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[1]  arXiv:1002.1306 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Dark Matter Decaying into a Fermi Sea of Neutrinos
Comments: 7 pages, 3 figures
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We study the possible decay of a coherently oscillating scalar field, interpreted as dark matter, into light fermions. Specifically, we consider a scalar field with sub-eV mass decaying into a Fermi sea of neutrinos. We recognize the similarity between our scenario and inflationary preheating where a coherently oscillating scalar field decays into standard model particles. Like the case of fermionic preheating, we find that Pauli blocking controls the dark matter decay into the neutrino sea. The radius of the Fermi sphere depends on the expansion of the universe leading to a time varying equation of state of dark matter. This makes the scenario very rich and we show that the decay rate might be different at different cosmological epochs. We categorize this in two interesting regimes and then study the cosmological perturbations to find the impact on structure formation. We find that the decay may help alleviating some of the standard problems related to cold dark matter.

[2]  arXiv:1002.1308 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Testing Parity-Violating Mechanisms with Cosmic Microwave Background Experiments
Comments: 8 pages, 6 figures; to be submitted to PRD
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

Chiral gravity and cosmological birefringence both provide physical mechanisms to produce parity-violating TB and EB correlations in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature/polarization. Here, we study how well these two mechanisms can be distinguished if non-zero TB/EB correlations are found. To do so, we evaluate the correlation matrix, including new TB-EB covariances. We find that the effects of these two mechanisms on the CMB are highly orthogonal, and can thus be distinguished fairly well in case of a high--signal-to-noise detection of TB/EB correlations. An Appendix evaluates the relative sensitivities of the BB, TB, and EB signals for detecting a chiral gravitational-wave background.

[3]  arXiv:1002.1309 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Metal-Ion Absorption in Conductively Evaporating Clouds
Comments: Submitted to ApJ
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We present computations of the ionization structure and metal-absorption properties of thermally conductive interface layers that surround evaporating warm spherical clouds, embedded in a hot medium. We rely on the analytical formalism of Dalton and Balbus to calculate the temperature profile in the evaporating gas, and we explicitly solve the time-dependent ionization equations for H, He, C, N, O, Si, and S in the conductive interface. We include photoionization by an external field. We estimate how departures from equilibrium ionization affect the resonance-line cooling efficiencies in the evaporating gas, and determine the conditions for which radiative losses may be neglected in the solution for the evaporation dynamics and temperature profile. Our results indicate that non-equilibrium cooling significantly increases the value of the saturation parameter (sigma_0) at which radiative losses begin to affect the flow dynamics. As applications we calculate the ion fractions and projected column densities arising in the evaporating layers surrounding dwarf-galaxy-scale objects that are also photoionized by metagalactic radiation. We compare our results to the UV metal-absorption column densities observed in local highly-ionized metal-absorbers, located in the Galactic corona or intergalactic medium. Conductive interfaces significantly enhance the formation of high-ions such as C^3+, N^4+, and O^5+ relative to purely photoionized clouds, especially for clouds embedded in a high-pressure corona. However, the enhanced columns are still too low to account for the O VI columns (~1e14 cm^-2) observed in the local high-velocity metal-ion absorbers. We find that column densities larger than ~1e13 cm^-2 cannot be produced in evaporating clouds.

[4]  arXiv:1002.1310 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Simplified models for photohadronic interactions in cosmic accelerators
Comments: 39 pages, 13 (color) figures, 6 tables
Subjects: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE); High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph)

We discuss simplified models for photo-meson production in cosmic accelerators, such as Active Galactic Nuclei and Gamma-Ray Bursts. Our self-consistent models are directly based on the underlying physics used in the SOPHIA software, and can be easily adapted if new data are included. They allow for the efficient computation of neutrino and photon spectra (from pi^0 decays), as a major requirement of modern time-dependent simulations of the astrophysical sources and parameter studies. In addition, the secondaries (pions and muons) are explicitely generated, a necessity if cooling processes are to be included. The separate computation of the pi^0, pi^+, and pi^- fluxes allows, for instance, for flavor ratio predictions of the neutrinos at the source, which are a requirement of many tests of neutrino properties using astrophysical sources. The separate treatment of the different interaction types allows for an identification of the dominating contribution. For instance, we demonstrate that for charged pion generation, the often used production by the Delta(1232)-resonance is typically not the dominant process in Active Galactic Nuclei and Gamma-Ray Bursts, and that the neutrino fluxes are underestimated by at least a factor of two if they are obtained from the neutral to charged pion ratio. We compare our results for several levels of simplification, and we demonstrate that they are sufficiently close to the SOPHIA software.

[5]  arXiv:1002.1311 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Measuring the Speed of Dark: Detecting Dark Energy Perturbations
Comments: 12 pages, 11 figures
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

The nature of dark energy can be probed not only through its equation of state, but also through its microphysics, characterized by the sound speed of perturbations to the dark energy density and pressure. As the sound speed drops below the speed of light, dark energy inhomogeneities increase, affecting both CMB and matter power spectra. We show that current data can put no significant constraints on the value of the sound speed when dark energy is purely a recent phenomenon, but can begin to show more interesting results for early dark energy models. For example, the best fit model for current data has a slight preference for dynamics (w(a)\ne-1), degrees of freedom distinct from quintessence (c_s\ne1), and early presence of dark energy (Omega_ de(a<<1)\ne0). Future data may open a new window on dark energy by measuring its spatial as well as time variation.

[6]  arXiv:1002.1315 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Constraining the Environment of CH+ Formation with CH3+ Observations
Comments: 7 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ
Subjects: Galaxy Astrophysics (astro-ph.GA)

The formation of CH+ in the interstellar medium has long been an outstanding problem in chemical models. In order to probe the physical conditions of the ISM in which CH+ forms, we propose the use of CH3+ observations. The pathway to forming CH3+ begins with CH+, and a steady state analysis of CH3+ and the reaction intermediary CH2+ results in a relationship between the CH+ and CH3+ abundances. This relationship depends on the molecular hydrogen fraction, f_H2, and gas temperature, T, so observations of CH+ and CH3+ can be used to infer the properties of the gas in which both species reside. We present observations of both molecules along the diffuse cloud sight line toward Cyg OB2 No. 12. Using our computed column densities and upper limits, we put constraints on the f_H2 vs. T parameter space in which CH+ and CH3+ form. We find that average, static, diffuse molecular cloud conditions (i.e. f_H2>0.2, T~60 K) are excluded by our analysis. However, current theory suggests that non-equilibrium effects drive the reaction C+ + H_2 --> CH+ + H, endothermic by 4640 K. If we consider a higher effective temperature due to collisions between neutrals and accelerated ions, the CH3+ partition function predicts that the overall population will be spread out into several excited rotational levels. As a result, observations of more CH3+ transitions with higher signal-to-noise ratios are necessary to place any constraints on models where magnetic acceleration of ions drives the formation of CH+.

[7]  arXiv:1002.1325 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Modeling the Metallicity Distribution of Globular Clusters
Comments: submitted to ApJ
Subjects: Galaxy Astrophysics (astro-ph.GA); Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

Observed metallicities of globular clusters reflect physical conditions in the interstellar medium of their high-redshift host galaxies. Globular cluster systems in most large galaxies display bimodal color and metallicity distributions, which are often interpreted as indicating two distinct modes of cluster formation. The metal-rich and metal-poor clusters have systematically different locations and kinematics in their host galaxies. However, the red and blue clusters have similar internal properties, such as the masses, sizes, and ages. It is therefore interesting to explore whether both metal-rich and metal-poor clusters could form by a common mechanism and still be consistent with the bimodal distribution. We present such a model, which prescribes the formation of globular clusters semi-analytically using galaxy assembly history from cosmological simulations coupled with observed scaling relations for the amount and metallicity of cold gas available for star formation. We assume that massive star clusters form only during mergers of massive gas-rich galaxies and tune the model parameters to reproduce the observed distribution in the Galaxy. A wide, but not entire, range of model realizations produces metallicity distributions consistent with the data. We find that early mergers of smaller hosts create exclusively blue clusters, whereas subsequent mergers of more massive galaxies create both red and blue clusters. Thus bimodality arises naturally as the result of a small number of late massive merger events. This conclusion is not significantly affected by the large uncertainties in our knowledge of the stellar mass and cold gas mass in high-redshift galaxies. The fraction of galactic stellar mass locked in globular clusters declines from over 10% at z>3 to 0.1% at present.

[8]  arXiv:1002.1327 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Cosmic rays from AGN, the knee energy mass scale and dark matter particles
Authors: Yukio Tomozawa
Subjects: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE); Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

Following the possibility of a new mass scale at the 3 PeV knee energy of the cosmic ray energy spectrum, the author suggests that the lowest mass for the dark matter particle should be 8.1 TeV, using GLMR supersymmetry theory . The author discusses the possibility of detecting such a signature in various observational facilities, gamma ray, neutrino and other underground detectors. The author also suggests that the observed discontinuity in the power law index in galaxy correlation functions is the knee energy counterpart in cosmology.

