540 research outputs found
Microwave polarization in the direction of galaxy clusters induced by the CMB quadrupole anisotropy
Electron scattering induces a polarization in the cosmic microwave background
(CMB) signal measured in the direction of a galaxy cluster due to the presence
of a quadrupole component in the CMB temperature distribution. Measuring the
polarization towards distant clusters provides the unique opportunity to
observe the evolution of the CMB quadrupole at moderate redshifts, z~0.5-3. We
demonstrate that for the local cluster population the polarization degree will
depend on the cluster celestial position. There are two extended regions in the
sky, which are opposite to each other, where the polarization is maximal,
0.1(tau/0.02) microK in the Rayleigh-Jeans part of the CMB spectrum (tau being
the Thomson optical depth across the cluster) exceeding the contribution from
the cluster transverse peculiar motion if v_t<1300 km/s. One can hope to detect
this small signal by measuring a large number of clusters, thereby effectively
removing the systematic contribution from other polarization components
produced in clusters. These polarization effects, which are of the order of
(v_t/c)^2 tau, (v_t/c) tau^2 and (kT_e/m_ec^2) tau^2, as well as the
polarization due to the CMB quadrupole, were previously calculated by Sunyaev
and Zel'dovich for the Rayleigh-Jeans region. We fully confirm their earlier
results and present exact frequency dependencies for all these effects. The
polarization is considerably higher in the Wien region of the CMB spectrum.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, submitted to MNRA
The distribution of supermassive black holes in the nuclei of nearby galaxies
The growth of supermassive black holes by merging and accretion in
hierarchical models of galaxy formation is studied by means of Monte Carlo
simulations. A tight linear relation between masses of black holes and masses
of bulges arises if if the mass accreted by supermassive black holes scales
linearly with the mass forming stars and if the redshift evolution of mass
accretion tracks closely that of star formation. Differences in redshift
evolution between black hole accretion and star formation introduce
considerable scatter in this relation. A non-linear relation between black hole
accretion and star formation results in a non-linear relation between masses of
remnant black holes and masses of bulges. The relation of black hole mass to
bulge luminosity obseved in nearby galaxies and its scatter are reproduced
reasonably well by models in which black hole accretion and star formation are
linearly related but do not track each other in redshift. This suggests that a
common mechanism determines the efficiency for black hole accretion and the
efficiency for star formation, especially for bright bulges.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, submitted to MNRA
Dissipation of Magnetohydrodynamic Waves on Energetic Particles: Impact on Interstellar Turbulence and Cosmic Ray Transport
The physical processes involved in diffusion of Galactic cosmic rays in the
interstellar medium are addressed. We study the possibility that the nonlinear
MHD cascade sets the power-law spectrum of turbulence which scatters charged
energetic particles. We find that the dissipation of waves due to the resonant
interaction with cosmic ray particles may terminate the Kraichnan-type cascade
below wavelengths 10^13 cm. The effect of this wave dissipation has been
incorporated in the GALPROP numerical propagation code in order to asses the
impact on measurable astrophysical data. The energy-dependence of the
cosmic-ray diffusion coefficient found in the resulting self-consistent model
may explain the peaks in the secondary to primary nuclei ratios observed at
about 1 GeV/nucleon.Comment: 15 pages, 20 figures, 1 table, emulateapj.cls; To be published in ApJ
10 May 2006, v.64
Explosive Nucleosynthesis in GRB Jets Accompanied by Hypernovae
Two-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations are performed to investigate
explosive nucleosynthesis in a collapsar using the model of MacFadyen and
Woosley (1999). It is shown that 56Ni is not produced in the jet of the
collapsar sufficiently to explain the observed amount of a hypernova when the
duration of the explosion is \sim 10 sec, which is considered to be the typical
timescale of explosion in the collapsar model. Even though a considerable
amount of 56Ni is synthesized if all explosion energy is deposited initially,
the opening angles of the jets become too wide to realize highly relativistic
outflows and gamma-ray bursts in such a case. From these results, it is
concluded that the origin of 56Ni in hypernovae associated with GRBs is not the
explosive nucleosynthesis in the jet. We consider that the idea that the origin
is the explosive nucleosynthesis in the accretion disk is more promising. We
also show that the explosion becomes bi-polar naturally due to the effect of
the deformed progenitor. This fact suggests that the 56Ni synthesized in the
accretion disk and conveyed as outflows are blown along to the rotation axis,
which will explain the line features of SN 1998bw and double peaked line
features of SN 2003jd. Some fraction of the gamma-ray lines from 56Ni decays in
the jet will appear without losing their energies because the jet becomes
optically thin before a considerable amount of 56Ni decays as long as the jet
is a relativistic flow. We show that abundance of nuclei whose mass number \sim
40 in the ejecta depends sensitively on the energy deposition rate. So it may
be determined by observations of chemical composition in metal poor stars which
model is the proper one as a model of a gamma-ray burst accompanied by a
hypernova.Comment: 29 pages with 16 figures. ApJ, accepte
Numerical Study on GRB-Jet Formation in Collapsars
Two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic simulations are performed using the
ZEUS-2D code to investigate the dynamics of a collapsar that generates a GRB
jet, taking account of realistic equation of state, neutrino cooling and
heating processes, magnetic fields, and gravitational force from the central
black hole and self gravity. It is found that neutrino heating processes are
not so efficient to launch a jet in this study. It is also found that a jet is
launched mainly by B_\phi fields that are amplified by the winding-up effect.
