124,466 research outputs found
A search for steep spectrum radio relics and halos with the GMRT
Context: Diffuse radio emission, in the form of radio halos and relics,
traces regions in clusters with shocks or turbulence, probably produced by
cluster mergers. Some models of diffuse radio emission in clusters indicate
that virtually all clusters should contain diffuse radio sources with a steep
spectrum. External accretion shocks associated with filamentary structures of
galaxies could also accelerate electrons to relativistic energies and hence
produce diffuse synchrotron emitting regions. Here we report on Giant Metrewave
Radio Telescope (GMRT) observations of a sample of steep spectrum sources from
the 74 MHz VLSS survey. These sources are diffuse and not associated with
nearby galaxies.
Aims: The main aim of the observations is to search for diffuse radio
emission associated with galaxy clusters or the cosmic web.
Methods: We carried out GMRT 610 MHz continuum observations of unidentified
diffuse steep spectrum sources.
Results: We have constructed a sample of diffuse steep spectrum sources,
selected from the 74 MHz VLSS survey. We identified eight diffuse radio sources
probably all located in clusters. We found five radio relics, one cluster with
a giant radio halo and a radio relic, and one radio mini-halo. By complementing
our observations with measurements from the literature we find correlations
between the physical size of relics and the spectral index, in the sense that
smaller relics have steeper spectra. Furthermore, larger relics are mostly
located in the outskirts of clusters while smaller relics are located closer to
the cluster center.Comment: 20 pages, 26 figures, accepted for publication in A&A on October 7,
200
Radio relics in cosmological simulations
Radio relics have been discovered in many galaxy clusters. They are believed
to trace shock fronts induced by cluster mergers. Cosmological simulations
allow us to study merger shocks in detail since the intra-cluster medium is
heated by shock dissipation. Using high resolution cosmological simulations,
identifying shock fronts and applying a parametric model for the radio emission
allows us to simulate the formation of radio relics. We analyze a simulated
shock front in detail. We find a rather broad Mach number distribution. The
Mach number affects strongly the number density of relativistic electrons in
the downstream area, hence, the radio luminosity varies significantly across
the shock surface. The abundance of radio relics can be modeled with the help
of the radio power probability distribution which aims at predicting radio
relic number counts. Since the actual electron acceleration efficiency is not
known, predictions for the number counts need to be normalized by the observed
number of radio relics. For the characteristics of upcoming low frequency
surveys we find that about thousand relics are awaiting discovery.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, Invited talk at the conference "Diffuse
Relativistic Plasmas", Bangalore, 1-4 March 2011; in press in special issue
of Journal of Astrophysics and Astronom
Spectral and polarization study of the double relics in Abell 3376 using the GMRT and the VLA
Double radio relics in galaxy clusters are rare phenomena that trace shocks
in the outskirts of merging galaxy clusters. We have carried out a spectral and
polarization study of the spectacular double relics in the galaxy cluster A3376
using the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope at 150 and 325 MHz and the Very Large
Array at 1400 MHz. The polarization study at 1400 MHz reveals a high degree of
polarization (~30%) and aligned magnetic field vectors (not corrected for
Faraday rotation) in the eastern relic. A highly polarized (>60%) filamentary
radio source of size ~300 kpc near the eastern relic and north of the bent-jet
radio galaxy is detected for the first time. The western relic is less
polarized and does not show aligned magnetic field vectors. The distribution of
spectral indices between 325 and 1400 MHz over the radio relics show steepening
from the outer to the inner edges of the relics. The spectral indices of the
eastern and the western relics imply Mach numbers in the range 2.2 to 3.3.
