97 research outputs found
Characterization of a hypoeutectic Al alloy obtained by selective laser melting
In this investigation, a hypoeutectic AlSi11Cu alloy was printed. This alloy was obtained in powder form with an average particle size of 40 µm. Bars 20 mm in diameter and 100 mm in length were printed with the building direction parallel to the bars' longitudinal direction. The microstructural characterization demonstrated an Al matrix surrounded by a Si network forming a coral-like pattern. The microstructure of the alloy showed a heterogeneous behavior with a mixture of columnar and equiaxed grains. Likewise, the texture indicated that the columnar grains were preferentially oriented towards the building direction, while the equiaxed followed a texture dominated by the cube component. On the other hand, the as-printed material strength showed higher values than those obtained in the same alloy using conventional processes such as casting. In addition, strength and ductility differences were found in the printed material, depending on the measurement direction. The highest values were obtained in the radial direction (565 MPa maximum strength and 4.8% elongation to failure). The lowest values corresponded to the transverse direction (508 MPa maximum strength and 3.2 elongation to failure), which corroborate the material anisotropy.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Mechanical and microstructural evolution of a 3D printed AlSi11Cu alloy
Additive manufacturing (AM) processes have attracted a great interest in the scientific community during the last five years. This paper presents the 3D printing of a hypoeutectic Al alloy obtained by the Selective Laser Melting (SLM) technique. The initially printed material presented a cellular Al matrix microstructure with interconnected Si networks. Different tensile behaviors were found depending on the orientation of the specimens for both the initial material and after the annealing heat treatment. The specimens cut in the printing direction recorded lower ductility values, while those from the perpendicular plane and in the radial direction showed higher ductility and strength values.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Constraints on Cold Magnetized Shocks in Gamma-Ray Bursts
We consider a model in which the ultra-relativistic jet in a gamma-ray burst
(GRB) is cold and magnetically accelerated. We assume that the energy flux in
the outflowing material is partially thermalized via internal shocks or a
reverse shock, and we estimate the maximum amount of radiation that could be
produced in such magnetized shocks. We compare this estimate with the available
observational data on prompt gamma-ray emission in GRBs. We find that, even
with highly optimistic assumptions, the magnetized jet model is radiatively too
inefficient to be consistent with observations. One way out is to assume that
much of the magnetic energy in the post-shock, or even pre-shock, jet material
is converted to particle thermal energy by some unspecified process, and then
radiated. This can increase the radiative efficiency sufficiently to fit
observations. Alternatively, jet acceleration may be driven by thermal pressure
rather than magnetic fields. In this case, which corresponds to the traditional
fireball model, sufficient prompt GRB emission could be produced either from
shocks at a large radius or from the jet photosphere closer to the center.Comment: MNRAS, in press. 9 pages, 4 figures, uses mn2e.cl
Effect of heat treatments on the mechanical and microstructural behavior of a hypoeutectic Al alloy obtained by laser power bed fusion
Large gains in strength and ductility are of little significance if the material’s anisotropy is high. Therefore, improving the mechanical properties and reducing the anisotropy of Al alloys obtained by additive manufacturing is a topic of growing interest. This manuscript examines the effect of distinct heat treatments on the mechanical, anisotropic, and microstructural behavior of a hypoeutectic, almost eutectic, AlSi11Cu alloy obtained by laser powder bed fusion (L-PBF). The microstructural characterization revealed an Al matrix surrounded by a Si-rich network, forming a coral-like pattern with a heterogeneous combination of columnar and equiaxed grains. The texture indicated that the columnar grains were preferentially oriented towards the building direction with strong Cube and Goss components. Different strength-ductility ratios were obtained following the annealing and solution heat treatments at different temperatures (200 °C–550 °C) with a holding time of 1 h. In terms of grain size and dislocation density, no significant changes were found in the microstructure, suggesting that grain size and dislocation strengthening mechanisms are not highly affected by the heat treatments. In addition, the Si-enriched network remained interconnected until 300 °C. At higher temperatures, this interconnection was lost, giving rise to large Si particles depleting the Si content in solid solution in the Al matrix. Digital image correlation maps revealed that deformation fields were more homogeneous when the cellular structure disappeared. The visco-plastic self-consistent model showed that when applying the load at 30° in the building direction (BD), the largest tensile strength was generated, whereas the lowest strength was obtained when the load was parallel to the BD. Heat treatments for 1 h holding time were found to be efficient in reducing the Lankford coefficients dispersion, suggesting improvements in formability and reducing the alloy’s planar anisotropy. These results revealed that annealing up to 400 °C or higher temperatures followed by water quenching leads to good strength and ductility ratios while reducing anisotropy.Peer ReviewedPostprint (published version
