59 research outputs found
Radiation Pressure Supported Starburst Disks and AGN Fueling
We consider the structure of marginally Toomre-stable starburst disks under
the assumption that radiation pressure on dust grains provides the dominant
vertical support against gravity. This is particularly appropriate when the
disk is optically thick to its own IR radiation, as in the central regions of
ULIRGs. Because the disk radiates at its Eddington limit, the Schmidt-law for
star formation changes in the optically-thick limit, with the star formation
rate per unit area scaling as Sigma_g/kappa, where Sigma_g is the gas surface
density and kappa is the mean opacity. We show that optically thick starburst
disks have a characteristic flux and dust effective temperature of F ~ 10^{13}
L_sun/kpc^2 and T_eff ~ 90K, respectively. We compare our predictions with
observations and find good agreement. We extend our model from many-hundred
parsec scales to sub-parsec scales and address the problem of fueling AGN. We
assume that angular momentum transport proceeds via global torques rather than
a local viscosity. We account for the radial depletion of gas due to star
formation and find a strong bifurcation between two classes of disk models: (1)
solutions with a starburst on large scales that consumes all of the gas with
little fueling of a central AGN and (2) models with an outer large-scale
starburst accompanied by a more compact starburst on 1-10 pc scales and a
bright central AGN. The luminosity of the latter models is in many cases
dominated by the AGN. We show that the vertical thickness of the starburst disk
on pc scales can approach h ~ r, perhaps accounting for the nuclear obscuration
in some Type 2 AGN. We also argue that the disk of young stars in the Galactic
Center may be the remnant of such a compact nuclear starburst.Comment: 26 pages, 9 figures, emulateapj, accepted to ApJ, minor changes,
discussion tightened, references adde
Stellar disk in the galactic center -- a remnant of a dense accretion disk?
Observations of the galactic center revealed a population of young massive
stars within 0.4 pc from Sgr A* -- the presumed location of a supermassive
black hole. The origin of these stars is a puzzle as their formation in citu
should be suppressed by the black hole's tidal field. We find that out of 13
stars whose 3-dimensional velocities have been measured by Genzel et. al.
(2000), 10 lie in a thin disk. The half-opening angle of the disk is consistent
with zero within the measurement errors, and does not exceed 10 degrees. We
propose that a recent burst of star formation has occurred in a dense gaseous
disk around Sgr A*. Such a disk is no longer present because, most likely, it
has been accreted by the central black hole. The three-dimensional orbit of S2,
the young star closest to Sgr A*, has been recently mapped out with high
precision. It is inclined to the stellar disk by 75 degrees. We find that the
orbit should undergo Lense-Thirring precession with the period of (5/a) Myr,
where a<1 is the dimensionless spin of the black hole. Therefore it is possible
that originally S2 orbit lay in the disk plane. If so, we can constrain the
black hole spin be greater than 0.2(t_{S2}/5 Myr), where t_{S2} is the age
of S2.Comment: submitted to ApJ Letter
The Link between Warm Molecular Disks in Maser Nuclei and Star Formation near the Black Hole at the Galactic Center
The discovery of hundreds of young, bright stars within a parsec from the
massive black hole at the center of the Galaxy presents a challenge to star
formation theories. The requisite Roche densities for the gravitational
collapse of gas clouds are most naturally achieved in accretion disks. The
water maser sources in Keplerian rotation in the nuclei of NGC4258, NGC1068,
and the Circinus galaxy indicate the presence of warm, extended, molecular
accretion disks around black holes similar in mass to the one at the Galactic
center. Here we argue that the current conditions in the maser nuclei, and
those near the Galactic center, represent two consecutive, recurrent phases in
the life cycle of the nucleus of a typical gas-rich spiral bulge. The warm
molecular disks that give rise to the observed maser emission fragment into
stellar-size objects. The stellar masses, their orbital geometry, and the total
number of stars thus formed are consistent with the values identified at the
Galactic center. The stars tend to form in compact groups resembling the IRS 13
complex that dominates the stellar light in the neighborhood of the black hole.Comment: ApJ Letters, in pres
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
An Eccentric Circumbinary Accretion Disk and the Detection of Binary Massive Black Holes
We present a two-dimensional grid-based hydrodynamic simulation of a thin,
viscous, locally-isothermal corotating disk orbiting an equal-mass Newtonian
binary point mass on a fixed circular orbit. We study the structure of the disk
after multiple viscous times. The binary maintains a central hole in the
viscously-relaxed disk with radius equal to about twice the binary semimajor
axis. Disk surface density within the hole is reduced by orders of magnitude
relative to the density in the disk bulk. The inner truncation of the disk
resembles the clearing of a gap in a protoplanetary disk. An initially circular
disk becomes elliptical and then eccentric. Disturbances in the disk contain a
component that is stationary in the rotating frame in which the binary is at
rest; this component is a two-armed spiral density wave. We measure the
distribution of the binary torque in the disk and find that the strongest
positive torque is exerted inside the central low-density hole. We make
connection with the linear theory of disk forcing at outer Lindblad resonances
(OLRs) and find that the measured torque density distribution is consistent
with forcing at the 3:2 (m=2) OLR, well within the central hole. We also
measure the time dependence of the rate at which gas accretes across the hole
and find quasi-periodic structure. We discuss implications for variability and
detection of active galactic nuclei containing a binary massive black hole.Comment: 10 pages; replaced to match ApJ version; includes new physical
interpretation of torque density (Sec. 4.1); large mpeg animation is
