909 research outputs found
Modelling blazar flaring using a time-dependent fluid jet emission model - an explanation for orphan flares and radio lags
Blazar jets are renowned for their rapid violent variability and
multiwavelength flares, however, the physical processes responsible for these
flares are not well understood. In this paper we develop a time-dependent
inhomogeneous fluid jet emission model for blazars. We model optically thick
radio flares for the first time and show that they are delayed with respect to
the prompt optically thin emission by ~ months to decades, with a lag that
increases with the jet power and observed wavelength. This lag is caused by a
combination of the travel time of the flaring plasma to the optically thin
radio emitting sections of the jet and the slow rise time of the radio flare.
We predict two types of flares: symmetric flares - with the same rise and decay
time, which occur for flares whose duration is shorter than both the radiative
lifetime and the geometric path-length delay timescale; extended flares - whose
luminosity tracks the power of particle acceleration in the flare, which occur
for flares with a duration longer than both the radiative lifetime and
geometric delay. Our model naturally produces orphan X-ray and -ray
flares. These are caused by flares which are only observable above the
quiescent jet emission in a narrow band of frequencies. Our model is able to
successfully fit to the observed multiwavelength flaring spectra and
lightcurves of PKS1502+106 across all wavelengths, using a transient flaring
front located within the broad-line region.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Using radiative energy losses to constrain the magnetisation and magnetic reconnection rate at the base of black hole jets
We calculate the severe radiative energy losses which occur at the base of
black hole jets using a relativistic fluid jet model, including in-situ
acceleration of non-thermal leptons by magnetic reconnection. Our results
demonstrate that including a self-consistent treatment of radiative energy
losses is necessary to perform accurate MHD simulations of powerful jets and
that jet spectra calculated via post-processing are liable to vastly
overestimate the amount of non-thermal emission. If no more than 95% of the
initial total jet power is radiated away by the plasma travels as it travels
along the length of the jet, we can place a lower bound on the magnetisation of
the jet plasma at the base of the jet. For typical powerful jets, we find that
the plasma at the jet base is required to be highly magnetised, with at least
10,000 times more energy contained in magnetic fields than in non-thermal
leptons. Using a simple power-law model of magnetic reconnection, motivated by
simulations of collisionless reconnection, we determine the allowed range of
the large-scale average reconnection rate along the jet, by restricting the
total radiative energy losses incurred and the distance at which the jet first
comes into equipartition. We calculate analytic expressions for the cumulative
radiative energy losses due to synchrotron and inverse-Compton emission along
jets, and derive analytic formulae for the constraint on the initial
magnetisation.Comment: 21 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Uncovering the physics behind the blazar sequence using a realistic model for jet emission
Blazar spectra are one of the most important windows into the physical
processes occurring along jets. The spectrum, composed from the different
emitting regions along the jet, allows us to constrain the physical conditions
in the jet. I present my work modelling blazar spectra using an extended
inhomogeneous jet model with an accelerating, magnetically dominated, parabolic
base transitioning to a slowly decelerating, conical section motivated by
observations, simulations and theory. We set the inner geometry of our
multi-zone model using observations of the jet in M87 which transitions from
parabolic to conical at 10^5 Schwarzschild radii. This model is able to
reproduce quiescent blazar spectra very well across all wavelengths (including
radio observations) for a sample of 42 BL Lacs and FSRQs.
Using this inhomogeneous model we are able to constrain the location at which
the synchrotron emission is brightest in these jets by fitting to the optically
thick to thin synchrotron break. We find that the radius of the jet at which
the synchrotron emission is brightest (where the jet first approaches
equipartition) scales approximately linearly with the jet power. We also find a
correlation between the length of the accelerating, parabolic section of the
jet and the maximum bulk Lorentz factor. In agreement with previous work we
find that BL Lacs are low power blazars whereas FSRQs are high power blazars.
Together with our simple jet power-radius relation this leads us to a deeper
understanding of the physics underlying the blazar sequence.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, to appear in "The Innermost Regions of
Relativistic Jets and Their Magnetic Fields" conference proceedings; includes
minor change
Synchrotron and inverse-Compton emission from blazar jets - III. Compton-dominant blazars
In this paper we develop the extended jet model of Potter & Cotter to model
the simultaneous multi-wavelength spectra of six Compton-dominant blazars. We
include an accelerating parabolic base transitioning to a slowly decelerating
conical jet with a geometry set by observations of M87 and consistent with
simulations and theory. We investigate several jet models and find that the
optically thick to thin synchrotron break in the radio spectrum requires the
jet to first come into equipartition at large distances along the jet (10^5
Schwarzschild radii), consistent with the observed transition from parabolic to
conical in the jet of M87. We confirm this result analytically and calculate
the expected frequency core-shift relations for the models under consideration.
We find that a parabolic jet transitioning to a ballistic conical jet, which
starts in equipartition and becomes more particle dominated at larger
distances, fits the multiwavelength data of the six blazars well, whilst an
adiabatic equipartition conical section requires very large bulk Lorentz
factors to reproduce the Compton-dominance of the blazars.
