8,897 research outputs found
Cosmic Ray Feedback
Cosmic rays produced or deposited at sites in hot cluster gas are thought to
provide the pressure that forms X-ray cavities. While cavities have a net
cooling effect on cluster gas, young, expanding cavities drive shocks that
increase the local entropy. Cavities also produce radial filaments of thermal
gas and are sources of cluster cosmic rays that diffuse through cavity walls,
as in Virgo where a radio lobe surrounds a radial thermal filament. Cosmic rays
also make the hot gas locally buoyant, allowing large masses of low entropy gas
to be transported out beyond the cooling radius. Successive cavities maintain a
buoyant outflow that preserves the cluster gas temperature and gas fraction
profiles and dramatically reduces the cooling rate onto the central black hole.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to appear in proceedings of the conference "The
Monster's Fiery Breath: Feedback in Galaxies, Groups, and Clusters", June
2009, Madison Wisconsi
Peculiar Velocity and Deaberration of the Sky
Recent studies have found the earth's peculiar velocity to be significant in
microwave background based tests for compact cosmic topology, and modifications
to these tests have been proposed. Tests of non-gaussianity, weak lensing
analysis and new tests using improved CMB data will also be sensitive to
peculiar velocity. We propose here to simplify matters by showing how to
construct a deaberrated CMB map to which any test requiring a Hubble flow
viewpoint can be applied without further complication. In a similar manner
deaberration can also be applied to object surveys used for example in
topological searches and matter distribution analysis. In particular we have
produced a revised list of objects with z > 1.0 using the NASA/IPAC
Extragalactic Database.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, v4 accepted by Ap
Cosmic ray diffusion fronts in the Virgo cluster
The pair of large radio lobes in the Virgo cluster, each about 23 kpc in
radius, have curiously sharp outer edges where the radio-synchrotron continuum
flux declines abruptly. However, just adjacent to this sharp transition, the
radio flux increases. This radio limb-brightening is observed over at least
half of the perimeter of both lobes. We describe slowly propagating steady
state diffusion fronts that explain these counterintuitive features. Because of
the natural buoyancy of radio lobes, the magnetic field is largely tangent to
the lobe boundary, an alignment that polarizes the radio emission and
dramatically reduces the diffusion coefficient of relativistic electrons. As
cosmic ray electrons diffuse slowly into the cluster gas, the local magnetic
field and gas density are reduced as gas flows back toward the radio lobe.
Radio emission peaks can occur because the synchrotron emissivity increases
with magnetic field and then decreases with the density of non-thermal
electrons. A detailed comparison of steady diffusion fronts with quantitative
radio observations may reveal information about the spatial variation of
magnetic fields and the diffusion coefficient of relativistic electrons. On
larger scales, some reduction of the gas density inside the Virgo lobes due to
cosmic ray pressure must occur and may be measurable. Such X-ray observations
could reveal important information about the presence of otherwise unobservable
non-thermal components such as relativistic electrons of low energy or proton
cosmic rays.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, Accepted by Ap
Nuclear Equation of State and Internal Structure of Magnetars
Recently, neutron stars with very strong surface magnetic fields have been
suggested as the site for the origin of observed soft gamma repeaters (SGRs).
We investigate the influence of a strong magnetic field on the properties and
internal structure of such strongly magnetized neutron stars (magnetars). The
presence of a sufficiently strong magnetic field changes the ratio of protons
to neutrons as well as the neutron appearance density. We also study the pion
production and pion condensation in a strong magnetic field. We discuss the
pion condensation in the interior of magnetars as a possible source of SGRs.Comment: 5 pages with 3 figures, To appear in the Proceedings of the 5th
Huntsville Gamma Ray Burst Symposium, Huntsville, Alabama, USA, Oct. 18-22,
199
Absence of a Lower Limit on Omega_b in Inhomogeneous Primordial Nucleosynthesis
We show that a class of inhomogeneous big bang nucleosynthesis models exist
which yield light-element abundances in agreement with observational
constraints for baryon-to-photon ratios significantly smaller than those
inferred from standard homogeneous big bang nucleosynthesis (HBBN). These
inhomogeneous nucleosynthesis models are characterized by a bimodal
distribution of baryons in which some regions have a local baryon-to-photon
ratio eta=3*10e-10, while the remaining regions are baryon-depleted. HBBN
scenarios with primordial (2H+3He)/H<9*10e-5 necessarily require that most
baryons be in a dark or non-luminous form, although new observations of a
possible high deuterium abundance in Lyman-alpha clouds may relax this
requirement somewhat. The models described here present another way to relax
this requirement and can even eliminate any lower bound on the baryon-to-photon
ratio.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures (available upon request by email), plain te
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