576 research outputs found
Cosmological Reionization by Stellar Sources
I use cosmological simulations that incorporate a physically motivated
approximation to three-dimensional radiative transfer that recovers correct
asymptotic ionization front propagation speeds for some cosmologically relevant
density distributions transfer to investigate the process of the reionization
of the universe by ionizing radiation from proto-galaxies. Reionization
proceeds in three stages and occupies a large redshift range from z~15 until
z~5. During the first, ``pre-overlap'' stage, HII regions gradually expand into
the low density IGM, leaving behind neutral high density protrusions. During
the second, ``overlap'' stage, that occurs in about 10% of the Hubble time, HII
regions merge and the ionizing background rises by a large factor. During the
third, ``post-overlap'' stage, remaining high density regions are being
gradually ionized as the required ionizing photons are being produced.
Residual fluctuations in the ionizing background reach significant (more than
10%) levels for the Lyman-alpha forest absorption systems with column densities
above 10^14 - 10^15 cm^-2 at z=3 to 4.Comment: Revised version accepted for publication in ApJ. Color versions of
Fig. 3a-h in GIF format, full (unbinned) versions of Fig. 5, 6, and 13, as
well as MPEG animations are available at
http://casa.colorado.edu/~gnedin/GALLERY/rei_p.htm
Polarization of AGN in UV Spectral Range
We present the review of some new problems in cosmology and physics of stars
in connection with future launching of WSO. We discuss three problems. UV
observations of distant z > 6 quasars allow to obtain information on the soft <
1 KeV X-ray radiation of the accretion disk around a supermassive black hole
because of its cosmological redshift. Really the region of X-ray radiation is
insufficiently investigated because of high galactic absorption. In a result
one will get important information on the reionization zone of the Universe.
Astronomers from ESO revealed the effect of alignment of electric vectors of
polarized QSOs. One of the probable mechanism of such alignment is the
conversion of QSO radiation into low mass pseudoscalar particles (axions) in
the extragalactic magnetic field. These boson like particles have been
predicted by new SUSY particle physics theory. Since the probability of such
conversion is increasing namely in UV spectral range one can expect the strong
correlation between UV spectral energy distribution of QSO radiation and
polarimetric data in the optical range. In the stellar physics one of the
interesting problems is the origin of the X-ray sources with super Eddington
luminosities. The results of UV observations of these X-ray sources will allow
to find the origin of these sources as accreting intermediate mass black holes.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
Magnetic fields from reionisation
We present a complementary study to a new model for generating magnetic
fields of cosmological interest. The driving mechanism is the photoionisation
process by photons provided by the first luminous sources. Investigating the
transient regime at the onset of inhomogeneous reionisation, we show that
magnetic field amplitudes as high as Gauss can be obtained
within a source lifetime. Photons with energies above the ionisation threshold
accelerate electrons, inducing magnetic fields outside the Stroemgren spheres
which surround the ionising sources. Thanks to their mean free path, photons
with higher energies propagate further and lead to magnetic field generation
deeper in the neutral medium. We find that soft X-ray photons could contribute
to a significant premagnetisation of the intergalactic medium at a redshift of
z=15.Comment: accepted for publication in A&
Singularity deep inside the spherical charged black hole core
We study analytically the spacelike singularity inside a
spherically-symmetric, charged black hole coupled to a self-gravitating
spherical massless scalar field. We assume spatial homogeneity, and find a
generic solution in terms of a formal series expansion. This solution is tested
against fully-nonlinear and inhomogeneous numerical simulations. We find full
compliance between our analytical solution and the pointwise behavior of the
singularity in the numerical simulations. This is a strong scalar-curvature
monotonic spacelike singularity, which connects to a weak null singularity at
asymptotically-late advanced time.Comment: 6 pages, to be published in Phys. Rev.
