2,017 research outputs found
Fractal Threshold Behavior in Vacuum Gravitational Collapse
We present the numerical evidence for fractal threshold behavior in the five
dimensional vacuum Einstein equations satisfying the cohomogeneity-two triaxial
Bianchi type-IX ansatz. In other words, we show that a flip of the wings of a
butterfly may influence the process of the black hole formation.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, minor change
What drives the dust activity of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko?
We use the gravitational instability formation scenario of cometesimals to
derive the aggregate size that can be released by the gas pressure from the
nucleus of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko for different heliocentric distances
and different volatile ices. To derive the ejected aggregate sizes, we
developed a model based on the assumption that the entire heat absorbed by the
surface is consumed by the sublimation process of one volatile species. The
calculations were performed for the three most prominent volatile materials in
comets, namely, H_20 ice, CO_2 ice, and CO ice. We find that the size range of
the dust aggregates able to escape from the nucleus into space widens when the
comet approaches the Sun and narrows with increasing heliocentric distance,
because the tensile strength of the aggregates decreases with increasing
aggregate size. The activity of CO ice in comparison to H_20 ice is capable to
detach aggregates smaller by approximately one order of magnitude from the
surface. As a result of the higher sublimation rate of CO ice, larger
aggregates are additionally able to escape from the gravity field of the
nucleus. Our model can explain the large grains (ranging from 2 cm to 1 m in
radius) in the inner coma of comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko that have been
observed by the OSIRIS camera at heliocentric distances between 3.4 AU and 3.7
AU. Furthermore, the model predicts the release of decimeter-sized aggregates
(trail particles) close to the heliocentric distance at which the gas-driven
dust activity vanishes. However, the gas-driven dust activity cannot explain
the presence of particles smaller than ~1 mm in the coma because the high
tensile strength required to detach these particles from the surface cannot be
provided by evaporation of volatile ices. These smaller particles can be
produced for instance by spin-up and centrifugal mass loss of ejected larger
aggregates
Thermophysical properties of near-Earth asteroid (341843) 2008 EV5 from WISE data
Aims. To derive the thermal inertia of 2008 EV, the baseline target for
the Marco Polo-R mission proposal, and infer information about the size of the
particles on its surface. Methods. Values of thermal inertia are obtained by
fitting an asteroid thermophysical model to NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey
Explorer (WISE) infrared data. From the constrained thermal inertia and a model
of heat conductivity that accounts for different values of the packing fraction
(a measure of the degree of compaction of the regolith particles), grain size
is derived. Results. We obtain an effective diameter , geometric visible albedo (assuming
), and thermal inertia J/m2/s(1/2)/K at
the 1- level of significance for its retrograde spin pole solution. The
regolith particles radius is mm for low degrees of
compaction, and mm for the highest packing densities.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures; accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Massive fields tend to form highly oscillating self-similarly expanding shells
The time evolution of self-interacting spherically symmetric scalar fields in
Minkowski spacetime is investigated based on the use of Green's theorem. It is
shown that a massive Klein-Gordon field can be characterized by the formation
of certain expanding shell structures where all the shells are built up by very
high frequency oscillations. This oscillation is found to be modulated by the
product of a simple time decaying factor of the form and of an
essentially self-similar expansion. Apart from this self-similar expansion the
developed shell structure is preserved by the evolution. In particular, the
energy transported by each shell appears to be time independent.Comment: 10 pages, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Scale invariance and critical gravitational collapse
We examine ways to write the Choptuik critical solution as the evolution of
scale invariant variables. It is shown that a system of scale invariant
variables proposed by one of the authors does not evolve periodically in the
Choptuik critical solution. We find a different system, based on maximal
slicing. This system does evolve periodically, and may generalize to the case
of axisymmetry or of no symmetry at all.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, Revtex, discussion modified to clarify
presentatio
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