42 research outputs found

    Taking apart the dynamical clock. Fat-tailed dynamical kicks shape the blue-straggler star bimodality

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    In globular clusters, blue straggler stars are heavier than the average star, so dynamical friction strongly affects them. The radial distribution of BSS, normalized to a reference population, appears bimodal in a fraction of Galactic GCs, with a density peak in the core, a prominent zone of avoidance at intermediate radii, and again higher density in the outskirts. The zone of avoidance appears to be located at larger radii the more relaxed the host cluster, acting as a sort of dynamical clock. We use a new method to compute the evolution of the BSS radial distribution under dynamical friction and diffusion. We evolve our BSS in the mean cluster potential under dynamical friction plus a random fluctuating force, solving the Langevin equation with the Mannella quasi symplectic scheme. This amounts to a new simulation method which is much faster and simpler than direct N-body codes but retains their main feature: diffusion powered by strong, if infrequent, kicks. We compute the radial distribution of initially unsegregated BSS normalized to a reference population as a function of time. We trace the evolution of its minimum, corresponding to the zone of avoidance. We compare the evolution under kicks extracted from a Gaussian distribution to that obtained using a Holtsmark distribution. The latter is a fat tailed distribution which correctly models the effects of close gravitational encounters. We find that the zone of avoidance moves outwards over time, as expected based on observations, only when using the Holtsmark distribution. Thus the correct representation of near encounters is crucial to reproduce the dynamics of the system. We confirm and extend earlier results that showed how the dynamical clock indicator depends both on dynamical friction and effective diffusion powered by dynamical encounters.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures. Version accepted in Astronomy & Astrophysic

    Dissipationless collapse and the dynamical mass-ellipticity relation of elliptical galaxies in Newtonian gravity and MOND

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    Context. Deur (2014) and Winters et al. (2023) proposed an empirical relation between the dark to total mass ratio and ellipticity in elliptical galaxies from their observed total dynamical mass-to-light ratio data M/L = (14.1 +/- 5.4){\epsilon}. In other words, the larger is the content of dark matter in the galaxy, the more the stellar component would be flattened. Such observational claim, if true, appears to be in stark contrast with the common intuition of the formation of galaxies inside dark halos with reasonably spherical symmetry. Aims. Comparing the processes of dissipationless galaxy formation in different theories of gravity, and emergence of the galaxy scaling relations therein is an important frame where, in principle one could discriminate them. Methods. By means of collisionless N-body simulations in modified Newtonian dynamics (MOND) and Newtonian gravity with and without active dark matter halos, with both spherical and clumpy initial structure, I study the trends of intrinsic and projected ellipticities, S\'ersic index and anisotropy with the total dynamical to stellar mass ratio. Results. It is shown that, the end products of both cold spherical collapses and mergers of smaller clumps depart more and more from the spherical symmetry for increasing values of the total dynamical mass to stellar mass, at least in a range of halo masses. The equivalent Newtonian systems of the end products of MOND collapses show a similar behaviour. The M/L relation obtained from the numerical experiments in both gravities is however rather different from that reported by Deur and coauthors.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, submitted, comments welcom

    Dynamics of heterogeneous clusters under intense laser fields

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    We study the dynamics of atomic and molecular nano-clusters exposed to short and intense X-fel pulsesComment: PhD Thesis, 133 pages, 60 (low quality) figure

    Radially anisotropic systems with r−αr^{-\alpha} forces. II: radial-orbit instability

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    We continue to investigate the dynamics of collisionless systems of particles interacting via additive r−αr^{-\alpha} interparticle forces. Here we focus on the dependence of the radial-orbit instability on the force exponent α\alpha. By means of direct NN-body simulations we study the stability of equilibrium radially anisotropic Osipkov-Merritt spherical models with Hernquist density profile and with 1≤α<31\leq\alpha<3. We determine, as a function of α\alpha, the minimum value for stability of the anisotropy radius rasr_{as} and of the maximum value of the associated stability indicator ξs\xi_s. We find that, for decreasing α\alpha, rasr_{as} decreases and ξs\xi_s increases, i.e. longer-range forces are more robust against radial-orbit instability. The isotropic systems are found to be stable for all the explored values of α\alpha. The end products of unstable systems are all markedly triaxial with minor-to-major axial ratio >0.3>0.3, so they are never flatter than an E7 system.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figure

    Proton ejection from molecular hydride clusters exposed to strong X-ray pulses

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    Clusters consisting of small molecules containing hydrogen do eject fast protons when illuminated by short X-ray pulses. A suitable overall charging of the cluster controlled by the X-ray intensity induces electron migration from the surface to the bulk leading to efficient segregation of the protons and to a globally hindered explosion of the heavy atoms even outside the screened volume. We investigate this peculiar effect systematically along the iso-electronic sequence of methane over ammonia and water to the atomic limit of neon as a reference. In contrast to core-shell systems where the outer shell is sacrificed to reduce radiation damage, the intricate proton dynamics of hydride clusters allows one to keep the entire backbone of heavy atoms intact.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
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