37 research outputs found
Protostellar Outflow Evolution in Turbulent Environments
The link between turbulence in star formatting environments and protostellar
jets remains controversial. To explore issues of turbulence and fossil cavities
driven by young stellar outflows we present a series of numerical simulations
tracking the evolution of transient protostellar jets driven into a turbulent
medium. Our simulations show both the effect of turbulence on outflow
structures and, conversely, the effect of outflows on the ambient turbulence.
We demonstrate how turbulence will lead to strong modifications in jet
morphology. More importantly, we demonstrate that individual transient outflows
have the capacity to re-energize decaying turbulence. Our simulations support a
scenario in which the directed energy/momentum associated with cavities is
randomized as the cavities are disrupted by dynamical instabilities seeded by
the ambient turbulence. Consideration of the energy power spectra of the
simulations reveals that the disruption of the cavities powers an energy
cascade consistent with Burgers'-type turbulence and produces a driving
scale-length associated with the cavity propagation length. We conclude that
fossil cavities interacting either with a turbulent medium or with other
cavities have the capacity to sustain or create turbulent flows in star forming
environments. In the last section we contrast our work and its conclusions with
previous studies which claim that jets can not be the source of turbulence.Comment: 24 pages, submitted to the Astrophysical Journa
Constraints on the binary black hole hypothesis for system LB-1
At about 70 solar masses, the recently-discovered dark object orbited by a B-type star in the system LB-1 is difficult to understand as the end point of standard stellar evolution, except as a binary black hole (BBH). LB-1 shows a strong, broad H-alpha emission line that is best attributed to a gaseous disk surrounding the dark mass. We use the observed H-alpha line shape, particularly its wing extension, to constrain the inner radius of the disk and thereby the separation of a putative BBH. The hypothesis of a current BBH is effectively ruled out on the grounds that its merger time must be a small fraction of the current age of the B star. The hypothesis of a previous BBH that merged to create the current dark mass is also effectively ruled out by the low orbital eccentricity, due to the combination of mass loss and kick resulted from gravitational wave emission in any past merger. We conclude that the current dark mass is a single black hole produced by the highly mass-conserving, monolithic collapse of a massive star
Supernova Properties from Shock Breakout X-rays
We investigate the potential of the upcoming LOBSTER space observatory (due
circa 2009) to detect soft X-ray flashes from shock breakout in supernovae,
primarily from Type II events. LOBSTER should discover many SN breakout
flashes, although the number is sensitive to the uncertain distribution of
extragalactic gas columns. X-ray data will constrain the radii of their
progenitor stars far more tightly than can be accomplished with optical
observations of the SN light curve. We anticipate the appearance of blue
supergiant explosions (SN 1987A analogs), which will uncover a population of
these underluminous events. We consider also how the mass, explosion energy,
and absorbing column can be constrained from X-ray observables alone and with
the assistance of optically-determined distances. These conclusions are drawn
using known scaling relations to extrapolate, from previous numerical
calculations, the LOBSTER response to explosions with a broad range of
parameters. We comment on a small population of flashes with 0.2 < z < 0.8 that
should exist as transient background events in XMM, Chandra, and ROSAT
integrations.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, accepted by MNRAS, presented at AAS 203rd
meetin
Outflow Driven Turbulence in Molecular Clouds
In this paper we explore the relationship between protostellar outflows and
turbulence in molecular clouds. Using 3-D numerical simulations we focus on the
hydrodynamics of multiple outflows interacting within a parsec scale volume. We
explore the extent to which transient outflows injecting directed energy and
momentum into a sub-volume of a molecular cloud can be converted into random
turbulent motions. We show that turbulence can readily be sustained by these
interactions and show that it is possible to broadly characterize an effective
driving scale of the outflows. We compare the velocity spectrum obtained in our
studies to that of isotropically forced hydrodynamic turbulence finding that in
outflow driven turbulence a power law is indeed achieved. However we find a
steeper spectrum (beta ~ 3) is obtained in outflow driven turbulence models
than in isotropically forced simulations (beta ~ 2). We discuss possible
physical mechanisms responsible for these results as well and their
implications for turbulence in molecular clouds where outflows will act in
concert with other processes such as gravitational collapse.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figure
Bianchi Model CMB Polarization and its Implications for CMB Anomalies
We derive the CMB radiative transfer equation in the form of a multipole
hierarchy in the nearly-Friedmann-Robertson-Walker limit of homogeneous, but
anisotropic, universes classified via their Bianchi type. Compared with
previous calculations, this allows a more sophisticated treatment of
recombination, produces predictions for the polarization of the radiation, and
allows for reionization. Our derivation is independent of any assumptions about
the dynamical behaviour of the field equations, except that it requires
anisotropies to be small back to recombination; this is already demanded by
observations.
