543 research outputs found
General Relativistic Radiative Transfer
We present a general method to calculate radiative transfer including
scattering in the continuum as well as in lines in spherically symmetric
systems that are influenced by the effects of general relativity (GR). We
utilize a comoving wavelength ansatz that allows to resolve spectral lines
throughout the atmosphere. The used numerical solution is an operator splitting
(OS) technique that uses a characteristic formal solution. The bending of
photon paths and the wavelength shifts due to the effects of GR are fully taken
into account, as is the treatment of image generation in a curved spacetime. We
describe the algorithm we use and demonstrate the effects of GR on the
radiative transport of a two level atom line in a neutron star like atmosphere
for various combinations of continuous and line scattering coefficients. In
addition, we present grey continuum models and discuss the effects of different
scattering albedos on the emergent spectra and the determination of effective
temperatures and radii of neutron star atmospheres
NLTE analysis of spectra: OBA stars
Methods of calculation of NLTE model atmosphere are discussed. The NLTE trace
element procedure is compared with the full NLTE model atmosphere calculation.
Differences between LTE and NLTE atmosphere modeling are evaluated. The ways of
model atom construction are discussed. Finally, modelling of expanding
atmospheres of hot stars with winds is briefly reviewed.Comment: in Determination of Atmospheric Parameters of B-, A-, F- and G-Type
Stars, E. Niemczura et al. eds., Springer, in pres
Pair plasma relaxation time scales
By numerically solving the relativistic Boltzmann equations, we compute the
time scale for relaxation to thermal equilibrium for an optically thick
electron-positron plasma with baryon loading. We focus on the time scales of
electromagnetic interactions. The collisional integrals are obtained directly
from the corresponding QED matrix elements. Thermalization time scales are
computed for a wide range of values of both the total energy density (over 10
orders of magnitude) and of the baryonic loading parameter (over 6 orders of
magnitude). This also allows us to study such interesting limiting cases as the
almost purely electron-positron plasma or electron-proton plasma as well as
intermediate cases. These results appear to be important both for laboratory
experiments aimed at generating optically thick pair plasmas as well as for
astrophysical models in which electron-positron pair plasmas play a relevant
role.Comment: Phys. Rev. E, in pres
Fundamental parameters of RR Lyrae stars from multicolour photometry and Kurucz atmospheric models. I. Theory and practical implementation
A photometric calibration of Kurucz static model atmospheres is used to
obtain the following parameters of RR Lyrae stars: variation of stellar angular
radius , effective temperature , gravity as a
function of phase, interstellar reddening towards the star and
atmospheric metallicity . Photometric and hydrodynamic conditions are given
to find the phases of pulsation when the quasi-static atmosphere approximation
(QSAA) can be applied. The QSAA is generalized to a non-uniformly moving
spherical atmosphere, and the distance , mass and atmospheric
motion are derived from the laws of mass and momentum conservation. To
demonstrate the efficiency of the method, the photometry of SU Dra
was used to derive the following parameters: ~dex,
, ~pc, , equilibrium luminosity and ~K.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figure
Importance of cooling in triggering the collapse of hypermassive neutron stars
The inspiral and merger of a binary neutron star (NSNS) can lead to the
formation of a hypermassive neutron star (HMNS). As the HMNS loses thermal
pressure due to neutrino cooling and/or centrifugal support due to
gravitational wave (GW) emission, and/or magnetic breaking of differential
rotation it will collapse to a black hole. To assess the importance of
shock-induced thermal pressure and cooling, we adopt an idealized equation of
state and perform NSNS simulations in full GR through late inspiral, merger,
and HMNS formation, accounting for cooling. We show that thermal pressure
contributes significantly to the support of the HMNS against collapse and that
thermal cooling accelerates its "delayed" collapse. Our simulations demonstrate
explicitly that cooling can induce the catastrophic collapse of a hot
hypermassive neutron star formed following the merger of binary neutron stars.
