6,447 research outputs found
Multimegawatt thermionic reactor systems for space applications
Design features and performance characteristics of thermionic reactor systems for space application
X-ray reverberation around accreting black holes
Luminous accreting stellar mass and supermassive black holes produce
power-law continuum X-ray emission from a compact central corona. Reverberation
time lags occur due to light travel time-delays between changes in the direct
coronal emission and corresponding variations in its reflection from the
accretion flow. Reverberation is detectable using light curves made in
different X-ray energy bands, since the direct and reflected components have
different spectral shapes. Larger, lower frequency, lags are also seen and are
identified with propagation of fluctuations through the accretion flow and
associated corona. We review the evidence for X-ray reverberation in active
galactic nuclei and black hole X-ray binaries, showing how it can be best
measured and how it may be modelled. The timescales and energy-dependence of
the high frequency reverberation lags show that much of the signal is
originating from very close to the black hole in some objects, within a few
gravitational radii of the event horizon. We consider how these signals can be
studied in the future to carry out X-ray reverberation mapping of the regions
closest to black holes.Comment: 72 pages, 32 figures. Accepted for publication in The Astronomy and
Astrophysics Review. Corrected for mostly minor typos, but in particular
errors are corrected in the denominators of the covariance and rms spectrum
error equations (Eqn. 14 and 15
Experimental investigation of some aspects of insect-like flapping flight aerodynamics for application to micro air vehicles
Insect-like flapping flight offers a power-efficient and highly manoeuvrable basis for micro air vehicles for indoor applications. Some aspects of the aerodynamics associated with the sweeping phase of insect wing kinematics are examined by making particle image velocimetry measurements on a rotating wing immersed in a tank of seeded water. The work is motivated by the paucity of data with quantified error on insect-like flapping flight, and aims to fill this gap by providing a detailed description of the experimental setup, quantifying the uncertainties in the measurements and explaining the results. The experiments are carried out at two Reynolds numbers-500 and 15,000-accounting for scales pertaining to many insects and future flapping-wing micro air vehicles, respectively. The results from the experiments are used to describe prominent flow features, and Reynolds number-related differences are highlighted. In particular, the behaviour of the leading-edge vortex at these Reynolds numbers is studied and the presence of Kelvin-Helmholtz instability observed at the higher Reynolds number in computational fluid dynamics calculations is also verified
Discovery of high-frequency iron K lags in Ark 564 and Mrk 335
We use archival XMM-Newton observations of Ark 564 and Mrk 335 to calculate
the frequency dependent time-lags for these two well-studied sources. We
discover high-frequency Fe K lags in both sources, indicating that the red wing
of the line precedes the rest frame energy by roughly 100 s and 150 s for Ark
564 and Mrk 335, respectively. Including these two new sources, Fe K
reverberation lags have been observed in seven Seyfert galaxies. We examine the
low-frequency lag-energy spectrum, which is smooth, and shows no feature of
reverberation, as would be expected if the low-frequency lags were produced by
distant reflection off circumnuclear material. The clear differences in the low
and high frequency lag-energy spectra indicate that the lags are produced by
two distinct physical processes. Finally, we find that the amplitude of the Fe
K lag scales with black hole mass for these seven sources, consistent with a
relativistic reflection model where the lag is the light travel delay
associated with reflection of continuum photons off the inner disc.Comment: 10 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Closest Look at 1H0707-495: X-ray Reverberation Lags with 1.3 Ms of Data
Reverberation lags in AGN were first discovered in the NLS1 galaxy,
1H0707-495. We present a follow-up analysis using 1.3 Ms of data, which allows
for the closest ever look at the reverberation signature of this remarkable
source. We confirm previous findings of a hard lag of ~100 seconds at
frequencies v ~ [0.5 - 4] e-4 Hz, and a soft lag of ~30 seconds at higher
frequencies, v ~ [0.6 - 3] e-3 Hz. These two frequency domains clearly show
different energy dependences in their lag spectra. We also find evidence for a
signature from the broad Fe K line in the high frequency lag spectrum. We use
Monte Carlo simulations to show how the lag and coherence measurements respond
