19,187 research outputs found
Testing the Space-Time Structure of Event Generators
We report on work done in collaboration with Klaus Kinder-Geiger and John
Ellis which aims at connecting the space-time structure of event generator
simulations with observable output.Comment: 16 pages LaTeX, including 5 postscript figures. To appear in the
Proceedings of ``RHIC Physics and Beyond - Kay Kay Gee Day'' (Brookhaven
National Laboratory, 23 Oct 1998), ed. by B. Muller and R.D. Pisarski, AIP
Conference Proceeding
Equation of State and Collective Dynamics
This talk summarizes the present status of a program to quantitatively relate
data from the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) on collective expansion
flow to the Equation of State (EOS) of hot and dense strongly interacting
matter, including the quark-gluon plasma and the quark-hadron phase transition.
The limits reached with the present state of the art and the next steps
required to make further progress will both be discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 6 two-part figures. Invited talk given at the 5th
International Conference on the Physics and Astrophysics of Quark-Gluon
Plasma (ICPAQGP 2005), Kolkata (India), Feb 8-12, 2005. Proceedings to be
published in Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Jan-E Alam et al., eds.
The Non-Linear Dependence of Flux on Black Hole Mass and Accretion Rate in Core Dominated Jets
We derive the non-linear relation between the core flux F_{nu} of accretion
powered jets at a given frequency and the mass M of the central compact object.
For scale invariant jet models, the mathematical structure of the equations
describing the synchrotron emission from jets enables us to cancel out the
model dependent complications of jet dynamics, retaining only a simple, model
independent algebraic relation between F_{nu} and M. This approach allows us to
derive the F_{nu}-M relation for any accretion disk scenario that provides a
set of input boundary conditions for the magnetic field and the relativistic
particle pressure in the jet, such as standard and advection dominated
accretion flow (ADAF) disk solutions. Surprisingly, the mass dependence of
F_{nu} is very similar in different accretion scenarios. For typical
flat-spectrum core dominated radio jets and standard accretion scenarios we
find F_{nu}~M^{17/12}. The 7-9 orders of magnitude difference in black hole
mass between microquasars and AGN jets imply that AGN jets must be about 3-4
orders of magnitude more radio loud than microquasars, i.e., the ratio of radio
to bolometric luminosity is much smaller in microquasars than in AGN jets.
Because of the generality of these results, measurements of this F_{nu}-M
dependence are a powerful probe of jet and accretion physics. We show how our
analysis can be extended to derive a similar scaling relation between the
accretion rate mdot and F_{nu} for different accretion disk models. For
radiatively inefficient accretion modes we find that the flat spectrum emission
follows F_{nu}~(mdot*M)^{17/12}.Comment: Added key words and acknowledgements, minor editorial corrections. 6
pages, to appear in MNRAS 343, L59-L6
Recommended from our members
ken
From the beginning, the world of game-playing by machine has been fortunate in attracting contributions from the leading names of computer science. Charles Babbage, Konrad Zuse, Claude Shannon, Alan Turing, John von Neumann, John McCarthy, Alan Newell, Herb Simon and Ken Thompson all come to mind, and each reader will wish to add to this list. Recently, the Journal has saluted both Claude Shannon and Herb Simon.