[9]  arXiv:1002.1340 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: The Effect of Corotation on the Radial Gradient of Metallicity of Spiral Galaxies
Comments: 3 pages, 1 figure
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

The corotation radius in a spiral galaxy is the radius where the spiral pattern speed has the same velocity of the rotation curve. By compiling results from the literature for 20 spiral galaxies we verified a strong correlation between the radius of the minima or inflections of the metallicity distribution and the corotation radius.

[10]  arXiv:1002.1343 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Imaging Redshift Estimates for BL Lacertae Objects
Comments: 15 pages, to appear in the Astrophysical Journal
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO); High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE)

We have obtained high dynamic range, good natural seeing i' images of BL Lacertae objects (BL Lacs) to search for the AGN host and thus constrain the source redshift. These objects are drawn from a sample of bright flat-spectrum radio sources that are either known (via recent Fermi LAT observations) gamma-ray emitters or similar sources that might be detected in continuing gamma-ray observations. All had spectroscopic confirmation as BL Lac sources, but no redshift solution. We detected hosts for 25/49 objects. As these galaxies have been argued to be standard candles, our measured host magnitudes provide redshift estimates (ranging from 0.2--1.0). Lower bounds are established on the redshifts of non-detections. The mean of the fit redshifts (and lower limits) is higher than those of spectroscopic solutions in the radio- and gamma-ray- loud parent samples, suggesting corrections may be needed for the luminosity function and evolution of these sources.

[11]  arXiv:1002.1346 [pdf]
Title: Difference in the wind speeds required for initiation versus continuation of sand transport on Mars: Implications for dunes and dust storms
Authors: Jasper F. Kok
Comments: In press in Physical Review Letters
Subjects: Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP)

Much of the surface of Mars is covered by dunes, ripples, and other features formed by the blowing of sand by wind, known as saltation. In addition, saltation loads the atmosphere with dust aerosols, which dominate the Martian climate. We show here that saltation can be maintained on Mars by wind speeds an order of magnitude less than required to initiate it. We further show that the resulting hysteresis effect causes saltation to occur for much lower wind speeds than previously thought. These findings have important implications for the formation of dust storms, sand dunes, and ripples on Mars.

[12]  arXiv:1002.1348 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Is Dust Forming on the Red Giant Branch in 47 Tuc?
Comments: Accepted for publication in ApJL
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

Using Spitzer IRAC observations from the SAGE-SMC Legacy program and archived Spitzer IRAC data, we investigate dust production in 47 Tuc, a nearby massive Galactic globular cluster. A previous study detected infrared excess, indicative of circumstellar dust, in a large population of stars in 47 Tuc, spanning the entire Red Giant Branch (RGB). We show that those results suffered from effects caused by stellar blending and imaging artifacts and that it is likely that no stars below about 1 mag from the tip of the RGB are producing dust. The only stars that appear to harbor dust are variable stars, which are also the coolest and most luminous stars in the cluster.

[13]  arXiv:1002.1360 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Generation of Alfven Waves by Magnetic Reconnection
Comments: 29 pages, 17 figures
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

In this paper, results of 2.5-dimensional magnetohydrodynamical simulations are reported for the magnetic reconnection of non-perfectly antiparallel magnetic fields. The magnetic field has a component perpendicular to the computational plane, that is, guide field. The angle theta between magnetic field lines in two half regions is a key parameter in our simulations whereas the initial distribution of the plasma is assumed to be simple; density and pressure are uniform except for the current sheet region. Alfven waves are generated at the reconnection point and propagate along the reconnected field line. The energy fluxes of the Alfven waves and sound waves generated by the magnetic reconnection are measured. Each flux shows the similar time evolution independent of theta. The percentage of the energies (time integral of energy fluxes) carried by the Alfven waves and sound waves to the released magnetic energy are calculated. The Alfven waves carry 38.9%, 36.0%, and 29.5% of the released magnetic energy at the maximum in the case of beta=0.1, 1, and 20 respectively, where beta is the plasma beta (the ratio of gas pressure to magnetic pressure). The sound waves carry 16.2%, 25.9%, and 75.0% of the energy at the maximum. Implications of these results for solar coronal heating and acceleration of high-speed solar wind are discussed.

[14]  arXiv:1002.1368 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Cross-correlation of the Lyman-\alpha Forest and HI 21 cm: A Probe of Cosmology
Comments: 4 pages, 3 figures (submitted)
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We present the cross-correlation of the redshifted 21-cm emission from neutral hydrogen (HI) in the post-reionization era with the Lyman-\alpha optical depth as a new probe of the large scale matter distribution in the redshift range z=2 to 3. Though the two signals originate from different astrophysical systems, they are both expected to trace the underlying dark matter distribution on large scales. The angular cross-correlation power spectrum estimator is found to be unaffected by the discrete quasar sampling, which only affects the noise in the estimate. Considering a quasar survey with high angular density, like the upcoming BOSS, we find that it will be possible to measure the cross-correlation at a higher level of precision than the 21-cm auto-correlation power spectrum using the same 21-cm observations. Further, the foregrounds and systematics in the 21-cm data and the Lyman-\alpha optical depth are expected to be uncorrelated, and hence these problems are expected to be considerably less severe in the cross-correlation as compared to the auto-correlations. The cross-correlation signal will be a new, independent probe of the astrophysics of the diffuse IGM, the growth of structure and the expansion history of the Universe.

[15]  arXiv:1002.1374 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Constraining dark matter halo properties using lensed SNLS supernovae
Comments: 11 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

This paper exploits the gravitational magnification of SNe Ia to measure properties of dark matter haloes. The magnification of individual SNe Ia can be computed using observed properties of foreground galaxies and dark matter halo models. We model the dark matter haloes of the galaxies as truncated singular isothermal spheres with velocity dispersion and truncation radius obeying luminosity dependent scaling laws. A homogeneously selected sample of 175 SNe Ia from the first 3-years of the Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS) in the redshift range 0.2 < z < 1 is used to constrain models of the dark matter haloes associated with foreground galaxies. The best-fitting velocity dispersion scaling law agrees well with galaxy-galaxy lensing measurements. We further find that the normalisation of the velocity dispersion of passive and star forming galaxies are consistent with empirical Faber-Jackson and Tully-Fisher relations, respectively. If we make no assumption on the normalisation of these relations, we find that the data prefer gravitational lensing at the 92 per cent confidence level. Using recent models of dust extinction we deduce that the impact of this effect on our results is very small. We also investigate the brightness scatter of SNe Ia due to gravitational lensing. The gravitational lensing scatter is approximately proportional to the SN Ia redshift. We find the constant of proportionality to be B = 0.055 +0.039 -0.041 mag (B < 0.12 mag at the 95 per cent confidence level). If this model is correct, the contribution from lensing to the intrinsic brightness scatter of SNe Ia is small for the SNLS sample.

[16]  arXiv:1002.1376 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: A note on the equivalence of a barotropic perfect fluid with a K-essence scalar field
Comments: 4 pages, 1 figure
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

In this short note, we obtain the necessary and sufficient condition for a class of non-canonical single scalar field models to be exactly equivalent to barotropic perfect fluids, under the assumption of an irrotational fluid flow. An immediate consequence of this result is that the non-adiabatic pressure perturbation in this class of scalar field systems vanishes exactly at all orders in perturbation theory and on all scales. The Lagrangian for this general class of scalar field models depends on both the kinetic term and the value of the field. However, after a field redefinition, it can be effectively cast in the form of a purely kinetic K-essence model.

[17]  arXiv:1002.1379 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: X-Ray and Gamma-Ray Emission from the Galactic Center
Comments: 5 pages, Contributed talk for the proceedings of the Galactic Center Workshop 2009, "The Galactic Center: A Window to the Nuclear Environment of Disk Galaxies", in 19-21 October, Shanghai China, 19-21 October, 2009
Subjects: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE)

We discuss the origin of continuum and line X-ray emission observed in the direction the Galactic Center. We predict a significant flux of de-excitation gamma-ray lines in this direction, which can be produced by subrelativistic protons generated by accretion processes.

[18]  arXiv:1002.1380 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Parsec-scale Properties of Brightest Cluster Galaxies
Comments: 20 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&amp;A
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We present new VLBI observations at 5 GHz of a complete sample of Brightest Cluster Galaxies (BCGs) in nearby Abell Clusters (distance class <3). Combined with data from the literature, this provides parsec-scale information for 34 BCGs. Our analysis of their parsec scale radio emission and cluster X-ray properties shows a possible dichotomy between BCGs in cool core clusters and those in non cool core clusters. Among resolved sources, those in cool core clusters tend to have two-sided parsec-scale jets, while those in less relaxed clusters have predominantly one-sided parsec-scale jets. We suggest that this difference could be the result of interplay between the jets and the surrounding medium. The one-sided structure in non cool core clusters could be due to Doppler boosting effects in relativistic, intrinsically symmetric jets; two-sided morphology in cool core clusters is likely related to the presence of heavy and mildly relativistic jets slowed down on the parsec-scale. Evidence of recurrent activity are also found in BCGs in cool core clusters.

