9,044 research outputs found
Clusters and cycles in the cosmic ray age distributions of meteorites
Statistically significant clusters in the cosmic ray exposure age distributions of some groups of iron and stone meteorites were observed, suggesting epochs of enhanced collision and breakups. Fourier analyses of the age distributions of chondrites reveal no significant periods, nor does the same analysis when applied to iron meteorite clusters
Front dynamics in turbulent media
A study of a stable front propagating in a turbulent medium is presented. The
front is generated through a reaction-diffusion equation, and the turbulent
medium is statistically modeled using a Langevin equation. Numerical
simulations indicate the presence of two different dynamical regimes. These
regimes appear when the turbulent flow either wrinkles a still rather sharp
propagating interfase or broadens it. Specific dependences of the propagating
velocities on stirring intensities appropriate to each case are found and
fitted when possible according to theoretically predicted laws. Different
turbulent spectra are considered.Comment: 8 pages, REVTEX, 6 postscript figures included. To appear in Phys.
Fluids (1997
Langevin approach to generate synthetic turbulence
We present an analytical scheme, easily implemented numerically, to generate
synthetic Gaussian turbulent flows by using a linear Langevin equation, where
the noise term acts as a stochastic stirring force. The characteristic
parameters of the velocity field are well introduced, in particular the
kinematic viscosity and the spectrum of energy. As an application, the
diffusion of a passive scalar is studied for two different energy spectra.
Numerical results are compared favorably with analytical calculations.Comment: 7 pages, REVTEX, 6 figures. To appear in Physics of Fluids (April
1997
Optical and near-infrared observations of the microquasar V4641 Sagittarii during the 1999 September outburst
We present photometric and spectroscopic optical and near-infrared (NIR)
observations (Based on observations collected at the European Southern
Observatory, Chile (ESO ID 63.H-0493 and 64.H-0382)) taken during the outburst
of the microquasar V4641 Sgr = SAX J1819.3-2525 (in'tzand et al., 2000) in
September 1999. We observed an increase in the J-Ks colour between 5 and 8 days
after the outburst, which we interpret as likely evidence for the presence of
dust around the source. We also observed an extraordinarily strong, broad and
variable H_alpha line, with a velocity width of 4560 km/s suggesting the
presence of a high-velocity outflow component. We constrain the distance of the
system between 3 and 8 kpc, locating it further away than previously derived
from radio observations (Hjellming et al., 2000), but consistent with Orosz et
al. (2001). We then discuss the nature of this system, showing that the
companion star is either a B3-A2 main sequence star, or a B3-A2 sub-giant
crossing the Hertzsprung gap. The system is therefore an Intermediate or High
Mass X-ray Binary System (IMXB or HMXB). The distance derived by these
optical/NIR observations implies that the jets observed by Hjellming et al.
(2000) would then exhibit apparent velocities of ~ 10 c. We finally discuss the
possibility of an interaction between the jets and surroundings of the source,
and also of this source being a ``microblazar''.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
RAM: A Relativistic Adaptive Mesh Refinement Hydrodynamics Code
We have developed a new computer code, RAM, to solve the conservative
equations of special relativistic hydrodynamics (SRHD) using adaptive mesh
refinement (AMR) on parallel computers. We have implemented a
characteristic-wise, finite difference, weighted essentially non-oscillatory
(WENO) scheme using the full characteristic decomposition of the SRHD equations
to achieve fifth-order accuracy in space. For time integration we use the
method of lines with a third-order total variation diminishing (TVD)
Runge-Kutta scheme. We have also implemented fourth and fifth order Runge-Kutta
time integration schemes for comparison. The implementation of AMR and
parallelization is based on the FLASH code. RAM is modular and includes the
capability to easily swap hydrodynamics solvers, reconstruction methods and
physics modules. In addition to WENO we have implemented a finite volume module
with the piecewise parabolic method (PPM) for reconstruction and the modified
Marquina approximate Riemann solver to work with TVD Runge-Kutta time
integration. We examine the difficulty of accurately simulating shear flows in
numerical relativistic hydrodynamics codes. We show that under-resolved
simulations of simple test problems with transverse velocity components produce
incorrect results and demonstrate the ability of RAM to correctly solve these
problems. RAM has been tested in one, two and three dimensions and in
Cartesian, cylindrical and spherical coordinates. We have demonstrated
fifth-order accuracy for WENO in one and two dimensions and performed detailed
comparison with other schemes for which we show significantly lower convergence
rates. Extensive testing is presented demonstrating the ability of RAM to
address challenging open questions in relativistic astrophysics.Comment: ApJS in press, 21 pages including 18 figures (6 color figures
Deep Infrared Imaging of the Microquasars 1E1740-2942 and GRS 1758-258
We present deep infrared (m) imaging of the Galactic microquasars
1E1740-2942 and GRS 1758-258 using the Keck-I 10-meter telescope in June 1998.
The observations were taken under excellent seeing conditions (\sim 0.45
\arcsec full-width half-maximum), making them exceptionally deep for these
crowded fields. We used the USNO-A2.0 catalog to astrometrically calibrate the
infrared images (along with an optical CCD image in the case of GRS 1758-258),
providing independent frame ties to the known radio positions of the objects.
For 1E1740-2942, we confirm potential candidates for the microquasar previously
identified by Marti et al., and show that none of the objects near the
microquasar have varied significantly from 1998 to 1999. For GRS 1758-258, our
astrometry indicates a position shifted from previous reports of candidates for
the microquasar. We find no candidates inside our 90% confidence radius to a limiting magnitude of mag. We discuss the implications of
these results for the nature of the microquasar binary systems.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal; 15 pages, including 4 figure
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