9,569 research outputs found

    Hybrid Passive Control Strategies for Reducing the Displacements at the Base of Seismic Isolated Structures

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    In this paper, the use of hybrid passive control strategies to mitigate the seismic response of a base-isolated structure is examined. The control performance of three different types of devices used for reducing base displacements of isolated buildings is investigated. Specifically, the Tuned Mass Damper (TMD), the New Tuned Mass Damper (New TMD) and the Tuned Liquid Column Damper (TLCD), each one associated to a Base Isolated structure (BI), have been considered. The seismic induced vibration control of base-isolated structures equipped with the TMD, New TMD or the TLCD is examined and compared with that of the base-isolated system without devices, using real recorded seismic signals as external input. Data show that the New TMD is the most effective in controlling the response of base-isolated structures so that it can be considered as a practical and appealing means to mitigate the dynamic response of base-isolated structures

    Ion-supported tori: a thermal bremsstrahlung model for the X-ray Background

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    We discuss the possibility that a significant contribution of the hard X-ray Background is the integrated emission from a population of galaxies undergoing advection-dominated accretion in their nuclei. Owing to poor coupling between ions and electrons and to efficient radiative cooling of the electrons, the accreting plasma is two-temperature, with the ions being generally much hotter than the electrons and forming an ion-supported torus. We show that the electron te mperature then saturates at approximately 100keV independent of model parameters. At this temperature the hard X-ray emission is dominated by bremsstrahlung radiation. We find that this physical model gives an excellent fit to the spectrum of the XRB in the 3-60 keV range, provided that there is some evolution associated with the spectral emissivity which must peak at a redshift of about 2. We estimate that such galaxies contribute only to a small fraction of the local X-ray volume emissivity. The model implies a higher mean black hole mass than is obtained from the evolution of quasars alone.Comment: 7 pages, 7 ps figures, uses mn.sty (included). Submitted for publication to MNRA

    Magnetic flares in accretion disc coronae and the Spectral States of black hole candidates: the case of GX 339-4

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    We present a model for the different X-ray spectral states displayed by Galactic Black Hole Candidates (GBHC). We discuss the physical and spectral implications for a magnetically structured corona in which magnetic flares result from reconnection of flux tubes rising from the accretion disk by the magnetic buoyancy instability. Using observations of one of the best studied examples, GX339-4, we identify the geometry and the physical conditions characterizing each of these states. We find that, in the Soft state, flaring occurs at small scale heights above the accretion disk. The soft thermal-like spectrum is the result of heating and consequent re-radiation of the hard X-rays produced by such flares. The hard tail is produced by Comptonization of the soft field radiation. Conversely, the hard state is the result of flares triggered high above the underlying accretion disk which produce X-rays via Comptonization of either internal synchrotron radiation or soft disk photons. The spectral characteristics of the different states are naturally accounted for by the choice of geometry: when flares are triggered high above the disk the system is photon-starved, hence the hard Comptonized spectrum of the hard state. Intense flaring close to the disk greatly enhances the soft-photon field with the result that the spectrum softens. We interpret the two states as being related to two different phases of magnetic energy dissipation. In the Soft state, Parker instability in the disk favours the emergence of large numbers of relatively low magnetic field flux tubes. In the hard state, only intense magnetic fields become buoyant. The model can also qualitatively account for the observed short timescale variability and the characteristics of the X-ray reflected component of the hard state.Comment: submitted to MNRAS, Feb. 1998, 10 pages, 3 figures in MNRAS LaTex styl

    Magnetic flares and the optical variability of the X-ray transient XTE J1118+480

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    The simultaneous presence of a strong quasi periodic oscillation of period of about 10 seconds in the optical and X-ray lightcurves of the X-ray transient XTE J1118+480 suggests that a significant fraction of the optical flux originates from the inner part of the accretion flow, where most of the X-rays are produced. We present a model of magnetic flares in an accretion disc corona where thermal cyclo-synchrotron emission contributes significantly to the optical emission, while the X-rays are produced by inverse Compton scattering of the soft photons produced by dissipation in the underlying disc and by the synchrotron process itself. Given the observational constraints, we estimate the values for the coronal temperature, optical depth and magnetic field intensity, as well as the accretion rate for the source. Within our model we predict a correlation between optical and hard X-ray variability and an anticorrelation between optical and soft X-rays. We also expect optical variability on flaring timescales (about tens of milliseconds), with a power density spectrum similar to the one observed in the X-ray band. Finally we use both the available optical/EUV/X-ray spectral energy distribution and the low frequency time variability to discuss limits on the inner radius of the optically thick disc.Comment: 5 pages, included 1 figure. One reference corrected. Submitted to MNRA

    Old stellar counter-rotating components in early-type galaxies from elliptical-spiral mergers