[19]  arXiv:1002.1386 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: NGC 4245: one or two bars, and where does the gas inflow stop?
Authors: O. K. Sil'chenko (1), I. V. Chilingarian (1 and 2), V. L. Afanasiev (3) ((1) Moscow State University, (2) Observatoire de Paris, (3) Russian Academy of Sciences)
Comments: 4 pages, 3 figures. To appear in "Tumbling, twisting, and winding galaxies: Pattern speeds along the Hubble sequence", E. M. Corsini and V. P. Debattista (eds.), Memorie della Societa` Astronomica Italiana
Subjects: Galaxy Astrophysics (astro-ph.GA); Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We have studied stellar and gaseous kinematics as well as stellar population properties in the center of the early-type barred galaxy NGC 4245 by means of integral-field spectroscopy. We have found a chemically distinct compact core, more metal-rich by a factor of 2.5 than the bulge, and a ring of young stars with the radius of 300 pc. Current star formation proceeds in this ring; its location corresponds to the inner Lindblad resonance of the large-scale bar. The mean age of stars in the chemically distinct core is significantly younger than the estimate by Sarzi et al. (2005) for the very center, within R=0.25", made with the HST spectroscopy data. We conclude that the `chemically distinct core' is in fact an ancient ultra-compact star forming ring with radius less than 100 pc which marks perhaps the past position of the inner Lindblad resonance. In general, the pattern of star formation history in the center of this early-type gas-poor galaxy confirms the predictions of dynamical models for the secular evolution of a stellar-gaseous disk under the influence of a bar.

[20]  arXiv:1002.1389 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Gravitational waves from cosmological phase transitions
Authors: Ruth Durrer
Comments: 14 pages, 8 Figures Proceedeings of the 1st Mediterranean Conference on Classical and Quantum Gravity (MCCQG)
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

I discuss the generation of a stochastic background of gravitational waves during a first order phase transition. I present simple general arguments which explain the main features of the gravitational wave spectrum like the $k^3$ power law growth on large scales and a estimate for the peak amplitude. In the second part I concentrate on the electroweak phase transition and argue that the nucleosynthesis bound on its gravitational wave background seriously limits seed magnetic fields which may have been generated during this transition.

[21]  arXiv:1002.1401 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Novae With Long-Lasting Supersoft Emission That Drive a High Accretion Rate
Authors: Bradley E. Schaefer, Andrew C. Collazzi (Louisiana State University)
Comments: Astronomical Journal, in press, 39 pages, 10 figures
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

We identify a new class of novae characterized by the post-eruption quiescent light curve being more than roughly a factor of ten brighter than the pre-eruption light curve. Eight novae (V723 Cas, V1500 Cyg, V1974 Cyg, GQ Mus, CP Pup, T Pyx, V4633 Sgr, and RW UMi) are separated out as being significantly distinct from other novae. This group shares a suite of uncommon properties, characterized by the post-eruption magnitude being much brighter than before eruption, short orbital periods, long-lasting supersoft emission following the eruption, a highly magnetized white dwarf, and secular declines during the post-eruption quiescence. We present a basic physical picture which shows why all five uncommon properties are causally connected. Most novae do not have adequate accretion for continuous hydrogen burning, but some can achieve this if the companion star is nearby (with short orbital period) and a magnetic field channels the matter onto a small area on the white dwarf so as to produce a locally high accretion rate. The resultant supersoft flux irradiates the companion star and drives a higher accretion rate (with a brighter post-eruption phase), which serves to keep the hydrogen burning and the supersoft flux going. The feedback loop cannot be perfectly self-sustaining, so the supersoft flux will decline over time, forcing a decline in the accretion rate and the system brightness. We name this new group after the prototype, V1500 Cyg. V1500 Cyg stars are definitely not progenitors of Type Ia supernovae. The V1500 Cyg stars have similar physical mechanisms and appearances as predicted for nova by the hibernation model, but with this group accounting for only 14% of novae.

[22]  arXiv:1002.1409 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Achromatizing a liquid-crystal spectropolarimeter: Retardance vs Stokes-based calibration of HiVIS
Comments: Accepted in PASP
Subjects: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM); Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

Astronomical spectropolarimeters can be subject to many sources of systematic error which limit the precision and accuracy of the instrument. We present a calibration method for observing high-resolution polarized spectra using chromatic liquid-crystal variable retarders (LCVRs). These LCVRs allow for polarimetric modulation of the incident light without any moving optics at frequencies >10Hz. We demonstrate a calibration method using pure Stokes input states that enables an achromatization of the system. This Stokes-based deprojection method reproduces input polarization even though highly chromatic instrument effects exist. This process is first demonstrated in a laboratory spectropolarimeter where we characterize the LCVRs and show example deprojections. The process is then implemented the a newly upgraded HiVIS spectropolarimeter on the 3.67m AEOS telescope. The HiVIS spectropolarimeter has also been expanded to include broad-band full-Stokes spectropolarimetry using achromatic wave-plates in addition to the tunable full-Stokes polarimetric mode using LCVRs. These two new polarimetric modes in combination with a new polarimetric calibration unit provide a much more sensitive polarimetric package with greatly reduced systematic error.

[23]  arXiv:1002.1413 [pdf]
Title: Status Report on the United Nations Basic Space Science Initiative (UNBSSI)
Comments: 8 pages
Subjects: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM); Physics and Society (physics.soc-ph)

Since 1990, the UN Programme on Space Applications leads the United Nations Basic Space Science Initiative by contributing to the international and regional development of astronomy and space science through annual UN/ESA/NASA/JAXA workshops on basic space science, International Heliophysical Year 2007, and the International Space Weather Initiative. Space weather is the conditions on the Sun and in the solar wind, magnetosphere, ionosphere and thermosphere that can influence the performance and reliability of space-borne and ground-based technological systems and can endanger human life or health. The programme also coordinates the development of IHY/ISWI low-cost, ground-based, world-wide instrument arrays. To date, 14 world-wide instrument arrays comprising approximately 1000 instruments (GPS receivers, magnetometers, spectrometers, particle detectors) are operating in more than 71 countries. The most recent workshop was hosted by the Republic of Korea in 2009 for Asia and the Pacific. Annual workshops on the ISWI have been scheduled to be hosted by Egypt in 2010 for Western Asia, Nigeria in 2011 for Africa, and Ecuador in 2012 for Latin America and the Caribbean.

[24]  arXiv:1002.1416 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Primordial Non-Gaussianities from Inflation Models
Authors: Xingang Chen
Comments: 80 pages, invited review for special issue of Advances in Astronomy on "Testing the Gaussianity and Statistical Isotropy of the Universe"
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO); High Energy Physics - Phenomenology (hep-ph); High Energy Physics - Theory (hep-th)

This is a pedagogical review on primordial non-Gaussianities from inflation models. We introduce formalisms and techniques that are used to compute such quantities. We review different mechanisms which can generate observable large non-Gaussianities during inflation, and distinctive signatures they leave on the non-Gaussian profiles. They are potentially powerful probes to the dynamics of inflation. We also provide a non-technical and qualitative summary of the main results and underlying physics.

[25]  arXiv:1002.1444 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Analysis of large-scale anisotropy of ultra-high energy cosmic rays in HiRes data
Comments: 9 pages, 5 Postscript figures
Subjects: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE)

Stereo data collected by the HiRes experiment over a six year period are examined for large-scale anisotropy related to the inhomogeneous distribution of matter in the nearby Universe. We consider the generic case of small cosmic-ray deflections and a large number of sources tracing the matter distribution. In this matter tracer model the expected cosmic ray flux depends essentially on a single free parameter, the typical deflection angle theta. We find that the HiRes data with threshold energies of 40 EeV and 57 EeV are incompatible with the matter tracer model at a 95% confidence level unless theta is larger than 10 degrees and are compatible with an isotropic flux. The data set above 10 EeV is compatible with both the matter tracer model and an isotropic flux.

[26]  arXiv:1002.1445 [pdf, other]
Title: The Coexistence of Classical Bulges, Pseudobulges, and Supermassive Black Holes
Authors: Peter Erwin
Comments: LaTeX, 4 pages, 2 PDF figures. To appear in the proceedings of "The Monster's Fiery Breath: Feedback in Galaxies, Groups, and Clusters", eds. Sebastian Heinz and Eric Wilcots (AIP conference series)
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

Some S0 and early-type spiral galaxies possess "composite bulges"; in these galaxies, the photometric bulge -- the central stellar light in excess of the disk light -- is composed of both a "(disky) pseudobulge", with a flattened, disklike morphology and relatively cool stellar kinematics, and a rounder, kinematically hot "classical bulge" embedded within. I speculate that supermassive black holes (SMBH) in such galaxies may correlate with the classical-bulge component only, and not with the pseudobulge component; preliminary comparisons with SMBH masses appear to support this hypothesis.

