13,964 research outputs found
Direct N-body Simulations of Rubble Pile Collisions
There is increasing evidence that many km-sized bodies in the Solar System
are piles of rubble bound together by gravity. We present results from a
project to map the parameter space of collisions between km-sized spherical
rubble piles. The results will assist in parameterization of collision outcomes
for Solar System formation models and give insight into fragmentation scaling
laws. We use a direct numerical method to evolve the positions and velocities
of the rubble pile particles under the constraints of gravity and physical
collisions. We test the dependence of the collision outcomes on impact
parameter and speed, impactor spin, mass ratio, and coefficient of restitution.
Speeds are kept low (< 10 m/s, appropriate for dynamically cool systems such as
the primordial disk during early planet formation) so that the maximum strain
on the component material does not exceed the crushing strength. We compare our
results with analytic estimates and hydrocode simulations. Off-axis collisions
can result in fast-spinning elongated remnants or contact binaries while fast
collisions result in smaller fragments overall. Clumping of debris escaping
from the remnant can occur, leading to the formation of smaller rubble piles.
In the cases we tested, less than 2% of the system mass ends up orbiting the
remnant. Initial spin can reduce or enhance collision outcomes, depending on
the relative orientation of the spin and orbital angular momenta. We derive a
relationship between impact speed and angle for critical dispersal of mass in
the system. We find that our rubble piles are relatively easy to disperse, even
at low impact speed, suggesting that greater dissipation is required if rubble
piles are the true progenitors of protoplanets.Comment: 30 pages including 4 tables, 8 figures. Revised version to be
published in Icarus
The Role of Cold Flows in the Assembly of Galaxy Disks
We use high resolution cosmological hydrodynamical simulations to demonstrate
that cold flow gas accretion, particularly along filaments, modifies the
standard picture of gas accretion and cooling onto galaxy disks. In the
standard picture, all gas is initially heated to the virial temperature of the
galaxy as it enters the virial radius. Low mass galaxies are instead dominated
by accretion of gas that stays well below the virial temperature, and even when
a hot halo is able to develop in more massive galaxies there exist dense
filaments that penetrate inside of the virial radius and deliver cold gas to
the central galaxy. For galaxies up to ~L*, this cold accretion gas is
responsible for the star formation in the disk at all times to the present.
Even for galaxies at higher masses, cold flows dominate the growth of the disk
at early times. Within this modified picture, galaxies are able to accrete a
large mass of cold gas, with lower initial gas temperatures leading to shorter
cooling times to reach the disk. Although star formation in the disk is
mitigated by supernovae feedback, the short cooling times allow for the growth
of stellar disks at higher redshifts than predicted by the standard model.Comment: accepted to Ap
Quantum-Liouville and Langevin Equations for Gravitational Radiation Damping
From a forward--backward path integral, we derive a master equation for the
emission and absorption of gravitons by a massive quantum object in a heat bath
of gravitons. Such an equation could describe collapse phenomena of dense
stars. We also present a useful approximate Langevin equation for such a
system.Comment: Author Information under
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/institution.html . Latest update of
paper (including all PS fonts) at
http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/31
High-Redshift Galaxies: Their Predicted Size and Surface Brightness Distributions and Their Gravitational Lensing Probability
Direct observations of the first generation of luminous objects will likely
become feasible over the next decade. The advent of the Next Generation Space
Telescope (NGST) will allow imaging of numerous galaxies and mini-quasars at
redshifts z>5. We apply semi-analytic models of structure formation to estimate
the rate of multiple imaging of these sources by intervening gravitational
lenses. Popular CDM models for galaxy formation yield a lensing optical depth
of about 1% for sources at redshift 10. The expected slope of the luminosity
function of the early sources implies an additional magnification bias of about
5, bringing the fraction of lensed sources at z=10 to about 5%. We estimate the
angular size distribution of high-redshift disk galaxies and find that most of
them are more extended than the resolution limit of NGST, roughly 0.06
arcseconds. We also show that there is only a modest redshift evolution in the
mean surface brightness of galaxies at z>2. The expected increase by 1-2 orders
of magnitude in the number of resolved sources on the sky, due to observations
with NGST, will dramatically improve upon the statistical significance of
existing weak lensing measurements. We show that, despite this increase in the
density of sources, confusion noise from z>2 galaxies is expected to be small
for NGST observations.Comment: 27 pages, 8 PostScript figures (of which two are new), revised
version accepted for Ap
Hierarchical formation of bulgeless galaxies II: Redistribution of angular momentum via galactic fountains
Within a fully cosmological hydrodynamical simulation, we form a galaxy which
