700 research outputs found

    Stimulated Raman scattering of water maser lines in astrophysical plasmas

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    Radiative transfer equations are derived and solved for the stimulated Raman scattering of water maser lines in the astrophysical plasmas with electron density of about 10^6 - 10^7 cm-3. In stimulated Raman scattering, the energy of water maser line is transferred to the side band modes: Stokes mode and anti-Stokes mode. The Stokes mode is easily produced by backward Raman scattering while the anti-Stokes mode is created by the interacting intersecting masers in the plasma. The intensity of the Stokes mode is higher than that of the anti-Stokes mode. These side band modes are proposed as explanation for the extreme velocity features observed in the galaxy NGC 4258. The threshold value of the brightness temperature for the Raman scattering is about 10^16 - 10^19 K, and it is satisfied in the case of NGC 4258.Comment: 12 pages, 4 Postscript figures. Accepted for Physics of Plasma

    Relationship between Horizontal Flow Velocity and Cell Lifetime for Supergranulation

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    A study of 50 supergranular cells obtained from SOHO Dopplergrams was undertaken in order to investigate the relationship between the lifetime (TT) and the horizontal flow velocity (vhv_h) of the cells. For this sample we find that the two parameters are correlated with a relation vhT0.5v_h\propto T^{0.5} and TT is identified with the eddy turn-over time. This is in agreement with the turbulent convective model of the solar atmosphere where the velocity spectrum of supergranular field given by 'vhL1/3v_h \propto L^{1/3}' can be identified with the Kolmogorov spectrum for the eddy size LL.Comment: 12th International Congress on Plasma Physics, 25-29 October 2004, Nice (France

    Pressure structure of solar coronal loops

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    The steady state pressure structure of a coronal loop is discussed in terms of the MHD global invariants of an incompressible plasma. The steady state is represented by the superposition of two Chandrasekhar-Kendall functions corresponding to (n=m=0) and (n=m=1) modes. The relative contribution of the two modes (epsilon) is found to depend on the surface pressure of the coronal loop which is also the pressure of the external medium. The mixed mode state does not exist for high values of the external pressure because epsilon becomes complex

    Upper mass limit for neutron star stability against black hole formation

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    Starting from the exact general relativistic expression for the total energy of selfgravitating spherically distributed matter and using the minimum energy priciple, we calculate the upper mass limit for a neutron star to be 3.1 solar masses

    Modeling of short scale turbulence in the solar wind

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    The solar wind serves as a laboratory for investigating magnetohydrodynamic turbulence under conditions irreproducible on the terra firma. Here we show that the frame work of Hall magnetohydrodynamics (HMHD), which can support three quadratic invariants and allows nonlinear states to depart fundamentally from the Alfv&#233;nic, is capable of reproducing in the inertial range the three branches of the observed solar wind magnetic fluctuation spectrum - the Kolmogorov branch <i>f</i><sup> -5/3</sup> steepening to <i>f</i><sup> -&alpha;<sub>1</sub></sup> with <!-- MATH alpha1simeq34alpha_1{simeq}3{-}4 --> <IMG WIDTH='61' HEIGHT='29' ALIGN='MIDDLE' BORDER='0' src='http://www.nonlin-processes-geophys.net/12/75/2005/npg-12-75-img3.gif' ALT='alpha1simeq34alpha_1{simeq}3{-}4'> on the high frequency side and flattening to <i>f</i><sup> -1</sup> on the low frequency side. These fluctuations are found to be associated with the nonlinear Hall-MHD Shear Alfv&#233;n waves. The spectrum of the concomitant whistler type fluctuations is very different from the observed one. Perhaps the relatively stronger damping of the whistler fluctuations may cause their unobservability. The issue of equipartition of energy through the so called Alfv&#233;n ratio acquires a new status through its dependence, now, on the spatial scale

    Microflares in accretion disks

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    We have investigated the phenomenon of explosive chromospheric evaporation from an accretion disk as a mechanism for fast variability in accreting sources such as low mass X-ray binaries and active galactic nuclei. This has been done in the context of advection dominated accretion flows, allowing both high and low states to be considered. This mechanism can in principle produce sub-millisecond timescales in binaries and sub-minute timescales in active galaxies. However, even considering the possibility that large numbers of these microflares may be present simultaneously, the power emitted from these microflares probably amounts to only a small fraction of the total X-ray luminosity.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, uses older A&A class file; accepted for publication in A&

    Waves in the solar photosphere

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    The solar photosphere is a partially ionized medium with collisions between electrons, various metallic ions and neutral hydrogen playing an important role in the momentum and energy transport in the medium. Furthermore, the number of neutral hydrogen atom could be as large as 10410^{4} times the number of plasma particles in the lower photosphere. The non-ideal MHD effects, namely Ohm, Ambipolar and Hall diffusion can play an important role in the photosphere. We demonstrate that Hall is an important non-ideal MHD effect in the solar photosphere and show that Hall effect can significantly affect the excitation and propagation of the waves in the medium. We also demonstrate that the non-ideal Hall dominated inhomogeneous medium can become parametrically unstable, and it could have important ramification for the photosphere and chromosphere of the sun. The analysis hints at the possibility of solar photosphere becoming parametrically unstable against the linear fluctuations.Comment: 5 Figures and 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
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