[27]  arXiv:1002.1448 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: FRW cosmology in Milgrom's bimetric theory of gravity
Comments: 11 pages
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We consider spatially homogeneous and isotropic Friedmann-Robertson-Walker (FRW) solutions of Milgrom's recently proposed class of bimetric theories of gravity. These theories have two different regimes, corresponding to high and low acceleration. We find simple power-law matter dominated solutions in both, as well as solutions with spatial curvature, and exponentially expanding solutions. In the high acceleration limit these solutions behave like the FRW solutions of General Relativity, with a cosmological constant term that is of the correct order of magnitude to explain the observed accelerating expansion of the Universe. We find that solutions that remain in the high acceleration regime for their entire history, however, require non-baryonic dark matter fields, or extra interaction terms in their gravitational Lagrangian, in order to be observationally viable. The low acceleration regime also provides some scope to account for this deficit, with solutions that differ considerably from their general relativistic counterparts.

[28]  arXiv:1002.1452 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: The first galactic stars and chemical enrichment in the halo
Authors: Piercarlo Bonifacio (CIFIST, Gepi, Oat)
Comments: Invited Review at IAU Symposium 265, "Chemical Abundances in the Universe: Connecting First Stars to Planets", K. Cunha, M. Spite &amp; B. Barbuy, eds. Cambridge University Press p. 81
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

The cosmic microwave background and the cosmic expansion can be interpreted as evidence that the Universe underwent an extremely hot and dense phase about 14 Gyr ago. The nucleosynthesis computations tell us that the Universe emerged from this state with a very simple chemical composition: H, 2H, 3He, 4He, and traces of 7Li. All other nuclei where synthesised at later times. Our stellar evolution models tell us that, if a low-mass star with this composition had been created (a "zero-metal" star) at that time, it would still be shining on the Main Sequence today. Over the last 40 years there have been many efforts to detect such primordial stars but none has so-far been found. The lowest metallicity stars known have a metal content, Z, which is of the order of 10e-4Z_Sun. These are also the lowest metallicity objects known in the Universe. This seems to support the theories of star formation which predict that only high mass stars could form with a primordial composition and require a minimum metallicity to allow the formation of low-mass stars. Yet, since absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, we cannot exclude the existence of such low-mass zero-metal stars, at present. If we have not found the first Galactic stars, as a by product of our searches we have found their direct descendants, stars of extremely low metallicity (Z<=10e-3Z_Sun). The chemical composition of such stars contains indirect information on the nature of the stars responsible for the nucleosynthesis of the metals. Such a fossil record allows us a glimpse of the Galaxy at a look-back time equivalent to redshift z=10, or larger. The last ten years have been full of exciting discoveries in this field, which I will try to review in this contribution.

[29]  arXiv:1002.1461 [pdf, other]
Title: Do Nuclear Star Clusters and Supermassive Black Holes Follow the Same Host-Galaxy Correlations?
Comments: LaTeX, 4 pages, 2 PDF figures. To appear in "Hunting for the Dark: The Hidden Side of Galaxy Formation", Malta, 19-23 Oct. 2009, eds. V.P. Debattista &amp; C.C. Popescu, AIP Conference Series
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

Recent studies have suggested a strong correlation between the masses of nuclear star clusters and their host galaxies, an extension of the known correlations between supermassive black holes (SMBHs) and their host galaxies. By focusing on disk galaxies with well-determined black hole and nuclear cluster masses, we argue that there is not a universal "central massive object" correlation after all: careful analysis shows that while SMBHs correlate better with the stellar masses of the bulge components, nuclear star clusters clearly correlate better with total galaxy stellar mass.

[30]  arXiv:1002.1476 [pdf, other]
Title: Evolution of the Clustering of Photometrically Selected Galaxies SDSS Galaxies
Comments: 15 pages, 12 figures, submitted to MNRAS, comments welcome
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We measure the angular auto-correlation functions (w) of SDSS galaxies selected to have photometric redshifts 0.1 < z < 0.4 and absolute r-band magnitudes Mr < -21.2. We split these galaxies into five overlapping redshift shells of width 0.1 and measure w in each subsample in order to investigate the evolution of SDSS galaxies. We find that the bias increases substantially with redshift - much more so than one would expect for a passively evolving sample. We use halo-model analysis to determine the best-fit halo-occupation-distribution (HOD) for each subsample, and the best-fit models allow us to interpret the change in bias physically. In order to properly interpret our best-fit HODs, we convert each halo mass to its z = 0 passively evolved bias (bo), enabling a direct comparison of the best-fit HODs at different redshifts. We find that the minimum halo bo required to host a galaxy decreases as the redshift decreases, suggesting that galaxies with Mr < -21.2 are forming in halos at the low-mass end of the HODs over our redshift range. We use the best-fit HODs to determine the change in occupation number divided by the change in mass of halos with constant bo and we find a sharp peak at bo ~ 0.9 - corresponding to an average halo mass of ~ 10^12Msol/h. We thus present the following scenario: the bias of galaxies with Mr < -21.2 decreases as the Universe evolves because these galaxies form in halos of mass ~ 10^12Msol/h (independent of redshift), and the bias of these halos naturally decreases as the Universe evolves.

[31]  arXiv:1002.1479 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: The effects of charge transfer inefficiency (CTI) on galaxy shape measurements
Comments: 11 pages, 6 figures, and 2 tables. Accepted for publication in PASP
Subjects: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM); Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

(Abridged) We examine the effects of charge transfer inefficiency (CTI) during CCD readout on galaxy shape measurements required by studies of weak gravitational lensing. We simulate a CCD readout with CTI such as that caused by charged particle radiation damage. We verify our simulations on data from laboratory-irradiated CCDs. Only charge traps with time constants of the same order as the time between row transfers during readout affect galaxy shape measurements. We characterize the effects of CTI on various galaxy populations. We baseline our study around p-channel CCDs that have been shown to have charge transfer efficiency up to an order of magnitude better than several models of n-channel CCDs designed for space applications. We predict that for galaxies furthest from the readout registers, bias in the measurement of galaxy shapes, Delta(e), will increase at a rate of 2.65 +/- 0.02 x 10^(-4) per year at L2 for accumulated radiation exposure averaged over the solar cycle. If uncorrected, this will consume the entire shape measurement error budget of a dark energy mission within about 4 years. Software mitigation techniques demonstrated elsewhere can reduce this by a factor of ~10, bringing the effect well below mission requirements. CCDs with higher CTI than the ones we studeied may not meet the requirements of future dark energy missions. We discuss ways in which hardware could be designed to further minimize the impact of CTI.

[32]  arXiv:1002.1482 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: The quiet chromosphere. Old wisdom, new insights, future needs
Authors: Robert J. Rutten
Comments: To appear in Proceedings 25th NSO Workshop, editors A. Tritschler, K. Reardon, H. Uitenbroek, Mem. Soc. Astr. Ital
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

The introduction to this review summarizes chromosphere observation in two figures. The first part showcases the historical emphasis on the eclipse chromosphere in the development of NLTE line formation theory and criticizes 1D modeling. The second part advertises recent breakthroughs after many decades of standstill. The third part discusses what may or should come next.

[33]  arXiv:1002.1486 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Do AGN suppress star formation in early-type galaxies?
Authors: Kevin Schawinski
Comments: 3 pages. Proceedings of "Accretion and Ejection in AGN: a global view", Como, Italy, ASP Conference Series, Eds: L. Maraschi, G. Ghisellini, R. Della Ceca and F. Tavecchio
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

The observation that AGN host galaxies preferentially inhabit the "green valley" between the blue cloud and the red sequence has significant consequences for our understanding of the co-evolution of galaxies and black holes via accretion events. I discuss the interpretation of green valley AGN host galaxy colours with particular focus on early-type galaxies.

[34]  arXiv:1002.1488 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Black hole growth and host galaxy morphology
Comments: 4 pages, 2 figures. Proceedings of the IAU Symposium no. 267, "Co-Evolution of Central Black Holes and Galaxies: Feeding and Feedback", eds. B.M. Peterson, R.S. Somerville and T. Storchi-Bergmann
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We use data from large surveys of the local Universe (SDSS+Galaxy Zoo) to show that the galaxy-black hole connection is linked to host morphology at a fundamental level. The fraction of early-type galaxies with actively growing black holes, and therefore the AGN duty cycle, declines significantly with increasing black hole mass. Late-type galaxies exhibit the opposite trend: the fraction of actively growing black holes increases with black hole mass.

[35]  arXiv:1002.1503 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Unfolding the Hierarchy of Voids
Comments: 5 pages, 2 figures
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We present a framework for the hierarchical identification and characterization of voids based on the Watershed Void Finder. The Hierarchical Void Finder is based on a generalization of the scale space of a density field invoked in order to trace the hierarchical nature and structure of cosmological voids. At each level of the hierarchy, the watershed transform is used to identify the voids at that particular scale. By identifying the overlapping regions between watershed basins in adjacent levels, the hierarchical void tree is constructed. Applications on a hierarchical Voronoi model and on a set of cosmological simulations illustrate its potential.

