10,581 research outputs found

    The Accelerating Pace of Star Formation

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    We study the temporal and spatial distribution of star formation rates in four well-studied star-forming regions in local molecular clouds(MCs): Taurus, Perseus, ρ\rho Ophiuchi, and Orion A. Using published mass and age estimates for young stellar objects in each system, we show that the rate of star formation over the last 10 Myrs has been accelerating and is (roughly) consistent with a t2t^2 power law. This is in line with previous studies of the star formation history of molecular clouds and with recent theoretical studies. We further study the clustering of star formation in the Orion Nebula Cluster(ONC). We examine the distribution of young stellar objects as a function of their age by computing an effective half-light radius for these young stars subdivided into age bins. We show that the distribution of young stellar objects is broadly consistent with the star formation being entirely localized within the central region. We also find a slow radial expansion of the newly formed stars at a velocity of v=0.17kms1v=0.17\,{\rm km\,s}^{-1}, which is roughly the sound speed of the cold molecular gas. This strongly suggests the dense structures that form stars persist much longer than the local dynamical time. We argue that this structure is quasi-static in nature and is likely the result of the density profile approaching an attractor solution as suggested by recent analytic and numerical analysis.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, submitted to MNRA

    Properties of Carbon-Oxygen White Dwarf Merger Remnants

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    Recent studies have shown that for suitable initial conditions both super- and sub-Chandrasekhar mass carbon-oxygen white dwarf mergers produce explosions similar to observed SNe Ia. The question remains, however, how much fine tuning is necessary to produce these conditions. We performed a large set of SPH merger simulations, sweeping the possible parameter space. We find trends for merger remnant properties, and discuss how our results affect the viability of our recently proposed sub-Chandrasekhar merger channel for SNe Ia.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, to appear in IAU 281 Proceedings "Binary Paths to Type Ia Supernovae Explosions

    Long Term Evolution of Magnetic Turbulence in Relativistic Collisionless Shocks: Electron-Positron Plasmas

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    We study the long term evolution of magnetic fields generated by a collisionless relativistic e+ee^+e^- shock which is initially unmagnetized. Our 2D particle-in-cell numerical simulations show that downstream of such a Weibel-mediated shock, particle distributions are close to isotropic, relativistic Maxwellians, and the magnetic turbulence is highly intermittent spatially, with the non-propagating magnetic fields forming relatively isolated regions with transverse dimension 1020\sim 10-20 skin depths. These structures decay in amplitude, with little sign of downstream merging. The fields start with magnetic energy density (0.10.2)\sim (0.1-0.2) of the upstream kinetic energy within the shock transition, but rapid downstream decay drives the fields to much smaller values, below 10310^{-3} of equipartition after 10310^3 skin depths. In an attempt to construct a theory that follows field decay to these smaller values, we explore the hypothesis that the observed damping is a variant of Landau damping in an unmagnetized plasma. The model is based on the small value of the downstream magnetic energy density, which suggests that particle orbits are only weakly perturbed from straight line motion, if the turbulence is homogeneous. Using linear kinetic theory applied to electromagnetic fields in an isotropic, relativistic Maxwellian plasma, we find a simple analytic form for the damping rates, γk\gamma_k, in two and three dimensions for small amplitude, subluminous electromagnetic fields. We find that magnetic energy does damp due to phase mixing of current carrying particles as (ωpt)q(\omega_p t)^{-q} with q1q \sim 1. (abridged)Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted to ApJ; Downsampled version for arXiv. Full resolution figures available at http://astro.berkeley.edu/~pchang/full_res_weibel.pd
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