13,148 research outputs found
A bright millisecond radio burst of extragalactic origin
Pulsar surveys offer one of the few opportunities to monitor even a small
fraction (~0.00001) of the radio sky for impulsive burst-like events with
millisecond durations. In analysis of archival survey data, we have discovered
a 30-Jy dispersed burst of duration <5 ms located three degrees from the Small
Magellanic Cloud. The burst properties argue against a physical association
with our Galaxy or the Small Magellanic Cloud. Current models for the free
electron content in the Universe imply a distance to the burst of <1 Gpc No
further bursts are seen in 90-hr of additional observations, implying that it
was a singular event such as a supernova or coalescence of relativistic
objects. Hundreds of similar events could occur every day and act as insightful
cosmological probes.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figures. Accepted by Science. Published electronically
via Science Express on September 27, 200
Neutrinos, Fission Cycling, and the r-process
It has long been suggested that fission cycling may play an important role in
the r-process. Fission cycling can only occur in a very neutron rich
environment. In traditional calculations of the neutrino driven wind of the
core-collapse supernova, the environment is not sufficiently neutron rich to
produce the r-process elements. However, we show that with a reduction of the
electron neutrino flux coming from the supernova, fission cycling does occur
and furthermore it produces an abundance pattern which is consistent with
observed r-process abundance pattern in halo stars. Such a reduction can be
caused by active-sterile neutrino oscillations or other new physics.Comment: Typos corrected. Presented at NIC-IX, International Symposium on
Nuclear Astrophysics - Nuclei in the Cosmos - IX, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland,
25-30 June, 200
The Influence of Nuclear Composition on the Electron Fraction in the Post-Core-Bounce Supernova Environment
We study the early evolution of the electron fraction (or, alternatively, the
neutron-to-proton ratio) in the region above the hot proto-neutron star formed
after a supernova explosion. We study the way in which the electron fraction in
this environment is set by a competition between lepton (electron, positron,
neutrino, and antineutrino) capture processes on free neutrons and protons and
nuclei. Our calculations take explicit account of the effect of nuclear
composition changes, such as formation of alpha particles (the alpha effect)
and the shifting of nuclear abundances in nuclear statistical equilibrium
associated with cooling in near-adiabatic outflow. We take detailed account of
the process of weak interaction freeze-out in conjunction with these nuclear
composition changes. Our detailed treatment shows that the alpha effect can
cause significant increases in the electron fraction, while neutrino and
antineutrino capture on heavy nuclei tends to have a buffering effect on this
quantity. We also examine the effect on weak rates and the electron fraction of
fluctuations in time in the neutrino and antineutrino energy spectra arising
from hydrodynamic waves. Our analysis is guided by the Mayle & Wilson supernova
code numerical results for the neutrino energy spectra and density and velocity
profiles.Comment: 38 pages, AAS LaTeX, 8 figure
Lutz-Kelker bias in pulsar parallax measurements
Lutz & Kelker showed that parallax measurements are systematically
overestimated because they do not properly account for the larger volume of
space that is sampled at smaller parallax values. We apply their analysis to
neutron stars, incorporating the bias introduced by the intrinsic radio
luminosity function and a realistic Galactic population model for neutron
stars. We estimate the bias for all published neutron star parallax
measurements and find that measurements with less than ~95% certainty, are
likely to be significantly biased. Through inspection of historic parallax
measurements, we confirm the described effects in optical and radio
measurements, as well as in distance estimates based on interstellar dispersion
measures. The potential impact on future tests of relativistic gravity through
pulsar timing and on X-ray--based estimates of neutron star radii is briefly
discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 3 tables, 1 figure. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Non-symmetric magnetohydrostatic equilibria:a multigrid approach
Aims. Linear magnetohydrostatic (MHS) models of solar magnetic fields balance plasma pressure gradients, gravity and Lorentz forces where the current density is composed of a linear force-free component and a cross-field component that depends on gravitational stratification. In this paper, we investigate an efficient numerical procedure for calculating such equilibria.Methods. The MHS equations are reduced to two scalar elliptic equations â one on the lower boundary and the other within the interior of the computational domain. The normal component of the magnetic field is prescribed on the lower boundary and a multigrid method is applied on both this boundary and within the domain to find the poloidal scalar potential. Once solved to a desired accuracy, the magnetic field, plasma pressure and density are found using a finite difference method.Results. We investigate the effects of the cross-field currents on the linear MHS equilibria. Force-free and non-force-free examples are given to demonstrate the numerical scheme and an analysis of speed-up due to parallelization on a graphics processing unit (GPU) is presented. It is shown that speed-ups of Ă30 are readily achievable
A Manganin Foil Sensor for Small Uniaxial Stress
We describe a simple manganin foil resistance manometer for uniaxial stress
measurements. The manometer functions at low pressures and over a range of
temperatures. In this design no temperature seasoning is necessary, although
the manometer must be prestressed to the upper end of the desired pressure
range. The prestress pressure cannot be increased arbitrarily; irreversibility
arising from shear stress limits its range. Attempting larger pressures yields
irreproducible resistance measurements.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
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