[36]  arXiv:1002.1505 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: User Guide for the Discrete Dipole Approximation Code DDSCAT 7.1
Authors: B. T. Draine (1), P. J. Flatau (2) ((1) Princeton University, (2) Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD)
Comments: 83 pages, 11 figures
Subjects: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM)

DDSCAT 7.1 is an open-source Fortran-90 software package applying the discrete dipole approximation to calculate scattering and absorption of electromagnetic waves by targets with arbitrary geometries and complex refractive index. The targets may be isolated entities (e.g., dust particles), but may also be 1-d or 2-d periodic arrays of "target unit cells", allowing calculation of absorption, scattering, and electric fields around arrays of nanostructures.
The theory of the DDA and its implementation in DDSCAT is presented in Draine (1988) and Draine & Flatau (1994), and its extension to periodic structures (and near-field calculations) in Draine & Flatau (2008). DDSCAT 7.1 includes support for MPI, OpenMP, and the Intel Math Kernel Library (MKL). DDSCAT supports calculations for a variety of target geometries. Target materials may be both inhomogeneous and anisotropic. It is straightforward for the user to "import" arbitrary target geometries into the code. DDSCAT automatically calculates total cross sections for absorption and scattering and selected elements of the Mueller scattering intensity matrix.
This User Guide explains how to use DDSCAT 7.1 to carry out electromagnetic scattering calculations. DDfield, a Fortran-90 code to calculate E and B at user-selected locations near the target, is included in the distribution. A number of changes have been made since the last release, DDSCAT 7.0 .

[37]  arXiv:1002.1511 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Searching for prompt signatures of nearby core-collapse supernovae by a joint analysis of neutrino and gravitational-wave data
Comments: 10 pages, 3 figures. To appear in Class. Quantum Grav
Subjects: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM)

We discuss the science motivations and prospects for a joint analysis of gravitational-wave (GW) and low-energy neutrino data to search for prompt signals from nearby supernovae (SNe). Both gravitational-wave and low-energy neutrinos are expected to be produced in the innermost region of a core-collapse supernova, and a search for coincident signals would probe the processes which power a supernova explosion. It is estimated that the current generation of neutrino and gravitational-wave detectors would be sensitive to Galactic core-collapse supernovae, and would also be able to detect electromagnetically dark SNe. A joint GW-neutrino search would enable improvements to searches by way of lower detection thresholds, larger distance range, better live-time coverage by a network of GW and neutrino detectors, and increased significance of candidate detections. A close collaboration between the GW and neutrino communities for such a search will thus go far toward realizing a much sought-after astrophysics goal of detecting the next nearby supernova.

[38]  arXiv:1002.1525 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Planetary Nebulae: Observational Properties, Mimics, and Diagnostics
Comments: 25 pages, 6 figures; presentation at the workshop on the Legacies of the Macquarie/AAO/Strasbourg H-alpha Planetary Nebula project, accepted by the Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia (PASA)
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

The total number of true, likely and possible planetary nebulae (PN) now known in the Milky Way is nearly 3000, double the number known a decade ago. The new discoveries are a legacy of the recent availability of wide field, narrowband imaging surveys, primarily in the light of H-alpha. In this paper, we summarise the various PN discovery techniques, and give an overview of the many types of objects which mimic PN and which appear as contaminants in both Galactic and extragalactic samples. Much improved discrimination of classical PN from their mimics is now possible based on the wide variety of high-quality multiwavelength data sets that are now available. We offer improved taxonomic and observational definitions for the PN phenomenon based on evaluation of these better diagnostic capabilities. However, we note that evidence is increasing that the PN phenomenon is heterogeneous, and PN are likely to be formed from multiple evolutionary scenarios. In particular, the relationships between some collimated symbiotic outflows and bipolar PN remain uncertain.

[39]  arXiv:1002.1526 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: The ASTE Galactic Center CO J=3-2 Survey: Probing Shocked Molecular Gas in the CMZ
Comments: 10 pages, 6 figures, Proceedings of the Galactic Center Workshop 2009, Shanghai
Subjects: Galaxy Astrophysics (astro-ph.GA)

Large-scale CO surveys have revealed that the central molecular zone (CMZ) of our Galaxy is characterized by a number of expanding shells/arcs, and by a peculiar population of compact clouds with large velocity widths -- high-velocity compact clouds (HVCCs). We have performed a large-scale CO J=3-2 survey of the CMZ from 2005 to 2008 with the Atacama Submillimeter-wave Telescope Experiment (ASTE). The data cover almost the full extent of the CMZ and the Clump 2 with a 34 arcsec grid spacing. The CO J=3-2 data were compared with the CO J=1--0 data taken with the Nobeyama Radio Observatory 45 m telescope. Molecular gas in the CMZ exhibits higher J=3-2/J=1-0 intensity ratios [R(3-2/1-0)=0.7] than that in the Galactic disk [R(3-2/1-0)=0.4]. We extracted highly excited, optically thin gas by the criterion, R(3-2/1-0)>=1.5. Clumps of high R(3-2/1-0) gas were found in the Sgr A and Sgr C regions, near SNR G 0.9+0.1, and three regions with energetic HVCCs; CO 1.27+0.01, CO -0.41-0.23, and CO -1.21-0.12. We also found a number of small spots of high R(3-2/1-0) gas over the CMZ. Many of these high R(3-2/1-0) clumps and spots have large velocity widths, and some apparently coincides with HVCCs, suggesting that they are spots of shocked molecular gas. Their origin should be local explosive events, possibly supernova explosions. These suggest that the energetic HVCCs are associated with massive compact clusters, which have been formed by microbursts of star formation. Rough estimates of the energy flow from large to small scale suggest that the supernova shocks can make a significant contribution to turbulence activation and gas heating in the CMZ.

[40]  arXiv:1002.1555 [pdf, other]
Title: Gravitational Waves from Collapsing Domain Walls
Comments: 18 pages, 8 figures
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We study the production of gravitational waves from cosmic domain walls created during phase transition in the early universe. We investigate the process of formation and evolution of domain walls by running three dimensional lattice simulations. If we introduce an approximate discrete symmetry, walls become metastable and finally disappear. We calculate the spectrum of gravitational waves produced by collapsing metastable domain walls. Extrapolating the numerical results, we find the signal of gravitational waves produced by domain walls whose energy scale is around 10^10-10^12GeV will be observable in the next generation gravitational wave interferometers.

[41]  arXiv:1002.1561 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Molecular Gas in Redshift 6 Quasar Host Galaxies
Comments: 34 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We report our new observations of redshifted carbon monoxide emission from six z~6 quasars, using the PdBI. CO (6-5) or (5-4) line emission was detected in all six sources. Together with two other previous CO detections, these observations provide unique constraints on the molecular gas emission properties in these quasar systems close to the end of the cosmic reionization. Complementary results are also presented for low-J CO lines observed at the GBT and the VLA, and dust continuum from five of these sources with the SHARC-II bolometer camera at the CSO. We then present a study of the molecular gas properties in our combined sample of eight CO-detected quasars at z~6. The detections of high-order CO line emission in these objects indicates the presence of highly excited molecular gas, with estimated masses on the order of 10^10 M_sun within the quasar host galaxies. No significant difference is found in the gas mass and CO line width distributions between our z~6 quasars and samples of CO-detected $1.4\leq z\leq5$ quasars and submillimeter galaxies. Most of the CO-detected quasars at z~6 follow the far infrared-CO luminosity relationship defined by actively star-forming galaxies at low and high redshifts. This suggests that ongoing star formation in their hosts contributes significantly to the dust heating at FIR wavelengths. The result is consistent with the picture of galaxy formation co-eval with supermassive black hole (SMBH) accretion in the earliest quasar-host systems. We investigate the black hole--bulge relationships of our quasar sample, using the CO dynamics as a tracer for the dynamical mass of the quasar host. The results place important constraints on the formation and evolution of the most massive SMBH-spheroidal host systems at the highest redshift.

[42]  arXiv:1002.1563 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: On the possibility of sub-TeV Gamma-ray emission from Cyg X-3
Authors: W. Bednarek
Comments: 13 pages, 8 figures, submitted to MNRAS
Subjects: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE)

The compact X-ray binary system Cyg X-3 has been recently discovered as a source of GeV gamma-rays by the AGILE and the {\it Fermi} satellites. It shows emission features in the GeV gamma-rays similar to other gamma-ray binaries which were also observed in the TeV gamma-rays (LS 5039 and LSI +61 303). The question appears whether Cyg X-3 can be also detected in the TeV gamma-rays by the Cherenkov telescopes.
Here we discuss this problem in detail based on the anisotropic inverse Compton (IC) e-p pair cascade model successfully applied to TeV gamma-ray binaries. We calculate the gamma-ray light curves and gamma-ray spectra expected from the cascade process occurring inside the Cyg X-3 binary system. It is found that the gamma-ray light curves at GeV energies can be consistent with the gamma-ray light curve observed by the Fermi for reasonable parameters of the orbit of the injection source of relativistic electrons. Moreover, we show that in such a model the sub-TeV gamma-ray emission (above 100 GeV) is expected to be below sensitivities of the present Cherenkov telescopes assuming that electrons are accelerated in Cyg X-3 to TeV energies. The next stage Cherenkov telescopes (MAGIC II, HESS II) should have the energy threshold in the range 20-30 GeV, in order to have a chance to detect the signal from Cyg X-3. Otherwise, the positive detection of gamma-rays at energies above a few tens of GeV requires a telescope with the sensitivity of ~0.1% of Crab Units. We conclude that detection of sub-TeV gamma-rays from Cyg X-3 by on-ground telescopes has to probably wait for construction of the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA).