We calculate the polarization signal in the Bianchi VIIh case, with the
parameters recently advocated to mimic the several large-angle anomalous
features observed in the CMB. We find that the peak polarization signal is ~
1.2 micro K for the best-fit model to the temperature anisotropies, and is
mostly confined to multipoles l<10. Remarkably, the predicted large-angle EE
and TE power spectra in the Bianchi model are consistent with WMAP observations
that are usually interpreted as evidence of early reionization. However, the
power in B-mode polarisation is predicted to be similar to the E-mode power and
parity-violating correlations are also predicted by the model; the WMAP
non-detection of either of these signals casts further strong doubts on the
veracity of attempts to explain the large-angle anomalies with global
anisotropy. On the other hand, given that there exist further dynamical degrees
of freedom in the VIIh universes that are yet to be compared with CMB
observations, we cannot at this time definitively reject the anisotropy
explanation.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Minor grammatical and
typographical changes to reflect version in press. 13 pages, 6 figure
Cauchy-perturbative matching and outer boundary conditions: computational studies
We present results from a new technique which allows extraction of
gravitational radiation information from a generic three-dimensional numerical
relativity code and provides stable outer boundary conditions. In our approach
we match the solution of a Cauchy evolution of the nonlinear Einstein field
equations to a set of one-dimensional linear equations obtained through
perturbation techniques over a curved background. We discuss the validity of
this approach in the case of linear and mildly nonlinear gravitational waves
and show how a numerical module developed for this purpose is able to provide
an accurate and numerically convergent description of the gravitational wave
propagation and a stable numerical evolution.Comment: 20 pages, RevTe
SN 2009bb: a Peculiar Broad-Lined Type Ic Supernova
Ultraviolet, optical, and near-infrared photometry and optical spectroscopy
of the broad-lined Type Ic supernova (SN) 2009bb are presented, following the
flux evolution from -10 to +285 days past B-band maximum. Thanks to the very
early discovery, it is possible to place tight constraints on the SN explosion
epoch. The expansion velocities measured from near maximum spectra are found to
be only slightly smaller than those measured from spectra of the prototype
broad-lined SN 1998bw associated with GRB 980425. Fitting an analytical model
to the pseudo-bolometric light curve of SN 2009bb suggests that 4.1+-1.9 Msun
of material was ejected with 0.22 +-0.06 Msun of it being 56Ni. The resulting
kinetic energy is 1.8+-0.7x10^52 erg. This, together with an absolute peak
magnitude of MB=-18.36+-0.44, places SN 2009bb on the energetic and luminous
end of the broad-lined Type Ic (SN Ic) sequence. Detection of helium in the
early time optical spectra accompanied with strong radio emission, and high
metallicity of its environment makes SN 2009bb a peculiar object. Similar to
the case for GRBs, we find that the bulk explosion parameters of SN 2009bb
cannot account for the copious energy coupled to relativistic ejecta, and
conclude that another energy reservoir (a central engine) is required to power
the radio emission. Nevertheless, the analysis of the SN 2009bb nebular
spectrum suggests that the failed GRB detection is not imputable to a large
angle between the line-of-sight and the GRB beamed radiation. Therefore, if a
GRB was produced during the SN 2009bb explosion, it was below the threshold of
the current generation of gamma-ray instruments.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
The Runts of the Litter: Why planets formed through gravitational instability can only be failed binary stars
Recent direct imaging discoveries suggest a new class of massive, distant
planets around A stars. These widely separated giants have been interpreted as
signs of planet formation driven by gravitational instability, but the
viability of this mechanism is not clear cut. In this paper, we first discuss
the local requirements for fragmentation and the initial fragment mass scales.
