9,793 research outputs found
Proposed reference models for CO2 and halogenated hydrocarbons
The vertical distribution of carbon dioxide, halocarbons and their sink products, HCl and HF, have become available, mainly by means of balloon measurements. Most measurements were made at northern mid-latutudes, but some constituents were measured at tropical latitudes and in the Southern Hemisphere as well. An attempt is made here to combine the available data for presentation of reference models for CO2, CCl4 CCl3F, CCl2F2, CClF3, CF4, CCl2F-CClF2, CClF2-CClF2, CClF2-CF3, CF3-CF3, CH3Cl, CHClF2, CH3-CCl3, CBrClF2, CBrF3, HCl and HF
Extended Uncertainty Principle for Rindler and cosmological horizons
We find exact formulas for the Extended Uncertainty Principle (EUP) for the
Rindler and Friedmann horizons and show that they can be expanded to obtain
asymptotic forms known from the previous literature. We calculate the
corrections to Hawking temperature and Bekenstein entropy of a black hole in
the universe due to Rindler and Friedmann horizons. The effect of the EUP is
similar to the canonical corrections of thermal fluctuations and so it rises
the entropy signalling further loss of information.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, REVTEX 4.1, minor changes, refs update
Fuelling quasars with hot gas
We consider a model for quasar formation in which massive black holes are
formed and fuelled largely by the accretion of hot gas during the process of
galaxy formation. In standard hierarchical collapse models, objects about the
size of normal galaxies and larger form a dense hot atmosphere when they
collapse. We show that if such an atmosphere forms a nearly "maximal" cooling
flow, then a central black hole can accrete at close to its Eddington limit.
This leads to exponential growth of a seed black hole, resulting in a quasar in
some cases. In this model, the first quasars form soon after the first
collapses to produce hot gas. The hot gas is depleted as time progresses,
mostly by cooling, so that the accretion rate eventually falls below the
threshold for advection-dominated accretion, at which stage radiative
efficiency plummets and any quasar turns off. A simple implementation of this
model, incorporated into a semi-analytical model for galaxy formation,
over-produces quasars when compared with observed luminosity functions, but is
consistent with models of the X-ray Background which indicate that most
accretion is obscured. It produces few quasars at high redshift due to the lack
of time needed to grow massive black holes. Quasar fuelling by hot gas provides
a minimum level, sufficient to power most quasars at redshifts between one and
two, to which other sources of fuel can be added. The results are sensitive to
feedback effects, such as might be due to radio jets and other outflows.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, MN Latex style, accepted for publication in
MNRA
The role of cooling flows in galaxy formation
The present structure of galaxies is governed by the radiative dissipation of
the gravitational and supernova energy injected during formation. A crucial
aspect of this process is whether the gas cools as fast as it falls into the
gravitational potential well. If it does then rapid normal star formation is
assumed to ensue. If not, and the gas can still cool by the present time, then
the situation resembles that of a cooling flow, such as commonly found in
clusters of galaxies. The cooled matter is assumed to accumulate as very cold
clouds and/or low mass stars, i.e. as baryonic dark matter. In this paper we
investigate the likelihood of a cooling flow phase during the hierarchical
formation of galaxies. We concentrate on the behaviour of the gas, using a
highly simplified treatment of the evolution of the dark matter potential
within which the gas evolves. We assume that normal star formation is limited
by how much gas the associated supernovae can unbind and allow the gas profile
to flatten as a consequence of supernova energy injection. We find that cooling
flows are an important phase in the formation of most galaxies with total (dark
plus luminous) masses approxgt 10^12 Msun , creating about 20 per cent of the
total dark halo in a galaxy such as our own and a smaller but comparable
fraction of an elliptical galaxy of similar mass. The onset of a cooling flow
determines the upper mass limit for the formation of a visible spheroid from
gas, setting a characteristic mass scale for normal galaxies. We argue that
disk formation requires a cooling flow phase and that dissipation in the
cooling flow phase is the most important factor in the survival of normal
galaxies during subsequent hierarchical mergers.Comment: uuencoded compressed postscript. The preprint is also available at
http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/preprint/PrePrint.htm
Chebyshev matrix product state approach for time evolution
We present and test a new algorithm for time-evolving quantum many-body
systems initially proposed by Holzner et al. [Phys. Rev. B 83, 195115 (2011)].