[43]  arXiv:1002.1570 [pdf]
Title: Rydberg Matter clusters of alkali metal atoms: the link between meteoritic matter, polar mesosphere summer echoes (PMSE), sporadic sodium layers, polar mesospheric clouds (PMCs, NLCs), and ion chemistry
Subjects: Earth and Planetary Astrophysics (astro-ph.EP)

A material exists which links together the influx of meteoritic matter from interplanetary space, the polar mesosphere summer echoes (PMSE), the sporadic sodium layers, the polar mesospheric clouds (PMCs, NLCs), and the observed ion chemistry in the mesosphere. The evidence in these research fields is here analyzed and found to agree well with the properties of Rydberg Matter (RM). This material has been studied with numerous methods in the laboratory. Alkali atoms, mainly Na, reach the mesosphere in the form of interplanetary (meteoritic, cometary) dust. The planar RM clusters NaN usually contain N = 19, 37 or 61 atoms, and have the density of air at 90 km altitude where they float. The diameters of the clusters are 10-100 nm from laboratory high precision radio frequency spectroscopic studies. Such experiments show that RM clusters interact strongly with radar frequencies: this explains the radio frequency heating and reflection studies of PMSE layers. The clusters give the low temperature in the mesosphere by efficient selective radiation at long wavelengths, which is observed in RF emission experiments. The lowest possible stable temperature of the mesopause is calculated for the first time to be 121 K in agreement with measurements, based on the strong optical activity at long wavelengths in RM. Sporadic sodium layers are explained in a unique way as due to shockwaves in the RM layers. Due to the high electronic excitation energy in RM clusters, they induce efficient reactions forming ions of all atoms and molecules in the atmosphere thus providing condensation nuclei for water vapour. This finally gives the visible part of the PMC structure. The present contribution fills the gap between and partially replaces the separate theories used to describe the various aspects of these intriguing phenomena.

[44]  arXiv:1002.1574 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: On the Probable Existence of an Abrupt Magnetization in the Upper Chromosphere of the Quiet Sun
Comments: 12 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters (2010)
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

We report on a detailed radiative transfer modeling of the observed scattering polarization in the H-alpha line, which allows us to infer quantitative information on the magnetization of the quiet solar chromosphere. Our analysis suggests the presence of a magnetic complexity zone with a mean field strength <B> > 30 G lying just below the sudden transition region to the coronal temperatures. The chromospheric plasma directly underneath is very weakly magnetized, with <B> ~ 1 G. The possible existence of this abrupt change in the degree of magnetization of the upper chromosphere of the quiet Sun might have large significance for our understanding of chromospheric (and, therefore, coronal) heating.

[45]  arXiv:1002.1575 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: RR Lyrae Stars in Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies
Authors: Gisella Clementini (INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico di Bologna, Bologna, Italy)
Comments: Invited talk presented at the B. V. Kukarkin Centenary Conference: Variable Stars, the Galactic Halo, and Galaxy Formation, October 12-16 2009
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

With ages comparable to the age of the Universe, the variable stars of RR Lyrae type have eyewitnessed the formation of their host galaxies, and thus can provide information on the processes that led to the assembling of large galaxies such as the Milky Way and the Andromeda galaxy. The present knowledge of the RR Lyrae population in Local Group dwarf spheroidal galaxies is reviewed,calling attention to the "ultra-faint" spheroidal systems recently discovered around the Milky Way by the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The properties of the RR Lyrae stars and the Oosterhoff dichotomy observed for Galactic globular clusters and field RR Lyrae stars are discussed, since they put constrain on the possibility that the Milky Way and Andromeda halos were built up from protogalactic fragments resembling the dwarf spheroidals we observe today.

[46]  arXiv:1002.1576 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Fermi LAT measurements of diffuse gamma-ray emission: results at the first-year milestone
Comments: Contribution to the Workshop SciNeGHe 2009/Gamma-ray Physics in the LHC era (Assisi - Italy, Oct. 7-9 2009); 10 pages, 6 figures
Subjects: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE)

For more than one year the Fermi Large Area Telescope has been surveying the gamma-ray sky from 20 MeV to more than 300 GeV with unprecedented statistics and angular resolution. One of the key science targets of the Fermi mission is diffuse gamma-ray emission. Galactic interstellar gamma-ray emission is produced by interactions of high-energy cosmic rays with the interstellar gas and radiation field. We review the most important results on the subject obtained so far: the non-confirmation of the excess of diffuse GeV emission seen by EGRET, the measurement of the gamma-ray emissivity spectrum of local interstellar gas, the study of the gradient of cosmic-ray densities and of the X(CO)=N(H2)/W(CO) ratio in the outer Galaxy. We also catch a glimpse at diffuse gamma-ray emission in the Large Magellanic Cloud. These results allow the improvement of large-scale models of Galactic diffuse gamma-ray emission and new measurements of the extragalactic gamma-ray background.

[47]  arXiv:1002.1585 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: PROFIT: a new alternative for emission-line PROfile FITting
Comments: Accepted for publication Astrophysics &amp; Space Science - 7 pges; 4 Figs
Subjects: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM); Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

I briefly describe a simple routine for emission-line profiles fitting by Gaussian curves or Gauss-Hermite series. The PROFIT (line-PROfile FITting) routine represent a new alternative for use in fits data cubes, as those from Integral Field Spectroscopy or Fabry-Perot Interferometry, and may be useful to better study the emission-line flux distributions and gas kinematics in distinct astrophysical objects, such as the central regions of galaxies and star forming regions. The PROFIT routine is written in IDL language and is available at this http URL
The PROFIT routine was used to fit the [Fe II]1.257um emission-line profiles for about 1800 spectra of the inner 350 pc of the Seyfert galaxy Mrk1066 obtained with Gemini NIFS and shows that the line profiles are better reproduced by Gauss-Hermite series than by the commonly used Gaussian curves. The two-dimensional map of the h_3 Gauss-Hermite moment shows its highest absolute values in regions close to the edge of the radio structure. These high values may be originated in an biconical outflowing gas associated with the radio jet - previously observed in the optical [O III] emission. The analysis of this kinematic component indicates that the radio jet leaves the center of the galaxy with the north-west side slightly oriented towards us and the south-east side away from us, being partially hidden by the disc of the galaxy.

[48]  arXiv:1002.1595 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: A deep optical/near-infrared catalog of Serpens
Comments: 7 page, 5 figures
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

We present a deep optical/near-infrared imaging survey of the Serpens molecular cloud. This survey constitutes the complementary optical data to the Spitzer "Core To Disk" (c2d) Legacy survey in this cloud. The survey was conducted using the Wide Field Camera at the Isaac Newton Telescope. About 0.96 square degrees were imaged in the R and Z filters, covering the entire region where most of the young stellar objects identified by the c2d survey are located. 26524 point-like sources were detected in both R and Z bands down to R=24.5 mag and Z=23 mag with a signal-to-noise ratio better than 3. The 95% completeness limit of our catalog corresponds to 0.04 solar masses for members of the Serpens star forming region (age 2 Myr and distance 260 pc) in the absence of extinction. Adopting the typical extinction of the observed area (Av=7 mag), we estimate a 95% completeness level down to 0.1 solar masses. The astrometric accuracy of our catalog is 0.4 arcsec with respect to the 2MASS catalog. Our final catalog contains J2000 celestial coordinates, magnitudes in the R and Z bands calibrated to the SDSS photometric system and, where possible, JHK magnitudes from 2MASS for sources in 0.96 square degrees in the direction of Serpens. This data product has been already used within the frame of the c2d Spitzer Legacy Project analysis in Serpens to study the star/disk formation and evolution in this cloud; here we use it to obtain new indications of the disk-less population in Serpens.

[49]  arXiv:1002.1603 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Constraints on variation in $\alpha$ and $m_e$ from WMAP 7-year data
Comments: 5 pages, 7 figures
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We update the constraints on the time variation of the fine structure constant $\alpha$ and the electron mass $m_e$, using the latest CMB data, including the 7-yr release of WMAP. We made statistical analyses of the variation of each one of the constants and of their joint variation, together with the basic set of cosmological parameters. We used a modified version of CAMB and COSMOMC to account for these possible variations. We present bounds on the variation of the constants for different data sets, and show how results depend on them. When using the latest CMB data plus the power spectrum from Sloan Digital Sky Survey LRG, we find that $\alpha / \alpha_0=0.986 \pm 0.007$ at 1-$\sigma$ level, when the 6 basic cosmological parameters were fitted, and only variation in $\alpha$ was allowed. The constraints in the case of variation in both constants are $ \alpha / \alpha_0= 0.986 \pm 0.009$ and $m_e / m_{e0} = 0.999 \pm 0.035$. In the case of only variation in $m_e$, the bound is $m_e /m_{e0}=0.964 \pm 0.025$.

