13,216 research outputs found
Recycling Pulsars: spins, masses and ages
Although the first millisecond pulsars (MSPs) were discovered 30 years ago we
still do not understand all details of their formation process. Here, we
present new results from Tauris, Langer & Kramer (2012) on the recycling
scenario leading to radio MSPs with helium or carbon-oxygen white dwarf
companions via evolution of low- and intermediate mass X-ray binaries (LMXBs,
IMXBs). We discuss the location of the spin-up line in the (P,Pdot)-diagram and
estimate the amount of accreted mass needed to obtain a given spin period and
compare with observations. Finally, we constrain the true ages of observed
recycled pulsars via calculated isochrones in the (P,Pdot)-diagram.Comment: Contributed talk, Proceedings of IAUS 291 "Neutron Stars and Pulsars:
Challenges and Opportunities after 80 years", J. van Leeuwen (ed.); 4 pages,
2 figure
Thermodynamic dislocation theory of high-temperature deformation in aluminum and steel
The statistical-thermodynamic dislocation theory developed in previous papers
is used here in an analysis of high-temperature deformation of aluminum and
steel. Using physics-based parameters that we expect theoretically to be
independent of strain rate and temperature, we are able to fit experimental
stress-strain curves for three different strain rates and three different
temperatures for each of these two materials. Our theoretical curves include
yielding transitions at zero strain in agreement with experiment. We find that
thermal softening effects are important even at the lowest temperatures and
smallest strain rates.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
The Supernova Channel of Super-AGB Stars
We study the late evolution of solar metallicity stars in the transition
region between white dwarf formation and core collapse. This includes the
super-asymptotic giant branch (super-AGB, SAGB) stars, which have massive
enough cores to ignite carbon burning and form an oxygen-neon (ONe) core. The
most massive SAGB stars have cores that may grow to the Chandrasekhar mass
because of continued shell-burning. Their cores collapse, triggering a so
called electron capture supernovae (ECSN). From stellar evolution models we
find that the initial mass range for SAGB evolution is 7.5 ... 9.25\msun. We
perform calculations with three different stellar evolution codes to
investigate the sensitivity of this mass range to some of the uncertainties in
current stellar models. The mass range significantly depends on the treatment
of semiconvective mixing and convective overshooting. To consider the effect of
a large number of thermal pulses, as expected in SAGB stars, we construct
synthetic SAGB models that include a semi-analytical treatment of dredge-up,
hot-bottom burning, and thermal pulse properties. This synthetic model enables
us to compute the evolution of the main properties of SAGB stars from the onset
of thermal pulses until the core reaches the Chandrasekhar mass or is uncovered
by the stellar wind. Thereby, we determine the stellar initial mass ranges that
produce ONe-white dwarfs and electron-capture supernovae. The latter is found
to be 9.0 ... 9.25\msun for our fiducial model, implying that electron-capture
supernovae would constitute about 4% of all supernovae in the local universe.
Our synthetic approach allows us to explore the uncertainty of this number
imposed by uncertainties in the third dredge-up efficiency and ABG mass loss
rate. We find for ECSNe a upper limit of ~20% of all supernovae (abridged).Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures, submitted to ApJ, uses emulateap
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