46,046 research outputs found
Coronae & Outflows from Helical Dynamos, Compatibility with the MRI, and Application to Protostellar Disks
Magnetically mediated disk outflows are a leading paradigm to explain winds
and jets in a variety of astrophysical sources, but where do the fields come
from? Since accretion of mean magnetic flux may be disfavored in a thin
turbulent disk, and only fields generated with sufficiently large scale can
escape before being shredded by turbulence, in situ field production is
desirable. Nonlinear helical inverse dynamo theory can provide the desired
fields for coronae and outflows. We discuss the implications for contemporary
protostellar disks, where the MRI (magneto-rotational instability) can drive
turbulence in the inner regions, and primordial protostellar disks, where
gravitational instability drives the turbulence. We emphasize that helical
dynamos are compatible with the magneto-rotational instability, and clarify the
relationship between the two.Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX (with figs); version in press for "Proceedings of the
International Workshop on Magnetic Fields and Star Formation: Theory vs.
Observation" Madrid, Spain; April 200
Star-forming accretion flows and the low luminosity nuclei of giant elliptical galaxies
The luminosities of the centers of nearby elliptical galaxies are very low
compared to models of thin disc accretion to their black holes at the Bondi
rate, typically a few hundredths to a few tenths of a solar mass per year. This
has motivated models of inefficiently-radiated accretion that invoke weak
electron-ion thermal coupling, and/or inhibited accretion rates due to
convection or outflows. Here we point out that even if such processes are
operating, a significant fraction of the accreting gas is prevented from
reaching the central black hole because it condenses into stars in a
gravitationally unstable disc. Star formation occurs inside the Bondi radius
(typically ~100pc in giant ellipticals), but still relatively far from the
black hole in terms of Schwarzschild radii. Star formation depletes and heats
the gas disc, eventually leading to a marginally stable, but much reduced,
accretion flow to the black hole. We predict the presence of cold (~100K),
dusty gas discs, containing clustered H-alpha emission and occasional type II
supernovae, both resulting from the presence of massive stars. Star formation
accounts for several features of the M87 system: a thin disc, traced by H-alpha
emission, is observed on scales of about 100pc, with features reminiscent of
spiral arms and dust lanes; the star formation rate inferred from the intensity
of H-alpha emission is consistent with the Bondi accretion rate of the system.
Star formation may therefore help suppress accretion onto the central engines
of massive ellipticals. We also discuss some implications for the fueling of
the Galactic center and quasars.Comment: 13 pages, accepted to MNRA
Brief Mindfulness Meditation Improves Mental State Attribution and Empathizing
Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Shubnikov-de Haas oscillations of a single layer graphene under dc current bias
Shubnikov-de Haas (SdH) oscillations under a dc current bias are
experimentally studied on a Hall bar sample of single layer graphene. In dc
resistance, the bias current shows the common damping effect on the SdH
oscillations and the effect can be well accounted for by an elevated electron
temperature that is found to be linearly dependent on the current bias. In
differential resistance, a novel phase inversion of the SdH oscillations has
been observed with increasing dc bias, namely we observe the oscillation maxima
develop into minima and vice versa. Moreover, it is found that the onset
biasing current, at which a SdH extremum is about to invert, is linearly
dependent on the magnetic field of the SdH extrema. These observations are
quantitatively explained with the help of a general SdH formula.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, A few references adde
Tunneling spectroscopy studies of aluminum oxide tunnel barrier layers
We report scanning tunneling microscopy and ballistic electron emission
microscopy studies of the electronic states of the uncovered and
chemisorbed-oxygen covered surface of AlOx tunnel barrier layers. These states
change when chemisorbed oxygen ions are moved into the oxide by either flood
gun electron bombardment or by thermal annealing. The former, if sufficiently
energetic, results in locally well defined conduction band onsets at ~1 V,
while the latter results in a progressively higher local conduction band onset,
exceeding 2.3 V for 500 and 600 C thermal anneals
The stellar content of the infalling molecular clump G286.21+0.17
The early evolution during massive star cluster formation is still uncertain.
Observing embedded clusters at their earliest stages of formation can provide
insight into the spatial and temporal distribution of the stars and thus probe
different star cluster formation models. We present near-infrared imaging of an
8'*13'(5.4pc*8.7pc) region around the massive infalling clump G286.21+0.17(also
known as BYF73). The stellar content across the field is determined and
photometry is derived in order to { obtain} stellar parameters for the cluster
members. We find evidence for some sub-structure (on scales less than a pc
diameter) within the region with apparently at least three different
sub-clusters associated with the molecular clump based on differences in
extinction and disk fractions. At the center of the clump we identify a deeply
embedded sub-cluster. Near-infrared excess is detected for 39-44% in the two
sub-clusters associated with molecular material and 27% for the exposed
cluster. Using the disk excess as a proxy for age this suggests the clusters
are very young. The current total stellar mass is estimated to be at least 200
Msun. The molecular core hosts a rich population of pre-main sequence stars.
There is evidence for multiple events of star formation both in terms of the
spatial distribution within the star forming region and possibly from the disk
frequency.Comment: Submitted to A
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