[50]  arXiv:1002.1609 [pdf]
Title: Dynamism in the solar core
Comments: 44 pages, 20 figures
Journal-ref: Proc. of the Third UN/ESA/NASA Workshop on the Intern. Heliophysical Year 2007 and Basic Space Science (ASSP). eds. Hans J. Haubold and A.M. Mathai. 2010, Springer, 103-139
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

Recent results of a mixed shell model heated asymmetrically by transient increases in nuclear burning indicate the transient generation of small hot spots inside the Sun somewhere between 0.1 and 0.2 solar radii. These hot bubbles are followed by a nonlinear differential equation system with finite amplitude non-homologous perturbations which is solved in a solar model. Our results show the possibility of a direct connection between the dynamic phenomena of the solar core and the atmospheric activity. Namely, an initial heating about DQ_0 ~ 10^{31}-10^{37} ergs can be enough for a bubble to reach the outer convective zone. Our calculations show that a hot bubble can arrive into subphotospheric regions with DQ_final ~ 10^{28} - 10^{34} ergs with a high speed, up to 10 km s-1, approaching the local sound speed. We point out that the developing sonic boom transforms the shock front into accelerated particle beam injected upwards into the top of loop carried out by the hot bubble above its forefront traveling from the solar interior. As a result, a new perspective arises to explain flare energetics. We show that the particle beams generated by energetic deep-origin hot bubbles in the subphotospheric layers have masses, energies, and chemical compositions in the observed range of solar chromospheric and coronal flares. It is shown how the emergence of a hot bubble into subphotospheric regions offers a natural mechanism that can generate both the eruption leading to the flare and the observed coronal magnetic topology for reconnection. We show a list of long-standing problems of solar physics that our model explains. We present some predictions for observations, some of which are planned to be realized in the near future.

[51]  arXiv:1002.1625 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Abell 611. II. X-ray and strong lensing analyses
Comments: 21 pages, 16 figures; submitted to Astronomy and Astrophysics
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

In this work we present the results of our analyses of the X-ray emission and of the strong lensing system in the galaxy cluster Abell 611 [z=0.288]. This cluster appears as an optimal candidate for a comparison of the mass reconstructions obtained through X-ray and lensing techniques, for its very relaxed dynamical appearance and its exceptional strong lensing system.
We infer the X-ray mass estimate deriving the density and temperature profile of the Intra-Cluster Medium through a non-parametric approach, taking advantage of the high spatial resolution of the publicly available Chandra observation of this cluster. Assuming that the cluster is in hydrostatic equilibrium and adopting a matter density profile, we can recover the total mass distribution of Abell 611 via the X-ray data. Moreover, we derive the total projected mass in the central regions of Abell 611 performing a parametric analysis of its strong lensing features through the public analysis software Lenstool. The results obtained with both methods are finally compared. We derive a good agreement between the X-ray and strong lensing total mass estimates in the central regions, while a marginal disagreement is found in the cluster external regions, where the cluster mass estimate extrapolated from the strong lensing results is lower with respect to the X-ray mass. We discuss the effect of some possible systematic errors influencing both mass estimates. We find a dependency of the X-ray mass on the manner of deriving the X-ray background. The strong lensing mass results are instead sensitive to the parameterisation of the galactic halo mass in the central regions, in particular to the modelisation of the BCG baryonic component, which can introduce a scatter in the strong lensing mass results of 20%.

[52]  arXiv:1002.1638 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Tau Boo b: Hunting for reflected starlight
Comments: 7 pages
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

Aims. We attempt to detect starlight reflected from the hot Jupiter orbiting the main-sequence star Tau Boo, in order to determine the albedo of the planetary atmosphere, the orbital inclination of the planetary system and the exact mass of the planetary companion.
Methods. We analyze high-precision, high-resolution spectra, collected over two half nights using UVES at the VLT/UT2, by way of data synthesis. We interpret our data using two different atmospheric models for hot Jupiters.
Results. Although a weak candidate signal appears near the most probable radial velocity amplitude, its statistical significance is insufficient for us to claim a detection. However, this feature agrees very well with a completely independently obtained result by another research group, which searched for reflected light from Tau Boo b. As a consequence of the non-detection of reflected light, we place upper limits to the planet-to-star flux ratio at the 99.9% significance level. For the most probable orbital inclination around i = 46 degrees, we can limit the relative reflected radiation to be less than 5.7 x 10^-5 for grey albedo. This implies a geometric albedo smaller than 0.40, assuming a planetary radius of 1.2 R_Jup .

[53]  arXiv:1002.1643 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: The hydrogen and helium lines of the symbiotic binary Z And during its brightening at the end of 2002
Authors: N. A. Tomov (1), M. T. Tomova (1), D. V. Bisikalo (2) ((1) Institute of Astronomy, Bulgarian Academy of Science, National Astronomical Observatory Rozhen, (2) Institute of Astronomy of the Russian Academy of Science)
Comments: 19 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy Reports
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

High resolution observations in the region of the lines Halpha, He II 4686 and Hgamma of the spectrum of the symbiotic binary Z And were performed during its small-amplitude brightening at the end of 2002. The profiles of the hydrogen lines were double-peaked. These profiles give a reason to suppose that the lines can be emitted mainly by an optically thin accretion disc. The Halpha line is strongly contaminated by the emission of the envelope, therefore for consideration of accretion disc properties we use the Hgamma line. The Halpha line had broad wings which are supposed to be determined mostly from radiation damping but high velocity stellar wind from the compact object in the system can also contribute to their appearance. The Hgamma line had a broad emission component which is assumed to be emitted mainly from the inner part of the accretion disc. The line He II 4686 had a broad emission component too, but it is supposed to appear in a region of a high velocity stellar wind. The outer radius of the accretion disc can be calculated from the shift between the peaks. Assuming, that the orbit inclination can ranges from 47$^\circ$ to 76$^\circ$, we estimate the outer radius as 20 - 50 R_sun. The behaviour of the observed lines can be considered in the framework of the model proposed for interpretation of the line spectrum during the major 2000 - 2002 brightening of this binary.

[54]  arXiv:1002.1647 [pdf, other]
Title: The type Ib supernova 2010O: an explosion in a Wolf-Rayet X-ray binary?
Comments: Submitted to MNRAS
Subjects: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE); Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

The type Ib supernova 2010O was recently discovered in the interacting starburst galaxy Arp 299. We present an analysis of two archival Chandra X-ray observations of Arp 299, taken before the explosion and show that there is a transient X-ray source at a position consistent with the supernova. Due to the diffuse emission, the background is difficult to estimate, limiting the formal significance of the detection to 2.2 sigma. We estimate the flux of the transient from the difference of the two X-ray images and conclude that the transient can be described by a 0.175 keV black body with a luminosity of 1.8+0.85-0.80erg/s for a distance of 41 Mpc. These properties put the transient in between the Galactic black hole binary XTE J1550-564 and the ultra-luminous X-ray binaries NGC 1313 X-1 and X-2. The high level of X-ray variability associated with the active starburst makes it impossible to rule out a chance alignment. If the source is associated with the supernova, it suggests SN2010O is the explosion of the second star in a Wolf-Rayet X-ray binary, such as Cyg X-3, IC 10 X-1 and NGC 300 X-1.

[55]  arXiv:1002.1661 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: On the Apparent Associations between Interstellar Neutral Hydrogen Structure and (WMAP) High Frequency Continuum Emission
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO); Galaxy Astrophysics (astro-ph.GA)

Galactic neutral hydrogen (HI) within a few hundred parsecs of the Sun contains structure with an angular distribution that is similar to small-scale structure observed by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP). A total of 108 associated pairs of associated HI and WMAP features have now been cataloged using HI data mapped in 2 km/s intervals and these pairs show a typical offset of 0.8 degrees. A large-scale statistical test for a direct association is carried out that casts little additional light on whether the these small offsets are merely coincidental or carry information. To pursue the issue further, the nature of several of the features within the foreground HI most closely associated with WMAP structure are examined in detail and it is shown that the cross-correlation coefficient for well-matched pairs of structures is of order unity. It is shown that free-free emission from electrons in unresolved density enhancements in interstellar space could theoretically produce high-frequency radio continuum radiation at the levels observed by WMAP and that such emission will appear nearly flat across the WMAP frequency range. Evidence for such structure in the interstellar medium already exists in the literature. Until higher angular resolution observations of the high-frequency continuum emission structure as well as the apparently associated HI structure become available, it may be difficult to rule out the possibility that some if not all the small-scale structure usually attributed to the cosmic microwave background may have a galactic origin.

