444 research outputs found
An axisymmetric hydrodynamical model for the torus wind in AGN. II: X-ray excited funnel flow
We have calculated a series of models of outflows from the obscuring torus in
active galactic nuclei (AGN). Our modeling assumes that the inner face of a
rotationally supported torus is illuminated and heated by the intense X-rays
from the inner accretion disk and black hole. As a result of such heating a
strong biconical outflow is observed in our simulations. We calculate
3-dimensional hydrodynamical models, assuming axial symmetry, and including the
effects of X-ray heating, ionization, and radiation pressure. We discuss the
behavior of a large family of these models, their velocity fields, mass fluxes
and temperature, as functions of the torus properties and X-ray flux. Synthetic
warm absorber spectra are calculated, assuming pure absorption, for sample
models at various inclination angles and observing times. We show that these
models have mass fluxes and flow speeds which are comparable to those which
have been inferred from observations of Seyfert 1 warm absorbers, and that they
can produce rich absorption line spectra.Comment: 32 pages, 11 figures Accepted for publication in Ap
Modification Of The Electron Energy Distribution Function During Lithium Experiments On The National Spherical Torus Experiment
The National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) has recently studied the use of a liquid lithium divertor (LLD). Divertor Langmuir probes have also been installed for making measurements of the local plasma conditions. A non-local probe interpretation method is used to supplement the classical probe interpretation and obtain measurements of the electron energy distribution function (EEDF) which show the occurrence of a hot-electron component. Analysis is made of two discharges within a sequence that exhibited changes in plasma fueling efficiency. It is found that the local electron temperature increases and that this increase is most strongly correlated with the energy contained within the hot-electron population. Preliminary interpretative modeling indicates that kinetic effects are likely in the NSTX
Thermal Instability and Photoionized X-ray Reflection in Accretion Disks
We study the X-ray illumination of an accretion disk. We relax the
simplifying assumption of constant gas density used in most previous studies;
instead we determine the density from hydrostatic balance. It is found that the
thermal ionization instability prevents the illuminated gas from attaining
temperatures at which the gas is unstable. In particular, the uppermost layers
of the X-ray illuminated gas are found to be almost completely ionized and at
the local Compton temperature ( K); at larger depths, the gas
temperature drops abruptly to form a thin layer with K, while at
yet larger depths it decreases sharply to the disk effective temperature. We
find that most of the Fe K line emission and absorption edge are
produced in the coolest, deepest layers, while the Fe atoms in the hottest,
uppermost layers are generally almost fully ionized, hence making a negligible
contribution to reprocessing features in keV energy range. We
provide a summary of how X-ray reprocessing features depend on parameters of
the problem. The results of our self-consistent calculations are both
quantitatively and qualitatively different from those obtained using the
constant density assumption. Therefore, we conclude that X-ray reflection
calculations should always utilize hydrostatic balance in order to provide a
reliable theoretical interpretation of observed X-ray spectra of AGN and GBHCs.Comment: Submitted to ApJ; 16 pages plus 13 figure
Ultraviolet Emission Line Ratios of Cataclysmic Variables
We present a statistical analysis of the ultraviolet emission lines of
cataclysmic variables (CVs) based on ultraviolet spectra of 20
sources extracted from the International Ultraviolet Explorer Uniform Low
Dispersion Archive. These spectra are used to measure the emission line fluxes
of N V, Si IV, C IV, and He II and to construct diagnostic flux ratio diagrams.
We investigate the flux ratio parameter space populated by individual CVs and
by various CV subclasses (e.g., AM Her stars, DQ Her stars, dwarf novae,
nova-like variables). For most systems, these ratios are clustered within a
range of decade for log Si IV/C IV and log He II/C IV
and decades for log N V/C IV . These
ratios are compared to photoionization and collisional ionization models to
constrain the excitation mechanism and the physical conditions of the
line-emitting gas. We find that the collisional models do the poorest job of
reproducing the data. The photoionization models reproduce the Si IV/C IV line
ratios for some shapes of the ionizing spectrum, but the predicted N V/C IV
line ratios are simultaneously too low by typically decades. Worse,
for no parameters are any of the models able to reproduce the observed He II/C
IV line ratios; this ratio is far too small in the collisional and scattering
models and too large by typically decades in the photoionization
models.Comment: LaTeX format, uses aaspp4.sty, 28 pages, 11 Postscript figures,
accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal 10/16/9
K-shell photoionization of ground-state Li-like boron ions [B]: Experiment and Theory
Absolute cross sections for the K-shell photoionization of ground-state
Li-like boron [B(1s2s S)] ions were measured by employing the
ion-photon merged-beams technique at the Advanced Light Source synchrotron
radiation facility. The energy ranges 197.5--200.5 eV, 201.9--202.1 eV of the
[1s(2s\,2p)P]P and [1s(2s\,2p)P] P
