146 research outputs found
A Phase Transition between Small and Large Field Models of Inflation
We show that models of inflection point inflation exhibit a phase transition
from a region in parameter space where they are of large field type to a region
where they are of small field type. The phase transition is between a universal
behavior, with respect to the initial condition, at the large field region and
non-universal behavior at the small field region. The order parameter is the
number of e-foldings. We find integer critical exponents at the transition
between the two phases.Comment: 21 pages, 8 figure
An Extended Grid of Nova Models: II. The Parameter Space of Nova Outbursts
This paper is a sequel to an earlier paper devoted to multiple, multicycle
nova evolution models (Prialnik & Kovetz 1995, first paper of the series),
which showed that the different characteristics of nova outbursts can be
reproduced by varying the values of three basic and independent parameters: the
white dwarf mass-M_{WD}, the temperature of its isothermal core-T_{WD} and the
mass transfer rate-Mdot. Apart from being the largest computational classical
novae parameter-space survey, we show here that the parameter space is
constrained by several analytical considerations and find its limiting
surfaces. Consequently, we extend the grid of multicycle nova evolution models
presented in Paper I almost to its limits, adding multicycle nova outburst
calculations for a considerable number of new parameter combinations. In
particular, the extended parameter pace that produces nova eruptions includes
low mass transfer rates down to 5e-13 Msun/yr, and more models for low T_{WD}.
Resulting characteristics of these runs are added to the former parameter
combination results, to provide a full grid spanning the entire parameter space
for Carbon-Oxygen white dwarfs. The full grid covers the entire range of
observed nova characteristics, even those of peculiar objects, which have not
been numerically reproduced until now. Most remarkably, runs for very low Mdot
lead to very high values for some characteristics, such as outburst amplitude
A>~20, high super-Eddington luminosities at maximum, heavy element abundance of
the ejecta Z_{ej}~0.63 and high ejected masses m_{ej}~7e-4 Msun.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ - 04/2005. Complete grid results
(Tables 2+3) data available at: http://geophysics.tau.ac.il/personal/oferya/
under "Publications
A phenomenological model for the X-ray spectrum of Nova V2491 Cygni
The X-ray flux of Nova V2491 Cyg reached a maximum some forty days after
optical maximum. The X-ray spectrum at that time, obtained with the RGS of
XMM-Newton, shows deep, blue-shifted absorption by ions of a wide range of
ionization. We show that the deep absorption lines of the X-ray spectrum at
maximum, and nine days later, are well described by the following
phenomenological model with emission from a central blackbody and from a
collisionally ionized plasma (CIE). The blackbody spectrum (BB) is absorbed by
three main highly-ionized expanding shells; the CIE and BB are absorbed by cold
circumstellar and interstellar matter that includes dust. The outflow density
does not decrease monotonically with distance. The abundances of the shells
indicate that they were ejected from an O-Ne white dwarf. We show that the
variations on time scales of hours in the X-ray spectrum are caused by a
combination of variation in the central source and in the column density of the
ionized shells. Our phenomenological model gives the best description so far of
the supersoft X-ray spectrum of nova V2491 Cyg, but underpredicts, by a large
factor, the optical and ultraviolet flux. The X-ray part of the spectrum must
originate from a very different layer in the expanding envelope, presumably
much closer to the white dwarf than the layers responsible for the
optical/ultraviolet spectrum. This is confirmed by absence of any correlation
between the X-ray and UV/optical observed fluxes.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
On Orbital Period Changes in Nova Outbursts
We propose a new mechanism that produces an orbital period change during a
nova outburst. When the ejected material carries away the specific angular
momentum of the white dwarf, the orbital period increases. A magnetic field on
the surface of the secondary star forces a fraction of the ejected material to
corotate with the star, and hence the binary system. The ejected material thus
takes angular momentum from the binary orbit and the orbital period decreases.
We show that for sufficiently strong magnetic fields on the surface of the
secondary star, the total change to the orbital period could even be negative
during a nova outburst, contrary to previous expectations. Accurate
determinations of pre- and post-outburst orbital periods of recurrent nova
systems could test the new mechanism, in addition to providing meaningful
constraints on otherwise difficult to measure physical quantities. We apply our
mechanism to outbursts of the recurrent nova U Sco.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
CMB Imprints of a Pre-Inflationary Climbing Phase
We discuss the implications for cosmic microwave background (CMB)
observables, of a class of pre-inflationary dynamics suggested by string models
where SUSY is broken due to the presence of D-branes and orientifolds
preserving incompatible portions of it. In these models the would-be inflaton
is forced to emerge from the initial singularity climbing up a mild exponential
potential, until it bounces against a steep exponential potential of "brane
SUSY breaking" scenarios, and as a result the ensuing descent gives rise to an
inflationary epoch that begins when the system is still well off its eventual
attractor. If a pre-inflationary climbing phase of this type had occurred
within 6-7 e-folds of the horizon exit for the largest observable wavelengths,
displacement off the attractor and initial-state effects would conspire to
suppress power in the primordial scalar spectrum, enhancing it in the tensor
spectrum and typically superposing oscillations on both. We investigate these
imprints on CMB observables over a range of parameters, examine their
statistical significance, and provide a semi-analytic rationale for our
results. It is tempting to ascribe at least part of the large-angle anomalies
in the CMB to pre-inflationary dynamics of this type.Comment: 38 pages, LaTeX, 11 eps figures, references added, matches version to
appear in JCA
The surprising Far-UV spectrum of the polar BY Camelopardalis
We report on the first far-UV observations of the asynchronous polar BY Cam
made by the Far-Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE). The source is known
to exhibit the most extreme NV/CIV emission resonance line ratio observed among
polars. The FUSE observations reveal a OVI resonance line weaker than in the
prototype of polars, AM Her, with the absence of a detectable narrow component.