Magnetohydrodynamic Simulations of Gamma-Ray Burst Jets: Beyond the Progenitor Star
Achromatic breaks in afterglow light curves of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) arise
naturally if the product of the jet's Lorentz factor \gamma and opening angle
\Theta_j satisfies (\gamma \Theta_j) >> 1 at the onset of the afterglow phase,
i.e., soon after the conclusion of the prompt emission. Magnetohydrodynamic
(MHD) simulations of collimated GRB jets generally give (\gamma \Theta_j) <~ 1,
suggesting that MHD models may be inconsistent with jet breaks. We work within
the collapsar paradigm and use axisymmetric relativistic MHD simulations to
explore the effect of a finite stellar envelope on the structure of the jet.
Our idealized models treat the jet-envelope interface as a collimating rigid
wall, which opens up outside the star to mimic loss of collimation. We find
that the onset of deconfinement causes a burst of acceleration accompanied by a
slight increase in the opening angle. In our fiducial model with a stellar
radius equal to 10^4.5 times that of the central compact object, the jet
achieves an asymptotic Lorentz factor \gamma ~ 500 far outside the star and an
asymptotic opening angle \Theta_j ~ 0.04 rad ~ 2 deg, giving (\gamma \Theta_j)
~ 20. These values are consistent with observations of typical long-duration
GRBs, and explain the occurrence of jet breaks. We provide approximate analytic
solutions that describe the numerical results well.Comment: Accepted to New Astronomy. 7 pages, 3 figures
Modelling the spectral evolution of classical double radio sources
The spectral evolution of powerful double radio galaxies (FR II's) is thought
to be determined by the acceleration of electrons at the termination shock of
the jet, their transport through the bright head region into the lobes and the
production of the radio emission by synchrotron radiation in the lobes. Models
presented to date incorporate some of these processes in prescribing the
electron distribution which enters the lobes. We have extended these models to
include a description of electron acceleration at the relativistic termination
shock and a selection of transport models for the head region. These are
coupled to the evolution of the electron spectrum in the lobes under the
influence of losses due to adiabatic expansion, by inverse Compton scattering
on the cosmic background radiation and by synchrotron radiation. The
evolutionary tracks predicted by this model are compared to observation using
the power/source-size (P-D) diagram. We find that the simplest scenario, in
which accelerated particles suffer adiabatic losses in the head region which
become more severe as the source expands produces P-D-tracks which conflict
with observation, because the power is predicted to decline too steeply with
increasing size. Agreement with observation can be found by assuming that
adiabatic losses are compensated during transport between the termination shock
and the lobe by a re-acceleration process distributed throughout the head
region.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
Reviving Fossil Radio Plasma in Clusters of Galaxies by Adiabatic Compression in Environmental Shock Waves
We give for a plasma with a history of several expansion and contraction
phases an analytical model of the evolution of a contained relativistic
electron population under synchrotron, inverse Compton and adiabatic energy
losses or gains. This is applied to different scenarios for evolution of radio
plasma inside the cocoons of radio galaxies, after the activity of the central
engine has ceased. It is demonstrated that fossil radio plasma with an age of
even up to 2 Gyr can be revived by compression in a shock wave of large-scale
structure formation, caused during the merging events of galaxy clusters, or by
the accretion onto galaxy clusters. We argue, that this is a highly plausible
explanation for the observed cluster radio relics, which are the regions of
diffuse radio emission found in clusters of galaxies, without any likely parent
radio galaxy seen nearby. An implication of this model is the existence of a
population of diffuse, ultra-steep spectrum, very low frequency radio sources
located inside and possibly outside of clusters of galaxies, tracing the
revival of aged fossil radio plasma by the shock waves associated with
large-scale structure formation.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures, accepted by A&
Three-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the evolution of magnetic fields in Fanaroff-Riley class II radio sources
Radio observations of Fanaroff-Riley class II sources often show correlations
between the synchrotron emission and the linear-polarimetric distributions.