to the addition of Poisson noise and to dilution by other components. With our
better understanding of these effects on the lag, we show that the lag-energy
spectra can be modelled with a scenario in which low frequency hard lags are
produced by a compact corona responding to accretion rate fluctuations
propagating through an optically thick accretion disc, and the high frequency
soft lags are produced by short light-travel delay associated with reflection
of coronal power-law photons off the disc.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
Phase transformation in Si from semiconducting diamond to metallic beta-Sn phase in QMC and DFT under hydrostatic and anisotropic stress
Silicon undergoes a phase transition from the semiconducting diamond phase to
the metallic beta-Sn phase under pressure. We use quantum Monte Carlo
calculations to predict the transformation pressure and compare the results to
density functional calculations employing the LDA, PBE, PW91, WC, AM05, PBEsol
and HSE06 exchange-correlation functionals. Diffusion Monte Carlo predicts a
transition pressure of 14.0 +- 1.0 GPa slightly above the experimentally
observed transition pressure range of 11.3 to 12.6 GPa. The HSE06 hybrid
functional predicts a transition pressure of 12.4 GPa in excellent agreement
with experiments. Exchange-correlation functionals using the local-density
approximation and generalized-gradient approximations result in transition
pressures ranging from 3.5 to 10.0 GPa, well below the experimental values. The
transition pressure is sensitive to stress anisotropy. Anisotropy in the stress
along any of the cubic axes of the diamond phase of silicon lowers the
equilibrium transition pressure and may explain the discrepancy between the
various experimental values as well as the small overestimate of the quantum
Monte Carlo transition pressure
Disentangling multipole resonances through a full x-ray polarization analysis
Complete polarization analysis applied to resonant x-ray scattering at the Cr
K-edge in K2CrO4 shows that incident linearly polarized x-rays can be converted
into circularly polarized x-rays by diffraction at the Cr pre-edge (E = 5994
eV). The physical mechanism behind this phenomenon is a subtle interference
effect between purely dipole (E1-E1) and purely quadrupole (E2-E2) transitions,
leading to a phase shift between the respective scattering amplitudes. This
effect may be exploited to disentangle two close-lying resonances that appear
as a single peak in a conventional energy scan, in this way allowing to single
out and identify the different multipole order parameters involved.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figure
Nebular Line Emission During the Epoch of Reionization
Nebular emission lines associated with galactic HII regions carry information
about both physical properties of the ionised gas and the source of ionising
photons as well as providing the opportunity of measuring accurate redshifts
and thus distances once a cosmological model is assumed. While nebular line
emission has been extensively studied at lower redshift there are currently
only few constraints within the epoch of reionisation (EoR, ), chiefly due
to the lack of sensitive near-IR spectrographs. However, this will soon change
with the arrival of the Webb Telescope providing sensitive near-IR spectroscopy
covering the rest-frame UV and optical emission of galaxies in the EoR. In
anticipation of Webb we combine the large cosmological hydrodynamical
simulation Bluetides with photoionisation modelling to predict the nebular
emission line properties of galaxies at . We find good agreement
with the, albeit limited, existing direct and indirect observational
constraints on equivalent widths though poorer agreement with luminosity
function constraints.Comment: 17 pages, accepted to MNRAS, significant modification from v1.0 data
available at https://stephenmwilkins.github.io/BluetidesEmissionLines_Public
Determination of the Antiferroquadrupolar Order Parameters in UPd3
By combining accurate heat capacity and X-ray resonant scattering results we
have resolved the long standing question regarding the nature of the
quadrupolar ordered phases in UPd_3. The order parameter of the highest
temperature quadrupolar phase has been uniquely determined to be antiphase
Q_{zx} in contrast to the previous conjecture of Q_{x^2-y^2} . The azimuthal
dependence of the X-ray scattering intensity from the quadrupolar superlattice
reflections indicates that the lower temperature phases are described by a
superposition of order parameters. The heat capacity features associated with
each of the phase transitions characterize their order, which imposes
restrictions on the matrix elements of the quadrupolar operators.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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