281 research outputs found
Numerical Models of Binary Neutron Star System Mergers. I.: Numerical Methods and Equilibrium Data for Newtonian Models
The numerical modeling of binary neutron star mergers has become a subject of
much interest in recent years. While a full and accurate model of this
phenomenon would require the evolution of the equations of relativistic
hydrodynamics along with the Einstein field equations, a qualitative study of
the early stages on inspiral can be accomplished by either Newtonian or
post-Newtonian models, which are more tractable. In this paper we offer a
comparison of results from both rotating and non-rotating (inertial) frame
Newtonian calculations. We find that the rotating frame calculations offer
significantly improved accuracy as compared with the inertial frame models.
Furthermore, we show that inertial frame models exhibit significant and
erroneous angular momentum loss during the simulations that leads to an
unphysical inspiral of the two neutron stars. We also examine the dependence of
the models on initial conditions by considering initial configurations that
consist of spherical neutron stars as well as stars that are in equilibrium and
which are tidally distorted. We compare our models those of Rasio & Shapiro
(1992,1994a) and New & Tohline (1997). Finally, we investigate the use of the
isolated star approximation for the construction of initial data.Comment: 32 pages, 19 gif figures, manuscript with postscript figures
available at http://www.astro.sunysb.edu/dswesty/docs/nspap1.p
Nucleosynthesis in the Outflow from Gamma Ray Burst Accretion Disks
We examine the nucleosynthesis products that are produced in the outflow from
rapidly accreting disks. We find that the type of element synthesis varies
dramatically with the degree of neutrino trapping in the disk and therefore the
accretion rate of the disk. Disks with relatively high accretion rates such as
10 M_solar/s can produce very neutron rich nuclei that are found in the r
process. Disks with more moderate accretion rates can produce copious amounts
of Nickel as well as the light elements such as Lithium and Boron. Disks with
lower accretion rates such as 0.1 M_solar/s produce large amounts of Nickel as
well as some unusual nuclei such as Ti-49, Sc-45, Zn-64, and Mo-92. This wide
array of potential nucleosynthesis products is due to the varying influence of
electron neutrinos and antineutrinos emitted from the disk on the
neutron-to-proton ratio in the outflow. We use a parameterization for the
outflow and discuss our results in terms of entropy and outflow acceleration.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures; submitted to Ap
Helium Star/Black Hole Mergers: a New Gamma-Ray Burst Model
We present a model for gamma-ray bursts (GRB's) in which a stellar mass black
hole acquires a massive accretion disk by merging with the helium core of its
red giant companion. The black hole enters the helium core after it, or its
neutron star progenitor, first experiences a common envelope phase that carries
it inwards through the hydrogen envelope. Accretion of the last several solar
masses of helium occurs on a time scale of roughly a minute and provides a
neutrino luminosity of approximately 10^51 - 10^52 erg/s. Neutrino
annihilation, 0.01% to 0.1% efficient, along the rotational axis then gives a
baryon loaded fireball of electron-positron pairs and radiation (about
10 erg total) whose beaming and relativistic interaction with
circumstellar material makes the GRB (e.g., Rees & Meszaros 1992). The useful
energy can be greatly increased if energy can be extracted from the rotational
energy of the black hole by magnetic interaction with the disk. Such events
should occur at a rate comparable to that of merging neutron stars and black
hole neutron star pairs and may be responsible for long complex GRB's, but not
short hard ones.Comment: 11 pages total, 2 Figures - altered and revised for ApJ letters,
accepte
Evidence for an Intense Neutrino Flux during -Process Nucleosynthesis?
We investigate the possibility that neutrino capture on heavy nuclei competes
with beta decay in the environment where the -Process elements are
synthesized. We find that such neutrino capture is not excluded by existing
abundance determinations. We show that inclusion of significant neutrino
capture on the (neutron number) N=82 waiting point nuclei can allow the
inferred abundances of these species to provide a good fit to steady weak (beta
decay plus neutrino capture) flow equilibrium. In fact, for particular choices
of neutrino flux conditions, this fit is improved over the case where nuclei
change their charge by beta decay alone. However, this improved fit can be
realized only if neutrino capture plays a negligible role in nuclear decay back
toward stability. We discuss the implications of these considerations for
current proposed sites and models for -Process nucleosynthesis.Comment: 10 pages, plain tex, submitted to ApJ
Low-energy neutrinos at off-axis from a standard beta-beam
We discuss a scenario to extract up to 150 MeV neutrinos at a standard
beta-beam facility using one and two detectors off-axis. In particular we show
that the high-energy component of the neutrino fluxes can be subtracted through
a specific combination of the response of two off-axis detectors. A systematic
analysis of the neutrino fluxes using different detector geometries is
presented, as well as a comparison with the expected fluxes at a low-energy
beta-beam facility. The presented option could offer an alternative way to
perform low-energy neutrino experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Opaque or transparent? A link between neutrino optical depths and the characteristic duration of short gamma-ray bursts
Cosmological gamma ray bursts (GRBs) are thought to occur from violent
hypercritical accretion onto stellar mass black holes, either following core
collapse in massive stars or compact binary mergers. This dichotomy may be
reflected in the two classes of bursts having different durations. Dynamical
calculations of the evolution of these systems are essential if one is to
establish characteristic, relevant timescales. We show here for the first time
the result of dynamical simulations, lasting approximately one second, of
post--merger accretion disks around black holes, using a realistic equation of
state and considering neutrino emission processes. We find that the inclusion
of neutrino optical depth effects produces important qualitative temporal and
spatial transitions in the evolution and structure of the disk, which may
directly reflect upon the duration and variability of short GRBs.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Can Naked Singularities Yield Gamma Ray Bursts?
