1,145 research outputs found
Mechanisms for Dwarf Nova Outbursts and Soft X-Ray Transients
I review models trying to explain dwarf-nova outbursts and soft X-ray
transients. The disc-instability model for dwarf-novae is still in its
preliminary state of development: its predictions depend very strongly on the
unknown viscosity mechanism. It is also doubtful that a {\sl pure}
disc-instability phenomenon will be able to describe {\sl all} types of
dwarf-nova outbursts, in particular superoutbursts. The disc-instability model
for SXTs suffers from the same difficulties but in addition its predictions are
contradicted by observations of transient sources in quiescence. The
illuminated mass-transfer model cannot describe correctly the time-scales of
SXT events for main-sequence secondaries with masses less than 1.
The existence of at least three systems with hr seems to
rule it out as an explanation of the SXT phenomenon.Comment: 13 pages, no figures, (available as uuencoded compressed tar file).
Invited review at IAU Symposium 165 "Compact Stars in Binaries", Den Haag,
15-19 August 199
Outbursts in ultracompact X-ray binaries
Very faint X-ray binaries appear to be transient in many cases with peak
luminosities much fainter than that of usual soft X-ray transients, but their
nature still remains elusive. We investigate the possibility that this
transient behaviour is due to the same thermal/viscous instability which is
responsible for outbursts of bright soft X-ray transients, occurring in
ultracompact binaries for adequately low mass-transfer rates. More generally,
we investigate the observational consequences of this instability when it
occurs in ultracompact binaries. We use our code for modelling the
thermal-viscous instability of the accretion disc, assumed here to be hydrogen
poor. We also take into account the effects of disc X-ray irradiation, and
consider the impact of the mass-transfer rate on the outburst brightness. We
find that one can reproduce the observed properties of both the very faint and
the brighter short transients (peak luminosity, duration, recurrence times),
provided that the viscosity parameter in quiescence is slightly smaller
(typically a factor of between two and four) than in bright soft X-ray
transients and normal dwarf nova outbursts, the viscosity in outburst being
unchanged. This possibly reflects the impact of chemical composition on
non-ideal MHD effects affecting magnetically driven turbulence in poorly
ionized discs.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, Astronomy and Astrophysics, in pres
Dwarf nova outbursts in intermediate polars
The disc instability model (DIM) has been very successful in explaining the
dwarf nova outbursts observed in cataclysmic variables. When, as in
intermediate polars (IP), the accreting white dwarf is magnetized, the disc is
truncated at the magnetospheric radius, but for mass-transfer rates
corresponding to the thermal-viscous instability such systems should still
exhibit dwarf-nova outbursts. Yet, the majority of intermediate polars in which
the magnetic field is not large enough to completely disrupt the accretion
disc, seem to be stable, and the rare observed outbursts, in particular in
systems with long orbital periods, are much shorter than normal dwarf-nova
outbursts. We investigate the predictions of the disc instability model for
intermediate polars in order to determine which of the observed properties of
these systems can be explained by the DIM. We use our numerical code for the
time evolution of accretion discs, modified to include the effects of the
magnetic field, with constant or variable mass transfer from the secondary
star. We show that intermediate polars have mass transfer low enough and
magnetic fields large enough to keep the accretion disc stable on the cold
equilibrium branch. We show that the infrequent and short outbursts observed in
long period systems, such as e.g., TV Col, cannot be attributed to the
thermal-viscous instability of the accretion disc, but instead have to be
triggered by an enhanced mass-transfer from the secondary, or, more likely, by
some instability coupling the white dwarf magnetic field with that generated by
the magnetorotational instability operating in the accretion disc. Longer
outbursts (a few days) could result from the disc instability.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures; submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysic
Hot white dwarfs and the UV delay in dwarf novae
We calculate the effect of illumination of dwarf nova accretion discs by
radiation from a hot, central, white dwarf. We show that only for very hot
white dwarfs (Teff ~ 40 000$ K) the inner region of quiescent dwarf nova discs
are partially depleted so that the delay between the rise to outburst of the
optical and UV fluxes would be increased as suggested recently by King (1997).
