3,233 research outputs found
The Magellanic System: What have we learnt from FUSE?
I review some of the findings on the Magellanic System produced by the Far
Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) during and after its eight years of
service. The Magellanic System with its high-velocity complexes provides a
nearby laboratory that can be used to characterize phenomena that involve
interaction between galaxies, infall and outflow of gas and metals in galaxies.
These processes are crucial for understanding the evolution of galaxies and the
intergalactic medium. Among the FUSE successes I highlight are the coronal gas
about the LMC and SMC, and beyond in the Stream, the outflows from these
galaxies, the discovery of molecules in the diffuse gas of the Stream and the
Bridge, an extremely sub-solar and sub-SMC metallicity of the Bridge, and a
high-velocity complex between the Milky Way and the Clouds.Comment: A contributed paper to the FUSE Annapolis Conference "Future
Directions in Ultraviolet Spectroscopy.", 5 pages. To appear as an AIP
Conference Proceedin
Low Redshift Intergalactic Absorption Lines in the Spectrum of HE0226-4110
We present an analysis of the FUSE and STIS E140M spectra of HE0226-4110
(z=0.495). We detect 56 Lyman absorbers and 5 O VI absorbers. The number of
intervening O VI systems per unit redshift with W>50 m\AA is dN(O VI)/dz~ 11.
The O VI systems unambiguously trace hot gas only in one case. For the 4 other
O VI systems, photoionization and collisional ionization models are viable
options to explain the observed column densities of the O VI and the other
ions. If the O VI systems are mostly photoionized, only a fraction of the
observed O VI will contribute to the baryonic density of the warm-hot ionized
medium (WHIM) along this line of sight. Combining our results with previous
ones, we show that there is a general increase of N(O VI) with increasing b(O
VI). Cooling flow models can reproduce the N-b distribution but fail to
reproduce the observed ionic ratios. A comparison of the number of O I, O II, O
III, O IV, and O VI systems per unit redshift show that the low-z IGM is more
highly ionized than weakly ionized. We confirm that photoionized O VI systems
show a decreasing ionization parameter with increasing H I column density. O VI
absorbers with collisional ionization/photoionization degeneracy follow this
relation, possibly suggesting that they are principally photoionized. We find
that the photoionized O VI systems in the low redshift IGM have a median
abundance of 0.3 solar. We do not find additional Ne VIII systems other than
the one found by Savage et al., although our sensitivity should have allowed
the detection of Ne VIII in O VI systems at T~(0.6-1.3)x10^6 K (if CIE
applies). Since the bulk of the WHIM is believed to be at temperatures T>10^6
K, the hot part of the WHIM remains to be discovered with FUV--EUV metal-line
transitions.Comment: Accepted for publication in the ApJS. Full resolution figures
available at
http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/ApJ/journal/preprints/ApJS63975.preprint.pd
Deuterium toward the WD0621-376 sight line: Results from the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) Mission
Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer observations are presented for
WD0621-376, a DA white dwarf star in the local interstellar medium (LISM) at a
distance of about 78 pc. The data have a signal-to-noise ratio of about 20-40
per 20 km/s resolution element and cover the wavelength range 905-1187 \AA.
LISM absorption is detected in the lines of D I, C II, C II*, C III, N I, N II,
N III, O I, Ar I, and Fe II. This sight line is partially ionized, with an
ionized nitrogen fraction of > 0.23. We determine the ratio (2). Assuming a standard interstellar
oxygen abundance, we derive . Using the
value of N(H I) derived from EUVE data gives a similar D/H ratio. The D I/N I
ratio is (2).Comment: accepted for publication in the ApJ
An HST/COS legacy survey of high-velocity ultraviolet absorption in the Milky Way's circumgalactic medium and the Local Group
To characterize the absorption properties of this circumgalactic medium (CGM)
and its relation to the LG we present the so-far largest survey of metal
absorption in Galactic high-velocity clouds (HVCs) using archival ultraviolet
(UV) spectra of extragalactic background sources. The UV data are obtained with
the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) onboard the Hubble Space Telescope (HST)
and are supplemented by 21 cm radio observations of neutral hydrogen. Along 270
sightlines we measure metal absorption in the lines of SiII, SiIII, CII, and
CIV and associated HI 21 cm emission in HVCs in the velocity range
|v_LSR|=100-500 km s^-1. With this unprecedented large HVC sample we were able
to improve the statistics on HVC covering fractions, ionization conditions,
small-scale structure, CGM mass, and inflow rate. For the first time, we
determine robustly the angular two point correlation function of the
high-velocity absorbers, systematically analyze antipodal sightlines on the
celestial sphere, and compare the absorption characteristics with that of
Damped Lyman alpha absorbers (DLAs) and constrained cosmological simulations of
the LG. Our study demonstrates that the Milky Way CGM contains sufficient
gaseous material to maintain the Galactic star-formation rate at its current
level. We show that the CGM is composed of discrete gaseous structures that
exhibit a large-scale kinematics together with small-scale variations in
physical conditions. The Magellanic Stream clearly dominates both the cross
section and mass flow of high-velocity gas in the Milky Way's CGM. The possible
presence of high-velocity LG gas underlines the important role of the local
cosmological environment in the large-scale gas-circulation processes in and
around the Milky Way (abridged).Comment: 37 pages, 25 figures, 8 tables, accepted for publication in A&
AMR, stability and higher accuracy
Efforts to achieve better accuracy in numerical relativity have so far
focused either on implementing second order accurate adaptive mesh refinement
or on defining higher order accurate differences and update schemes. Here, we
argue for the combination, that is a higher order accurate adaptive scheme.
