9,801 research outputs found
Multimetric Supergravities
Making use of integral forms and superfield techniques we propose
supersymmetric extensions of the multimetric gravity Lagrangians in dimensions
one, two, three and four. The supersymmetric interaction potential covariantly
deforms the bosonic one, producing in particular suitable super-symmetric
polynomials generated by the Berezinian. As an additional application of our
formalism we construct supersymmetric multi-Maxwell theories in dimensions
three and four.Comment: 37 pages, Latex2e, no figure
Chemical complexity in astrophysical simulations: optimization and reduction techniques
Chemistry has a key role in the evolution of the interstellar medium (ISM),
so it is highly desirable to follow its evolution in numerical simulations.
However, it may easily dominate the computational cost when applied to large
systems. In this paper we discuss two approaches to reduce these costs: (i)
based on computational strategies, and (ii) based on the properties and on the
topology of the chemical network. The first methods are more robust, while the
second are meant to be giving important information on the structure of large,
complex networks. To this aim we first discuss the numerical solvers for
integrating the system of ordinary differential equations (ODE) associated with
the chemical network. We then propose a buffer method that decreases the
computational time spent in solving the ODE system. We further discuss a
flux-based method that allows one to determine and then cut on the fly the less
active reactions. In addition we also present a topological approach for
selecting the most probable species that will be active during the chemical
evolution, thus gaining information on the chemical network that otherwise
would be difficult to retrieve. This topological technique can also be used as
an a priori reduction method for any size network. We implemented these methods
into a 1D Lagrangian hydrodynamical code to test their effects: both classes
lead to large computational speed-ups, ranging from x2 to x5. We have also
tested some hybrid approaches finding that coupling the flux method with a
buffer strategy gives the best trade-off between robustness and speed-up of
calculations.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRA
Dark-matter halo mergers as a fertile environment for low-mass Population III star formation
While Population III stars are typically thought to be massive, pathways
towards lower-mass Pop III stars may exist when the cooling of the gas is
particularly enhanced. A possible route is enhanced HD cooling during the
merging of dark-matter halos. The mergers can lead to a high ionization degree
catalysing the formation of HD molecules and may cool the gas down to the
cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature. In this paper, we investigate
the merging of mini-halos with masses of a few 10 M and explore the
feasibility of this scenario. We have performed three-dimensional cosmological
hydrodynamics calculations with the ENZO code, solving the thermal and chemical
evolution of the gas by employing the astrochemistry package KROME. Our results
show that the HD abundance is increased by two orders of magnitude compared to
the no-merging case and the halo cools down to 60 K triggering
fragmentation. Based on Jeans estimates the expected stellar masses are about
10 M. Our findings show that the merging scenario is a potential
pathway for the formation of low-mass stars.Comment: Submitted to MNRA
KROME - a package to embed chemistry in astrophysical simulations
Chemistry plays a key role in many astrophysical situations regulating the
cooling and the thermal properties of the gas, which are relevant during
gravitational collapse, the evolution of disks and the fragmentation process.
In order to simplify the usage of chemical networks in large numerical
simulations, we present the chemistry package KROME, consisting of a Python
pre-processor which generates a subroutine for the solution of chemical
networks which can be embedded in any numerical code. For the solution of the
rate equations, we make use of the high-order solver DLSODES, which was shown
to be both accurate and efficient for sparse networks, which are typical in
astrophysical applications. KROME also provides a large set of physical
processes connected to chemistry, including photochemistry, cooling, heating,
dust treatment, and reverse kinetics.
The package presented here already contains a network for primordial
chemistry, a small metal network appropriate for the modelling of low
metallicities environments, a detailed network for the modelling of molecular
clouds, a network for planetary atmospheres, as well as a framework for the
modelling of the dust grain population. In this paper, we present an extended
test suite ranging from one-zone and 1D-models to first applications including
cosmological simulations with ENZO and RAMSES and 3D collapse simulations with
the FLASH code. The package presented here is publicly available at
http://kromepackage.org/ and https://bitbucket.org/krome/krome_stableComment: accepted for publication in MNRA
Primordial star formation: relative impact of H2 three-body rates and initial conditions
Population III stars are the first stars in the Universe to form at z=20-30
out of a pure hydrogen and helium gas in minihalos of 10^5-10^6 M .
Cooling and fragmentation is thus regulated via molecular hydrogen. At
densities above 10^8 cm, the three-body H2 formation rates are
particularly important for making the gas fully molecular. These rates were
considered to be uncertain by at least a few orders of magnitude. We explore
the impact of new accurate three-body H2 formation rates derived by Forrey
(2013) for three different minihalos, and compare to the results obtained with
three-body rates employed in previous studies. The calculations are performed
with the cosmological hydrodynamics code ENZO (release 2.2) coupled with the
chemistry package KROME (including a network for primordial chemistry), which
was previously shown to be accurate in high resolution simulations. While the
new rates can shift the point where the gas becomes fully molecular, leading to
a different thermal evolution, there is no trivial trend in how this occurs.
