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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Solar physics 122 (1989), S. 245-261 
    ISSN: 1573-093X
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Abstract We discuss the observable variability of spectral lines in the soft X-ray and XUV region. Rapid variability of coronal emission, both in flaring and non-flaring structures has been reported and is particularly prominent when high spatial resolution is available. Examination of the ionization and recombination time-scales for the formation and removal of ions with prominent solar emission lines shows that, even though ionization equilibrium generally prevails, the observable variability time-scales are often limited by these atomic processes, independent of the physical process which is causing the change in the solar atmosphere. Rapid heating can lead to an initial freezing-in of abundances of some ions; observations of at least one low- and one high-excitation line from such an ion would permit studies of the time evolution of the emission measure and temperature. In a very limited number of cases, rapid cooling leads to freezing-in of the abundance of an ion and observations of a low-excitation line of this ion will not yield accurate information about the thermal evolution. Thus, future observations of Mgx 609 Å should be augmented by simultaneous observation at another wavelength, such as 63 Å. In addition, with the ability to produce images in isolated spectral lines it becomes possible to select those for which rapid variability is observable, such asOvii, rather than lines which were selected on the basis of previous hardware constraints, such asOvii.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Astrophysics and space science 233 (1995), S. 189-193 
    ISSN: 1572-946X
    Keywords: Galactic structure ; Gas dynamics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: Abstract By considering a simple fluid model, we investigate the role of phase transitions in the ISM on the galaxy- scale gas dynamics. Cooling and heating timescales in the ISM are typically shorter than typical galactic rotation timescales, so the individual phases in the ISM can be assumed to be in temperature equilibrium with the radiation field. Using this approximation we can construct an equation of state which depends upon the average density and mass fractions in the individual phases. Previous studies suggest that there is an equilibrium phase fraction as a function of pressure. We incorporate evolution towards this equilibrium state as a relaxation term with a time to obtain equilibrium τ. We derive a condition in terms of a critical Mach number when one dimensional shocks should be continuous. For small values of the relaxation time τ we show that the relaxation term acts like a viscosity. We show with one dimensional simulations that increasing τ causes shocks to become smoother. This work suggests that phase changes can strongly effect the gas dynamics of the ISM across spiral arms and bars.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-07-09
    Description: We study the late-time evolution of the central regions of two Milky Way (MW)-like simulations of galaxies formed in a cosmological context, one hosting a fast bar and the other a slow one. We find that bar length, Rb, measurements fluctuate on a dynamical time-scale by up to 100 per cent, depending on the spiral structure strength and measurement threshold. The bar amplitude oscillates by about 15 per cent, correlating with Rb. The Tremaine–Weinberg method estimates of the bars’ instantaneous pattern speeds show variations around the mean of up to $sim !20{{ m per cent}}$, typically anticorrelating with the bar length and strength. Through power spectrum analyses, we establish that these bar pulsations, with a period in the range ∼60–200 Myr, result from its interaction with multiple spiral modes, which are coupled with the bar. Because of the presence of odd spiral modes, the two bar halves typically do not connect at exactly the same time to a spiral arm, and their individual lengths can be significantly offset. We estimated that in about 50 per cent of bar measurements in MW-mass external galaxies, the bar lengths of SBab-type galaxies are overestimated by $sim !15{{ m per cent}}$ and those of SBbc types by $sim !55{{ m per cent}}$. Consequently, bars longer than their corotation radius reported in the literature, dubbed ‘ultrafast bars’, may simply correspond to the largest biases. Given that the Scutum–Centaurus arm is likely connected to the near half of the MW bar, recent direct measurements may be overestimating its length by 1–1.5 kpc, while its present pattern speed may be 5–10 $ m km s^{-1} kpc^{-1}$ smaller than its time-averaged value.
