520 research outputs found
Stability of magnetic vortex in soft magnetic nano-sized circular cylinder
Stability of magnetic vortex with respect to displacement of its center in a
nano-scale circular cylinder made of soft ferromagnetic material is studied
theoretically. The mode of vortex displacement producing no magnetic charges on
the cylinder side is proposed and the corresponding absolute single-domain
radius of the cylinder is calculated as a function of its thickness and the
exchange length of the material. In cylinders with the radii less than the
single-domain radius the vortex state is unstable and is absolutely prohibited
(except if pinned by material imperfections), so that the distribution of the
magnetization vector in such cylinders in no applied magnetic field is uniform
(or quasi-uniform). The phase diagram of nano-scale cylinders including the
stability line and the metastability region obtained here is presented.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, RevTex 4, presented at JEMS'01, accepted to JMM
Magnetars and Gamma Ray Bursts
In the last few years, evidences for a long-lived and sustained engine in
Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) have increased the attention to the so called
millisecond-magnetar model, as a competitive alternative to the standard
collapsar scenario. I will review here the key aspects of the {\it millisecond
magnetar} model for Long Duration Gamma Ray Bursts (LGRBs). I will briefly
describe what constraints, present observations put on any engine model, both
in term of energetic, outflow properties, and the relation with the associated
Supernova (SN). For each of these I will show how the millisecond magnetar
model satisfies the requirements, what are the limits of the model, how can it
be further tested, and what observations might be used to discriminate against
it. I will also discuss numerical results that show the importance of the
confinement by the progenitor star in explaining the formation of a collimated
outflow, how a detailed model for the evolution of the central engine can be
built, and show that a wide variety of explosive events can be explained by
different magnetar parameters. I will conclude with a suggestion that magnetars
might be at the origin of the Extended Emission (EE) observed in a significant
fraction of Short GRBs.Comment: 8 pages; to appear in Proceedings of IAU 279 "Death of Massive Stars:
Supernovae and Gamma-ray Bursts
Thermal Evolution and Light Curves of Young Bare Strange Stars
The cooling of a young bare strange star is studied numerically by solving
the equations of energy conservation and heat transport for both normal and
superconducting strange quark matter inside the star. We show that the thermal
luminosity from the strange star surface, due to both photon emission and e+e-
pair production, may be orders of magnitude higher than the Eddington limit,
for about one day for normal quark matter but possibly for up to a hundred
years for superconducting quark matter, while the maximum of the photon
spectrum is in hard X-rays with a mean energy of ~ 100 keV or even more. This
differs both qualitatively and quantitatively from the photon emission from
young neutron stars and provides a definite observational signature for bare
strange stars. It is shown that the energy gap of superconducting strange quark
matter may be estimated from the light curves if it is in the range from ~ 0.5
MeV to a few MeV.Comment: Ref [10] added and abstract shortened. 4 pages, 3 figures, revtex4.
To be published in Phys. Rev. Letter
On the possible observational manifestation of supernova shock impact on the neutron star magnetosphere
Impact of supernova explosion on the neutron star magnetosphere in a massive
binary system is considered. The supernova shock striking the NS magnetosphere
filled with plasma can lead to the formation of a magnetospheric tail with
significant magnetic energy. The magnetic field reconnection in the current
sheet formed can convert the magnetic energy stored in the tail into kinetic
energy of accelerated charged particles. Plasma instabilities excited by beams
of relativistic particles can lead to the formation of a short pulse of
coherent radio emission with parameters similar to those of the observed bright
extragalactic millisecond radio burst (Lorimer et al. 2007).Comment: 8 pages, Astron. Lett. in pres
Evolution and stability of a magnetic vortex in small cylindrical ferromagnetic particle under applied field
The energy of a displaced magnetic vortex in a cylindrical particle made of
isotropic ferromagnetic material (magnetic dot) is calculated taking into
account the magnetic dipolar and the exchange interactions. Under the
simplifying assumption of small dot thickness the closed-form expressions for
the dot energy is written in a non-perturbative way as a function of the
coordinate of the vortex center. Then, the process of losing the stability of
the vortex under the influence of the externally applied magnetic field is
considered. The field destabilizing the vortex as well as the field when the
vortex energy is equal to the energy of a uniformly magnetized state are
calculated and presented as a function of dot geometry. The results (containing
no adjustable parameters) are compared to the recent experiment and are in good
agreement.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, RevTe
Induced scattering of short radio pulses
Effect of the induced Compton and Raman scattering on short, bright radio
pulses is investigated. It is shown that when a single pulse propagates through
the scattering medium, the effective optical depth is determined by the
duration of the pulse but not by the scale of the medium. The induced
scattering could hinder propagation of the radio pulse only if close enough to
the source a dense enough plasma is presented. The induced scattering within
the relativistically moving source places lower limits on the Lorentz factor of
the source. The results are applied to the recently discovered short
extragalactic radio pulse.Comment: submitted to Ap
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