrum observed in the Orion-KL region is
produced close to source I and scattered to our line of sight in the OMC1
outflow cavity. The spectrum allows us to exclude source I being a very large,
massive protostar rotating at breakup speed. We suggest that the absorption
spectrum is produced in a disk surrounding a ~10 Msun protostar, accreting from
its disk at a high rate of a few 10^{-3} Msun/yr.Comment: Accepted for publication on A&
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