4,177 research outputs found
Determining the luminosity function of Swift long gamma-ray bursts with pseudo-redshifts
The determination of luminosity function (LF) of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) is
of an important role for the cosmological applications of the GRBs, which is
however hindered seriously by some selection effects due to redshift
measurements. In order to avoid these selection effects, we suggest to
calculate pseudo-redshifts for Swift GRBs according to the empirical L-E_p
relationship. Here, such a relationship is determined by reconciling
the distributions of pseudo- and real redshifts of redshift-known GRBs. The
values of E_p taken from Butler's GRB catalog are estimated with Bayesian
statistics rather than observed. Using the GRB sample with pseudo-redshifts of
a relatively large number, we fit the redshift-resolved luminosity
distributions of the GRBs with a broken-power-law LF. The fitting results
suggest that the LF could evolve with redshift by a redshift-dependent break
luminosity, e.g., L_b=1.2\times10^{51}(1+z)^2\rm erg s^{-1}. The low- and
high-luminosity indices are constrained to 0.8 and 2.0, respectively. It is
found that the proportional coefficient between GRB event rate and star
formation rate should correspondingly decrease with increasing redshifts.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
Black hole hyperaccretion in collapsars. III. GRB timescale
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are classified into long and short populations (i.e.,
LGRBs and SGRBs) based on the observed bimodal distribution of duration
. Multimessenger observations indicated that most SGRBs and LGRBs
should be powered by ultrarelativistic jets launched from black hole (BH)
hyperaccretion in compact object mergers and massive collapsars, respectively.
However, the duration criterion sometimes cannot correctly reflect the physical
origin of a particular GRB. In the collapsar scenario, a GRB can be observed
when the jet breaks out from the envelope and circumstellar medium
successfully. The observed GRB duration reflects only the time that the engine
operates after the jet breaks out. This work studies the propagation of jets
driven by the neutrino annihilation or Blandford-Znajek mechanism in massive
collapsars. The signatures of the progenitors for producing LGRBs, SGRBs, and
failed GRBs in the collapsar scenario are exhibited. The competition between
the mass supply onto the BH hyperaccretion and jet propagation into the
envelope are definitely dependent on the density profiles of the collapsars. We
show that duration and isotropic energy of GRBs can help
constrain the density profiles of collapsars. Finally, we propose that a
collapsar-origin SGRB, GRB 200826A, might originate from a
neutrino-annihilation-dominated jet launched by a collapsar
whose progenitor's envelope has been stripped.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Dynamic dissipative cooling of a mechanical oscillator in strong-coupling optomechanics
Cooling of mesoscopic mechanical resonators represents a primary concern in
cavity optomechanics. Here in the strong optomechanical coupling regime, we
propose to dynamically control the cavity dissipation, which is able to
significantly accelerate the cooling process while strongly suppressing the
heating noise. Furthermore, the dynamic control is capable of overcoming
quantum backaction and reducing the cooling limit by several orders of
magnitude. The dynamic dissipation control provides new insights for tailoring
the optomechanical interaction and offers the prospect of exploring macroscopic
quantum physics.Comment: accepetd in Physical Review Letter
Higher theta series for unitary groups over function fields
In previous work, we defined certain virtual fundamental classes for special
cycles on the moduli stack of Hermitian shtukas, and related them to the higher
derivatives of non-singular Fourier coefficients of Siegel-Eisenstein series.
In the present article, we construct virtual fundamental classes in greater
generality, including those expected to relate to the higher derivatives of
singular Fourier coefficients. We assemble these classes into "higher" theta
series, which we conjecture to be modular. Two types of evidence are presented:
structural properties affirming that the cycle classes behave as conjectured
under certain natural operations such as intersection products, and
verification of modularity in several special situations. One innovation
underlying these results is a new approach to special cycles in terms of
derived algebraic geometry.Comment: Comments welcome
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