424 research outputs found
Relativistic AGN jets III. Synthesis of synchrotron emission from Double-Double Radio Galaxies
The class of Double-Double Radio Galaxies (DDRGs) relates to episodic jet
outbursts. How various regions and components add to the total intensity in
radio images is less well known. In this paper we synthesize synchrotron images
for DDRGs based on special relativistic hydrodynamic simulations, making
advanced approximations for the magnetic fields. We study the synchrotron
images for: Three different radial jet profiles; Ordered, entangled or mixed
magnetic fields; Spectral ageing from synchrotron cooling; The contribution
from different jet components; The viewing angle and Doppler (de-)boosting; The
various epochs of the evolution of the DDRG. To link our results to
observational data, we adopt to J1835+6204 as a reference source. In all cases
the synthesized synchrotron images show two clear pairs of hotspots, in the
inner and outer lobes. The best resemblance is obtained for the piecewise
isochoric jet model, for a viewing angle of approximately , i.e. inclined with the lower jet towards the observer, with
predominantly entangled ( per cent of the magnetic pressure) in
turbulent, rather than ordered fields. The effects of spectral ageing become
significant when the ratio of observation frequencies and cut-off frequency
, corresponding to MHz. For viewing angles , a DDRG
morphology can no longer be recognized. The second jets must be injected within
4 per cent of the lifetime of the first jets for a DDRG structure to
emerge, which is relevant for Active Galactic Nuclei feedback constraints.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figure
On the Structure and Scale of Cosmic Ray Modified Shocks
Strong astrophysical shocks, diffusively accelerating cosmic rays (CR) ought
to develop CR precursors. The length of such precursor is believed to
be set by the ratio of the CR mean free path to the shock speed,
i.e., , which is formally
independent of the CR pressure . However, the X-ray observations of
supernova remnant shocks suggest that the precursor scale may be significantly
shorter than which would question the above estimate unless the
magnetic field is strongly amplified and the gyroradius is strongly
reduced over a short (unresolved) spatial scale. We argue that while the CR
pressure builds up ahead of the shock, the acceleration enters into a strongly
nonlinear phase in which an acoustic instability, driven by the CR pressure
gradient, dominates other instabilities (at least in the case of low
plasma). In this regime the precursor steepens into a strongly nonlinear front
whose size scales with \emph{the CR pressure}as , where is the scale of
the developed acoustic turbulence, and is the ratio of CR to gas
pressure. Since , the precursor scale reduction may be strong
in the case of even a moderate gas heating by the CRs through the acoustic and
(possibly also) the other instabilities driven by the CRs.Comment: EPS 2010 paper, to appear in PPC
On the mechanism for breaks in the cosmic ray spectrum
The proof of cosmic ray (CR) origin in supernova remnants (SNR) must hinge on
full consistency of the CR acceleration theory with the observations; direct
proof is impossible because of the orbit stochasticity of CR particles. Recent
observations of a number of galactic SNR strongly support the SNR-CR connection
in general and the Fermi mechanism of CR acceleration, in particular. However,
many SNR expand into weakly ionized dense gases, and so a significant revision
of the mechanism is required to fit the data. We argue that strong ion-neutral
collisions in the remnant surrounding lead to the steepening of the energy
spectrum of accelerated particles by \emph{exactly one power}. The spectral
break is caused by a partial evanescence of Alfven waves that confine particles
to the accelerator. The gamma-ray spectrum generated in collisions of the
accelerated protons with the ambient gas is also calculated. Using the recent
Fermi spacecraft observation of the SNR W44 as an example, we demonstrate that
the parent proton spectrum is a classical test particle power law , steepening to at .Comment: APS talk to appear in PoP, 4 figure
Nonlinear shock acceleration beyond the Bohm limit
We suggest a physical mechanism whereby the acceleration time of cosmic rays
by shock waves can be significantly reduced. This creates the possibility of
particle acceleration beyond the knee energy at ~10^15eV. The acceleration
results from a nonlinear modification of the flow ahead of the shock supported
by particles already accelerated to the knee momentum at p ~ p_*. The particles
gain energy by bouncing off converging magnetic irregularities frozen into the
flow in the shock precursor and not so much by re-crossing the shock itself.
