635 research outputs found
Feedback first: the surprisingly weak effects of magnetic fields, viscosity, conduction, and metal diffusion on galaxy formation
Using high-resolution simulations with explicit treatment of stellar feedback
physics based on the FIRE (Feedback in Realistic Environments) project, we
study how galaxy formation and the interstellar medium (ISM) are affected by
magnetic fields, anisotropic Spitzer-Braginskii conduction and viscosity, and
sub-grid metal diffusion from unresolved turbulence. We consider controlled
simulations of isolated (non-cosmological) galaxies but also a limited set of
cosmological "zoom-in" simulations. Although simulations have shown significant
effects from these physics with weak or absent stellar feedback, the effects
are much weaker than those of stellar feedback when the latter is modeled
explicitly. The additional physics have no systematic effect on galactic star
formation rates (SFRs) . In contrast, removing stellar feedback leads to SFRs
being over-predicted by factors of . Without feedback, neither
galactic winds nor volume filling hot-phase gas exist, and discs tend to
runaway collapse to ultra-thin scale-heights with unphysically dense clumps
congregating at the galactic center. With stellar feedback, a multi-phase,
turbulent medium with galactic fountains and winds is established. At currently
achievable resolutions and for the investigated halo mass range
, the additional physics investigated here (MHD,
conduction, viscosity, metal diffusion) have only weak (-level)
effects on regulating SFR and altering the balance of phases, outflows, or the
energy in ISM turbulence, consistent with simple equipartition arguments. We
conclude that galactic star formation and the ISM are primarily governed by a
combination of turbulence, gravitational instabilities, and feedback. We add
the caveat that AGN feedback is not included in the present work
Exploring wind-driving dust species in cool luminous giants III. Wind models for M-type AGB stars: dynamic and photometric properties
Stellar winds observed in asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars are usually
attributed to a combination of stellar pulsations and radiation pressure on
dust. Shock waves triggered by pulsations propagate through the atmosphere,
compressing the gas and lifting it to cooler regions, which create favourable
conditions for grain growth. If sufficient radiative acceleration is exerted on
the newly formed grains through absorption or scattering of stellar photons, an
outflow can be triggered. Strong candidates for wind-driving dust species in
M-type AGB stars are magnesium silicates (MgSiO and MgSiO). Such
grains can form close to the stellar surface, they consist of abundant
materials and, if they grow to sizes comparable to the wavelength of the
stellar flux maximum, they experience strong acceleration by photon scattering.
We use a frequency-dependent radiation-hydrodynamics code with a detailed
description for the growth of MgSiO grains to calculate the first
extensive set of time-dependent wind models for M-type AGB stars. The resulting
wind properties, visual and near-IR photometry and mid-IR spectra are compared
with observations.We show that the models can produce outflows for a wide range
of stellar parameters. We also demonstrate that they reproduce observed
mass-loss rates and wind velocities, as well as visual and near-IR photometry.
However, the current models do not show the characteristic silicate features at
10 and 18 m as a result of the cool temperature of MgSiO grains in
the wind. Including a small amount of Fe in the grains further out in the
circumstellar envelope will increase the grain temperature and result in
pronounced silicate features, without significantly affecting the photometry in
the visual and near-IR wavelength regions.Comment: 11 pages, 14 figure
Green operators for low regularity spacetimes
In this paper we define and construct advanced and retarded Green operators
for the wave operator on spacetimes with low regularity. In order to do so we
require that the spacetime satisfies the condition of generalised hyperbolicity
which is equivalent to well- posedness of the classical inhomogeneous problem
with zero initial data where weak solutions are properly supported. Moreover,
we provide an explicit formula for the kernel of the Green operators in terms
of an arbitrary eigenbasis of H 1 and a suitable Green matrix that solves a
system of second order ODEs
Analogues of the central point theorem for families with -intersection property in
In this paper we consider families of compact convex sets in
such that any subfamily of size at most has a nonempty intersection. We
prove some analogues of the central point theorem and Tverberg's theorem for
such families
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