2,307 research outputs found

    Thermal Instability and the Formation of Clumpy Gas Clouds

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    The radiative cooling of optically thin gaseous regions and the formation of a two-phase medium and of cold gas clouds with a clumpy substructure is investigated. In optically thin clouds, the growth rate of small isobaric density perturbations is independent of their length scale. However, the growth of a perturbation is limited by its transition from isobaric to isochoric cooling. The temperature at which this transition occurs decreases with the length scale of the perturbation. Consequently small scale perturbations have the potential to reach higher amplitudes than large scale perturbations. When the amplitude becomes nonlinear, advection overtakes the pressure gradient in promoting the compression resulting in an accelerated growth of the disturbance. The critical temperature for transition depends on the initial amplitude. The fluctuations which can first reach nonlinearity before their isobaric to isochoric transition will determine the characteristic size and mass of the cold dense clumps which would emerge from the cooling of an initially nearly homogeneous region of gas. Thermal conduction is in general very efficient in erasing isobaric, small-scale fluctuations, suppressing a cooling instability. A weak, tangled magnetic field can however reduce the conductive heat flux enough for low-amplitude fluctuations to grow isobarically and become non-linear if their length scales are of order 0.01 pc. Finally, we demonstrate how a 2-phase medium, with cold clumps being pressure confined in a diffuse hot residual background component, would be sustained if there is adequate heating to compensate the energy loss.Comment: 26 pages, Latex, 10 postscript figures, ApJ, in pres

    On the Formation of Boxy and Disky Elliptical Galaxies

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    The origin of boxy and disky elliptical galaxies is investigated. The results of two collisionless N-body simulations of spiral-spiral mergers with mass ratios of 1:1 and 3:1 are discussed and the projected properties of the merger remnants are investigated. It is shown that the equal-mass merger leads to an anisotropic, slowly rotating system with preferentially boxy isophotes and significant minor axis rotation. The unequal-mass merger results in the formation of a rotationally supported elliptical with disky isophotes and small minor axis rotation. The observed scatter in the kinematical and isophotal properties of both classes of elliptical galaxies can be explained by projection effects.Comment: 12 pages, incl. 5 figures, accepted by ApJ Letter

    On the impact of the magnitude of Interstellar pressure on physical properties of Molecular Cloud

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    Recently reported variations in the typical physical properties of Galactic and extra-Galactic molecular clouds (MCs), and in their ability to form stars have been attributed to local variations in the magnitude of interstellar pressure. Inferences from these surveys have called into question two long-standing beliefs that the MCs : 1 are Virialised entities and (2) have approximately constant surface density i.e., the validity of the Larson's third law. In this work we invoke the framework of cloud-formation via collisions between warm gas flows. Post-collision clouds forming in these realisations cool rapidly and evolve primarily via the interplay between the Non-linear Thin Shell Instability (NTSI), and the self-gravity. Over the course of these simulations we traced the temporal evolution of the surface density of the assembled clouds, the fraction of dense gas, the distribution of gas column density (NPDF), and the Virial nature of the assembled clouds. We conclude, these physical properties of MCs not only exhibit temporal variation, but their respective peak-magnitude also increases in proportion with the magnitude of external pressure, PextP_{ext}. The velocity dispersion in assembled clouds appears to follow the power-law, σgasPext0.23\sigma_{gas}\propto P_{ext}^{0.23}. Also, the power-law tail at higher densities becomes shallower with increasing magnitude of external pressure, for magnitudes, Pext/kB107P_{ext}/k_{B}\lesssim 10^{7} K cm3^{-3}, at higher magnitudes such as those typically found in the Galactic CMZ (Pext/kB>107P_{ext}/k_{B} > 10^{7} K cm3^{-3}), the power-law shows significant steepening. Thus while our results are broadly consistent with inferences from various recent observational surveys, it appears, MCs hardly exhibit a unique set of properties, but rather a wide variety, that can be reconciled with a range of magnitudes of pressure between 104^{4} K cm3^{-3} - 108^{8} K cm3^{-3}.Comment: 20 pages, 11 Figures, 1 Table, To appear in Monthly Notice of the RA

    On the star-forming ability of Molecular Clouds

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    The star-forming ability of a molecular cloud depends on the fraction of gas it can cycle into the dense-phase. Consequently, one of the crucial questions in reconciling star-formation in clouds is to understand the factors that control this process. While it is widely accepted that the variation in ambient conditions can alter significantly the ability of a cloud to spawn stars, the observed variation in the star-formation rate in nearby clouds that experience similar ambient conditions, presents an interesting question. In this work we attempted to reconcile this variation within the paradigm of colliding flows. To this end we develop self-gravitating, hydrodynamic realisations of identical flows, but allowed to collide off-centre. Typical observational diagnostics such as the gas-velocity dispersion, the fraction of dense-gas, the column density distribution ({\small N-PDF}), the distribution of gas mass as a function of KK-band extinction and the strength of compressional/solenoidal modes in the post-collision cloud were deduced for different choices of the impact parameter of collision. We find that a strongly sheared cloud is terribly inefficient in cycling gas into the dense phase and that such a cloud can possibly reconcile the sluggish nature of star-formation reported for some clouds. Within the paradigm of cloud-formation via colliding flows this is possible in case of flows colliding with a relatively large impact parameter. We conclude that compressional modes - though probably essential - are insufficient to ensure a relatively higher star-formation efficiency in a cloud.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures; To appear in MNRA

    Can Neutron stars constrain Dark Matter?