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    We investigate, by means of numerical simulations, the possibility of forming counter-rotating old stellar components by major mergers between an elliptical and a spiral galaxy. We show that counter-rotation can appear both in dissipative and dissipationless retrograde mergers, and it is mostly associated to the presence of a disk component, which preserves part of its initial spin. In turn, the external regions of the two interacting galaxies acquire part of the orbital angular momentum, due to the action of tidal forces exerted on each galaxy by the companion.Comment: 6 pages, 15 figures. Accepted on Astronomy & Astrophysic

    Quantifying stellar radial migration in an N-body simulation: blurring, churning, and the outer regions of galaxy discs

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    Radial stellar migration in galactic discs has received much attention in studies of galactic dynamics and chemical evolution, but remains a dynamical phenomenon that needs to be fully quantified. In this work, using a Tree-SPH simulation of an Sb-type disc galaxy, we quantify the effects of blurring (epicyclic excursions) and churning (change of guiding radius). We quantify migration (either blurring or churning) both in terms of flux (the number of migrators passing at a given radius), and by estimating the population of migrators at a given radius at the end of the simulation compared to non-migrators, but also by giving the distance over which the migration is effective at all radii. We confirm that the corotation of the bar is the main source of migrators by churning in a bar-dominated galaxy, its intensity being directly linked to the episode of a strong bar, in the first 1-3 Gyr of the simulation. We show that within the outer Lindblad resonance (OLR), migration is strongly dominated by churning, while blurring gains progressively more importance towards the outer disc and at later times. Most importantly, we show that the OLR limits the exchange of angular momentum, separating the disc in two distinct parts with minimal or null exchange, except in the transition zone, which is delimited by the position of the OLR at the epoch of the formation of the bar, and at the final epoch. We discuss the consequences of these findings for our understanding of the structure of the Milky Way disc. Because the Sun is situated slightly outside the OLR, we suggest that the solar vicinity may have experienced very limited churning from the inner disc.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics (acceptance date: 27/04/15), 24 pages, 24 figure

    Hiding its age: the case for a younger bulge

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    The determination of the age of the bulge has led to two contradictory results. On the one side, the color-magnitude diagrams in different bulge fields seem to indicate a uniformly old (>>10 Gyr) population. On the other side, individual ages derived from dwarfs observed through microlensing events seem to indicate a large spread, from \sim 2 to \sim 13 Gyr. Because the bulge is now recognised as being mainly a boxy peanut-shaped bar, it is suggested that disk stars are one of its main constituents, and therefore also stars with ages significantly younger than 10 Gyr. Other arguments as well point to the fact that the bulge cannot be exclusively old, and in particular cannot be a burst population, as it is usually expected if the bulge was the fossil remnant of a merger phase in the early Galaxy. In the present study, we show that given the range of metallicities observed in the bulge, a uniformly old population would be reflected into a significant spread in color at the turn-off which is not observed. Inversely, we demonstrate that the correlation between age and metallicity expected to hold for the inner disk would conspire to form a color-magnitude diagram with a remarkably small spread in color, thus mimicking the color-magnitude diagram of a uniformly old population. If stars younger than 10 Gyr are part of the bulge, as must be the case if the bulge has been mainly formed through dynamical instabilities in the disk, then a very small spread at the turn-off is expected, as seen in the observations.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures. Accepted for publication in A&

    Two-temperature coronae in active galactic nuclei

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    We show that coronal magnetic dissipation in thin active sheets that sandwich standard thin accretion disks in active galactic nuclei may account for canonical electron temperatures of a few ×109\times 10^9K if protons acquire most of the dissipated energy. Coulomb collisions transfer energy from the ions to the electrons, which subsequently cool rapidly by inverse-Compton scattering. In equilibrium, the proton energy density likely exceeds that of the magnetic field and both well exceed the electron and photon energy densities. The Coulomb energy transfer from protons to electrons is slow enough to maintain a high proton temperature, but fast enough to explain observed rapid X-ray variabilities in Seyferts. The 109\sim 10^9K electron temperature is insensitive to the proton temperature when the latter is 1012\ge 10^{12}K.Comment: 5 pages LaTex, and 2 .ps figures, submitted to MNRAS, 4/9

    X-ray Dichroism and the Pseudogap Phase of Cuprates

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    A recent polarized x-ray absorption experiment on the high temperature cuprate superconductor Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8 indicates the presence of broken parity symmetry below the temperature, T*, where a pseudogap appears in photoemission. We critically analyze the x-ray data, and conclude that a parity-breaking signal of the kind suggested is unlikely based on the crystal structures reported in the literature. Possible other origins of the observed dichroism signal are discussed. We propose x-ray scattering experiments that can be done in order to determine whether such alternative interpretations are valid or not.Comment: final version to be published in Phys Rev B: some calculational details added, clarification of XNLD contamination and biaxiality, more discussion on possible space groups and previous optics result
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