3,140 research outputs found
Gravitational and magnetosonic waves in gamma-ray bursts
One of the possible sources of gamma-ray bursts are merging, compact
neutronstar binaries. More than 90% of the binding energy of such a binary is
released in the form of gravitational waves (GWs) in the last few seconds of
the spiral-in phase before the formation of a black hole. In this article we
investigate whether a fraction of this GW-energy is transferred to
magnetohydrodynamic waves in the magnetized plasma wind around the binary.
Using the 3+1 orthonormal tedrad formalism, we study the propagation of a
monochromatic, plane fronted, linearly polarized GW perpendicular to the
ambient magnetic field in an ultra-relativistic wind, first in the comoving and
then in the observer frame. A closed set of general relativistic
magnetohydrodynamic equations is derived in the form of conservation laws for
electric charge, matter energy, momentum and magnetic energy densities. We
linearize these equations under the action of a monochromatic GW, which acts as
a driver and find that fast magneto-acoustic waves grow, with amplitudes
proportional to the GW amplitude and frequency and the strength of the
background magnetic field.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics (A&A). 7 pages,
1 figur
Solar VLBI
In April, 1981, radio telescopes at Dwingeloo (The Netherlands) and Onsala (Sweden) were used as a long-baseline interferometer at a wavelength of 18 cm. The baseline of 619 km gave a spatial resolution on the Sun of about 45 km. The major problems of Solar Very Long Baseline Interferometry are discussed
Prospects for determining air shower characteristics through geosynchrotron emission arrival times
Using simulations of geosynchrotron radiation from extensive air showers, we
present a relation between the shape of the geosynchrotron radiation front and
the distance of the observer to the maximum of the air shower. By analyzing the
relative arrival times of radio pulses at several radio antennas in an air
shower array, this relation may be employed to estimate the depth of maximum of
an extensive air shower if its impact position is known, allowing an estimate
for the primary particle's species. Vice versa, the relation provides an
estimate for the impact position of the shower's core if an external estimate
of the depth of maximum is available. In realistic circumstances, the method
delivers reconstruction uncertainties down to 30 g/cm^2 when the distance to
the shower core does not exceed 7 km. The method requires that the arrival
direction is known with high precision.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Astroparticle
Physics
Simulation of radio emission from air showers in atmospheric electric fields
We study the effect of atmospheric electric fields on the radio pulse emitted
by cosmic ray air showers. Under fair weather conditions the dominant part of
the radio emission is driven by the geomagnetic field. When the shower charges
are accelerated and deflected in an electric field additional radiation is
emitted. We simulate this effect with the Monte Carlo code REAS2, using
CORSIKA-simulated showers as input. In both codes a routine has been
implemented that treats the effect of the electric field on the shower
particles. We find that the radio pulse is significantly altered in background
fields of the order of ~100 V/cm and higher. Practically, this means that air
showers passing through thunderstorms emit radio pulses that are not a reliable
measure for the shower energy. Under other weather circumstances significant
electric field effects are expected to occur rarely, but nimbostratus clouds
can harbor fields that are large enough. In general, the contribution of the
electric field to the radio pulse has polarization properties that are
different from the geomagnetic pulse. In order to filter out radio pulses that
have been affected by electric field effects, radio air shower experiments
should keep weather information and perform full polarization measurements of
the radio signal.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Astroparticle
Physic
Monte Carlo simulations of air showers in atmospheric electric fields
The development of cosmic ray air showers can be influenced by atmospheric
electric fields. Under fair weather conditions these fields are small, but the
strong fields inside thunderstorms can have a significant effect on the
electromagnetic component of a shower. Understanding this effect is
particularly important for radio detection of air showers, since the radio
emission is produced by the shower electrons and positrons. We perform Monte
Carlo simulations to calculate the effects of different electric field
configurations on the shower development. We find that the electric field
becomes important for values of the order of 1 kV/cm. Not only can the energy
distribution of electrons and positrons change significantly for such field
strengths, it is also possible that runaway electron breakdown occurs at high
altitudes, which is an important effect in lightning initiation.Comment: 24 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in Astroparticle
Physic
Micromachined capacitive long-range displacement sensor
First measurement results are presented for a surface-micromachined long-range (50– 100 μm) periodic capacitive position sensor. The sensor consists of two periodic geometries (period = 10 μm) sliding along each other with minimum spacing of about 1.5 μm. The relative displacement between the two, results in a periodic change in capacitance. An electrostatic comb-drive actuator is employed to generate displacements. Measured maximum capacitance change ΔC=0.72 fF corresponds to simulation results but needs better shielding from external noise sources. The results show this sensorconcept can potentially lead towards long-range nano-positioning control of microactuator systems
Prospects for direct cosmic ray mass measurements through the Gerasimova-Zatsepin effect
The Solar radiation field may break apart ultra high energy cosmic nuclei,
after which both remnants will be deflected in the interplanetary magnetic
field in different ways. This process is known as the Gerasimova-Zatsepin
effect after its discoverers. We investigate the possibility of using the
detection of the separated air showers produced by a pair of remnant particles
as a way to identify the species of the original cosmic ray primary directly.
Event rates for current and proposed detectors are estimated, and requirements
are defined for ideal detectors of this phenomenon. Detailed computational
models of the disintegration and deflection processes for a wide range of
cosmic ray primaries in the energy range of 10^16 to 10^20 eV are combined with
sophisticated detector models to calculate realistic detection rates. The
fraction of Gerasimova-Zatsepin events is found to be of the order of 10^-5 of
the cosmic ray flux, implying an intrinsic event rate of around 0.07 km^-2
sr^-1 yr^-1 in the energy range defined. Event rates in any real experiment,
however, existing or under construction, will probably not exceed 10^-2 yr^-1.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Micromachined capacitive displacement sensor for long-range nano-positioning
Integrated long-range position sensing with high accuracy will be of paramount importance for high-potential applications in a.o. future probe-based datastorage and microscopy applications [1], provided that nm position accuracy can be obtained over a range of tens of micrometers or more. This work presents the design, fabrication and measurements for an integrated incremental capacitive long-range position sensor for nano-positioning of microactuators. For compactness, economical viability and optimal performance, the aim has been to fully integrate sensor and actuator through micromachining technology, without additional micro-assembly. Two related concepts are presented and evaluated through analysis, 2D-Finite-Element Simulations and experimental assessment. The sensors consist of two periodic geometries (period ≈ 8-16μm) on resp. a slider, movable in x-direction, and sense-structures, movable in y-direction, at both sides of the slider, Fig. 1. In ICMM the displacement of the slider is measured by measuring the periodic change in capacitance ΔCs(x) with a charge-amplifier and synchronous detection technique [2]. Using sense-actuators, the gap-distance between sense-structures and slider is made smaller than is possible with standard available photo-lithography (< 2 μm), thus increasing the capacitance and the S-N Ratio
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