18,946 research outputs found
Jet trails and Mach cones: The interaction of microquasars with the ISM
A sub-set of microquasars exhibit high peculiar velocity with respect to the
local standard of rest due to the kicks they receive when being born in
supernovae. The interaction between the radio plasma released by microquasar
jets from such high-velocity binaries with the ISM must lead to the production
of trails and bow shocks similar to what is observed in narrow-angle tailed
radio galaxies and pulsar wind nebulae. We present a set of numerical
simulations of this interaction that illuminate the long term dynamical
evolution and the observational properties of these microquasar bow shock
nebulae and trails. We find that this interaction always produces a structure
that consists of a bow shock, a trailing neck, and an expanding bubble. Using
our simulations to model emission, we predict that the shock surrounding the
bubble and the neck should be visible in H{\alpha} emission, the interior of
the bubble should be visible in synchrotron radio emission, and only the bow
shock is likely to be detectable in X-ray emission. We construct an analytic
model for the evolution of the neck and bubble shape and compare this model
with observations of X-ray binary SAX J1712.6-3739.Comment: 33 pages, 13 figures, 1 table; Accepted to Ap
Possible Origin of RHIC R_{out}/R_{sid} HBT Results
The effects of opacity of the nuclei together with a blackbody type of
emission along the system history are considered as a means to explain the
ratio observed by STAR and PHENIX collaborations at RHIC.
Within our model, no flow is required to explain the data trend of this ratio
for large surface emissivities.Comment: 4 pages, 2 Postscript figures, uses espcrc1.sty. Talk presented at
Quark Matter 2002, Nantes, France, July 18-24, 2002; to appear in the
proceedings (Nucl. Phys. A
Flow effects on the freeze-out phase-space density in heavy ion collisions
The strong longitudinal expansion of the reaction zone formed in relativistic
heavy-ion collisions is found to significantly reduce the spatially averaged
pion phase-space density, compared to naive estimates based on thermal
distributions. This has important implications for data interpretation and
leads to larger values for the extracted pion chemical potential at kinetic
freeze-out.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures included via epsfig, added discussion of different
transverse density profiles, 1 new figur
X-ray and Radio Monitoring of GX 339-4 and Cyg X-1
Previous work by Motch et al. (1985) suggested that in the low/hard state of
GX339-4, the soft X-ray power-law extrapolated backward in energy agrees with
the IR flux level. Corbel and Fender (2002) later showed that the typical hard
state radio power-law extrapolated forward in energy meets the backward
extrapolated X-ray power-law at an IR spectral break, which was explicitly
observed twice in GX339-4. This has been cited as further evidence that jet
synchrotron radiation might make a significant contribution to the observed
X-rays in the hard state. We explore this hypothesis with a series of
simultaneous radio/X-ray hard state observations of GX339-4. We fit these
spectra with a simple, but remarkably successful, doubly broken power-law model
that indeed requires a spectral break in the IR. For most of these
observations, the break position as a function of X-ray flux agrees with the
jet model predictions. We then examine the radio flux/X-ray flux correlation in
Cyg X-1 through the use of 15 GHz radio data, obtained with the Ryle radio
telescope, and Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer data, from the All Sky Monitor and
pointed observations. We find evidence of `parallel tracks' in the radio/X-ray
correlation which are associated with `failed transitions' to, or the beginning
of a transition to, the soft state. We also find that for Cyg X-1 the radio
flux is more fundamentally correlated with the hard, rather than the soft,
X-ray flux.Comment: To Appear in the Proceedings of "From X-ray Binaries to Quasars:
Black Hole Accretion on All Mass Scales" (Amsterdam, July 2004). Eds. T
Maccarone, R. Fender, L. H
Radio Lobe Dynamics and the Environment of Microquasars
We argue that, when compared to AGNs in dynamical terms, microquasars are
found in low density, low pressure environments. Using a simple analytic model,
we discuss radio lobe dynamics and emission. Dynamical considerations for GRS
1915+105 and GRO J1655-40 show that they are located in ISM densities well
below the canonical n_ISM ~ 1 cm^{-3} unless the jets are unusually narrow or
much more powerful than currently believed.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in A&A Letter
Shock heating by FR I radio sources in galaxy clusters
Feedback by active galactic nuclei (AGN) is frequently invoked to explain the
cut-off of the galaxy luminosity function at the bright end and the absence of
cooling flows in galaxy clusters. Meanwhile, there are recent observations of
shock fronts around radio-loud AGN. Using realistic 3D simulations of jets in a
galaxy cluster, we address the question what fraction of the energy of active
galactic nuclei is dissipated in shocks. We find that weak shocks that
encompass the AGN have Mach numbers of 1.1-1.2 and dissipate at least 2% of the
mechanical luminosity of the AGN. In a realistic cluster medium, even a
continuous jet can lead to multiple shock structures, which may lead to an
overestimate of the AGN duty cycles inferred from the spatial distribution of
waves.Comment: accepted by MNRAS Letter
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