The acceleration rate is thus determined by the gradient of the flow velocity
and turns out to be formally independent of the particle mean free path
(m.f.p.). The velocity gradient is, in turn, set by the knee-particles at p ~
p_* as having the dominant contribution to the CR pressure. Since it is
independent of the m.f.p., the acceleration rate of particles above the knee
does not decrease with energy, unlike in the linear acceleration regime. The
reason for the knee formation at p ~ p_* is that particles with are
effectively confined to the shock precursor only while they are within limited
domains in the momentum space, while other particles fall into
``loss-islands'', similar to the ``loss-cone'' of magnetic traps. This
structure of the momentum space is due to the character of the scattering
magnetic irregularities. They are formed by a train of shock waves that
naturally emerge from unstably growing and steepening magnetosonic waves or as
a result of acoustic instability of the CR precursor. These losses steepen the
spectrum above the knee, which also prevents the shock width from increasing
with the maximum particle energy.Comment: aastex, 13 eps figure
Modeling Bell's Non-resonant Cosmic Ray Instability
We have studied the non-resonant streaming instability of charged energetic
particles moving through a background plasma, discovered by Bell (2004). We
confirm his numerical results regarding a significant magnetic field
amplification in the system. A detailed physical picture of the instability
development and of the magnetic field evolution is given.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted to Ap
On the Momentum Diffusion of Radiating Ultrarelativistic Electrons in a Turbulent Magnetic Field
Here we investigate some aspects of stochastic acceleration of
ultrarelativistic electrons by magnetic turbulence. In particular, we discuss
the steady-state energy spectra of particles undergoing momentum diffusion due
to resonant interactions with turbulent MHD modes, taking rigorously into
account direct energy losses connected with different radiative cooling
processes. For the magnetic turbulence we assume a given power spectrum of the
type . In contrast to the previous approaches, however, we
assume a finite range of turbulent wavevectors , consider a variety of
turbulence spectral indexes , and concentrate on the case of a
very inefficient particle escape from the acceleration site. We find that for
different cooling and injection conditions, stochastic acceleration processes
tend to establish a modified ultrarelativistic Maxwellian distribution of
radiating particles, with the high-energy exponential cut-off shaped by the
interplay between cooling and acceleration rates. For example, if the timescale
for the dominant radiative process scales with the electron momentum as
, the resulting electron energy distribution is of the form
, where , and
is the equilibrium momentum defined by the balance between stochastic
acceleration and energy losses timescales. We also discuss in more detail the
synchrotron and inverse-Compton emission spectra produced by such an electron
energy distribution, taking into account Klein-Nishina effects. We point out
that the curvature of the high frequency segments of these spectra, even though
being produced by the same population of electrons, may be substantially
different between the synchrotron and inverse-Compton components.Comment: 42 pages, 14 figures included. Slightly modified version, accepted
for publication in Ap
Extended Formulations in Mixed-integer Convex Programming
We present a unifying framework for generating extended formulations for the
polyhedral outer approximations used in algorithms for mixed-integer convex
programming (MICP). Extended formulations lead to fewer iterations of outer
approximation algorithms and generally faster solution times. First, we observe
that all MICP instances from the MINLPLIB2 benchmark library are conic
representable with standard symmetric and nonsymmetric cones. Conic
reformulations are shown to be effective extended formulations themselves
because they encode separability structure. For mixed-integer
conic-representable problems, we provide the first outer approximation
algorithm with finite-time convergence guarantees, opening a path for the use
of conic solvers for continuous relaxations. We then connect the popular
modeling framework of disciplined convex programming (DCP) to the existence of
extended formulations independent of conic representability. We present
evidence that our approach can yield significant gains in practice, with the
solution of a number of open instances from the MINLPLIB2 benchmark library.Comment: To be presented at IPCO 201
The Heating of Thermal Electrons in Fast Collisionless Shocks: The Integral Role of Cosmic Rays
Understanding the heating of electrons to quasi-thermal energies at
collisionless shocks has broad implications for plasma astrophysics. It
directly impacts the interpretation of X-ray spectra from shocks, is important
for understanding how energy is partitioned between the thermal and cosmic ray
populations, and provides insight into the structure of the shock itself. In
Ghavamian, Laming & Rakowski (2007) we presented observational evidence for an
inverse square relation between the electron-to-proton temperature ratio and
the shock speed at the outer blast waves of supernova remnants in partially
neutral interstellar gas. There we outlined how lower hybrid waves generated in
the cosmic ray precursor could produce such a relationship by heating the
electrons to a common temperature independent of both shock speed and the
strength of the ambient magnetic field. Here we explore the mechanism of lower
hybrid wave heating of electrons in more detail. Specifically we examine the
growth rate of the lower hybrid waves for both the kinetic (resonant) and
reactive cases. We find that only the kinetic case exhibits a growing mode. At
low Alfv\'en Mach numbers (~15) the growth of lower hybrid waves can be faster
than the magnetic field amplification by modified Alfv\'en waves.Comment: Accepted to ApJ, 25 pages single column, 3 figure
Dark Matter in split extended supersymmetry
We consider the split extended (N=2) supersymmetry scenario recently proposed
by Antoniadis et al. [hep-ph/0507192] as a realistic low energy framework
arising from intersecting brane models. While all scalar superpartners and
charged gauginos are naturally at a heavy scale, the model low energy spectrum
contains a Higgsino-like chargino and a neutralino sector made out of two
Higgsino and two Bino states. We show that the lightest neutralino is a viable
dark matter candidate, finding regions in the parameter space where its thermal
relic abundance matches the latest determination of the density of matter in
the
Universe by WMAP. We also discuss dark matter detection strategies within
this model: we point out that current data on cosmic-ray antimatter already
place significant constraints on the model, while direct detection is the most
promising technique for the future. Analogies and differences with respect to
the standard split
SUSY scenario based on the MSSM are illustrated.Comment: 14 pages, references added, typos corrected, matches with the
published versio
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