This depletion, however, must create several small outbursts between main
outbursts, contrary to observations. Lower white dwarf temperatures may cause
the outburts to be of the `inside-out' type removing the UV delay. We conclude
that white dwarf irradiation of dwarf nova discs is not very efficient for
example because the UV radiation from the hot white dwarf does not penetrate
deep enough in the disc atmosphere. The total ablation of the inner disc by
e.g. evaporation (possibly related to illumination) appears to be a very
promising possibility, accounting for both the EUV delay and the general
lightcurves properties.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figures; accepted for publication in MNRA
Radio Loudness of AGNs: Host Galaxy Morphology and the Spin Paradigm
We investigate how the total radio luminosity of AGN-powered radio sources
depends on their accretion luminosity and the central black hole mass. We find
that AGNs form two distinct and well separated sequences on the radio-loudness
- Eddington-ratio plane. We argue that these sequences mark the real upper
bounds of radio-loudness of two distinct populations of AGNs: those hosted
respectively by elliptical and disk galaxies. Both sequences show the same
dependence of the radio-loudness on the Eddington ratio (an increase with
decreasing Eddington ratio), which suggests that another parameter in addition
to the accretion rate must play a role in determining the jet production
efficiency in active galactic nuclei, and that this parameter is related to
properties of the host galaxy. The revealed host-related radio dichotomy breaks
down at high accretion rates where the dominant fraction of luminous quasars
hosted by elliptical galaxies is radio quiet. We argue that the huge difference
between the radio-loudness reachable by AGNs in disc and elliptical galaxies
can be explained by the scenario according to which the spin of a black hole
determines the outflow's power, and central black holes can reach large spins
only in early type galaxies (following major mergers), and not (in a
statistical sense) in spiral galaxies.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures included. Proceedings of the Workshop
`Extragalactic Jets: Theory and Observation from Radio to Gamma Ray',
Girdwood, May 200
Mass of a Black Hole Firewall
Quantum entanglement of Hawking radiation has been supposed to give rise to a
Planck density "firewall" near the event horizon of old black holes. We show
that Planck density firewalls are excluded by Einstein's equations for black
holes of mass exceeding the Planck mass. We find an upper limit of
to the surface density of a firewall in a Schwarzschild black hole of mass ,
translating for astrophysical black holes into a firewall density smaller than
Planck density by more than 30 orders of magnitude. A strict upper limit on the
firewall density is given by the Planck density times the ratio .Comment: 6 pages, version published in Phys. Rev. Let
The 1996 outburst of GRO J1655-40: disc irradiation and enhanced mass transfer
We show that the 1996 outburst of the X-ray binary transient system GRO
J1655-40 can be explained by the standard dwarf-nova type disc instability,
followed by an episode of enhanced mass transfer from the secondary if the mass
transfer rate in GRO J1655-40 is within a factor < 10 of the stability limit.
We argue that irradiation of the secondary during the onset of the outburst
driven by the thermal instability in the outer disc can increase the mass
transfer rate above the minimum value required for stable accretion. This will
then produce the period of near-constant X-ray emission seen in this system.
This scenario can also explain the observed anti-correlation between the
optical and X-ray fluxes. It is generally accepted that optical emission in
low-mass X-ray binaries is produced by irradiation of the outer disc by X-rays.
There is also strong circumstantial evidence that in order for the outer disc
to see the irradiating flux, it must be warped. Depending on the warp
propagation mechanism, either a burst of mass from the secondary or viscous
decay are likely to decrease the degree of warping, thereby causing the
decrease in the observed optical flux while the X-ray flux remains constant or
even increases, exactly as observed in GRO J1655-40. Finally, the decrease of
the disc warping and, therefore, irradiation will cause the disc to become
unstable once again, terminating the outburst.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics - in pres
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