19 research outputs found

    SPMHD simulations of Structure Formation

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    The intracluster medium of galaxy clusters is permeated by {\mu}G magnetic fields. Observations with current and future facilities have the potential to illuminate the role of these magnetic fields play in the astrophysical processes of galaxy clusters. To obtain a greater understanding of how the initial seed fields evolve to the magnetic fields in the intracluster medium requires magnetohydrodynamic simulations. We critically assess the current Smoothed Particle Magneto-Hydrodynamics (SPMHD) schemes, especially highlighting the impact of a hyperbolic divergence cleaning scheme and artificial resistivity switch on the magnetic field evolution in cosmological simulations of the formation of a galaxy cluster using the N-body/SPMHD code gcmhd++. The impact and performance of the cleaning scheme and two different schemes for the artificial resistivity switch is demonstrated via idealized test cases and cosmological simulations. We demonstrate that the hyperbolic divergence cleaning scheme is effective at suppressing the growth of the numerical divergence error of the magnetic field and should be applied to any SPMHD simulation. Although the artificial resistivity is important in the strong field regime, it can suppress the growth of the magnetic field in the weak field regime, such as galaxy clusters. With sufficient resolution, simulations with divergence cleaning can reproduce observed magnetic fields. We conclude that the cleaning scheme alone is sufficient for galaxy cluster simulations, but our results indicate that the SPMHD scheme must be carefully chosen depending on the regime of the magnetic field.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures, published (MNRAS 476 2890

    High-energy neutrino fluxes from AGN populations inferred from X-ray surveys

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    High-energy neutrinos and photons are complementary messengers, probing violent astrophysical processes and structural evolution of the Universe. X-ray and neutrino observations jointly constrain conditions in active galactic nuclei (AGN) jets: their baryonic and leptonic contents, and particle production efficiency. Testing two standard neutrino production models for local source Cen A \citep{KT2008,BB2009}, we calculate the high-energy neutrino spectra of single AGN sources and derive the flux of high-energy neutrinos expected for the current epoch. Assuming that accretion determines both X-rays and particle creation, our parametric scaling relations predict neutrino yield in various AGN classes. We derive redshift-dependent number densities of each class, from {\it Chandra} and {\it Swift}/BAT X-ray luminosity functions \citep{SGB2008,ACS2009}. We integrate the neutrino spectrum expected from the cumulative history of AGN (correcting for cosmological and source effects, e.g. jet orientation and beaming). Both emission scenarios yield neutrino fluxes well above limits set by {\it IceCube} (by ∼4\sim 4--106×10^6 \times at 1 PeV, depending on the assumed jet models for neutrino production). This implies that: (i) Cen A might not be a typical neutrino source as commonly assumed; (ii) both neutrino production models overestimate the efficiency; (iii) neutrino luminosity scales with accretion power differently among AGN classes and hence does not follow X-ray luminosity universally; (iv) some AGN are neutrino-quiet (e.g. below a power threshold for neutrino production); (v) neutrino and X-ray emission have different duty cycles (e.g. jets alternate between baryonic and leptonic flows); or (vi) some combination of the above.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Observational signatures of cosmic ray interactions in molecular clouds

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    We investigate ionization and heating of gas in the dense, shielded clumps/cores of molecular clouds bathed by an influx of energetic, charged cosmic rays (CRs). These molecular clouds have complex structures, with substantial variation in their physical properties over a wide range of length scales. The propagation and distribution of the CRs is thus regulated accordingly, in particular, by the magnetic fields threaded through the clouds and into the dense regions within. We have found that a specific heating rate reaching 10−2610^{-26} erg cm−3^{-3} s−1^{-1} can be sustained in the dense clumps/cores for Galactic environments, and this rate increases with CR energy density. The propagation of CRs and heating rates in some star-forming filaments identified in IC 5146 are calculated, with the CR diffusion coefficients in these structures determined from magnetic field fluctuations inferred from optical and near-infrared polarizations of starlight, which is presumably a magnetic-field tracer. Our calculations indicate that CR heating can vary by nearly three orders of magnitude between different filaments within a cloud due to different levels of CR penetration. The CR ionization rate among these filaments is similar. The equilibrium temperature that could be maintained by CR heating alone is of order 1 K1~{\rm K} in a Galactic environment, but this value would be higher in strongly star-forming environments, thus causing an increase in the Jeans mass of their molecular clouds.Comment: 31 pages, 13 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in Ap

