3 research outputs found
The Hidden Magnetic Field of The Young Neutron Star in Kesteven 79
Recent observations of the central compact object in the Kesteven 79
supernova remnant show that this neutron star (NS) has a weak dipole magnetic
field (a few x 10^{10} G) but an anomalously large (~ 64%) pulse fraction in
its surface X-ray emission. We explore the idea that a substantial sub-surface
magnetic field exists in the NS crust, which produces diffuse hot spots on the
stellar surface due to anisotropic heat conduction, and gives rise to the
observed X-ray pulsation. We develop a general-purpose method, termed
"Temperature Template with Full Transport" (TTFT), that computes the synthetic
pulse profile of surface X-ray emission from NSs with arbitrary magnetic field
and surface temperature distributions, taking into account magnetic atmosphere
opacities, beam pattern, vacuum polarization, and gravitational light bending.
We show that a crustal toroidal magnetic field of order a few x 10^{14} G or
higher, varying smoothly across the crust, can produce sufficiently distinct
surface hot spots to generate the observed pulse fraction in the Kes 79 NS.
This result suggests that substantial sub-surface magnetic fields, much
stronger than the "visible" dipole fields, may be buried in the crusts of some
young NSs, and such hidden magnetic fields can play an important role in their
observational manifestations. The general TTFT tool we have developed can also
be used for studying radiation from other magnetic NSs.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure
Spin-Orbit Coupling And Tidal Dissipation In Hot Jupiter Systems
Hot Jupiters are giant planets located extremely close to their host stars, with orbital periods less than 5 days. Many aspects of hot Jupiter (HJ) formation remain unclear, but several clues, such as the observed misalignment between their orbital axes and their hosts' spin axes, point to a dynamical origin. In the first portion of this work we explore the stellar spin-orbit dynamics of one such dynamical formation channel, the Lidov-Kozai mechanism. We show that the coupling between the stellar spin and the planet orbit can lead to complex, and sometimes chaotic, behavior of the stellar spin vector. Many features of this behavior arise due to a set of resonances between the stellar spin axis precession timescale and the Lidov-Kozai timescale. Under the assumption that the stellar quadrupole does not induce precession in the planet's orbit, given a system with a set of initial parameters, we show that it is possible to predict whether the system can attain high spin-orbit misalignments. In the second portion of this work, we discuss tidal dissipation in giant planets, another aspect that is crucial to dynamical HJ formation theories. We show that tidal dissipation in the cores of giant planets can be significant, and can help reconcile inconsistencies in the tidal dissipation efficiencies inferred from observations of Jupiter's moons and from high-eccentricity HJ migration theories. Finally, we improve upon existing core tidal dissipation theories by presenting semi-analytical formulae for dissipation in a core surrounded by a polytropic n = 1 envelope