We find that all these blazars require high power, high bulk Lorentz factor
jets observed close to the line of sight as we expect from the blazar sequence
and consistent with the results from Paper II. The inverse-Compton emission in
our fits is due to inverse-Compton scattering of high-redshift CMB photons at
large distances along the jet due to the high bulk Lorentz factors of the jets.
We postulate a new interpretation of the blazar sequence based on the radius of
the transition region of the jet (where the jet is brightest in synchrotron
emission) scaling linearly with black hole mass.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Feasibility of Magnetic Reconnection Powered Blazar Flares from Synchrotron Self-Compton Emission
Order of magnitude variability has been observed in the blazar sub-class of
Active Galactic Nuclei on minute timescales. These high-energy flares are often
difficult to explain with shock acceleration models due to the small size of
the inferred emitting region, with recent particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations
showing that magnetic reconnection is a promising alternative mechanism. Here,
we present a macroscopic emission model physically motivated by PIC
simulations, where the energy for particle acceleration originates from the
reconnecting magnetic field. We track the radial growth and relative velocity
of a reconnecting plasmoid, modelling particle acceleration and radiative
losses from synchrotron and synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) emission. To test
the viability of magnetic reconnection as the mechanism behind rapid blazar
flares we simultaneously fit our model to the observed light-curve and SED from
the 2016 TeV flare of BL Lacertae. We find generally that, without considering
external photons, reconnecting plasmoids are unable to produce Compton-dominant
TeV flares and so cannot reproduce the observations due to overproduction of
synchrotron emission. Additionally, problematically large plasmoids, comparable
in size to the entire jet radius, are required to emit sufficient SSC
gamma-rays to be observable. However, our plasmoid model can reproduce the
rapid TeV lightcurve of the flare, demonstrating that reconnection is able to
produce rapid, powerful TeV flares on observed timescales. We conclude that
while reconnection can produce SSC flares on the correct timescales, the
primary source of TeV emission cannot be SSC and the size of plasmoids required
may be implausibly large.Comment: Replaced with accepted version. Contains additional figures and
considers the effect of a magnetic guide fiel
Using C to build a satellite scheduling expert system: Examples from the Explorer Platform planning system
A C-based artificial intelligence (AI) development effort which is based on a software tools approach is discussed with emphasis on reusability and maintainability of code. The discussion starts with simple examples of how list processing can easily be implemented in C and then proceeds to the implementations of frames and objects which use dynamic memory allocation. The implementation of procedures which use depth first search, constraint propagation, context switching, and blackboard-like simulation environment are described. Techniques for managing the complexity of C-based AI software are noted, especially the object-oriented techniques of data encapsulation and incremental development. Finally, all these concepts are put together by describing the components of planning software called the Planning And Resource Reasoning (PARR) Shell. This shell was successfully utilized for scheduling services of the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System for the Earth Radiation Budget Satellite since May of 1987 and will be used for operations scheduling of the Explorer Platform in Nov. of 1991
Using C to build a satellite scheduling expert system: Examples from the Explorer platform planning system
Recently, many expert systems were developed in a LISP environment and then ported to the real world C environment before the final system is delivered. This situation may require that the entire system be completely rewritten in C and may actually result in a system which is put together as quickly as possible with little regard for maintainability and further evolution. With the introduction of high performance UNIX and X-windows based workstations, a great deal of the advantages of developing a first system in the LISP environment have become questionable. A C-based AI development effort is described which is based on a software tools approach with emphasis on reusability and maintainability of code. The discussion starts with simple examples of how list processing can easily be implemented in C and then proceeds to the implementations of frames and objects which use dynamic memory allocation. The implementation of procedures which use depth first search, constraint propagation, context switching and a blackboard-like simulation environment are described. Techniques for managing the complexity of C-based AI software are noted, especially the object-oriented techniques of data encapsulation and incremental development. Finally, all these concepts are put together by describing the components of planning software called the Planning And Resource Reasoning (PARR) shell. This shell was successfully utilized for scheduling services of the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System for the Earth Radiation Budget Satellite since May 1987 and will be used for operations scheduling of the Explorer Platform in November 1991
A gauge-invariant approach to interactions in the dark sector
We outline a gauge-invariant framework to calculate cosmological
perturbations in dark energy models consisting of a scalar field interacting
with dark matter via energy and momentum exchanges. Focusing on three
well-known models of quintessence and three common types of dark-sector
interactions, we calculate the matter and dark energy power spectra as well as
the Integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect in these models. We show how the
presence of dark-sector interactions can produce a large-scale enhancement in
the matter power spectrum and a boost in the low multipoles of the cosmic
microwave background anisotropies. Nevertheless, we find these enhancements to
be much more subtle than those found by previous authors who model dark energy
using simple ansatz for the equation of state. We also address issues of
instabilities and emphasise the importance of momentum exchanges in the dark
sector.Comment: 24 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in JCA
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