680 research outputs found
Implications from Late-Time X-ray Detections of Optically Selected Tidal Disruption Events: State Changes, Unification, and Detection Rates
We present Chandra X-ray observations of four optically-selected tidal
disruption events (TDEs) obtained 4-9 years after discovery. Three sources were
detected with luminosities between 9X10^40 and 3X10^42 erg/s. The spectrum of
PTF09axc is consistent with a power law of index 2.5+-0.1, whereas the spectrum
of PTF09ge is very soft. The power law spectrum of PTF09axc and prior
literature findings, provide evidence that TDEs transition from an early-time
soft state to a late-time hard state many years after disruption. We propose
that the time to peak luminosity for optical and X-ray emission may differ
substantially in TDEs, with X-rays being produced or becoming observable later.
This delay helps explain the differences in observed properties such as
L_opt/L_ X of optically and X-ray selected TDEs. We update TDE rate predictions
for the eROSITA instrument: it ranges from 3 per yr to 990 per yr, depending
sensitively on the distribution of black hole spins and the time delay between
disruption and peak X-ray brightness. We further predict an asymmetry in the
number of retrograde and prograde disks in samples of optically and X-ray
selected TDEs. The details of the observational biases can contribute to
observed differences between optically and X-ray selected TDEs (with optically
selected TDEs being fainter in X-rays for retrograde TDE disks).Comment: Accepted for publication to ApJ, 18 pages, 4 figure
Generalized Boltzmann Equation for Lattice Gas Automata
In this paper, for the first time a theory is formulated that predicts
velocity and spatial correlations between occupation numbers that occur in
lattice gas automata violating semi-detailed balance. Starting from a coupled
BBGKY hierarchy for the -particle distribution functions, cluster expansion
techniques are used to derive approximate kinetic equations. In zeroth
approximation the standard nonlinear Boltzmann equation is obtained; the next
approximation yields the ring kinetic equation, similar to that for hard sphere
systems, describing the time evolution of pair correlations. As a quantitative
test we calculate equal time correlation functions in equilibrium for two
models that violate semi-detailed balance. One is a model of interacting random
walkers on a line, the other one is a two-dimensional fluid type model on a
triangular lattice. The numerical predictions agree very well with computer
simulations.Comment: 31 pages LaTeX, 12 uuencoded tar-compressed Encapsulated PostScript
figures (`psfig' macro), hardcopies available on request, 78kb + 52k
Scour hole development in river beds with mixed sand-clay-peat stratigraphy
River deltas are often characterized by a heterogeneous subsoil stratigraphy, composed of layers of sand, clay and peat. This has important consequences for the riverbed morphology and in particular the formation of scour holes. When the riverbed is composed of poorly erodible clay or peat, erosion processes are retarded. However, when thinner parts of clay or peat layers erode; underlying sand patches are incised and large scour holes may develop within in a short amount of time. The unpredictability and fast development makes these scour holes difficult to manage while stability of dikes and infrastructure may be at stake. In this paper we study the scour hole formation and development in heterogeneous subsoil. The Rhine-Meuse estuary forms the ideal system for this analysis as it has been intensively measured and contains about 100 scour holes. Based on nearly 60 years of river bed topography data and data on the subsurface lithography and hydrodynamics, we present a system analysis of scour hole formation in heterogeneous subsoil stratigraphy. In addition the detailed growth of a recently formed scour hole is studied and compared to scale model tests
Radio Monitoring of the Tidal Disruption Event Swift J164449.3+573451. I. Jet Energetics and the Pristine Parsec-Scale Environment of a Supermassive Black Hole
We present continued radio observations of the tidal disruption event
SwiftJ164449.3+573451 extending to \sim216 days after discovery. The data are
part of a long-term program to monitor the expansion and energy scale of the
relativistic outflow, and to trace the parsec-scale environment around a
previously-dormant supermassive black hole (SMBH). The new observations reveal
a significant change in the radio evolution starting at \sim1 month, with a
brightening at all frequencies that requires an increase in the energy by about
an order of magnitude, and an overall density profile around the SMBH of rho
\propto r^{-3/2} (0.1-1.2 pc) with a significant flattening at r\sim0.4-0.6 pc.
