2,852 research outputs found
Numerical modelling of the classical nova outburst
A mechanism is described that promises to explain how nova outbursts take place on white dwarf of 1 solar mass or less and for accretion rates of 4 x 10 to the -10 solar mass/yr or greater
Studies of hydrodynamic events in stellar evolution. 3: Ejection of planetary nebulae
The dynamic behavior of the H-rich envelope (0.101 solar mass) of an evolved star (1.1 solar mass) as the luminosity rises to 19000 solar luminosity during the second ascent of the red giant branch. For luminosities in the range 3100 L 19000 solar luminosity the H-rich envelope pulsates like a long-period variable (LPV) with periods of the order of a year. As L reaches 19000 solar luminosity, the entire H-rich envelope is ejected as a shell with speeds of a few 10 km/s. The ejection occurs on a timescale of a few LPV pulsation periods. This ejection is associated with the formation of a planetary nebula. The computations are based on an implicit hydrodynamic computer code. T- and RHO-dependent opacities and excitation and ionization energies are included. As the H-rich envelope is accelerated off the stellar core, the gap between envelope and core is approximated by a vacuum, filled with radiation. Across the vacuum, the luminosity is conserved and the anisotropy of the radiation is considered as well as the solid angle subtended by the remnant star at the inner surface of the H-rich envelope. Spherical symmetry and the diffusion approximation are assumed
Thermonuclear runaways in thick hydrogen rich envelopes of neutron stars
A Lagrangian, fully implicit, one dimensional hydrodynamic computer code was used to evolve thermonuclear runaways in the accreted hydrogen rich envelopes of 1.0 Msub solar neutron stars with radii of 10 km and 20 km. Simulations produce outbursts which last from about 750 seconds to about one week. Peak effective temeratures and luninosities were 26 million K and 80 thousand Lsub solar for the 10 km study and 5.3 millison and 600 Lsub solar for the 20 km study. Hydrodynamic expansion on the 10 km neutron star produced a precursor lasting about one ten thousandth seconds
Numerical simulation of the magnetospheric gate model for X-ray bursters
A Lagrangian, fully implicit, one dimensional hydrodynamic computer code was used to investigate the evolution of a gas cloud impacting the surface of a 20 km, 1 Msub solar neutron star. This gas is initially at rest with respect to the surface of the neutron star, extends to 185 km above the surface, and is optically thick. The infall results in a burst which lasts about 0.1 seconds and reached a peak luminosity and effective temperature of 240,000 Lsub solar and 9 million; respectively. The burst was followed by a phase of oscillations with a period 0.2 seconds
The Palaeoecology of the Interglacial Deposits at Histon Road, Cambridge
Von den interglazialen Schichten in Histon Road, Cambridge, ist ein 8-m-Kern gewonnen worden. Er gestattete eine genaue Untersuchung der Pflanzen- und der Land- und Süßwasser-Molluskenreste. Die betreffenden Schichten gehören der Zone g der letzten Interglazialzeit und der Zone h-i an: letzteres Symbol soll andeuten, daß, obwohl die Kontinuität der Schichten nicht unterbrochen ist, die Picea-Zone, h, in diesem einzigen in Großbritannien bekannten Ausschnitt aus diesem Teil der letzten Interglazialzeit fehlt. Von Zone f ist keine Spur gefunden worden. Um ein Bild von der Paläoökologie zu bekommen, wurden die makroskopischen Pflanzenreste und Mollusken aus 41 Teilstücken inventarisiert, von denen jedes durchschnittlich 15 cm Länge hätte. Etwa 3000 Früchte und Samen und 16000 Mollusken wurden gefunden. Diese sind in ökologische und klimatische Verteilungsgruppen eingeteilt worden. Die Bedeutung der Variationen innerhalb dieser Gruppen wird behandelt. Die Pflanzenreste und Mollusken scheinen ein einheitliches Bild von einem Zustand zu bieten, der vom Sumpf bis zum fließenden Gewässer variiert, wie es von einem aufschüttend mäandrierenden Flusse zu erwarten ist.researc
High Accuracy Near-infrared Imaging Polarimetry with NICMOS
The findings of a nine orbit calibration plan carried out during HST Cycle
15, to fully determine the NICMOS camera 2 (2.0 micron) polarization
calibration to high accuracy, are reported. Recently Ueta et al. and Batcheldor
et al. have suggested that NICMOS possesses a residual instrumental
polarization at a level of 1.2-1.5%. This would completely inhibit the data
reduction in a number of GO programs, and hamper the ability of the instrument
to perform high accuracy polarimetry. We obtained polarimetric calibration
observations of three polarimetric standards at three spacecraft roll angles
separated by ~60deg. Combined with archival data, these observations were used
to characterize the residual instrumental polarization in order for NICMOS to
reach its full potential of accurate imaging polarimetry at p~1%. Using these
data, we place an 0.6% upper limit on the instrumental polarization and
calculate values of the parallel transmission coefficients that reproduce the
ground-based results for the polarimetric standards. The uncertainties