    Covariant polarized radiative transfer on cosmological scales for investigating large-scale magnetic field structures

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    Polarization of radiation is a powerful tool to study cosmic magnetism and analysis of polarization can be used as a diagnostic tool for large-scale structures. In this paper, we present a solid theoretical foundation for using polarized light to investigate large-scale magnetic field structures: the cosmological polarized radiative transfer (CPRT) formulation. The CPRT formulation is fully covariant. It accounts for cosmological and relativistic effects in a self-consistent manner and explicitly treats Faraday rotation, as well as Faraday conversion, emission, and absorption processes. The formulation is derived from the first principles of conservation of phase-space volume and photon number. Without loss of generality, we consider a flat Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) space-time metric and construct the corresponding polarized radiative transfer equations. We propose an all-sky CPRT calculation algorithm, based on a ray-tracing method, which allows cosmological simulation results to be incorporated and, thereby, model templates of polarization maps to be constructed. Such maps will be crucial in our interpretation of polarized data, such as those to be collected by the Square Kilometer Array (SKA). We describe several tests which are used for verifying the code and demonstrate applications in the study of the polarization signatures in different distributions of electron number density and magnetic fields. We present a pencil-beam CPRT calculation and an all-sky calculation, using a simulated galaxy cluster or a model magnetized universe obtained from GCMHD+ simulations as the respective input structures. The implications on large-scale magnetic field studies are discussed; remarks on the standard methods using rotation measure are highlighted.Comment: 32 pages, 14 figure

    Polarized radiative transfer, rotation measure fluctuations, and large-scale magnetic fields

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    Faraday rotation measure (RM) at radio wavelengths is commonly used to scales on which magnetic fields vary in large-scale diffus astrophysical media can be inferred from correlations in the observe RM. RM is a variable which can be derived from the polarized radiativ transfer equations in restrictive conditions. This paper assesses th usage of rotation measure fluctuation (RMF) analyses for magnetic fiel diagnostics in the framework of polarized radiative transfer. We us models of various magnetic field configurations and electron densit distributions to show how density fluctuations could affect th correlation length of the magnetic fields inferred from the conventiona RMF analyses. We caution against interpretations of RMF analyses when distributed and fractal-like density structures. As the spatia correlations are generally not the same in the line-of-sigh longitudinal direction and the sky plane direction, one also needs t clarify the context of RMF when inferring from observational data. I complex situations, a covariant polarized radiative transfer calculatio is essential to capture all aspects of radiative and transpor processes, which would otherwise ambiguate the interpretations o magnetism in galaxy clusters and larger scale cosmological structure

    Investigative Study on Preprint Journal Club as an Effective Method of Teaching Latest Knowledge in Astronomy

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    As recent advancements in physics and astronomy rapidly rewrite textbooks, there is a growing need in keeping abreast of the latest knowledge in these fields. Reading preprints is one of the effective ways to do this. By having journal clubs where people can read and discuss journals together, the benefits of reading journals become more prevalent. We present an investigative study of understanding the factors that affect the success of preprint journal clubs in astronomy, more commonly known as Astro-ph/Astro-Coffee (hereafter called AC). A survey was disseminated to understand how institutions from different countries implement AC. We interviewed 9 survey respondents and from their responses we identified four important factors that make AC successful: commitment (how the organizer and attendees participate in AC), environment (how conducive and comfortable AC is conducted), content (the discussed topics in AC and how they are presented), and objective (the main goal/s of conducting AC). We also present the format of our AC, an elective class which was evaluated during the Spring Semester 2020 (March 2020 - June 2020). Our evaluation with the attendees showed that enrollees (those who are enrolled and are required to present papers regularly) tend to be more committed in attending compared to audiences (those who are not enrolled and are not required to present papers regularly). In addition, participants tend to find papers outside their research field harder to read. Finally, we showed an improvement in the weekly number of papers read after attending AC of those who present papers regularly, and a high satisfaction rating of our AC. We summarize the areas of improvement in our AC implementation, and we encourage other institutions to evaluate their own AC in accordance with the four aforementioned factors to assess the effectiveness of their AC in reaching their goals.Comment: Accepted for publication in PRPER. A summary video is available at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fzy2I_xA_dU&ab_channel=NthuCosmolog
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