40,483 research outputs found
Spot-like Structures of Neutron Star Surface Magnetic Fields
There is growing evidence, based on both X-ray and radio observations of
isolated neutron stars, that besides the large--scale (dipolar) magnetic field,
which determines the pulsar spin--down behaviour, small--scale poloidal field
components are present, which have surface strengths one to two orders of
magnitude larger than the dipolar component. We argue in this paper that the
Hall--effect can be an efficient process in producing such small--scale field
structures just above the neutron star surface. It is shown that due to a
Hall--drift induced instability, poloidal magnetic field structures can be
generated from strong subsurface toroidal fields, which are the result of
either a dynamo or a thermoelectric instability acting at early times of a
neutron star's life. The geometrical structure of these small--scale surface
anomalies of the magnetic field resembles that of some types of
``star--spots''. The magnetic field strength and the length--scales are
comparable with values that can be derived from various observations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics Letters;
language improved, 2nd para of Sect. 3 change
Spark Model for Pulsar Radiation Modulation Patterns
A non-stationary polar gap model first proposed by Ruderman & Sutherland
(1975) is modified and applied to spark-associated pulsar emission at radio
wave-lengths. It is argued that under physical and geometrical conditions
prevailing above pulsar polar cap, highly non-stationary spark discharges do
not occur at random positions. Instead, sparks should tend to operate in well
determined preferred regions. At any instant the polar cap is populated as
densely as possible with a number of two-dimensional sparks with a
characteristic dimension as well as a typical distance between adjacent sparks
being about the polar gap height. Our model differs, however, markedly from its
original 'hollow cone' version. The key feature is the quasi-central spark
driven by pair production process and anchored to the local pole of a
sunspot-like surface magnetic field. This fixed spark prevents the motion of
other sparks towards the pole, restricting it to slow circumferential drift
across the planes of field lines converging at the local pole. We argue that
the polar spark constitutes the core pulsar emission, and that the annular
rings of drifting sparks contribute to conal components of the pulsar beam. We
found that the number of nested cones in the beam of typical pulsar should not
excced three; a number also found by Mitra & Deshpande (1999) using a
completely different analysis.Comment: 31 pages, 8 figures, accepted by Ap
A Next-to-Minimal Supersymmetric Model of Hybrid Inflation
We propose a model of inflation based on a simple variant of the NMSSM,
called NMSSM, where the additional singlet plays the role of the
inflaton in hybrid (or inverted hybrid) type models. As in the original NMSSM,
the NMSSM solves the problem of the MSSM via the VEV of a gauge
singlet , but unlike the NMSSM does not suffer from domain wall problems
since the offending symmetry is replaced by an approximate Peccei-Quinn
symmetry which also solves the strong CP problem, and leads to an invisible
axion with interesting cosmological consequences. The PQ symmetry may arise
from a superstring model with an exact discrete symmetry after
compactification. The model predicts a spectral index to one part in
.Comment: 17 pages, Latex; note added, accepted for Phys. Lett.
Time-scales of Radio Emission in PSR J0437-4715 at 327 MHz
Time-scales of radio emission are studied in PSR J0437-4715 at 327 MHz using
almost half a million periods of high quality data from Ooty Radio Telescope.
The radio emission in this milli second pulsar occurs on a short (s) time-scale
of approximately 0.026 +- 0.001 periods, and on a (l) time-scale that is much
longer than the widths of the components of the integrated profile
(approximately 0.05 periods). The width of the s emission increases with its
increasing relative contribution to the total radio emission. This may provide
constraints for the details of discharge of vacuum gaps above pulsar polar
caps. The s emission occasionally takes place in the form of intense spikes,
which are confined to the main component of the integrated profile for 90 per
cent of the time. The positions of spikes within a component of the integrated
profile have no simple relation to the shape of that component. This may have
impact on the interpretation of the integrated profile components in terms of
independent regions of emission on the polar cap.Comment: Accepted for publication in Vol 543 (1 Nov 2000) of The Astrophysical
Journa
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