62 research outputs found
Detection of Tidal Disruption Events around Direct Collapse Black Holes at High Redshifts with the James Webb Space Telescope
This is the third sequel in a series discussing the discovery of various
types of extragalactic transients with the {\it James Webb Space Telescope} in
a narrow-field ( deg), moderately deep ( mag)
survey. In this part we focus on the detectability and observational
characteristics of Direct Collapse Black Holes (DCBH) and Tidal Disruption
Events (TDE) around them. We use existing models for DCBH accretion
luminosities and spectra as well as for TDE light curves, and find that
accreting DCBH seeds may be bright enough for detection up to with
JWST NIRCam imaging, TDEs of massive ( Msol) stars around them
can enhance the chance for discovering them as transient objects, although the
rates of such events is low, a few per survey time. TDEs around non-accreting
black holes of Msol may also be detected at redshifts in
the redder NIRCam bands between 3 and 5 microns. It is also shown that
accreting DCBHs appear separate from supernovae (SNe) on the NIRCam color-color
plot, but TDEs from quiescent black holes fall in nearly the same color range
as Superluminous Supernovae (SLSNe), which makes them more difficult to
identify.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figures, ApJ in pres
The Effect of the Hall Term on the Nonlinear Evolution of the Magnetorotational Instability: I. Local Axisymmetric Simulations
The effect of the Hall term on the evolution of the magnetorotational
instability (MRI) in weakly ionized accretion disks is investigated using local
axisymmetric simulations. First, we show that the Hall term has important
effects on the MRI when the temperature and density in the disk is below a few
thousand K and between 10^13 and 10^18 cm^{-3} respectively. Such conditions
can occur in the quiescent phase of dwarf nova disks, or in the inner part
(inside 10 - 100 AU) of protoplanetary disks. When the Hall term is important,
the properties of the MRI are dependent on the direction of the magnetic field
with respect to the angular velocity vector \Omega. If the disk is threaded by
a uniform vertical field oriented in the same sense as \Omega, the axisymmetric
evolution of the MRI is an exponentially growing two-channel flow without
saturation. When the field is oppositely directed to \Omega, however, small
scale fluctuations prevent the nonlinear growth of the channel flow and the MRI
evolves into MHD turbulence. These results are anticipated from the
characteristics of the linear dispersion relation. In axisymmetry on a field
with zero-net flux, the evolution of the MRI is independent of the size of the
Hall term relative to the inductive term. The evolution in this case is
determined mostly by the effect of ohmic dissipation.Comment: 31 pages, 3 tables, 12 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ,
postscript version also available from
http://www.astro.umd.edu/~sano/publications
The Effects of the Peak-Peak Correlation on the Peak Model of Hierarchical Clustering
In two previous papers a semi-analytical model was presented for the
hierarchical clustering of halos via gravitational instability from peaks in a
random Gaussian field of density fluctuations. This model is better founded
than the extended Press-Schechter model, which is known to agree with numerical
simulations and to make similar predictions. The specific merger rate, however,
shows a significant departure at intermediate captured masses. The origin of
this was suspected as being the rather crude approximation used for the density
of nested peaks. Here, we seek to verify this suspicion by implementing a more
accurate expression for the latter quantity which accounts for the correlation
among peaks. We confirm that the inclusion of the peak-peak correlation
improves the specific merger rate, while the good behavior of the remaining
quantities is preserved.Comment: ApJ accepted. 15 pages, including 4 figures. Also available at
ftp://pcess1.am.ub.es/pub/ApJ/effectpp.ps.g
Skewed exponential pairwise velocities from Gaussian initial conditions
Using an Eulerian perturbative calculation, we show that the distribution of
relative pairwise velocities which arises from gravitational instability of
Gaussian density fluctuations has asymmetric (skewed) exponential tails. The
negative skewness is induced by the negative mean streaming velocity of pairs
(the infall prevails over expansion), while the exponential tails arise because
the relative pairwise velocity is a number, not volume weighted statistic. The
derived probability distribution is compared with N-body simulations and shown
to provide a reasonable fit.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in ApJ letter
Binary Star Origin of High Field Magnetic White Dwarfs
White dwarfs with surface magnetic fields in excess of MG are found as
isolated single stars and relatively more often in magnetic cataclysmic
variables. Some 1,253 white dwarfs with a detached low-mass main-sequence
companion are identified in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey but none of these is
observed to show evidence for Zeeman splitting of hydrogen lines associated
with a magnetic field in excess of 1MG. If such high magnetic fields on white
dwarfs result from the isolated evolution of a single star then there should be
the same fraction of high field white dwarfs among this SDSS binary sample as
among single stars. Thus we deduce that the origin of such high magnetic fields
must be intimately tied to the formation of cataclysmic variables. CVs emerge
from common envelope evolution as very close but detached binary stars that are
then brought together by magnetic braking or gravitational radiation. We
propose that the smaller the orbital separation at the end of the common
