4,250 research outputs found

    Marking the Moral Boundaries of Class

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    This article welcomes the recent renewed interest in the topic of class within sociology and cultural studies. This comes after a long period – from around the middle part of the 1980s and into the 1990s – during which social class was dismissed as a mode of understanding socio-economic and cultural conditions on the part of both academics and mainstream political organisations alike. Working-class formations in particular came under scrutiny, increasingly seen to be in terminal decline and fragmentation through the impact of post-industrialisation processes set in train in western economies from the turn of the 1980s onwards. The demise of heavy industry – steel, coal, textiles, for instance – profoundly altered working-class communities, transforming the material world and cultural life of the British working class, powerful developments reinforcing the \'end of class\' debate. Allied to this, the emergence within the academy of new theoretical frameworks associated with postmodern thought claimed to undermine traditional understandings around class. This article insists on the continuing significance of class and does so by focussing on an important recent response to the class debate, Andrew Sayer\'s The Moral Significance of Class (2005). This book stakes a lucid claim for the importance of recognising class as a powerful determining factor of subjectivity. While drawing upon aspects of Sayer\'s theoretical framework and argument to examine class experience, it is also the intention of the article to supplement Sayer\'s work by developing related theoretical propositions derived from the writing of Raymond Williams and the Russian linguist and cultural critic Volosinov/Bakhtin.Working Class; Experience; Structure of Feeling; Recognition; Language; Identity

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    Superluminal Waves and the Structure of Pulsar Wind Termination Shocks

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    The termination shock of a pulsar wind is located roughly where the ram pressure matches that of the surrounding medium. Downstream of the shock, MHD models of the diffuse nebular emission suggest the plasma is weakly magnetized. However, the transition from a Poynting-dominated MHD wind to a particle-dominated flow is not well understood. We discuss a solution of this "sigma problem" in which a striped wind converts into a strong, superluminal electromagnetic wave. This mode slows down as it propagates radially, and its ram pressure tends to a constant value at large radius, a property we use to match the solution to the surrounding nebula. The wave thus forms a pre-cursor to the termination shock, which occurs at the point where the wave dissipates. Possible damping and dissipation mechanisms are discussed qualitatively.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Proceedings of the "Electromagnetic Radiation from Pulsars and Magnetars" conference, April 24-27, 2012, Zielona Gora, Polan

    Rapid cosmic-ray acceleration at perpendicular shocks in supernova remnants

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    Perpendicular shocks are shown to be rapid particle accelerators that perform optimally when the ratio usu_{\rm s} of the shock speed to the particle speed roughly equals the ratio 1/η1/\eta of the scattering rate to the gyro frequency. We use analytical methods and Monte-Carlo simulations to solve the kinetic equation that governs the anisotropy generated at these shocks, and find, for ηus≈1\eta u_{\rm s}\approx1, that the spectral index softens by unity and the acceleration time increases by a factor of two compared to the standard result of diffusive shock acceleration theory. These results provide a theoretical basis for the thirty-year-old conjecture that a supernova exploding into the wind of a Wolf-Rayet star may accelerate protons to an energy exceeding 1015 10^{15}\,eV.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Ap

    Large-Scale Cosmic-Ray Anisotropy as a Probe of Interstellar Turbulence

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    We calculate the large-scale cosmic-ray (CR) anisotropies predicted for a range of Goldreich-Sridhar (GS) and isotropic models of interstellar turbulence, and compare them with IceTop data. In general, the predicted CR anisotropy is not a pure dipole; the cold spots reported at 400 TeV and 2 PeV are consistent with a GS model that contains a smooth deficit of parallel-propagating waves and a broad resonance function, though some other possibilities cannot, as yet, be ruled out. In particular, isotropic fast magnetosonic wave turbulence can match the observations at high energy, but cannot accommodate an energy dependence in the shape of the CR anisotropy. Our findings suggest that improved data on the large-scale CR anisotropy could provide a valuable probe of the properties - notably the power-spectrum - of the interstellar turbulence within a few tens of parsecs from Earth.Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures. Published in The Astrophysical Journa

    Computation of synthetic spectra from simulations of relativistic shocks

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    Particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations of relativistic shocks are in principle capable of predicting the spectra of photons that are radiated incoherently by the accelerated particles. The most direct method evaluates the spectrum using the fields given by the Lienard-Wiechart potentials. However, for relativistic particles this procedure is computationally expensive. Here we present an alternative method, that uses the concept of the photon formation length. The algorithm is suitable for evaluating spectra both from particles moving in a specific realization of a turbulent electromagnetic field, or from trajectories given as a finite, discrete time series by a PIC simulation. The main advantage of the method is that it identifies the intrinsic spectral features, and filters out those that are artifacts of the limited time resolution and finite duration of input trajectories.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa

    Inductive spikes and gamma-ray flares from the Crab Nebula

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    The ~400 MeV flaring emission from the Crab Nebula is naturally explained as the result of an abrupt reduction in the mass-loading of the pulsar wind. Very few particles are then available to carry the current required to maintain wave activity, causing them to achieve high Lorentz factors. When they penetrate the Nebula, a tightly beamed, high luminosity burst of hard gamma-rays results, with characteristics similar to the observed flares. This mechanism may operate in other powerful pulsars, such as J0537-6910 (PWN N 157B), B0540-69, B1957+20 and J0205+6449 (3C 58).Comment: Talk presented at the 7th Fermi Symposium, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, October 201

    High-energy emission from pulsar binaries

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    Unpulsed, high-energy emission from pulsar binaries can be attributed to the interaction of a pulsar wind with that of a companion star. At the shock between the outflows, particles carried away from the pulsar magnetosphere are accelerated and radiate both in synchrotron and inverse Compton processes. This emission constitutes a significant fraction of the pulsar spin-down luminosity. It is not clear however, how the highly magnetized pulsar wind could convert its mainly electromagnetic energy into the particles with such high efficiency. Here we investigate a scenario in which a pulsar striped wind converts into a strong electromagnetic wave before reaching the shock. This mode can be thought of as a shock precursor that is able to accelerate particles to ultrarelativistic energies at the expense of the electromagnetic energy it carries. Radiation of the particles leads to damping of the wave. The efficiency of this process depends on the physical conditions imposed by the external medium. Two regimes can be distinguished: a high density one, where the EM wave cannot be launched at all and the current sheets in the striped wind are first compressed by an MHD shock and subsequently dissipate by reconnection, and a low density one, where the wind can first convert into an electromagnetic wave in the shock precursor, which then damps and merges into the surroundings. Shocks in binary systems can transit from one regime to another according to binary phase. We discuss possible observational implications for these objects.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. Proceedings of Gamma2012, July 9-13, Heidelberg, German

    Radiative damping and emission signatures of strong superluminal waves in pulsar winds

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    We analyse the damping by radiation reaction and by Compton drag of strong, superluminal electromagnetic waves in the context of pulsar winds. The associated radiation signature is found by estimating the efficiency and the characteristic radiation frequencies. Applying these estimates to the gamma-ray binary containing PSR B1259-63, we show that the GeV flare observed by Fermi-LAT can be understood as inverse Compton emission by particles scattering photons from the companion star, if the pulsar wind termination shock acquires a precursor of superluminal waves roughly 30 days after periastron. This constrains the mass-loading factor of the wind μ=L/N˙mc2\mu=L/\dot{N}mc^2 (where LL is the luminosity and N˙\dot{N} the rate of loss of electrons and positrons) to be roughly 6×1046\times 10^4.Comment: minor revisions, accepted for publication in Ap
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