366 research outputs found
Anisotropic convection in rotating proto-neutron stars
We study the conditions for convective instability in rotating, non-magnetic
proto--neutron stars. The criteria that determine stability of nascent neutron
stars are analogous to the Solberg--Hoiland conditions but including the
presence of lepton gradients. Our results show that, for standard angular
velocity profiles, convectively unstable modes with wave-vectors parallel to
the rotation axis are suppressed by a stable angular momentum profile, while
unstable modes with wave-vectors perpendicular to the axis remain unaltered.
Since the wave-vector is perpendicular to the velocity perturbation, the
directional selection of the unstable modes may result in fluid motions along
the direction of the rotation axis. This occurs in rigidly rotating stars as
well as in the inner core of differentially rotating stars. Our results provide
a natural source of asymmetry for proto--neutron stars with the only
requirement that angular velocities be of the order of the convective
characteristic frequency.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, final version to appear in A&
2D and 3D Core-Collapse Supernovae Simulation Results Obtained with the CHIMERA Code
Much progress in realistic modeling of core-collapse supernovae has occurred
recently through the availability of multi-teraflop machines and the increasing
sophistication of supernova codes. These improvements are enabling simulations
with enough realism that the explosion mechanism, long a mystery, may soon be
delineated. We briefly describe the CHIMERA code, a supernova code we have
developed to simulate core-collapse supernovae in 1, 2, and 3 spatial
dimensions. We then describe the results of an ongoing suite of 2D simulations
initiated from a 12, 15, 20, and 25 solar mass progenitor. These have all
exhibited explosions and are currently in the expanding phase with the shock at
between 5,000 and 20,000 km. We also briefly describe an ongoing simulation in
3 spatial dimensions initiated from the 15 solar mass progenitor.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
The evolution of novel fungal genes from non-retroviral RNA viruses
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Endogenous derivatives of non-retroviral RNA viruses are thought to be absent or rare in eukaryotic genomes because integration of RNA viruses in host genomes is impossible without reverse transcription. However, such derivatives have been proposed for animals, plants and fungi, often based on surrogate bioinformatic evidence. At present, there is little known of the evolution and function of integrated non-retroviral RNA virus genes. Here, we provide direct evidence of integration by sequencing across host-virus gene boundaries and carry out phylogenetic analyses of fungal hosts and totivirids (dsRNA viruses of fungi and protozoans). Further, we examine functionality by tests of neutral evolution, comparison of residues that are necessary for viral capsid functioning and assays for transcripts, dsRNA and viral particles.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Sequencing evidence from gene boundaries was consistent with integration. We detected previously unknown integrated <it>Totivirus</it>-like sequences in three fungi (<it>Candida parapsilosis</it>, <it>Penicillium marneffei </it>and <it>Uromyces appendiculatus</it>). The phylogenetic evidence strongly indicated that the direction of transfer was from <it>Totivirus </it>to fungus. However, there was evidence of transfer of <it>Totivirus</it>-like sequences among fungi. Tests of selection indicated that integrated genes are maintained by purifying selection. Transcripts were apparent for some gene copies, but, in most cases, the endogenous sequences lacked the residues necessary for normal viral functioning.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our findings reveal that horizontal gene transfer can result in novel gene formation in eukaryotes despite miniaturized genomic targets and a need for co-option of reverse transcriptase.</p
Dimension as a Key to the Neutrino Mechanism of Core-Collapse Supernova Explosions
We explore the dependence on spatial dimension of the viability of the
neutrino heating mechanism of core-collapse supernova explosions. We find that
the tendency to explode is a monotonically increasing function of dimension,
with 3D requiring 4050\% lower driving neutrino luminosity than 1D and
1525\% lower driving neutrino luminosity than 2D. Moreover, we find
that the delay to explosion for a given neutrino luminosity is always shorter
in 3D than 2D, sometimes by many hundreds of milliseconds. The magnitude of
this dimensional effect is much larger than the purported magnitude of a
variety of other effects, such as nuclear burning, inelastic scattering, or
general relativity, which are sometimes invoked to bridge the gap between the
current ambiguous and uncertain theoretical situation and the fact of robust
supernova explosions. Since real supernovae occur in three dimensions, our
finding may be an important step towards unraveling one of the most problematic
puzzles in stellar astrophysics. In addition, even though in 3D we do see
pre-explosion instabilities and blast asymmetries, unlike the situation in 2D,
we do not see an obvious axially-symmetric dipolar shock oscillation. Rather,
the free energy available to power instabilites seems to be shared by more and
more degrees of freedom as the dimension increases. Hence, the strong dipolar
axisymmetry seen in 2D and previously identified as a fundamental
characteristic of the shock hydrodynamics may not survive in 3D as a prominent
feature.Comment: Accepted to ApJ July 7th, Replaced with accepted versio
Ascertaining the Core Collapse Supernova Mechanism: An Emerging Picture?