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    We argue that observations of old neutron stars can impose constraints on dark matter candidates even with very small elastic or inelastic cross section, and self-annihilation cross section. We find that old neutron stars close to the galactic center or in globular clusters can maintain a surface temperature that could in principle be detected. Due to their compactness, neutron stars can acrete WIMPs efficiently even if the WIMP-to-nucleon cross section obeys the current limits from direct dark matter searches, and therefore they could constrain a wide range of dark matter candidates.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figure

    Collapse and Fragmentation in Finite Sheets

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    We present two-dimensional simulations of finite, self-gravitating gaseous sheets. Unlike the case of infinite sheets, such configurations do not constitute equilibrium states but instead are subject to global collapse unless countered by pressure forces or rotation. The initial effect of finite geometry is to promote concentrations of material at the edges of the sheet. If the sheet is not perfectly circular, gravitational focussing results in enhanced concentrations of mass. In the second-most simple geometry, that of an elliptical outer boundary, the general result is collapse to a filamentary structure with the densest concentrations of mass at the ends of the filament. We suggest that these simple calculations have interesting implications for the gravitational evolution of overall molecular cloud structure, envisioning that such clouds might originate as roughly sheetlike sections of gas accumulated as a result of large-scale flows in the local interstellar medium. We show some examples of local clouds with overall filamentary shape and denser concentrations of mass and star clusters near the ends of the overall extended structure, suggestive of our simple ellipse collapse calculations. We suggest that cluster-forming gas is often concentrated as a result of gravity acting on irregular boundaries; this mechanism can result in very rapid infall of gas which may be of importance to the formation of massive stars. This picture suggests that much of the supersonic ``turbulence'' observed in molecular clouds might be gravitationally-generated. Our results may provide impetus for further theoretical explorations of global gravitational effects in molecular clouds and their implications for generating the substructure needed for fragmentation into stars and clusters.Comment: 30 pages, 16 figure

    About the morphology of dwarf spheroidal galaxies and their dark matter content

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    The morphological properties of the Carina, Sculptor and Fornax dwarfs are investigated using new wide field data with a total area of 29 square degrees. The stellar density maps are derived, hinting that Sculptor possesses tidal tails indicating interaction with the Milky Way. Contrary to previous studies we cannot find any sign of breaks in the density profiles for the Carina and Fornax dwarfs. The possible existence of tidal tails in Sculptor and of King limiting radii in Fornax and Carina are used to derive global M/L ratios, without using kinematic data. By matching those M/L ratios to kinematically derived values we are able to constrain the orbital parameters of the three dwarfs. Fornax cannot have M/L smaller than 3 and must be close to its perigalacticon now. The other extreme is Sculptor that needs to be on an orbit with an eccentricity bigger than 0.5 to be able to form tidal tails despite its kinematic M/L.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, accepted by A&

    Three-dimensional Continuum Radiative Transfer Images of a Molecular Cloud Core Evolution

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    We analyze a three-dimensional smoothed particle hydrodynamics simulation of an evolving and later collapsing pre-stellar core. Using a three-dimensional continuum radiative transfer program, we generate images at 7 micron, 15 micron, 175 micron, and 1.3 mm for different evolutionary times and viewing angles. We discuss the observability of the properties of pre-stellar cores for the different wavelengths. For examples of non-symmetric fragments, it is shown that, misleadingly, the density profiles derived from a one-dimensional analysis of the corresponding images are consistent with one-dimensional core evolution models. We conclude that one-dimensional modeling based on column density interpretation of images does not produce reliable structural information and that multidimensional modeling is required.Comment: accepted by ApJL, 4 pages, 4 figure

    Diffuse gamma-ray background and cosmic-ray positrons from annihilating dark matter

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    We study the annihilating dark matter contribution to the extra-galactic diffuse gamma-ray background spectrum, motivated by the recent observations of cosmic-ray positron/electron anomalies. The observed diffuse gamma-ray flux provides stringent constraint on dark matter models and we present upper bounds on the annihilation cross section of the dark matter. It is found that for the case of cored dark matter halo profile, the diffuse gamma-rays give more stringent bound compared with gamma-rays from the Galactic center. The Fermi satellite will make the bound stronger.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures; references added; to appear in PR
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