However, since the ratio of total energy relative to the rest mass energy in
the jet is not so high as several hundred, we conclude that the jets seen in
this study are not be a GRB jet. This result suggests that general relativistic
effects, which are not included in this study, will be important to generate a
GRB jet. Also, the accretion disk with magnetic fields may still play an
important role to launch a GRB jet, although a simulation for much longer
physical time (\sim 10-100 s) is required to confirm this effect. It is shown
that considerable amount of 56Ni is synthesized in the accretion disk. Thus
there will be a possibility for the accretion disk to supply sufficient amount
of 56Ni required to explain the luminosity of a hypernova. Also, it is shown
that neutron-rich matter due to electron captures with high entropy per baryon
is ejected along the polar axis. Moreover, it is found that the electron
fraction becomes larger than 0.5 around the polar axis near the black hole by
\nu_e capture at the region. Thus there will be a possibility that r-process
and r/p-process nucleosynthesis occur at these regions. Finally, much neutrons
will be ejected from the jet, which suggests that signals from the neutron
decays may be observed as the delayed bump of afterglow or gamma-rays.Comment: 54 pages with 19 postscript figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ.
High resolution version is available at
http://www2.yukawa.kyoto-u.ac.jp/~nagataki/collapsar.pd
Towards a Stable Numerical Evolution of Strongly Gravitating Systems in General Relativity: The Conformal Treatments
We study the stability of three-dimensional numerical evolutions of the
Einstein equations, comparing the standard ADM formulation to variations on a
family of formulations that separate out the conformal and traceless parts of
the system. We develop an implementation of the conformal-traceless (CT)
approach that has improved stability properties in evolving weak and strong
gravitational fields, and for both vacuum and spacetimes with active coupling
to matter sources. Cases studied include weak and strong gravitational wave
packets, black holes, boson stars and neutron stars. We show under what
conditions the CT approach gives better results in 3D numerical evolutions
compared to the ADM formulation. In particular, we show that our implementation
of the CT approach gives more long term stable evolutions than ADM in all the
cases studied, but is less accurate in the short term for the range of
resolutions used in our 3D simulations.Comment: 17 pages, 15 figures. Small changes in the text, and a change in the
list of authors. One new reference adde
Effects of Varying the Three-Body Molecular Hydrogen Formation Rate in Primordial Star Formation
The transformation of atomic hydrogen to molecular hydrogen through
three-body reactions is a crucial stage in the collapse of primordial,
metal-free halos, where the first generation of stars (Population III stars) in
the Universe are formed. However, in the published literature, the rate
coefficient for this reaction is uncertain by nearly an order of magnitude. We
report on the results of both adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) and smoothed
particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations of the collapse of metal-free halos as
a function of the value of this rate coefficient. For each simulation method,
we have simulated a single halo three times, using three different values of
the rate coefficient. We find that while variation between halo realizations
may be greater than that caused by the three-body rate coefficient being used,
both the accretion physics onto Population III protostars as well as the
long-term stability of the disk and any potential fragmentation may depend
strongly on this rate coefficient.Comment: 29 pages, 7 figures; Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
The 60 month all-sky Burst Alert Telescope survey of active galactic nucleus and the anisotropy of nearby AGNs
Surveys above 10 keV represent one of the best resources to provide an unbiased census of the population of active galactic nuclei (AGNs). We present the results of 60 months of observation of the hard X-ray sky with Swift/Burst Alert Telescope (BAT). In this time frame, BAT-detected (in the 15-55 keV band) 720 sources in an all-sky survey of which 428 are associated with AGNs, most of which are nearby. Our sample has negligible incompleteness and statistics a factor of ~2 larger over similarly complete sets of AGNs. Our sample contains (at least) 15 bona fide Compton-thick AGNs and 3 likely candidates. Compton-thick AGNs represent ~5% of AGN samples detected above 15 keV. We use the BAT data set to refine the determination of the log N-log S of AGNs which is extremely important, now that NuSTAR prepares for launch, toward assessing the AGN contribution to the cosmic X-ray background. We show that the log N-log S of AGNs selected above 10 keV is now established to ~10% precision. We derive the luminosity function of Compton-thick AGNs and measure a space density of 7.9+4.1 - 2.9 × 10-5 Mpc-3 for objects with a de-absorbed luminosity larger than 2 × 1042 erg s-1. As the BAT AGNs are all mostly local, they allow us to investigate the spatial distribution of AGNs in the nearby universe regardless of absorption. We find concentrations of AGNs that coincide spatially with the largest congregations of matter in the local (<=85 Mpc) universe. There is some evidence that the fraction of Seyfert 2 objects is larger than average in the direction of these dense regions
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