Here we present the results from two sets of simulations, in two and three
spatial dimensions. In two dimensions, the simulations include multifrequency
flux-limited diffusion neutrino transport in the "ray-by-ray-plus"
approximation, two-dimensional self gravity in the Newtonian limit, and nuclear
burning through a 14-isotope alpha network. The three-dimensional simulations
are model simulations constructed to reflect the post stellar core bounce
conditions during neutrino shock reheating at the onset of explosion. They are
hydrodynamics-only models that focus on critical aspects of the shock stability
and dynamics and their impact on the supernova mechanism and explosion. In two
dimensions, we obtain explosions (although in one case weak) for two
progenitors (11 and 15 Solar mass models). Moreover, in both cases the
explosion is initiated when the inner edge of the oxygen layer accretes through
the shock. Thus, the shock is not revived while in the iron core, as previously
discussed in the literature. The three-dimensional studies of the development
of the stationary accretion shock instability (SASI) demonstrate the
fundamentally new dynamics allowed when simulations are performed in three
spatial dimensions. The predominant l=1 SASI mode gives way to a stable m=1
mode, which in turn has significant ramifications for the distribution of
angular momentum in the region between the shock and proto-neutron star and,
ultimately, for the spin of the remnant neutron star. Moreover, the
three-dimensional simulations make clear, given the increased number of degrees
of freedom, that two-dimensional models are severely limited by artificially
imposed symmetries.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figure
Gravitational Waves from Core Collapse Supernovae
We present the gravitational wave signatures for a suite of axisymmetric core
collapse supernova models with progenitors masses between 12 and 25 solar
masses. These models are distinguished by the fact they explode and contain
essential physics (in particular, multi-frequency neutrino transport and
general relativity) needed for a more realistic description. Thus, we are able
to compute complete waveforms (i.e., through explosion) based on
non-parameterized, first-principles models. This is essential if the waveform
amplitudes and time scales are to be computed more precisely. Fourier
decomposition shows that the gravitational wave signals we predict should be
observable by AdvLIGO across the range of progenitors considered here. The
fundamental limitation of these models is in their imposition of axisymmetry.
Further progress will require counterpart three-dimensional models.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Modeling core collapse supernovae in 2 and 3 dimensions with spectral neutrino transport
The overwhelming evidence that the core collapse supernova mechanism is
inherently multidimensional, the complexity of the physical processes involved,
and the increasing evidence from simulations that the explosion is marginal
presents great computational challenges for the realistic modeling of this
event, particularly in 3 spatial dimensions. We have developed a code which is
scalable to computations in 3 dimensions which couples PPM Lagrangian with
remap hydrodynamics [1], multigroup, flux-limited diffusion neutrino transport
[2], with many improvements), and a nuclear network [3]. The neutrino transport
is performed in a ray-by-ray plus approximation wherein all the lateral effects
of neutrinos are included (e.g., pressure, velocity corrections, advection)
except the transport. A moving radial grid option permits the evolution to be
carried out from initial core collapse with only modest demands on the number
of radial zones. The inner part of the core is evolved after collapse along
with the rest of the core and mantle by subcycling the lateral evolution near
the center as demanded by the small Courant times. We present results of 2-D
simulations of a symmetric and an asymmetric collapse of both a 15 and an 11 M
progenitor. In each of these simulations we have discovered that once the
oxygen rich material reaches the shock there is a synergistic interplay between
the reduced ram pressure, the energy released by the burning of the shock
heated oxygen rich material, and the neutrino energy deposition which leads to
a revival of the shock and an explosion.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figure
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