resonances, respectively, were investigated using resolving powers of up to
17\,600. The energy range of the experiments was extended to about 238.2 eV
yielding energies of the most prominent
[1s(2\,n)]P resonances with an absolute accuracy
of the order of 130 ppm. The natural linewidths of the [1s(2s\,2p)P]
P and [1s(2s\,2p)P] P resonances were measured
to be meV and meV, respectively, which compare
favourably with theoretical results of 4.40 meV and 30.53 meV determined using
an intermediate coupling R-matrix method.Comment: 6 figures and 2 table
K-shell photoionization of ground-state Li-like carbon ions [C]: experiment, theory and comparison with time-reversed photorecombination
Absolute cross sections for the K-shell photoionization of ground-state
Li-like carbon [C(1s2s S)] ions were measured by employing the
ion-photon merged-beams technique at the Advanced Light Source. The energy
ranges 299.8--300.15 eV, 303.29--303.58 eV and 335.61--337.57 eV of the
[1s(2s2p)P]P, [1s(2s2p)P]P and [(1s2s)S 3p]P
resonances, respectively, were investigated using resolving powers of up to
6000. The autoionization linewidth of the [1s(2s2p)P]P resonance was
measured to be meV and compares favourably with a theoretical result
of 26 meV obtained from the intermediate coupling R-Matrix method. The present
photoionization cross section results are compared with the outcome from
photorecombination measurements by employing the principle of detailed balance.Comment: 3 figures and 2 table
X-ray Astronomy in the Laboratory with a Miniature Compact Object Produced by Laser-Driven Implosion
Laboratory spectroscopy of non-thermal equilibrium plasmas photoionized by
intense radiation is a key to understanding compact objects, such as black
holes, based on astronomical observations. This paper describes an experiment
to study photoionizing plasmas in laboratory under well-defined and genuine
conditions. Photoionized plasma is here generated using a 0.5-keV Planckian
x-ray source created by means of a laser-driven implosion. The measured x-ray
spectrum from the photoionized silicon plasma resembles those observed from the
binary stars Cygnus X-3 and Vela X-1 with the Chandra x-ray satellite. This
demonstrates that an extreme radiation field was produced in the laboratory,
however, the theoretical interpretation of the laboratory spectrum
significantly contradicts the generally accepted explanations in x-ray
astronomy. This model experiment offers a novel test bed for validation and
verification of computational codes used in x-ray astronomy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures are included. This is the original submitted
version of the manuscript to be published in Nature Physic
Stochastic pump effect and geometric phases in dissipative and stochastic systems
The success of Berry phases in quantum mechanics stimulated the study of
similar phenomena in other areas of physics, including the theory of living
cell locomotion and motion of patterns in nonlinear media. More recently,
geometric phases have been applied to systems operating in a strongly
stochastic environment, such as molecular motors. We discuss such geometric
effects in purely classical dissipative stochastic systems and their role in
the theory of the stochastic pump effect (SPE).Comment: Review. 35 pages. J. Phys. A: Math, Theor. (in press
Thermal radiation processes
We discuss the different physical processes that are important to understand
the thermal X-ray emission and absorption spectra of the diffuse gas in
clusters of galaxies and the warm-hot intergalactic medium. The ionisation
balance, line and continuum emission and absorption properties are reviewed and
several practical examples are given that illustrate the most important
diagnostic features in the X-ray spectra.Comment: 37 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Space Science
Reviews, special issue "Clusters of galaxies: beyond the thermal view",
Editor J.S. Kaastra, Chapter 9; work done by an international team at the
International Space Science Institute (ISSI), Bern, organised by J.S.
Kaastra, A.M. Bykov, S. Schindler & J.A.M. Bleeke
Hydrogen-like nitrogen radio line from hot interstellar and warm-hot intergalactic gas
Hyperfine structure lines of highly-charged ions may open a new window in
observations of hot rarefied astrophysical plasmas. In this paper we discuss
spectral lines of isotopes and ions abundant at temperatures 10^5-10^7 K,
characteristic for warm-hot intergalactic medium, hot interstellar medium,
starburst galaxies, their superwinds and young supernova remnants. Observations
of these lines will allow to study bulk and turbulent motions of the observed
target and will broaden the information about the gas ionization state,
chemical and isotopic composition.
The most prospective is the line of the major nitrogen isotope having
wavelength 5.65 mm (Sunyaev and Churazov 1084). Wavelength of this line is
well-suited for observation of objects at z=0.15-0.6 when it is redshifted to
6.5-9 mm spectral band widely-used in ground-based radio observations, and, for
example, for z>=1.3, when the line can be observed in 1.3 cm band and at lower
frequencies. Modern and future radio telescopes and interferometers are able to
observe the absorption by 14-N VII in the warm-hot intergalactic medium at
redshifts above z=0.15 in spectra of brightest mm-band sources. Sub-millimeter
emission lines of several most abundant isotopes having hyperfine splitting
might also be detected in spectra of young supernova remnants.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures, accepted by Astronomy Letters; v3: details
added; error fixe
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