    Print ISSN: 0035-8711
    Electronic ISSN: 1365-2966
    Topics: Physics
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2015-05-08
    Description: We estimate the size and distribution of the parent populations for the six largest (at least 20 stars in the solar neighbourhood) chemical groups identified in the chemical tagging experiment by Mitschang et al. Stars in the abundance groups tend to lie near a boundary in angular momentum versus eccentricity space where the probability is highest for a star to be found in the solar neighbourhood and where orbits have apocentre approximately equal to the Sun's galactocentric radius. Assuming that the parent populations are uniformly distributed at all azimuthal angles in the Galaxy, we estimate that the parent populations of these abundance groups contain at least 200 000 members. The spread in angular momentum of the groups implies that the assumption of a uniform azimuthal distribution only fails for the two youngest groups and only for the highest angular momentum stars in them. The parent populations of three thin disc groups have narrow angular momentum distributions, but tails in the eccentricity and angular momentum distributions suggest that only a small fraction of stars have migrated and increased in eccentricity. In contrast, the parent populations of the thick disc groups exhibit both wide angular momentum and eccentricity distributions implying that both heating and radial migration has taken place.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1365-2966
    Topics: Physics
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2016-03-31
    Description: We use a damped mass-spring model within an N -body code to simulate the tidal evolution of the spin and orbit of a self-gravitating viscoelastic spherical body moving around a point-mass perturber. The damped mass-spring model represents a Kelvin–Voigt viscoelastic solid. We measure the tidal quality function (the dynamical Love number k 2 divided by the tidal quality factor Q ) from the numerically computed tidal drift of the semimajor axis of the binary. The shape of k 2 / Q , as a function of the principal tidal frequency, reproduces the kink shape predicted by Efroimsky for the tidal response of near-spherical homogeneous viscoelastic rotators. We demonstrate that we can directly simulate the tidal evolution of spinning viscoelastic objects. In future, the mass-spring N -body model can be generalized to inhomogeneous and/or non-spherical bodies.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2015-07-18
    Description: Winds from short-period Earth and Neptune mass exoplanets, driven by high-energy radiation from a young star, may evaporate a significant fraction of a planet's mass. If the momentum flux from the evaporative wind is not aligned with the planet/star axis, then it can exert a torque on the planet's orbit. Using steady-state one-dimensional evaporative wind models, we estimate this torque using a lag angle that depends on the product of the speed of the planet's upper atmosphere and a flow time-scale for the wind to reach its sonic radius. We estimate the regime of planet radius, mass and stellar radiation flux in which a wind is capable of exerting a significant torque on the planet's orbit, and we find that it could be important for some of the observed planets. We also estimate the momentum flux from time-dependent one-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations. Similar to the Yarkovsky effect, the wind causes the planet to drift outwards if atmospheric circulation is prograde (super-rotating) and in the opposite direction if the circulation is retrograde. A close-in super-Earth mass planet that loses a large fraction of its mass in a wind could drift a few per cent of its semimajor axis. While this change is small, it places constraints on the evolution of resonant pairs such as Kepler 36b and c.