While one might naively expect the results to be inbetween the calculations
based on Palla et al. (1983) and Abel et al. (2002), the behavior can be close
to the former or the latter depending on the dark matter halo that is explored.
We conclude that employing the correct three-body rates is about as equally
important as the use of appropriate initial conditions, and that the resulting
thermal evolution needs to be calculated for every halo individually.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, A&A, 561, A13 (2014
The formation of the primitive star SDSS J102915+172927: effect of the dust mass and the grain-size distribution
Understanding the formation of the extremely metal poor star
SDSS-J102915+172927 is of fundamental importance to improve our knowledge on
the transition between the first and second generation of stars in the
Universe. In this paper, we perform three-dimensional cosmological
hydrodynamical simulations of dust-enriched halos during the early stages of
the collapse process including a detailed treatment of the dust physics. We
employ the astrochemistry package \krome coupled with the hydrodynamical code
\textsc{enzo} assuming grain size distributions produced by the explosion of
core-collapse supernovae of 20 and 35 M primordial stars which are
suitable to reproduce the chemical pattern of the SDSS-J102915+172927 star. We
find that the dust mass yield produced from Population III supernovae
explosions is the most important factor which drives the thermal evolution and
the dynamical properties of the halos. Hence, for the specific distributions
relevant in this context, the composition, the dust optical properties, and the
size-range have only minor effects on the results due to similar cooling
functions. We also show that the critical dust mass to enable fragmentation
provided by semi-analytical models should be revised, as we obtain values one
order of magnitude larger. This determines the transition from disk
fragmentation to a more filamentary fragmentation mode, and suggests that
likely more than one single supernova event or efficient dust growth should be
invoked to get such a high dust content.Comment: Accepted on Ap
Evidence for a spatial bias in the perception of sequences of brief tones
Listeners are unable to report the physical order of particular sequences of brief tones. This phenomenon of temporal dislocation depends on tone durations and frequencies. The current study empirically shows that it also depends on the spatial location of the tones. Dichotically testing a three-tone sequence showed that the central tone tends to be reported as the first or the last element when it is perceived as part of a left-to-right motion. Since the central-tone dislocation does not occur for right-to-left sequences of the same tones, this indicates that there is a spatial bias in the perception of sequences. \ua9 2013 Acoustical Society of America
A UV flux constraint on the formation of direct collapse black holes
The ability of metal free gas to cool by molecular hydrogen in primordial
halos is strongly associated with the strength of ultraviolet (UV) flux
produced by the stellar populations in the first galaxies. Depending on the
stellar spectrum, these UV photons can either dissociate molecules
directly or indirectly by photo-detachment of as the latter
provides the main pathway for formation in the early universe. In
this study, we aim to determine the critical strength of the UV flux above
which the formation of molecular hydrogen remains suppressed for a sample of
five distinct halos at by employing a higher order chemical solver and a
Jeans resolution of 32 cells. We presume that such flux is emitted by PopII
stars implying atmospheric temperatures of ~K. We performed
three-dimensional cosmological simulations and varied the strength of the UV
flux below the Lyman limit in units of . Our findings show that the
value of varies from halo to halo and is sensitive to the
local thermal conditions of the gas. For the simulated halos it varies from
400-700 with the exception of one halo where .
This has important implications for the formation of direct collapse black
holes and their estimated population at z > 6. It reduces the number density of
direct collapse black holes by almost three orders of magnitude compared to the
previous estimates.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, matches the accepted version to ber published in
MNRAS, higher resolution version is available at
http://www.astro.physik.uni-goettingen.de/~mlatif/Jcrit.pd
Vertex Operators for Closed Superstrings
We construct an iterative procedure to compute the vertex operators of the
closed superstring in the covariant formalism given a solution of IIA/IIB
supergravity. The manifest supersymmetry allows us to construct vertex
operators for any generic background in presence of Ramond-Ramond (RR) fields.
We extend the procedure to all massive states of open and closed superstrings
and we identify two new nilpotent charges which are used to impose the gauge
fixing on the physical states. We solve iteratively the equations of the vertex
for linear x-dependent RR field strengths. This vertex plays a role in studying
non-constant C-deformations of superspace. Finally, we construct an action for
the free massless sector of closed strings, and we propose a form for the
kinetic term for closed string field theory in the pure spinor formalism.Comment: TeX, harvmac, amssym.tex, 41 pp; references adde
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