available at http://www.tapir.caltech.edu/~milos/circBinaryEccDisk.mp
21cm Absorption by Compact Hydrogen Disks Around Black Holes in Radio-Loud Nuclei of Galaxies
The clumpy maser disks observed in some galactic nuclei mark the outskirts of
the accretion disk that fuels the central black hole and provide a potential
site of nuclear star formation. Unfortunately, most of the gas in maser disks
is currently not being probed; large maser gains favor paths that are
characterized by a small velocity gradient and require rare edge-on
orientations of the disk. Here we propose a method for mapping the atomic
hydrogen distribution in nuclear disks through its 21cm absorption against the
radio continuum glow around the central black hole. In NGC 4258, the 21cm
optical depth may approach unity for high angular-resolution (VLBI) imaging of
coherent clumps which are dominated by thermal broadening and have the column
density inferred from X-ray absorption data, ~10^{23}/cm^2. Spreading the 21cm
absorption over the full rotation velocity width of the material in front of
the narrow radio jets gives a mean optical depth of ~0.1. Spectroscopic
searches for the 21cm absorption feature in other galaxies can be used to
identify the large population of inclined gaseous disks which are not masing in
our direction. Follow-up imaging of 21cm silhouettes of accelerating clumps
within these disks can in turn be used to measure cosmological distances.Comment: 4 page
A combined model for the X-ray to gamma-ray emission of Cyg X-1
We use recent data obtained by three (OSSE, BATSE, and COMPTEL) of four
instruments on board the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, to construct a model of
Cyg X-1 which describes its emission in a broad energy range from soft X-rays
to MeV gamma-rays self-consistently. The gamma-ray emission is interpreted to
be the result of Comptonization, bremsstrahlung, and positron annihilation in a
hot optically thin and spatially extended region surrounding the whole
accretion disk. For the X-ray emission a standard corona-disk model is applied.
We show that the Cyg X-1 spectrum accumulated by the CGRO instruments during a
~4 year time period between 1991 and 1995, as well as the HEAO-3 gamma1 and
gamma2 spectra can be well represented by our model. The derived parameters
match the observational results obtained from X-ray measurements.Comment: 11 pages including 6 ps-figures and 2 tables, latex2e, uses
emulateapj.sty (ver. of 18 Sep 96, enclosed), epsfig.sty, times.sty. To
appear in July 20, 1998 issue of ApJ (v.502
HERPESVIRUS INFECTIONS AND CLINICAL-IMMUNOLOGIC INTERACTIONS IN PATIENTS WITH EARLY-ONSET ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE AND LATE-ONSET ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is currently the most common cause of dementia. A significant role in the pathogenesis of AD belongs to the activation of the mechanisms of neuroinflammation. There is a hypothesis that chronic infections may play a role in the maintenance of the inflammatory response in AD. The aim of this work was to study the detection rate and DNA level of herpesviruses, as well as their possible relationship with the level of the key cytokines and with clinical parameters of AD in patients with early and late onset. 30 patients with AD and 33 healthy volunteers were enrolled. The quantitative determination of DNA of CMV, EBV, HHV-6, HHV-7 was carried out by PCR. The level of cytokines and soluble IL-1β antagonist (IL-1ra) in the blood was determined by ELISA. Herpesvirus infection with increased viral load was determined if at least one of the criteria was present: 1) DNA level of EBV and/or HHV-6 > 10,000 copies/ml in saliva; 2) presence of DNA of at least one of the EBV, HHV-6, HHV-7 viruses in the blood. In the subgroup of patients with early onset and increased viral load, there was a higher increase in the levels of a number of cytokines: proinflammatory IL-8 and IL-12, a Th2-cytokine IL-4, a cytokine of the adaptive immune response IL-2. However, the level of the anti-inflammatory protein IL-1ra was lower than in the controls. These changes may indicate a dysregulation of the antiviral response, with a predominance of activation of systemic inflammation and Th2-mediated reactions. Also, in early onset AD the increased viral load was associated with lower scores on Boston naming test. The results indicate that in studies of AD mechanisms and in the search for prognostic markers of the disease, it is important to take into account the heterogeneity of AD in terms of genetic predisposition factors, risk factors, immune parameters and clinical data. Such approach is necessary for the subsequent development of personalized approaches to the prevention and treatment of AD
Star Formation and Dynamics in the Galactic Centre
The centre of our Galaxy is one of the most studied and yet enigmatic places
in the Universe. At a distance of about 8 kpc from our Sun, the Galactic centre
(GC) is the ideal environment to study the extreme processes that take place in
the vicinity of a supermassive black hole (SMBH). Despite the hostile
environment, several tens of early-type stars populate the central parsec of
our Galaxy. A fraction of them lie in a thin ring with mild eccentricity and
inner radius ~0.04 pc, while the S-stars, i.e. the ~30 stars closest to the
SMBH (<0.04 pc), have randomly oriented and highly eccentric orbits. The
formation of such early-type stars has been a puzzle for a long time: molecular
clouds should be tidally disrupted by the SMBH before they can fragment into
stars. We review the main scenarios proposed to explain the formation and the
dynamical evolution of the early-type stars in the GC. In particular, we
discuss the most popular in situ scenarios (accretion disc fragmentation and
molecular cloud disruption) and migration scenarios (star cluster inspiral and
Hills mechanism). We focus on the most pressing challenges that must be faced
to shed light on the process of star formation in the vicinity of a SMBH.Comment: 68 pages, 35 figures; invited review chapter, to be published in
expanded form in Haardt, F., Gorini, V., Moschella, U. and Treves, A.,
'Astrophysical Black Holes'. Lecture Notes in Physics. Springer 201
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