124 research outputs found
Simplified Hydrostatic Carbon Burning in White Dwarf Interiors
We introduce two simplified nuclear networks that can be used in hydrostatic
carbon burning reactions occurring in white dwarf interiors. They model the
relevant nuclear reactions in carbon-oxygen white dwarfs (COWDs) approaching
ignition in Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) progenitors, including the effects of the
main e-captures and \beta-decays that drive the convective Urca process. They
are based on studies of a detailed nuclear network compiled by the authors and
are defined by approximate sets of differential equations whose derivations are
included in the text. The first network, N1, provides a good first order
estimation of the distribution of ashes and it also provides a simple picture
of the main reactions occurring during this phase of evolution. The second
network, N2, is a more refined version of N1 and can reproduce the evolution of
the main physical properties of the full network to the 5% level. We compare
the evolution of the mole fraction of the relevant nuclei, the neutron excess,
the photon energy generation and the neutrino losses between both simplified
networks and the detailed reaction network in a fixed temperature and density
parcel of gas.Comment: 52 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
H2 distribution during formation of multiphase molecular clouds
H2 is the simplest and the most abundant molecule in the ISM, and its
formation precedes the formation of other molecules. Understanding the
dynamical influence of the environment and the interplay between the thermal
processes related to the formation and destruction of H2 and the structure of
the cloud is mandatory to understand correctly the observations of H2. We
perform high resolution MHD colliding flow simulations with the AMR code RAMSES
in which the physics of H2 has been included. We compare the simulation results
with various observations including the column densities of excited rotational
levels. Due to a combination of thermal pressure, ram pressure and gravity, the
clouds produced at the converging point of HI streams are highly inhomogeneous.
H2 molecules quickly form in relatively dense clumps and spread into the
diffuse interclump gas. This in particular leads to the existence of
significant abundances of H2 in the diffuse and warm gas that lies in between
clumps. Simulations and observations show similar trends, specially for the
HI-to-H2 transition. The abundances of excited rotational levels, calculated at
equilibrium in the simulations are very similar to the observed abundances
inferred from FUSE results. This is a direct consequence of the presence of the
H2 enriched diffuse and warm gas. Our simulations show that H2 rapidly forms in
the dense clumps and, due to the complex structure of molecular clouds, quickly
spreads at lower densities. Consequently a significant fraction of warm H2
exists in the low density gas. This warm H2 leads to column densities of
excited rotational levels close to the observed ones likely revealing the
complex intermix between the warm and the cold gas in molecular clouds. This
suggests that the 2-phase structure of molecular clouds is an essential
ingredient to fully understand molecular hydrogen in these objects.Comment: 16 pages, 19 figures. Accepted for publication in A&
Methodological considerations concerning manual annotation of musical audio in function of algorithm development
In research on musical audio-mining, annotated music databases are needed which allow the development of computational tools that extract from the musical audiostream the kind of high-level content that users can deal with in Music Information Retrieval (MIR) contexts. The notion of musical content, and therefore the notion of annotation, is ill-defined, however, both in the syntactic and semantic sense. As a consequence, annotation has been approached from a variety of perspectives (but mainly linguistic-symbolic oriented), and a general methodology is lacking. This paper is a step towards the definition of a general framework for manual annotation of musical audio in function of a computational approach to musical audio-mining that is based on algorithms that learn from annotated data. 1
Cosmological Implications of the Second Parameter of Type Ia Supernovae
Theoretical models predict that the initial metallicity of the progenitor of
a Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) affects the peak of the supernova light curve. This
can cause a deviation from the standard light curve calibration employed when
using SNe Ia as standardizable distance candles and, if there is a systematic
evolution of the metallicity of SN Ia progenitors, could affect the
determination of cosmological parameters. Here we show that this metallicity
effect can be substantially larger than has been estimated previously, when the
neutronisation in the immediate pre-explosion phase in the CO white dwarf is
taken into account, and quantitatively assess the importance of metallicity
evolution for determining cosmological parameters. We show that, in principle,
a moderate and plausible amount of metallicity evolution could mimic a
lambda-dominated, flat Universe in an open, lambda-free Universe. However, the
effect of metallicity evolution appears not large enough to explain the high-z
SN Ia data in a flat Universe, for which there is strong independent evidence,
without a cosmological constant. We also estimate the systematic uncertainties
introduced by metallicity evolution in a lambda-dominated, flat Universe. We
find that metallicity evolution may limit the precision with which Omega_m and
w can be measured and that it will be difficult to distinguish evolution of the
equation of state of dark energy from metallicity evolution, at least from SN
Ia data alone.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, constructive comments welcom
Ortho-H2 and the Age of Interstellar Dark Clouds
International audienceInterstellar dark clouds are the sites of star formation. Their main component, dihydrogen, exists under two states, ortho and para. H2 is supposed to form in the ortho:para ratio (OPR) of 3:1 and to subsequently decay to almost pure para-H2 (OPR = 0.1 is necessary to prevent DCO+ large-scale apparition. We conclude that the inevitable decay of ortho-H2 sets an upper limit of ~6 million years to the age of starless molecular clouds under usual conditions
Magnetic diffusivities in 3D radiative chemo-hydrodynamic simulations of protostellar collapse
International audienc
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