Ken’s retirement from Lucent Technologies’ Bell Labs to the start-up Entrisphere is also a good moment for reflection
The Challenge of Reforming the WTO Dispute Settlement Understanding
The May 2003 deadline for the completion of the negotiations on improvements and clarifications of the Dispute Settlement Understanding (DSU) under the Doha Mandate has not been met. However, Members agreed in July 2003 to extend the deadline for the review until the end of May 2004. This article briefly summarises the past six years of negotiations on the DSU review, the most contentious issues and the systemic difficulties of the negotiations. We conclude with prospects for the forthcoming negotiations until 2004.WTO Dispute Settlement Understanding DSU Review
Effects of jet quenching on the hydrodynamical evolution of quark-gluon plasma
We study the effects of jet quenching on the hydrodynamical evolution of the
quark-gluon plasma (QGP) fluid created in a heavy-ion collision. In jet
quenching, a hard QCD parton, before fragmenting into a jet of hadrons,
deposits a fraction of its energy in the medium, leading to suppressed
production of high-pT hadrons. Assuming that the deposited energy quickly
thermalizes, we simulate the subsequent hydrodynamic evolution of the QGP
fluid. For partons moving at supersonic speed, v_p > c_s, and sufficiently
large energy loss, a shock wave forms leading to conical flow [1]. The PHENIX
Collaboration recently suggested that observed structures in the azimuthal
angle distribution [2] might be caused by conical flow. We show here that
conical flow produces different angular structures than predicted in [1] and
that, for phenomenologically acceptable values of parton energy loss, conical
flow effects are too weak to explain the structures seen by PHENIX [2].Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Last figure changed, now showing angular
distribution of pions instead of photons. Added comments on "lost jets" and
pT-dependence of angular correlation
Formation of recollimation shocks in jets of high-mass X-ray binaries
We study conditions for formation of recollimation shocks in jets interacting
with stellar winds in high-mass X-ray binaries. We show the existence of a
critical jet power, dependent on the wind rate and velocity and the jet
velocity, above which a recollimation shock is not formed. For jet powers below
critical, we derive the location of the shock. We show that surface shocks may
still exist above the critical power, but only occupy a small volume of the jet
and do not significantly alter the jet opening angle. We test these prediction
by 3-D numerical simulations, which confirm the existence and the value of the
critical power. We apply our results to Cyg X-1 and Cyg X-3.Comment: MNRAS, in pres
Elliptic flow in 200 A GeV Au+Au collisions and 2.76 A TeV Pb+Pb collisions: insights from viscous hydrodynamics + hadron cascade hybrid model
Using the newly developed hybrid model VISHNU which connects viscous
hydrodynamics with a hadron cascade model, we study the differential and
integrated elliptic flow v_2 at different centrality bins for 200 A GeV Au+Au
collisions and 2.76 A TeV Pb+Pb collisions. We find that the average Quark
Gluon Plasma (QGP) specific shear viscosity eta/s slightly increases from
Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) to Large Hadron Collider (LHC) energies.
However, a further study assuming different temperature dependencies for
(eta/s)_QGP shows that one cannot uniquely constrain the form of (eta/s)_QGP(T)
by fitting the spectra and v_2 alone. Based on our current understanding, the
question on whether the QGP fluid is more viscous or more perfect in the
temperature regime reached by LHC energies is still open.Comment: added a figure and discussion; this version accepted by Phys. Rev.
A deep Chandra observation of Abell 4059: a new face to radio-mode AGN feedback?
A deep Chandra observation of the cooling core cluster Abell 4059 (A4059) is
presented. Previous studies have found two X-ray cavities in the central
regions of A4059 together with a ridge of X-ray emission 20kpc south-west of
the cluster center. These features are clearly related to the radio galaxy
PKS2354-35 which resides in the cD galaxy. Our new data confirm these previous
findings and strengthen previous suggestions that the south-western ridge is
colder and denser than, but in approximate pressure equilibrium with, the
surrounding ICM atmosphere. In addition, we find evidence for a weak shock that
wraps around the north and east sides of the cavity structure. Our data allow
us to map the 2-dimensional distribution of metals in the ICM of A4059 for the
first time. We find that the SW ridge possesses an anomalously high
(super-solar) metalicity. The unusual morphology, temperature structure and
metal distribution all point to significant asymmetry in the ICM atmosphere
prior to the onset of radio-galaxy activity. Motivated by the very high
metalicity of the SW ridge, we hypothesize that the ICM asymmetry was caused by
the extremely rapid stripping of metal enriched gas from a starburst galaxy
that plunged through the core of A4059. Furthermore, we suggest that the onset
of powerful radio-galaxy activity in the cD galaxy may have been initiated by
this starburst/stripping event, either via the tidal-shocking of cold gas
native to the cD galaxy, or the accretion of cold gas that had been stripped
from the starburst galaxy.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 12 pages, 11
figures. A version of this paper including full resolution figures can be
found at http://www.astro.umd.edu/~chris/publications/papers/a4059_2008.pd
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