A Machian Model of Dark Energy
Einstein believed that Mach's principle should play a major role in finding a
meaningful spacetime geometry, though it was discovered later that his field
equations gave some solutions which were not Machian. It is shown, in this
essay, that the kinematical models, which are invoked to solve the
cosmological constant problem, are in fact consistent with Mach's ideas. One
particular model in this category is described which results from the
microstructure of spacetime and seems to explain the current observations
successfully and also has some benefits over the conventional models. This
forces one to think whether the Mach's ideas and the cosmological constant are
interrelated in some way.Comment: Received an Honorable mention in the Essay Contest-2002 sponsored by
the Gravity Research Foundation; A paragraph added on how the model can
explain the CMB anisotropy observations; To appear in the Classical and
Quantum Gravit
Cosmological Magnetogenesis driven by Radiation Pressure
The origin of large scale cosmological magnetic fields remains a mystery,
despite the continuous efforts devoted to that problem. We present a new model
of magnetic field generation, based on local charge separation provided by an
anisotropic and inhomogeneous radiation pressure. In the cosmological context,
the processes we explore take place at the epoch of the reionisation of the
Universe. Under simple assumptions, we obtain results (i) in terms of the order
of magnitude of the field generated at large scales and (ii) in terms of its
power spectrum. The amplitudes obtained (B ~ 8.10^(-6) micro-Gauss) are
considerably higher than those obtained in usual magnetogenesis models and
provide suitable seeds for amplification by adiabatic collapse and/or dynamo
during structure formation.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figure
Dynamical Evolution of Globular Clusters in Hierarchical Cosmology
We probe the evolution of globular clusters that could form in giant
molecular clouds within high-redshift galaxies. Numerical simulations
demonstrate that the large and dense enough gas clouds assemble naturally in
current hierarchical models of galaxy formation. These clouds are enriched with
heavy elements from earlier stars and could produce star clusters in a similar
way to nearby molecular clouds. The masses and sizes of the model clusters are
in excellent agreement with the observations of young massive clusters. Do
these model clusters evolve into globular clusters that we see in our and
external galaxies? In order to study their dynamical evolution, we calculate
the orbits of model clusters using the outputs of the cosmological simulation
of a Milky Way-sized galaxy. We find that at present the orbits are isotropic
in the inner 50 kpc of the Galaxy and preferentially radial at larger
distances. All clusters located outside 10 kpc from the center formed in the
now-disrupted satellite galaxies. The spatial distribution of model clusters is
spheroidal, with a power-law density profile consistent with observations. The
combination of two-body scattering, tidal shocks, and stellar evolution results
in the evolution of the cluster mass function from an initial power law to the
observed log-normal distribution.Comment: 5 pages, proceedings of IAU 246 "Dynamical Evolution of Dense Stellar
Systems", eds. Vesperini, Giersz, Sill
Resolving Gas Dynamics in the Circumnuclear Region of a Disk Galaxy in a Cosmological Simulation
Using a hydrodynamic adaptive mesh refinement code, we simulate the growth
and evolution of a galaxy, which could potentially host a supermassive black
hole, within a cosmological volume. Reaching a dynamical range in excess of 10
million, the simulation follows the evolution of the gas structure from
super-galactic scales all the way down to the outer edge of the accretion disk.
Here, we focus on global instabilities in the self-gravitating, cold,
turbulence-supported, molecular gas disk at the center of the model galaxy,
which provide a natural mechanism for angular momentum transport down to sub-pc
scales. The gas density profile follows a power-law scaling as r^-8/3,
consistent with an analytic description of turbulence in a quasi-stationary
circumnuclear disk. We analyze the properties of the disk which contribute to
the instabilities, and investigate the significance of instability for the
galaxy's evolution and the growth of a supermassive black hole at the center.Comment: 16 pages (includes appendix), submitted to ApJ. Figures here are at
low resolution; for higher resolution version, download
http://casa.colorado.edu/~levinerd/ms.pd
Ionization near-zones associated with quasars at z ~ 6
We analyze the size evolution of HII regions around 27 quasars between z=5.7
to 6.4 ('quasar near-zones' or NZ). We include more sources than previous
studies, and we use more accurate redshifts for the host galaxies, with 8 CO
molecular line redshifts and 9 MgII redshifts. We confirm the trend for an
increase in NZ size with decreasing redshift, with the luminosity normalized
proper size evolving as: R_{NZ,corrected} = (7.4 \pm 0.3) - (8.0 \pm 1.1)
\times (z-6) Mpc. While derivation of the absolute neutral fraction remains
difficult with this technique, the evolution of the NZ sizes suggests a
decrease in the neutral fraction of intergalactic hydrogen by a factor ~ 9.4
from z=6.4 to 5.7, in its simplest interpretation. Alternatively, recent
numerical simulations suggest that this rapid increase in near-zone size from
z=6.4 to 5.7 is due to the rapid increase in the background photo-ionization
rate at the end of the percolation or overlap phase, when the average mean free
path of ionizing photons increases dramatically. In either case, the results
are consistent with the idea that z ~ 6 to 7 corresponds to the tail end of
cosmic reionization. The scatter in the normalized NZ sizes is larger than
expected simply from measurement errors, and likely reflects intrinsic
differences in the quasars or their environments. We find that the near-zone
sizes increase with quasar UV luminosity, as expected for photo-ionization
dominated by quasar radiation.Comment: 16 pages, aas format, 4 figures, to appear in the ApJ letter
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