Thus, cooling physics is important to include in NSNS merger calculations to
accurately determine the lifetime of the HMNS remnant and to extract
information about the NS equation of state, cooling mechanisms, bar
instabilities and B-fields from the GWs emitted during the transient phase
prior to BH formation.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, matches published versio
General Relativistic versus Newtonian: a universality in radiation hydrodynamics
We compare Newtonian and general relativistic descriptions of the stationary
accretion of self-gravitating fluids onto compact bodies. Spherical symmetry
and thin gas approximation are assumed. Luminosity depends, amongst other
factors, on the temperature and the contribution of gas to the total mass, in
both -- general relativistic () and Newtonian () -- models. We
discover a remarkable universal behaviour for transonic flows: the ratio of
respective luminosities is independent of the fractional mass of
the gas and depends on asymptotic temperature. It is close to 1 in the regime
of low asymptotic temperatures and can grow by one order of magnitude for high
temperatures. These conclusions are valid for a wide range of polytropic
equations of state.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Non-LTE Abundances of Magnesium, Aluminum and Sulfur in OB Stars Near the Solar Circle
Non-LTE abundances of magnesium, aluminum and sulfur are derived for a sample
of 23 low-v \sin i stars belonging to six northern OB associations of the
Galactic disk within 1 kpc of the Sun. The abundances are obtained from the
fitting of synthetic line profiles to high resolution spectra. A comparison of
our results with HII region abundances indicates good agreement for sulfur
while the cepheid abundances are higher. The derived abundances of Mg show good
overlap with the cepheid results. The aluminum abundances for OB stars are
significantly below the cepheid values. But, the OB star results show a
dependence with effective temperature and need further investigation. The high
Al abundances in the cepheids could be the result of mixing. A discussion of
the oxygen abundance in objects near the solar circle suggests that the current
mean galactic oxygen abundance in this region is 8.6-8.7 and in agreement with
the recently revised oxygen abundance in the solar photosphere. Meaningful
comparisons of the absolute S, Al and Mg abundances in OB stars with the Sun
must await a reinvestigation of these elements, as well as the meteoritic
reference element Si, with 3D hydrodynamical model atmospheres for the Sun. No
abundance gradients are found within the limited range in galactocentric
distances in the present study. Such variations would be expected only if there
were large metallicity gradients in the disk.Comment: 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&A, needs aa.st
Detection of Anisotropies in the Gravitational-Wave Stochastic Background
By correlating the signals from a pair of gravitational-wave detectors, one
can undertake sensitive searches for a stochastic background of gravitational
radiation. If the stochastic background is anisotropic, then this correlated
signal varies harmonically with the earth's rotation. We calculate how the
harmonics of this varying signal are related to the multipole moments which
characterize the anisotropy, and give a formula for the signal-to-noise ratio
of a given harmonic. The specific case of the two LIGO (Laser Interferometric
Gravitational Observatory) detectors, which will begin operation around the
year 2000, is analyzed in detail. We consider two possible examples of
anisotropy. If the gravitational-wave stochastic background contains a dipole
intensity anisotropy whose origin (like that of the Cosmic Background
Radiation) is motion of our local system, then that anisotropy will be
observable by the advanced LIGO detector (with 90% confidence in one year of
observation) if \Omega_{gw} > 5.3 \times 10^{-8} h_{100}^{-2}. We also study
the signal produced by stochastic sources distributed in the same way as the
luminous matter in the galactic disk, and in the same way as the galactic halo.
The anisotropy due to sources distributed as the galactic disk or as the
galactic halo will be observable by the advanced LIGO detector (with 90%
confidence in one year of observation) if \Omega_{gw} > 1.8 \times 10^{-10}
h_{100}^{-2} or \Omega_{gw} > 6.7 \times 10^{-8} h_{100}^{-2}, respectively.Comment: 25 pages, Latex with RevTeX and epsfig, now includes S/N ratio
calculations, expected response from anisotropy due to local motion & sources
in galax
A photon transport problem with a time-dependent point source
We consider a time-dependent problem of photon transport in an interstellar cloud with a point photon source modeled by a Dirac δ functional. The existence of a unique distributional solution to this problem is established by using the theory of continuous semigroups of operators on locally convex spaces coupled with a constructive approach for producing spaces of generalized functions
Similarity Properties and Scaling Laws of Radiation Hydrodynamic Flows in Laboratory Astrophysics
The spectacular recent development of modern high-energy density laboratory
facilities which concentrate more and more energy in millimetric volumes allows
the astrophysical community to reproduce and to explore, in millimeter-scale
targets and during very short times, astrophysical phenomena where radiation
and matter are strongly coupled. The astrophysical relevance of these
experiments can be checked from the similarity properties and especially
scaling laws establishment, which constitutes the keystone of laboratory
astrophysics. From the radiating optically thin regime to the so-called
optically thick radiative pressure regime, we present in this paper, for the
first time, a complete analysis of the main radiating regimes that we
encountered in laboratory astrophysics with the same formalism based on the
Lie-group theory. The use of the Lie group method appears as systematic which
allows to construct easily and orderly the scaling laws of a given problem.
This powerful tool permits to unify the recent major advances on scaling laws
and to identify new similarity concepts that we discuss in this paper and which
opens important applications for the present and the future laboratory
astrophysics experiments. All these results enable to demonstrate theoretically
that astrophysical phenomena in such radiating regimes can be explored
experimentally thanks to powerful facilities. Consequently the results
presented here are a fundamental tool for the high-energy density laboratory
astrophysics community in order to quantify the astrophysics relevance and
justify laser experiments. Moreover, relying on the Lie-group theory, this
paper constitutes the starting point of any analysis of the self-similar
dynamics of radiating fluids.Comment: Astrophys. J. accepte
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