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    Electronic ISSN: 1365-2966
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2016-09-20
    Description: We use numerical simulations to measure the sensitivity of the tidal spin-down rate of a homogeneous triaxial ellipsoid to its axis ratios by comparing the drift rate in orbital semimajor axis to that of a spherical body with the same mass, volume and simulated rheology. We use a mass-spring model approximating a viscoelastic body spinning around its shortest body axis, with spin aligned with orbital spin axis, and in circular orbit about a point mass. The torque or drift rate can be estimated from that predicted for a sphere with equivalent volume if multiplied by $0.5 (1 + b^4/a^4)(b/a)^{-4/3} (c/a)^{-\alpha _c}$ where b / a and c / a are the body axis ratios and index α c 1.05 is consistent with the random lattice mass-spring model simulations but α c = 4/3 suggested by scaling estimates. A homogeneous body with axis ratios 0.5 and 0.8, like Haumea, has orbital semimajor axis drift rate about twice as fast as a spherical body with the same mass, volume and material properties. A simulation approximating a mostly rocky body but with 20 per cent of its mass as ice concentrated at its ends has a drift rate 10 times faster than the equivalent homogeneous rocky sphere. However, this increase in drift rate is not enough to allow Haumea's satellite, Hi'iaka, to have tidally drifted away from Haumea to its current orbital semimajor axis.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2015-07-01
    Description: We present a multiwavelength morphological analysis of star-forming clouds and filaments in the central (50 kpc) regions of 16 low-redshift ( z 〈 0.3) cool core brightest cluster galaxies. New Hubble Space Telescope imaging of far-ultraviolet continuum emission from young (10 Myr), massive (5 M ) stars reveals filamentary and clumpy morphologies, which we quantify by means of structural indices. The FUV data are compared with X-ray, Lyα, narrow-band Hα, broad-band optical/IR, and radio maps, providing a high spatial resolution atlas of star formation locales relative to the ambient hot (~10 7–8 K) and warm ionized (~10 4 K) gas phases, as well as the old stellar population and radio-bright active galactic nucleus (AGN) outflows. Nearly half of the sample possesses kpc-scale filaments that, in projection, extend towards and around radio lobes and/or X-ray cavities. These filaments may have been uplifted by the propagating jet or buoyant X-ray bubble, or may have formed in situ by cloud collapse at the interface of a radio lobe or rapid cooling in a cavity's compressed shell. The morphological diversity of nearly the entire FUV sample is reproduced by recent hydrodynamical simulations in which the AGN powers a self-regulating rain of thermally unstable star-forming clouds that precipitate from the hot atmosphere. In this model, precipitation triggers where the cooling-to-free-fall time ratio is t cool / t ff ~ 10. This condition is roughly met at the maximal projected FUV radius for more than half of our sample, and clustering about this ratio is stronger for sources with higher star formation rates.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2015-10-02
    Description: We use test-particle integrations to show that epicyclic motions excited by a pericentre passage of a dwarf galaxy could account for bulk vertical velocity streaming motions recently observed in the Galactic stellar disc near the Sun. We use fixed potential test-particle integrations to isolate the role of phase wrapping of epicyclic perturbations from bending and breathing waves or modes, which require self-gravity to oscillate. Perturbations from a fairly massive Sagittarius dwarf galaxy, M d  ~ 2.5  x  10 10 M , are required to account for the size of the observed streaming motions from its orbital pericentre approximately a Gyr ago. A previous passage of the dwarf through the Galactic disc approximately 2.2 Gyr ago (with a then more massive dwarf galaxy) is less effective. If phase wrapping of epicyclic perturbations is responsible for stellar streaming motions in the Galactic disc, then there should be variations in velocity gradients on scales of a few kpc in the vicinity of the Sun.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2013-10-08
    Description: We explore scenarios for the origin of two different density planets in the Kepler 36 system in adjacent orbits near the 7:6 mean motion resonance. We find that fine tuning is required in the stochastic forcing amplitude, the migration rate and planet eccentricities to allow two convergently migrating planets to bypass mean motion resonances such as the 4:3, 5:4 and 6:5, and yet allow capture into the 7:6 resonance. Stochastic forcing can eject the system from resonance causing a collision between the planets, unless the disc causing migration and stochastic forcing is depleted soon after resonance capture. We explore a scenario with approximately Mars mass embryos originating exterior to the two planets and migrating inwards towards two planets. We find that gravitational interactions with embryos can nudge the system out of resonances. Numerical integrations with about a half dozen embryos can leave the two planets in the 7:6 resonance. Collisions between planets and embryos have a wide distribution of impact angles and velocities ranging from accretionary to disruptive. We find that impacts can occur at sufficiently high impact angle and velocity that the envelope of a planet could have been stripped, leaving behind a dense core. Some of our integrations show the two planets exchanging locations, allowing the outer planet that had experienced multiple collisions with embryos to become the innermost planet. A scenario involving gravitational interactions and collisions with embryos may account for both the proximity of the Kepler 36 planets and their large density contrast.
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    Topics: Physics
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