Magnetic position vectors seem to align with the projected emission of both the
radio jets and the sources' edges. Using statistics we study such relation as
well as its unknown time evolution via synthetic polarisation maps of model FR
II sources formed in 3D-MHD numerical simulations of bipolar, hypersonic and
weakly magnetised jets. The magnetic field is initially random with a
Kolmogorov power spectrum, everywhere. We investigate the structure and
evolution of magnetic fields in the sources as a function of the power of jets
and the observational viewing angle. Our synthetic polarisation maps agree with
observations, showing B-field vectors which are predominantly aligned with the
jet axis, and show that magnetic fields inside sources are shaped by the jets'
backflow. Polarimetry is found to correlate with time, the viewing angle and
the jet-to-ambient density contrast. The magnetic structure inside thin
elongated sources is more uniform than inside more spherical ones. We see jets
increase the magnetic energy in cocoons in proportion to the jet velocity and
the cocoon width. Filaments in the synthetic emission maps suggest turbulence
develops in evolved sources.Comment: Accepted for publication in the MNRAS. 21 pages, 11 figure
Comparison of Radio Observations and Numerical Simulations of the Radio Lobes of Cygnus A
We present a comparison of radio observations of the archetypal powerful
radio galaxy Cygnus A and 2-D numerical hydrodynamical simulations. We
characterize some global trends in the observed radio properties and compare
them with the properties of a simulated radio source. The numerical results are
the following. Jets propagating in a constant density atmosphere will
decelerate with time. Thus, the estimated dynamical age of the source will be
greater than the actual age of the source. For a source similar to Cygnus A the
difference will be about a factor of 2. The second moment gives an accurate
representation of the "true" width of the simulated source. The Gaussian FWHM
tends to be about 40% larger than the true width and can be systematically in
error if the surface brightness exhibits multiple peaks. We suggest that the
ratio of the Gaussian FWHM to the second moment may be a diagnostic of the
emissivity profile in the lobes. The simulations can qualitatively reproduce
the overall observed morphology and the behavior of the cross-sections in
surface brightness, the decline in surface brightness with distance from the
hot spots, and the width of the lobes. This suggests that the 2-D simulations
give a reasonable representation of the properties of Cygnus A.Comment: the larger figures are available as gif
Prograde and Retrograde Black Holes: Whose Jet is More Powerful?
The outflow efficiency (eta) from black hole (BH) accretion disc systems is
known to depend upon both the BH spin (a) and the amount of large-scale
magnetic flux threading the BH and disc. Semi-analytical flux-trapping models
suggest retrograde BHs should trap much more large-scale magnetic flux near the
BH leading to much higher eta than for prograde BHs. We self-consistently
determine the amount of large-scale magnetic flux trapped by rapidly spinning
(a = -0.9 and 0.9) BHs using global 3D time-dependent non-radiative general
relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations of thick (h/r ~ 0.3-0.6) discs. We
find that BH-trapped flux builds up until it is strong enough to disrupt the
inner accretion disc. Contrary to prior flux-trapping models, which do not
include the back-reaction of magnetic flux on the disc, our simulations show
prograde BHs trap more magnetic flux, leading to about 3 times higher eta than
retrograde BHs for |a| = 0.9. Both spin orientations can produce highly
efficient jets, eta ~ 100%, with increasing eta for increasing disc thickness.
The similarity of eta for prograde and retrograde BHs makes it challenging to
infer the sign of BH spin based on jet energetics alone.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Accepted to MNRAS. For associated movies see
http://youtu.be/yNZLjsrz0Wo and http://youtu.be/bQE69wti3a
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