62,292 research outputs found

    Hot interstellar gas and ionization of embedded clouds

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    Researchers present detailed photoionization calculations for the instellar cloud in which the Sun is embedded. They consider the EUV radiation field with contribution from discrete stellar sources and from a thermal bremsstrahlung-radiative recombination spectrum emitted from the surrounding 10 to the 6th power k coronal substrate. They establish lower limits to the fractional ionization of hydrogen and helium of 0.17 and 0.29 respectively. The high He ionization fraction results primarily from very strong line emission below 500 A originating in the surrounding coronal substrate while the H ionization is dominated by the EUV radiation from the discrete stellar sources. The dual effects of thermal conduction and the EUV spectrum of the 10 to the 6th k plasma on ionization in the cloud skin are explored. The EUV radiation field and Auger ionization have insignificant effects on the resulting ionic column densities of Si IV, C IV, N V and O VI through the cloud skin. Calculations show that the abundances of these species are dominated by collisional ionization in the thermal conduction front. Because of a low charge exchange rate with hydrogen, the ionic column density ratios of N (CIII)/N (CII) and N (NII)/N (NI) are dominated by the EUV radiation field in the local interstellar medium. These ratios should be important diagnostics for the EUV radiation field and serve as surrogate indicators of the interstellar He and H ionization fraction respectively. Spacecraft such as Lyman which is designed to obtain high resolution spectral data down to the Lyman limit at 912 A could sample interstellar lines of these ions

    GRB afterglows: deep Newtonian phase and its application

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    Gamma-ray burst afterglows have been observed for months or even years in a few cases. It deserves noting that at such late stages, the remnants should have entered the deep Newtonian phase, during which the majority of shock-accelerated electrons will no longer be highly relativistic. To calculate the afterglows, we must assume that the electrons obey a power-law distribution according to their kinetic energy, not simply the Lorentz factor.Comment: Poster at the 4th workshop "Gamma-Ray Bursts in the Afterglow Era" (Rome, 2004), accepted for publication in the proceedings. 4 pages, with 3 figures inserte

    Beaming effects in GRBs and orphan afterglows

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    The overall dynamical evolution and radiation mechanism of γ\gamma-ray burst jets are briefly introduced. Various interesting topics concerning beaming in γ\gamma-ray bursts are discussed, including jet structures, orphan afterglows and cylindrical jets. The possible connection between γ\gamma-ray bursts and neutron star kicks is also addressed.Comment: 10 Pages, 4 figures, to appear in a special issue of ApSS. Oral report presented at "The Multiwavelength Approach to Unidentified Gamma-Ray Sources" (Hong Kong, June 1 - 4, 2004; Conference organizers: K.S. Cheng and G.E. Romero

    Statistics Of The Burst Model At Super-critical Phase

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    We investigate the statistics of a model of type-I X-ray burst [Phys. Rev. E, {\bf 51}, 3045 (1995)] in its super-critical phase. The time evolution of the burnable clusters, places where fire can pass through, is studied using simple statistical arguments. We offer a simple picture for the time evolution of the percentage of space covered by burnable clusters. A relation between the time-average and the peak percentage of space covered by burnable clusters is also derived.Comment: 11 Pages in Revtex 3.0. Two figures available by sending request to [email protected]

    Constraining the bulk Lorentz factor from the photosphere emission

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    We propose a direct and model-independent method to constrain the Lorentz factor of a relativistically expanding object, like gamma-ray bursts. Only the measurements, such as thermal component of the emission, the distance and the variable time scale of the light curve, are used. If the uncertainties are considered, we will obtain lower limits of the Lorentz factor instead. We apply this method to GRB 090618 and get a lower limit of the Lorentz factor to be 22. The method can be used to any relativistically moving object, such as gamma-ray bursts, blazars, and soft gamma-ray repeaters, providing the thermal component of the emission being observed.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur

    Long-term X-ray emission from Swift J1644+57

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    The X-ray emission from Swift J1644+57 is not steadily decreasing instead it shows multiple pulses with declining amplitudes. We model the pulses as reverse shocks from collisions between the late ejected shells and the externally shocked material, which is decelerated while sweeping the ambient medium. The peak of each pulse is taken as the maximum emission of each reverse shock. With a proper set of parameters, the envelope of peaks in the light curve as well as the spectrum can be modelled nicely.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    A Morphological Approach to the Pulsed Emission from Soft Gamma Repeaters

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    We present a geometrical methodology to interpret the periodical light curves of Soft Gamma Repeaters based on the magnetar model and the numerical arithmetic of the three-dimensional magnetosphere model for the young pulsars. The hot plasma released by the star quake is trapped in the magnetosphere and photons are emitted tangent to the local magnetic field lines. The variety of radiation morphologies in the burst tails and the persistent stages could be well explained by the trapped fireballs on different sites inside the closed field lines. Furthermore, our numerical results suggests that the pulse profile evolution of SGR 1806-20 during the 27 December 2004 giant flare is due to a lateral drift of the emitting region in the magnetosphere.Comment: 7 figures, accepted by Ap

    An unexpectedly low-redshift excess of Swift gamma-ray burst rate

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    Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are the most violent explosions in the Universe and can be used to explore the properties of high-redshift universe. It is believed that the long GRBs are associated with the deaths of massive stars. So it is possible to use GRBs to investigate the star formation rate (SFR). In this paper, we use Lynden-Bell's cc^- method to study the luminosity function and rate of \emph{Swift} long GRBs without any assumptions. We find that the luminosity of GRBs evolves with redshift as L(z)g(z)=(1+z)kL(z)\propto g(z)=(1+z)^k with k=2.430.38+0.41k=2.43_{-0.38}^{+0.41}. After correcting the redshift evolution through L0(z)=L(z)/g(z)L_0(z)=L(z)/g(z), the luminosity function can be expressed as ψ(L0)L00.14±0.02\psi(L_0)\propto L_0^{-0.14\pm0.02} for dim GRBs and ψ(L0)L00.70±0.03\psi(L_0)\propto L_0^{-0.70\pm0.03} for bright GRBs, with the break point L0b=1.43×1051 erg s1L_{0}^{b}=1.43\times10^{51}~{\rm erg~s^{-1}}. We also find that the formation rate of GRBs is almost constant at z<1.0z<1.0 for the first time, which is remarkably different from the SFR. At z>1.0z>1.0, the formation rate of GRB is consistent with the SFR. Our results are dramatically different from previous studies. Some possible reasons for this low-redshift excess are discussed. We also test the robustness of our results with Monte Carlo simulations. The distributions of mock data (i.e., luminosity-redshift distribution, luminosity function, cumulative distribution and logNlogS\log N-\log S distribution) are in good agreement with the observations. Besides, we also find that there are remarkable difference between the mock data and the observations if long GRB are unbiased tracers of SFR at z<1.0z<1.0.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figures, 1 table, accepted by ApJ
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