The increase in energy cannot be explained with continuous injection from an L
\propto t^{-5/3} tail, which is observed in the X-rays. Instead, we conclude
that the relativistic jet was launched with a wide range of Lorentz factors,
obeying E(>Gamma) \propto Gamma^{-2.5}. The similar ratio of duration to
dynamical timescale for Sw1644+57 and GRBs suggests that this result may be
applicable to GRBs as well. The radial density profile may be indicative of
Bondi accretion, with the inferred flattening at r\sim0.5 pc in good agreement
with the Bondi radius for a \sim10^6 M_sun black hole. The density at \sim0.5
pc is about a factor of 30 times lower than inferred for the Milky Way galactic
center, potentially due to a smaller number of mass-shedding massive stars.
From our latest observations (\sim216 d) we find that the jet energy is
E_{iso}\sim5x10^{53} erg (E_j\sim2.4x10^{51} erg for theta_j=0.1), the radius
is r\sim1.2 pc, the Lorentz factor is Gamma\sim2.2, the ambient density is
n\sim0.2 cm^{-3}, and the projected size is r_{proj}\sim25 microarcsec.
Assuming no future changes in the observed evolution we predict that the radio
emission from Sw1644+57 should be detectable with the EVLA for several decades,
and will be resolvable with VLBI in a few years.Comment: Submitted to ApJ; 22 pages, 2 tables, 9 figure
Correlations and Renormalization in Lattice Gases
A complete formulation is given of an exact kinetic theory for lattice gases.
This kinetic theory makes possible the calculation of corrections to the usual
Boltzmann / Chapman-Enskog analysis of lattice gases due to the buildup of
correlations. It is shown that renormalized transport coefficients can be
calculated perturbatively by summing terms in an infinite series. A
diagrammatic notation for the terms in this series is given, in analogy with
the diagrammatic expansions of continuum kinetic theory and quantum field
theory. A closed-form expression for the coefficients associated with the
vertices of these diagrams is given. This method is applied to several standard
lattice gases, and the results are shown to correctly predict experimentally
observed deviations from the Boltzmann analysis.Comment: 94 pages, pure LaTeX including all figure
Sifting for Sapphires: Systematic Selection of Tidal Disruption Events in iPTF
We present results from a systematic selection of tidal disruption events
(TDEs) in a wide-area (4800~deg), band, Intermediate Palomar
Transient Factory (iPTF) experiment. Our selection targets typical
optically-selected TDEs: bright (60\% flux increase) and blue transients
residing in the center of red galaxies. Using photometric selection criteria to
down-select from a total of 493 nuclear transients to a sample of 26 sources,
we then use follow-up UV imaging with the Neil Gehrels Swift Telescope,
ground-based optical spectroscopy, and light curve fitting to classify them as
14 Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia), 9 highly variable active galactic nuclei
(AGNs), 2 confirmed TDEs, and 1 potential core-collapse supernova. We find it
possible to filter AGNs by employing a more stringent transient color cut ( 0.2 mag); further, UV imaging is the best discriminator for filtering
SNe, since SNe Ia can appear as blue, optically, as TDEs in their early phases.
However, when UV-optical color is unavailable, higher precision astrometry can
also effectively reduce SNe contamination in the optical. Our most stringent
optical photometric selection criteria yields a 4.5:1 contamination rate,
allowing for a manageable number of TDE candidates for complete spectroscopic
follow-up and real-time classification in the ZTF era. We measure a TDE per
galaxy rate of 1.7 10 gal yr (90\%
CL in Poisson statistics). This does not account for TDEs outside our selection
criteria, thus may not reflect the total TDE population, which is yet to be
fully mapped.Comment: 24 pages, 21 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journal Supplement Serie
Local Anaesthesia Suppressing Idiopathic Ventricular Tachycardia - A Cause of Non-inducible Arrhythmia During Electrophysiology Study
AbstractA 13year old boy having idiopathic ventricular tachycardia had non-inducible tachycardia twice on electrophysiology (EP) study due to suppression of arrhythmia by local anaesthetic agent, lignocaine. This case report demonstrates a cause of non-inducibility or arrhythmia during EP study and effect of lignocaine in suppression of idiopathic ventricular tachycardia
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