Remarkable features such as the inward filament extending from the eastern
relic, the highly polarized filament, the complex polarization properties of
the western relic and the separation of the BCG from the ICM by a distance >900
kpc are noticed in the cluster. A comparison with simulated cluster mergers is
required to understand the complex properties of the double relics in the
context of the merger in A3376. An upper limit (log(P(1.4GHz) W/Hz < 23.0) on
the strength of a Mpc size radio halo in A3376 is estimated.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Stable Superstring Relics
We investigate the cosmological constraints on exotic stable matter states
which arise in realistic free fermionic superstring models. These states appear
in the superstring models due to a ``Wilson--line'' breaking of the unifying
non--Abelian gauge symmetry. In the models that we consider the unifying
gauge symmetry is broken at the string level to ,
or . The exotic matter
states are classified according to the patterns of the symmetry
breaking. In and type models one obtains
fractionally charged states with . In type models one also obtains states with the regular
charges under the Standard Model gauge group but with ``fractional'' charges
under the symmetry. These states include down--like color
triplets and electroweak doublets, as well as states which are Standard Model
singlets. By analyzing the renormalizable and nonrenormalizable terms of the
superpotential in a specific superstring model, we show that these exotic
states can be stable. We investigate the cosmological constraints on the masses
and relic density of the exotic states. We propose that, while the abundance
and the masses of the fractionally charged states are highly constrained, the
Standard Model -- like states, and in particular the Standard Model singlet,
are good dark matter candidates.Comment: 46 pages. Standard LateX. Ten figures (Encapsulated PostScript
Radio observations of the double-relic galaxy cluster Abell 1240
We present LOFAR 120 − 168 MHz images of the merging galaxy cluster Abell 1240 that hosts double radio relics. In combination with the GMRT 595 − 629 MHz and VLA 2 − 4 GHz data, we characterised the spectral and polarimetric properties of the radio emission. The spectral indices for the relics steepen from their outer edges towards the cluster centre and the electric field vectors are approximately perpendicular to the major axes of the relics. The results are consistent with the picture that these relics trace large-scale shocks propagating outwards during the merger. Assuming diffusive shock acceleration (DSA), we obtain shock Mach numbers of M = 2.4 and 2.3 for the northern and southern shocks, respectively. For M ≲ 3 shocks, a pre-existing population of mildly relativistic electrons is required to explain the brightness of the relics due to the high (> 10 per cent) particle acceleration efficiency required. However, for M ≳ 4 shocks the required efficiency is ≳ 1% and ≳ 0.5%, respectively, which is low enough for shock acceleration directly from the thermal pool. We used the fractional polarization to constrain the viewing angle to ≥ 53 ± 3° and ≥ 39 ± 5° for the northern and southern shocks, respectively. We found no evidence for diffuse emission in the cluster central region. If the halo spans the entire region between the relics (∼1.8 Mpc) our upper limit on the power is P1.4 GHz = (1.4 ± 0.6) × 1023 W Hz−1 which is approximately equal to the anticipated flux from a cluster of this mass. However, if the halo is smaller than this, our constraints on the power imply that the halo is underluminous
Constraints on the average magnetic field strength of relic radio sources 0917+75 and 1401-33 from XMM-Newton observations
We observed two relic radio sources, 0917+75 and 1401-33, with the XMM-Newton
X-ray observatory. We did not detect any X-ray emission, thermal or
non-thermal, in excess of the local background level from either target. This
imposes new upper limits on the X-ray flux due to inverse Compton scattering of
photons from the cosmic microwave background by relativistic electrons in the
relic sources, and new lower limits on the magnetic field strength from the
relative strength of the radio and X-ray emission. The combination of radio and
X-ray observations provides a measure of the magnetic field independent of
equipartition or minimum energy assumptions. Due to increasing sensitivity of
radio observations, the known population of cluster relics has been growing;
however, studies of non-thermal X-ray emission from relics remain scarce. Our
study adds to the small sample of relics studied in X-rays. In both relics, our
field strength lower limits are slightly larger than estimates of the