We then consider whether the fragment's subsequent growth can be terminated
within the planetary mass regime. Finally, we place disks in the larger context
of star formation and disk evolution models. We find that in order for
gravitational instability to produce planets, disks must be atypically cold in
order to reduce the initial fragment mass. In addition, fragmentation must
occur during a narrow window of disk evolution, after infall has mostly ceased,
but while the disk is still sufficiently massive to undergo gravitational
instability. Under more typical conditions, disk-born objects will likely grow
well above the deuterium burning planetary mass limit. We conclude that if
planets are formed by gravitational instability, they must be the low mass tail
of the distribution of disk-born companions. To validate this theory, on-going
direct imaging surveys must find a greater abundance of brown dwarf and M-star
companions to A-stars. Their absence would suggest planet formation by a
different mechanism such as core accretion, which is consistent with the debris
disks detected in these systems.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, accepted to ApJ, some content changes, revised
figure
The origin and evolution of the normal Type Ia SN 2018aoz with infant-phase reddening and excess emission
SN~2018aoz is a Type Ia SN with a -band plateau and excess emission in the
infant-phase light curves 1 day after first light, evidencing an
over-density of surface iron-peak elements as shown in our previous study.
Here, we advance the constraints on the nature and origin of SN~2018aoz based
on its evolution until the nebular phase. Near-peak spectroscopic features show
the SN is intermediate between two subtypes of normal Type Ia: Core-Normal and
Broad-Line. The excess emission could have contributions from the radioactive
decay of surface iron-peak elements as well as ejecta interaction with either
the binary companion or a small torus of circumstellar material. Nebular-phase
limits on H and He~I favour a white dwarf companion, consistent with
the small companion size constrained by the low early SN luminosity, while the
absence of [O~I] and He~I disfavours a violent merger of the progenitor. Of the
two main explosion mechanisms proposed to explain the distribution of surface
iron-peak elements in SN~2018aoz, the asymmetric Chandrasekhar-mass explosion
is less consistent with the progenitor constraints and the observed blueshifts
of nebular-phase [Fe~II] and [Ni~II]. The helium-shell double-detonation
explosion is compatible with the observed lack of C spectral features, but
current 1-D models are incompatible with the infant-phase excess emission,
color, and absence of nebular-phase [Ca~II]. Although
the explosion processes of SN~2018aoz still need to be more precisely
understood, the same processes could produce a significant fraction of Type Ia
SNe that appear normal after 1 day.Comment: Submitted for publication in ApJ. 35 pages, 16 figures, 7 table
A MISSING-LINK IN THE SUPERNOVA-GRB CONNECTION: THE CASE OF SN 2012ap
Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) are characterized by ultra-relativistic outflows,
while supernovae are generally characterized by non-relativistic ejecta. GRB
afterglows decelerate rapidly usually within days, because their low-mass
ejecta rapidly sweep up a comparatively larger mass of circumstellar material.
However supernovae, with heavy ejecta, can be in nearly free expansion for
centuries. Supernovae were thought to have non-relativistic outflows except for
few relativistic ones accompanied by GRBs. This clear division was blurred by
SN 2009bb, the first supernova with a relativistic outflow without an observed
GRB. Yet the ejecta from SN 2009bb was baryon loaded, and in nearly-free
expansion for a year, unlike GRBs. We report the first supernova discovered
without a GRB, but with rapidly decelerating mildly relativistic ejecta, SN
2012ap. We discovered a bright and rapidly evolving radio counterpart driven by
the circumstellar interaction of the relativistic ejecta. However, we did not
find any coincident GRB with an isotropic fluence of more than a sixth of the
fluence from GRB 980425. This shows for the first time that central engines in
type Ic supernovae, even without an observed GRB, can produce both relativistic
and rapidly decelerating outflows like GRBs.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in Ap