rotates at 140 km/s, and is characterised by two loose spiral arms and a bar,
indicative of a Hubble Type SBc/d galaxy. We show that our simulated galaxy has
no classical bulge, with a pure disc profile at z=1, well after the major
merging activity has ended. A long-lived bar subsequently forms, resulting in
the formation of a secularly-formed "pseudo" bulge, with the final
bulge-to-total light ratio B/T=0.21. We show that the majority of gas which
loses angular momentum and falls to the central region of the galaxy during the
merging epoch is blown back into the hot halo, with much of it returning later
to form stars in the disc. We propose that this mechanism of redistribution of
angular momentum via a galactic fountain, when coupled with the results from
our previous study which showed why gas outflows are biased to have low angular
momentum, can solve the angular momentum/bulgeless disc problem of the cold
dark matter paradigm.Comment: 9 Pages, 10 Figures, accepted MNRAS version. Comments welcom
Aerodynamic pressures around high-speed trains: the transition from unconfined to enclosed spaces
The theory and practice of train-induced aerodynamic pressure loads on surfaces near to the tracks is compromised by an incomplete understanding of trains operating in short tunnels, partially enclosed spaces, and next to simple structures such as vertical walls. Unique pressure-loading patterns occur in each case. This work has been carried out to obtain a fundamental understanding of how these loading patterns transition from one to the other as the infrastructure becomes more confined. It also considers the impact of the results on two separate European codes of practice applying to tunnels and other structures. A parametric moving-model study was undertaken, transitioning from the open air to single and double vertical walls, partially enclosed spaces, short single-track tunnels and a longer tunnel. The train model was based on a German ICE2, and was fired at 32 m/s past the structures. Multiple surface pressure tappings and in-flow probes were used, providing the opportunity to assess the three-dimensional nature of the pressure and velocity fields. The experiments successfully mapped the transition between the three loading patterns and isolated the geometric changes. Further loading patterns were discovered relating to the length of the train, the length of the tunnel and the distance from the tunnel entrance. The three-dimensional nature of the pressure was related to the length of the tunnel and the distance from the tunnel entrance. Issues surrounding the lack of provision in codes of practice for short tunnels were discussed. </jats:p
Invisible Article III Delinquency: History, Mystery, and Concerns About “Federal Juvenile Courts”
This essay is the second in a two-part series focused on our nation’s invisible juvenile justice system—one that operates under the legal radar as part of the U.S. Constitution’s Article III federal district court system. The first publication, Article III Adultification of Kids: History, Mystery, and Troubling Implications of Federal Youth Transfers, examined the little-known practice of prosecuting children as adults in federal courts. This paper will look at the related phenomenon of juvenile delinquency matters that are filed and pursued in our nation’s federal court system.
To date, most scholarship evaluating youth prosecution has focused on our country’s juvenile courts—venues established and run in each of the individual states and territories. The anomaly of child prosecution under federal laws in our nation’s Article III courts has received far less attention—particularly over the last two decades. However, recent events suggest—and policies of the current presidential administration demonstrate—federal apprehension and prosecution of youth is a subject worthy of greater study
Effects of Extreme Obliquity Variations on the Habitability of Exoplanets
We explore the impact of obliquity variations on planetary habitability in
hypothetical systems with high mutual inclination. We show that large
amplitude, high frequency obliquity oscillations on Earth-like exoplanets can
suppress the ice-albedo feedback, increasing the outer edge of the habitable
zone. We restrict our exploration to hypothetical systems consisting of a
solar-mass star, an Earth-mass planet at 1 AU, and 1 or 2 larger planets. We
verify that these systems are stable for years with N-body simulations,
and calculate the obliquity variations induced by the orbital evolution of the
Earth-mass planet and a torque from the host star. We run a simplified energy
balance model on the terrestrial planet to assess surface temperature and ice
coverage on the planet's surface, and we calculate differences in the outer
edge of the habitable zone for planets with rapid obliquity variations. For
each hypothetical system, we calculate the outer edge of habitability for two
conditions: 1) the full evolution of the planetary spin and orbit, and 2) the
eccentricity and obliquity fixed at their average values. We recover previous
results that higher values of fixed obliquity and eccentricity expand the
habitable zone, but also find that obliquity oscillations further expand
habitable orbits in all cases. Terrestrial planets near the outer edge of the
habitable zone may be more likely to support life in systems that induce rapid
obliquity oscillations as opposed to fixed-spin planets. Such planets may be
the easiest to directly characterize with space-borne telescopes.Comment: 46 pages, 12 Figures, 5 Table
- …