The approach is based on merging the matrix product state (MPS) formalism with
the method of expanding the time-evolution operator in Chebyshev polynomials.
We calculate time-dependent observables of a system of hardcore bosons quenched
under the Bose-Hubbard Hamiltonian on a one-dimensional lattice. We compare the
new algorithm to more standard methods using the MPS architecture. We find that
the Chebyshev method gives numerically exact results for small times. However,
the reachable times are smaller than the ones obtained with the other
state-of-the-art methods. We further extend the new method using a
spectral-decomposition-based projective scheme that utilizes an effective
bandwidth significantly smaller than the full bandwidth, leading to longer
evolution times than the non-projective method and more efficient information
storage, data compression, and less computational effort.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
VLT near-infrared spectra of hard serendipitous Chandra sources
We present near-infrared long-slit spectra of eight optically-dim X-ray
sources obtained with ISAAC on the Very Large Telescope. Six of the sources
have hard X-ray emission with a significant fraction of the counts emerging
above 2 keV. All were discovered serendipitously in the fields of three nearby
galaxy clusters observed with Chandra, and identified through near-infrared
imaging. The X-ray fluxes lie close to the break in the source counts. Two of
the sources show narrow emission lines, and a third has a broad line. One of
the narrow line-emitting sources has a clear redshift identification at z=2.18,
while the other has a tentative determination based on the highest redshift
detection of He I 10830 at z=1.26. The remainder have featureless spectra to
deep limiting equivalent widths of 20--60 angstroms and line flux approx= 5 x
10^{-17} erg/s/cm^2 in the K-band. High-quality J, H and Ks--band images of the
sources were combined with archival optical detections or limits to estimate a
photometric redshift for six. Two sources show complex double morphology. The
hard sources have spectral count ratios consistent with heavily obscured AGN,
while the host galaxy emits much of the optical and near-infrared flux. The
most likely explanation for the featureless continua is that the line photons
are being scattered or destroyed by optically-thick gas and associated dust
with large covering fractions.Comment: Replaced in response to problems with the PDF version of Fig 4 at
arxiv.org, but not at the mirror sites (lanl.gov, soton.ac.uk). No content
change
A Chandra observation of the H2O megamaser IC2560
A short Chandra ACIS-S observation of the Seyfert 2 galaxy IC 2560, which
hosts a luminous nuclear water megamaser, shows: 1) the X-ray emission is
extended; 2) the X-ray spectrum shows emission features in the soft (E<2 keV)
X-ray band; this is the major component of the extended emission; and 3) a very
strong (EW~3.6 keV) iron K line at 6.4 keV on a flat continuum. This last
feature clearly indicates that the X-ray source is hidden behind Compton-thick
obscuration, so that the intrinsic hard X-ray luminosity must be much higher
than observed, probably close to ~3e42 erg/s. We briefly discuss the
implications for powering of the maser emission and the central source.Comment: 5 pages, MNRAS in pres
Frequency conversion of structured light
We demonstrate the coherent frequency conversion of structured light, optical
beams in which the phase varies in each point of the transverse plane, from the
near infrared (803nm) to the visible (527nm). The frequency conversion process
makes use of sum-frequency generation in a periodically poled lithium niobate
(ppLN) crystal with the help of a 1540-nm Gaussian pump beam. We perform
far-field intensity measurements of the frequency-converted field, and verify
the sought-after transformation of the characteristic intensity and phase
profiles for various input modes. The coherence of the frequency-conversion
process is confirmed using a mode-projection technique with a phase mask and a
single-mode fiber. The presented results could be of great relevance to novel
applications in high-resolution microscopy and quantum information processing
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