Gamma-ray bursts are believed to be the most luminous objects in the
Universe. There has been some suggestion that these arise from quantum
processes around naked singularities. The main problem with this suggestion is
that all known examples of naked singularities are massless and hence there is
effectively no source of energy. It is argued that a globally naked singularity
coupled with quantum processes operating within a distance of the order of
Planck length of the singularity will probably yield energy burst of the order
of M_pc^2\approx2\times 10^{16} ergs, where M_p is the Planck mass.Comment: 4 pages, TeX, no figure
Magnetic Braking and Viscous Damping of Differential Rotation in Cylindrical Stars
Differential rotation in stars generates toroidal magnetic fields whenever an
initial seed poloidal field is present. The resulting magnetic stresses, along
with viscosity, drive the star toward uniform rotation. This magnetic braking
has important dynamical consequences in many astrophysical contexts. For
example, merging binary neutron stars can form "hypermassive" remnants
supported against collapse by differential rotation. The removal of this
support by magnetic braking induces radial fluid motion, which can lead to
delayed collapse of the remnant to a black hole. We explore the effects of
magnetic braking and viscosity on the structure of a differentially rotating,
compressible star, generalizing our earlier calculations for incompressible
configurations. The star is idealized as a differentially rotating, infinite
cylinder supported initially by a polytropic equation of state. The gas is
assumed to be infinitely conducting and our calculations are performed in
Newtonian gravitation. Though highly idealized, our model allows for the
incorporation of magnetic fields, viscosity, compressibility, and shocks with
minimal computational resources in a 1+1 dimensional Lagrangian MHD code. Our
evolution calculations show that magnetic braking can lead to significant
structural changes in a star, including quasistatic contraction of the core and
ejection of matter in the outermost regions to form a wind or an ambient disk.
These calculations serve as a prelude and a guide to more realistic MHD
simulations in full 3+1 general relativity.Comment: 20 pages, 19 figures, 3 tables, AASTeX, accepted by Ap
Collapse of Uniformly Rotating Stars to Black Holes and the Formation of Disks
Simulations in general relativity show that the outcome of collapse of a
marginally unstable, uniformly rotating star spinning at the mass-shedding
limit depends critically on the equation of state. For a very stiff equation of
state, which is likely to characterize a neutron star, essentially all of the
mass and angular momentum of the progenitor are swallowed by the Kerr black
hole formed during the collapse, leaving nearly no residual gas to form a disk.
For a soft equation of state with an adiabatic index \Gamma - 4/3 << 1, which
characterizes a very massive or supermassive star supported predominantly by
thermal radiation pressure, as much as 10% of the mass of the progenitor avoids
capture and goes into a disk about the central hole. We present a semi-analytic
calculation that corroborates these numerical findings and shows how the final
outcome of such a collapse may be determined from simple physical
considerations. In particular, we employ a simple energy variational principle
with an approximate, post-Newtonian energy functional to determine the
structure of a uniformly rotating, polytropic star at the onset of collapse as
a function of polytropic index n, where \Gamma = 1+1/n. We then use this data
to calculate the mass and spin of the final black hole and ambient disk. We
show that the fraction of the total mass that remains in the disk falls off
sharply as 3-n (equivalently, \Gamma - 4/3) increases.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, 2 tables, AASTeX; accepted to appear in The
Astrophysical Journa
r-Process Nucleosynthesis in Hot Accretion Disk Flows from Black Hole - Neutron Star Mergers
We consider hot accretion disk outflows from black hole - neutron star
mergers in the context of the nucleosynthesis they produce. We begin with a
three dimensional numerical model of a black hole - neutron star merger and
calculate the neutrino and antineutrino fluxes emitted from the resulting
accretion disk. We then follow the element synthesis in material outflowing the
disk along parameterized trajectories. We find that at least a weak r-process
is produced, and in some cases a main r-process as well. The neutron-rich
conditions required for this production of r-process nuclei stem directly from
the interactions of the neutrinos emitted by the disk with the free neutrons
and protons in the outflow.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, one table and additional references adde
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