The OVI broad line is detected with an equivalent width of the same order as in
AM Her, the blueward doublet component is clearly present but the redward
component is strongly affected by H2 absorption. The presence of a strong NIII
line and weak CIII lines also confirms the peculiar CNO line flux. We compare
the resonance CNO line intensities with the predictions of the CLOUDY plasma
code coupled to a geometrical model of the accretion column. Varying the
temperature and/or intensity of the ionising spectrum is unable to reproduce
the observed broad line ratios. A solution is obtained by significantly
altering the element abundances with a strong depletion of C, overabundance of
N and a weak underabundance of O. This confirms previous suggestions of
non-solar abundances which may result from redistribution in the accreted
material following nova outbursts and/or the secondary nuclear evolution. A
very significant H2 absorption is observed in front of the source, a possible
indication for either the existence of a dense interstellar cloud or of
circumstellar material.Comment: 6 pages, 4 Postscript figures, accepted by Astronomy and
Astrophysics, uses aa.st
Decoupling Inflation From the String Scale
When Inflation is embedded in a fundamental theory, such as string theory, it
typically begins when the Universe is already substantially larger than the
fundamental scale [such as the one defined by the string length scale]. This is
naturally explained by postulating a pre-inflationary era, during which the
size of the Universe grew from the fundamental scale to the initial
inflationary scale. The problem then arises of maintaining the [presumed]
initial spatial homogeneity throughout this era, so that, when it terminates,
Inflation is able to begin in its potential-dominated state. Linde has proposed
that a spacetime with compact negatively curved spatial sections can achieve
this, by means of chaotic mixing. Such a compactification will however lead to
a Casimir energy, which can lead to effects that defeat the purpose unless the
coupling to gravity is suppressed. We estimate the value of this coupling
required by the proposal, and use it to show that the pre-inflationary
spacetime is stable, despite the violation of the Null Energy Condition
entailed by the Casimir energy.Comment: 24 pages, 5 eps figures, references added, stylistic changes, version
to appear in Classical and Quantum Gravit
Searching for a Cosmological Preferred Axis: Union2 Data Analysis and Comparison with Other Probes
We review, compare and extend recent studies searching for evidence for a
preferred cosmological axis. We start from the Union2 SnIa dataset and use the
hemisphere comparison method to search for a preferred axis in the data. We
find that the hemisphere of maximum accelerating expansion rate is in the
direction (\omm=0.19) while the hemisphere of
minimum acceleration is in the opposite direction
(\omm=0.30). The level of anisotropy is described by the normalized
difference of the best fit values of \omm between the two hemispheres in the
context of \lcdm fits. We find a maximum anisotropy level in the Union2 data of
\frac{\Delta \ommax}{\bomm}=0.43\pm 0.06. Such a level does not necessarily
correspond to statistically significant anisotropy because it is reproduced by
about of simulated isotropic data mimicking the best fit Union2 dataset.
However, when combined with the axes directions of other cosmological
observations (bulk velocity flow axis, three axes of CMB low multipole moments
and quasar optical polarization alignment axis), the statistical evidence for a
cosmological anisotropy increases dramatically. We estimate the probability
that the above independent six axes directions would be so close in the sky to
be less than . Thus either the relative coincidence of these six axes is a
very large statistical fluctuation or there is an underlying physical or
systematic reason that leads to their correlation.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures. Accepted in JCAP (to appear). Extended analysis
with redshift tomography of SnIa, included errorbars and increased number of
axes. The Mathematica 7 files with the data used for the production of the
figures along with a Powerpoint file with additional figures may be
downloaded from http://leandros.physics.uoi.gr/anisotrop
How Well Do We (and Will We) Know Solar Neutrino Fluxes and Oscillation Parameters?
Assuming neutrino oscillations occur, the pp electron neutrino flux is
uncertain by at least a factor of two, the flux by a factor of
five, and the flux by a factor of forty-five. Calculations of the
expected results of future solar neutrino experiments (SuperKamiokande, SNO,
BOREXINO, ICARUS, HELLAZ, and HERON) are used to illustrate the extent to which
these experiments will restrict the range of the allowed neutrino mixing
parameters. We present an improved formulation of the ``luminosity constraint''
and show that at 95\% confidence limit this constraint establishes the best
available limits on the rate of creation of pp neutrinos in the solar interior
and provides the best upper limit to the neutrino flux.Comment: 37 pages, uuencoded Z-compressed postscript file (with figures);
Submitted to Physical Review
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