equipartition magnetic field.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. Accepted by MNRA
Kaluza-Klein relics from warped reheating
It has been suggested that after brane-antibrane inflation in a
Klebanov-Strassler (KS) warped throat, metastable Kaluza-Klein (KK) excitations
can be formed due to nearly-conserved angular momenta along isometric
directions in the throat. If sufficiently long-lived, these relics could
conflict with big bang nucleosynthesis or baryogenesis by dominating the energy
density of the universe. We make a detailed estimate of the decay rate of such
relics using the low energy effective action of type IIB string theory
compactified on the throat geometry, with attention to powers of the warp
factor. We find that it is necessary to turn on SUSY-breaking deformations of
the KS background in order to ensure that the most dangerous relics will decay
fast enough. The decay rate is found to be much larger than the naive guess
based on the dimension of the operators which break the angular isometries of
the throat. For an inflationary warp factor of order , we obtain
the bound M_{3/2} \gsim 10^9 GeV on the scale of SUSY breaking to avoid
cosmological problems from the relics, which is satisfied in the KKLT
construction assumed to stabilize the compactification. Given the requirement
that the relics decay before nucleosynthesis or baryogenesis, we place bounds
on the mass of the relic as a function of the warp factor in the throat for
more general warped backgrounds.Comment: 30 pages, 7 figures. Added analysis and discussions to address the
referees concerns: explored the effects of different IR boundary conditions,
clarified the role of the simplified toy model, discussed the dominant
SUSY-preserving decay route (but still conclude the SUSY-breaking one is
faster). All original conclusions still hol
The Radio Relics and Halo of El Gordo, a Massive Cluster Merger
We present 610 MHz and 2.1 GHz imaging of the massive SZE-selected z=0.870
cluster merger ACT-CL J0102-4915 (El Gordo), obtained with the GMRT and the
ATCA, respectively. We detect two complexes of radio relics separated by 3.4'
(1.6 Mpc) along the system's NW-to-SE collision axis that have high integrated
polarizations (33%) and steep spectral indices, consistent with creation via
Fermi acceleration by shocks in the ICM. From the spectral index of the relics,
we compute a Mach number of 2.5^{+0.7}_{-0.3} and shock speed of
2500^{+400}_{-300} km/s. With our ATCA data, we compute the Faraday depth
across the NW relic and find a mean value of 11 rad/m^2 and standard deviation
of 6 rad/m^2. With the integrated line-of-sight gas density derived from new
Chandra observations, our Faraday depth measurement implies B_parallel~0.01 \mu
G in the cluster outskirts. The extremely narrow shock widths in the relics
(<23 kpc) prevent us from placing a meaningful constraint on |B| using cooling
time arguments. In addition to the relics, we detect a large (1.1 Mpc radius),
powerful (log L_1.4[W/Hz]= 25.66+-0.12) radio halo with a Bullet-like
morphology. The spectral-index map of the halo shows the synchrotron spectrum
is flattest near the relics, along the collision axis, and in regions of high
T_gas, all locations associated with recent energy injection. The spatial and
spectral correlation between the halo emission and cluster X-ray properties
supports primary-electron processes like turbulent reacceleration as the halo
production mechanism. The halo's integrated 610 MHz to 2.1 GHz spectral index
is 1.2+-0.1, consistent with the cluster's high T_gas in view of previously
established global scaling relations. El Gordo is the highest-redshift cluster
known to host a radio halo and/or radio relics, and provides new constraints on
the non-thermal physics in clusters at z>0.6. [abridged]Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures, accepted in Ap
CMB statistical anisotropies of classical and quantum origins
We examine the impact of different anisotropic relics on inflation, in
particular the predictions on the density perturbations. These relics can be
the source of the large scale anomalies in the cosmic microwave background.
There are two different types of background relics, one from the matter sector
and the other purely from the metric. Although the angular-dependence of the
statistical anisotropy in both cases are degenerate, the scale-dependence are
observationally distinctive. In addition, we demonstrate that non-Bunch-Davies
vacuum states can extend the statistical anisotropy to much shorter scales, and
leave a scale-dependence that is insensitive to the different backgrounds but
sensitive to the initial quantum state.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figure
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