This combines the power that adaptive gridding techniques provide to resolve
fine scales (in addition to a more efficient use of resources) together with
the higher accuracy furnished by higher order schemes when the solution is
adequately resolved. To define a convenient higher order adaptive mesh
refinement scheme, we discuss a few different modifications of the standard,
second order accurate approach of Berger and Oliger. Applying each of these
methods to a simple model problem, we find these options have unstable modes.
However, a novel approach to dealing with the grid boundaries introduced by the
adaptivity appears stable and quite promising for the use of high order
operators within an adaptive framework
Non-Abelian gauge field theory in scale relativity
Gauge field theory is developed in the framework of scale relativity. In this
theory, space-time is described as a non-differentiable continuum, which
implies it is fractal, i.e., explicitly dependent on internal scale variables.
Owing to the principle of relativity that has been extended to scales, these
scale variables can themselves become functions of the space-time coordinates.
Therefore, a coupling is expected between displacements in the fractal
space-time and the transformations of these scale variables. In previous works,
an Abelian gauge theory (electromagnetism) has been derived as a consequence of
this coupling for global dilations and/or contractions. We consider here more
general transformations of the scale variables by taking into account separate
dilations for each of them, which yield non-Abelian gauge theories. We identify
these transformations with the usual gauge transformations. The gauge fields
naturally appear as a new geometric contribution to the total variation of the
action involving these scale variables, while the gauge charges emerge as the
generators of the scale transformation group. A generalized action is
identified with the scale-relativistic invariant. The gauge charges are the
conservative quantities, conjugates of the scale variables through the action,
which find their origin in the symmetries of the ``scale-space''. We thus found
in a geometric way and recover the expression for the covariant derivative of
gauge theory. Adding the requirement that under the scale transformations the
fermion multiplets and the boson fields transform such that the derived
Lagrangian remains invariant, we obtain gauge theories as a consequence of
scale symmetries issued from a geometric space-time description.Comment: 24 pages, LaTe
Metallicity and Physical Conditions in the Magellanic Bridge
We present a new analysis of the diffuse gas in the Magellanic Bridge (RA>3h)
based on HST/STIS E140M and FUSE spectra of 2 early-type stars lying within the
Bridge and a QSO behind it. We derive the column densities of HI (from
Ly\alpha), NI, OI, ArI, SiII, SII, and FeII of the gas in the Bridge. Using the
atomic species, we determine the first gas-phase metallicity of the Magellanic
Bridge, [Z/H]=-1.02+/-0.07 toward one sightline, and -1.7<[Z/H]<-0.9 toward the
other one, a factor 2 or more smaller than the present-day SMC metallicity.
Using the metallicity and N(HI), we show that the Bridge gas along our three
lines of sight is ~70-90% ionized, despite high HI columns, logN(HI)=19.6-20.1.
Possible sources for the ongoing ionization are certainly the hot stars within
the Bridge, hot gas (revealed by OVI absorption), and leaking photons from the
SMC and LMC. From the analysis of CII*, we deduce that the overall density of
the Bridge must be low (<0.03-0.1 cm^-3). We argue that our findings combined
with other recent observational results should motivate new models of the
evolution of the SMC-LMC-Galaxy system.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Ap
Matching characteristic codes: exploiting two directions
Combining incoming and outgoing characteristic formulations can provide
numerical relativists with a natural implementation of Einstein's equations
that better exploits the causal properties of the spacetime and gives access to
both null infinity and the interior region simultaneously (assuming the
foliation is free of caustics and crossovers). We discuss how this combination
can be performed and illustrate its behavior in the Einstein-Klein-Gordon field
in 1D.Comment: 10 pages, 9 postscript figures. To appear in Int. Journ. of Mod.
Phys.
Gravitational waveforms with controlled accuracy
A partially first-order form of the characteristic formulation is introduced
to control the accuracy in the computation of gravitational waveforms produced
by highly distorted single black hole spacetimes. Our approach is to reduce the
system of equations to first-order differential form on the angular
derivatives, while retaining the proven radial and time integration schemes of
the standard characteristic formulation. This results in significantly improved
accuracy over the standard mixed-order approach in the extremely nonlinear
post-merger regime of binary black hole collisions.Comment: Revised version, published in Phys. Rev. D, RevTeX, 16 pages, 4
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