associated with the parallel transmission coefficients, a result of the
photometric repeatability of the observations, are seen to dominate the
accuracy of p and theta. However, the updated coefficients do allow imaging
polarimetry of targets with p~1.0% at an accuracy of +/-0.6% and +/-15deg. This
work enables a new caliber of science with HST.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, PASP accepte
High Accuracy Imaging Polarimetry with NICMOS
The ability of NICMOS to perform high accuracy polarimetry is currently
hampered by an uncalibrated residual instrumental polarization at a level of
1.2-1.5%. To better quantify and characterize this residual we obtained
observations of three polarimetric standard stars at three separate space-craft
roll angles. Combined with archival data, these observations were used to
characterize the residual instrumental polarization to enable NICMOS to reach
its full polarimetric potential. Using these data, we calculate values of the
parallel transmission coefficients that reproduce the ground-based results for
the polarimetric standards. The uncertainties associated with the parallel
transmission coefficients, a result of the photometric repeatability of the
observations, dominate the accuracy of p and theta. However, the new
coefficients now enable imaging polarimetry of targets with p~1.0% at an
accuracy of +/-0.6% and +/-15 degrees.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Contributed talk, "Astronomical Polarimetry 2008.
Science from Small to Large Telescopes" La Malbaie, Quebec, Canada, 200
Polarization Diagnostics for Cool Core Cluster Emission Lines
The nature of the interaction between low-excitation gas filaments at ~104 K, seen in optical line emission, and diffuse X-ray emitting coronal gas at ~107 K in the centers of galaxy clusters remains a puzzle. The presence of a strong, empirical correlation between the two gas phases is indicative of a fundamental relationship between them, though as yet of undetermined cause. The cooler filaments, originally thought to have condensed from the hot gas, could also arise from a merger or the disturbance of cool circumnuclear gas by nuclear activity. Here, we have searched for intrinsic line emission polarization in cool core galaxy clusters as a diagnostic of fundamental transport processes. Drawing on developments in solar astrophysics, direct energetic particle impact induced polarization holds the promise to definitively determine the role of collisional processes such as thermal conduction in the ISM physics of galaxy clusters, while providing insight into other highly anisotropic excitation mechanisms such as shocks, intense radiation fields, and suprathermal particles. Under certain physical conditions, theoretical calculations predict of the order of 10% polarization. Our observations of the filaments in four nearby cool core clusters place stringent upper limits ( 0.1%) on the presence of emission line polarization, requiring that if thermal conduction is operative, the thermal gradients are not in the saturated regime. This limit is consistent with theoretical models of the thermal structure of filament interfacesPeer reviewe
WFPC2 LRF Imaging of Emission Line Nebulae in 3CR Radio Galaxies
We present HST/WFPC2 Linear Ramp Filter images of high surface brightness
emission lines (either [OII], [OIII], or H-alpha+[NII]) in 80 3CR radio
sources. We overlay the emission line images on high resolution VLA radio
images (eight of which are new reductions of archival data) in order to examine
the spatial relationship between the optical and radio emission. We confirm
that the radio and optical emission line structures are consistent with weak
alignment at low redshift (z < 0.6) except in the Compact Steep Spectrum (CSS)
radio galaxies where both the radio source and the emission line nebulae are on
galactic scales and strong alignment is seen at all redshifts. There are weak
trends for the aligned emission line nebulae to be more luminous, and for the
emission line nebula size to increase with redshift and/or radio power. The
combination of these results suggests that there is a limited but real capacity
for the radio source to influence the properties of the emission line nebulae
at these low redshifts (z < 0.6). Our results are consistent with previous
suggestions that both mechanical and radiant energy are responsible for
generating alignment between the radio source and emission line gas.Comment: 80 pages, 54 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
Two qubits entanglement dynamics in a symmetry-broken environment
We study the temporal evolution of entanglement pertaining to two qubits
interacting with a thermal bath. In particular we consider the simplest
nontrivial spin bath models where symmetry breaking occurs and treat them by
mean field approximation. We analytically find decoherence free entangled
states as well as entangled states with an exponential decay of the quantum
correlation at finite temperature.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
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