envelope phase, the stronger the magnetic field. The magnetic cataclysmic
variables originate from those common envelope systems that almost merge. We
propose further that those common envelope systems that do merge are the
progenitors of the single high field white dwarfs. Thus all highly magnetic
white dwarfs, be they single stars or the components of MCVs, have a binary
origin. This hypothesis also accounts for the relative dearth of single white
dwarfs with fields of 10,000 - 1,000,000G. Such intermediate-field white dwarfs
are found preferentially in cataclysmic variables. In addition the bias towards
higher masses for highly magnetic white dwarfs is expected if a fraction of
these form when two degenerate cores merge in a common envelope. Similar
scenarios may account for very high field neutron stars.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, accepted by MNRA
CLASH-VLT: The stellar mass function and stellar mass density profile of the z=0.44 cluster of galaxies MACS J1206.2-0847
Context. The study of the galaxy stellar mass function (SMF) in relation to
the galaxy environment and the stellar mass density profile, rho(r), is a
powerful tool to constrain models of galaxy evolution. Aims. We determine the
SMF of the z=0.44 cluster of galaxies MACS J1206.2-0847 separately for passive
and star-forming (SF) galaxies, in different regions of the cluster, from the
center out to approximately 2 virial radii. We also determine rho(r) to compare
it to the number density and total mass density profiles. Methods. We use the
dataset from the CLASH-VLT survey. Stellar masses are obtained by SED fitting
on 5-band photometric data obtained at the Subaru telescope. We identify 1363
cluster members down to a stellar mass of 10^9.5 Msolar. Results. The whole
cluster SMF is well fitted by a double Schechter function. The SMFs of cluster
SF and passive galaxies are statistically different. The SMF of the SF cluster
galaxies does not depend on the environment. The SMF of the passive population
has a significantly smaller slope (in absolute value) in the innermost (<0.50
Mpc), highest density cluster region, than in more external, lower density
regions. The number ratio of giant/subgiant galaxies is maximum in this
innermost region and minimum in the adjacent region, but then gently increases
again toward the cluster outskirts. This is also reflected in a decreasing
radial trend of the average stellar mass per cluster galaxy. On the other hand,
the stellar mass fraction, i.e., the ratio of stellar to total cluster mass,
does not show any significant radial trend. Conclusions. Our results appear
consistent with a scenario in which SF galaxies evolve into passive galaxies
due to density-dependent environmental processes, and eventually get destroyed
very near the cluster center to become part of a diffuse intracluster medium.Comment: A&A accepted, 15 pages, 13 figure
CLASH-VLT: The mass, velocity-anisotropy, and pseudo-phase-space density profiles of the z=0.44 galaxy cluster MACS 1206.2-0847
We use an unprecedented data-set of about 600 redshifts for cluster members,
obtained as part of a VLT/VIMOS large programme, to constrain the mass profile
of the z=0.44 cluster MACS J1206.2-0847 over the radial range 0-5 Mpc (0-2.5
virial radii) using the MAMPOSSt and Caustic methods. We then add external
constraints from our previous gravitational lensing analysis. We invert the
Jeans equation to obtain the velocity-anisotropy profiles of cluster members.
With the mass-density and velocity-anisotropy profiles we then obtain the first
determination of a cluster pseudo-phase-space density profile. The kinematics
and lensing determinations of the cluster mass profile are in excellent
agreement. This is very well fitted by a NFW model with mass M200=(1.4 +- 0.2)
10^15 Msun and concentration c200=6 +- 1, only slightly higher than theoretical
expectations. Other mass profile models also provide acceptable fits to our
data, of (slightly) lower (Burkert, Hernquist, and Softened Isothermal Sphere)
or comparable (Einasto) quality than NFW. The velocity anisotropy profiles of
the passive and star-forming cluster members are similar, close to isotropic
near the center and increasingly radial outside. Passive cluster members follow
extremely well the theoretical expectations for the pseudo-phase-space density
profile and the relation between the slope of the mass-density profile and the
velocity anisotropy. Star-forming cluster members show marginal deviations from
theoretical expectations. This is the most accurate determination of a cluster
mass profile out to a radius of 5 Mpc, and the only determination of the
velocity-anisotropy and pseudo-phase-space density profiles of both passive and
star-forming galaxies for an individual cluster [abridged]Comment: A&A in press; 22 pages, 19 figure
Casimir effect: running Newton constant or cosmological term
We argue that the instability of Euclidean Einstein gravity is an indication
that the vacuum is non perturbative and contains a condensate of the metric
tensor in a manner reminiscent of Yang-Mills theories. As a simple step toward
the characterization of such a vacuum the value of the one-loop effective
action is computed for Euclidean de Sitter spaces as a function of the
curvature when the unstable conformal modes are held fixed. Two phases are
found, one where the curvature is large and gravitons should be confined and
another one which appears to be weakly coupled and tends to be flat. The
induced cosmological constant is positive or negative in the strongly or weakly
curved phase, respectively. The relevance of the Casimir effect in
understanding the UV sensitivity of gravity is pointed out.Comment: Final, slightly extended version, to appear in Classical and Quantum
Gravit
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