[56]  arXiv:1002.1663 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: A high-resolution spectroscopic survey of late-type stars: chromospheric activity, rotation, kinematics, and age
Comments: Accepted to A&amp;A. 56 pages, 7 pages. Online material: 4 tables and 27 figures
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

Aims: We present a compilation of spectroscopic data from a survey of 144 chromospherically active young stars in the solar neighborhood which may be used to investigate different aspects of the formation and evolution of the solar neighborhood in terms of kinematics and stellar formation history. The data have already been used by us in several studies. With this paper, we make all these data accessible to the scientific community for future studies on different topics. Methods: We performed spectroscopic observations with echelle spectrographs to cover the entirety of the optical spectral range simultaneously. Standard data reduction was performed with the IRAF ECHELLE package. We applied the spectral subtraction technique to reveal chromospheric emission in the stars of the sample. The equivalent width of chromospheric emission lines was measured in the subtracted spectra and then converted to fluxes using equivalent width-flux relationships. Radial and rotational velocities were determined by the cross-correlation technique. Kinematics, equivalent widths of the lithium line 6707.8 angstroms and spectral types were also determined. Results: A catalog of spectroscopic data is compiled: radial and rotational velocities, space motion, equivalent widths of optical chromospheric activity indicators from Ca II H & K to the calcium infrared triplet and the lithium line in 6708 angstroms. Fluxes in the chromospheric emission lines and R'HK are also determined for each observation of star in the sample. We used these data to investigate the emission levels of our stars. The study of the Halpha emission line revealed the presence of two different populations of chromospheric emitters in the sample, clearly separated in the log F(Halpha)/Fbol - (V-J) diagram.

[57]  arXiv:1002.1670 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Three carbon-enhanced metal-poor dwarf stars from the SDSS - Chemical abundances from CO^5BOLD 3D hydrodynamical model atmospheres
Comments: 12 pages, 15 figures. Accepted for publication in A&amp;A
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

The origin of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars enriched with both s and r elements is highly debated. Detailed abundances of these types of stars are crucial to understand the nature of their progenitors. The aim of this investigation is to study in detail the abundances of SDSS J1349-0229, SDSS J0912+0216 and SDSS J1036+1212, three dwarf CEMP stars, selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. Using high resolution VLT/UVES spectra (R ~ 30 000) we determine abundances for Li, C, N, O, Na, Mg, Al, Ca, Sc, Ti, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni and 21 neutron-capture elements. We made use of CO^5BOLD 3D hydrodynamical model atmospheres in the analysis of the carbon, nitrogen and oxygen abundances. NLTE corrections for C I and O I lines were computed using the Kiel code. We classify SDSS J1349-0229 and SDSS J0912+0216 as CEMP-r+s stars. SDSS J1036+1212 belongs to the class CEMP-no/s, with enhanced Ba, but deficient Sr, of which it is the third member discovered to date. Radial-velocity variations have been observed in SDSS J1349-0229, providing evidence that it is a member of a binary system. The chemical composition of the three stars is generally compatible with mass transfer from an AGB companion. However, many details remain difficult to explain. Most notably of those are the abundance of Li at the level of the Spite plateau in SDSS J1036+1212 and the large over-abundance of the pure r-process element Eu in all three stars.

[58]  arXiv:1002.1675 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Coronal hole boundaries evolution at small scales: II. XRT view Can small-scale outflows at CHBs be a source of the slow solar wind?
Comments: 8 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables. Astronomy and Astrophysics, submitted
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

We developed an automated procedure for the identification of transient brightenings in images from the X-ray telescope on-board Hinode taken with an Al Poly filter in the equatorial coronal holes, polar coronal holes, and the quiet Sun with and without transient coronal holes. We found that in comparison to the quiet Sun, the boundaries of coronal holes are abundant with brightening events including areas inside the coronal holes where closed magnetic field structures are present. The visual analysis of these brightenings revealed that around 70% of them in equatorial, polar and transient coronal holes and their boundaries show expanding loop structures and/or collimated outflows. In the quiet Sun only 30% of the brightenings show flows with most of them appearing to be contained in the solar corona by closed magnetic field lines. This strongly suggests that magnetic reconnection of co-spatial open and closed magnetic field lines creates the necessary conditions for plasma outflows to large distances. The ejected plasma always originates from pre-existing or newly emerging (at X-ray temperatures) bright points. The present study confirms our findings that the evolution of loop structures known as coronal bright points is associated with the small-scale changes of coronal hole boundaries. The loop structures show an expansion and eruption with the trapped plasma consequently escaping along the "quasi" open magnetic field lines. These ejections appear to be triggered by magnetic reconnection, e.g. the so-called interchange reconnection between the closed magnetic field lines (BPs) and the open magnetic field lines of the coronal holes. We suggest that these plasma outflows are possibly one of the sources of the slow solar wind.

[59]  arXiv:1002.1685 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Low-Latitude Coronal Holes at the Minimum of the 23rd Solar Cycle
Comments: 14 pages, 7 figures
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

Low and mid-latitude coronal holes (CHs) observed on the Sun during the current solar activity minimum (from September 21, 2006, Carrington rotation (CR) 2048, until June 26, 2009 (CR 2084)) were analyzed using {\it SOHO}/EIT and STEREO-A SECCHI EUVI data. From both the observations and Potential Field Source Surface (PFSS) modeling, we find that the area occupied by CHs inside a belt of $\pm 40^\circ$ around the solar equator is larger in the current 2007 solar minimum relative to the similar phase of the previous 1996 solar minimum. The enhanced CH area is related to a recurrent appearance of five persistent CHs, which survived during 7-27 solar rotations. Three of the CHs are of positive magnetic polarity and two are negative. The most long-lived CH was being formed during 2 days and existed for 27 rotations. This CH was associated with fast solar wind at 1 AU of approximately 620$\pm 40$ km s$^{-1}$. The 3D MHD modeling for this time period shows an open field structure above this CH. We conclude that the global magnetic field of the Sun possessed a multi-pole structure during this time period. Calculation of the harmonic power spectrum of the solar magnetic field demonstrates a greater prevalence of multi-pole components over the dipole component in the 2007 solar minimum compared to the 1996 solar minimum. The unusual large separation between the dipole and multi-pole components is due to the very low magnitude of the dipole component, which is three times lower than that in the previous 1996 solar minimum.

[60]  arXiv:1002.1690 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: Unusual Trends in Solar P-Mode Frequencies During the Current Extended Minimum
Comments: Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

We investigate the behavior of the intermediate-degree mode frequencies of the sun during the current extended minimum phase to explore the time-varying conditions in the solar interior. Using contemporaneous helioseismic data from GONG and MDI, we find that the changes in resonant mode frequencies during the activity minimum period are significantly greater than the changes in solar activity as measured by different proxies. We detect a seismic minimum in MDI p-mode frequency shifts during 2008 July--August but no such signature is seen in mean shifts computed from GONG frequencies. We also analyze the frequencies of individual oscillation modes from GONG data as a function of latitude and observe a signature of the onset of the solar cycle 24 in early 2009. Thus the intermediate degree modes do not confirm the onset of the cycle 24 during late 2007 as reported from the analysis of the low-degree GOLF frequencies. Further, both the GONG and MDI frequencies show a surprising anti-correlation between frequencies and activity proxies during the current minimum, in contrast to the behavior during the minimum between cycles 22 and 23.

[61]  arXiv:1002.1700 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: How the curvaton scenario, modulated reheating and an inhomogeneous end of inflation are related
Comments: 5 pages
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO)

We show that the mechanism for generating the primordial curvature perturbation, and hence the observable non-gaussianity, is similar in both the Curvaton and Modulated Reheating models. In both cases the model can be written in terms of an energy transfer between the constituting fluids. We then show that this is also true for the mechanism of generating the curvature perturbation by symmetry breaking the end of inflation. We then relate this to the non-gaussian contribution to the curvature perturbation and find that it is inversely proportional to the efficiency with which the curvature perturbation is transferred between the fluids. We generalise models of modulated reheating to allow for a non-linear energy transfer rate.

[62]  arXiv:1002.1701 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: The nonlinear saturation of the non-resonant kinetically driven streaming instability
Subjects: High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE)

A non-resonant instability for the amplification of the interstellar magnetic field in young Supernova Remnant (SNR) shocks was predicted by Bell (2004), and is thought to be relevant for the acceleration of cosmic ray (CR) particles. For this instability, the CRs streaming ahead of SNR shock fronts drive electromagnetic waves with wavelengths much shorter than the typical CR Larmor radius, by inducing a current parallel to the background magnetic field. We explore the nonlinear regime of the non-resonant mode using Particle-in-Cell (PIC) hybrid simulations, with kinetic ions and fluid electrons, and analyze the saturation mechanism for realistic CR and background plasma parameters. In the linear regime, the observed growth rates and wavelengths match the theoretical predictions; the nonlinear stage of the instability shows a strong reaction of both the background plasma and the CR particles, with the saturation level of the magnetic field varying with the CR parameters. The simulations with CR-to-background density ratios of n_CR/n_b=10^(-5) reveal the highest magnetic field saturation levels, with energy also being transferred to the background plasma and to the perpendicular velocity components of the CR particles. The results show that amplification factors >10 for the magnetic field can be achieved, and suggest that this instability is important for the generation of magnetic field turbulence, and for the acceleration of CR particles.

[63]  arXiv:1002.1703 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: The SMBH mass versus M_G sigma^2 relation: A comparison between real data and numerical models
Comments: 16 pages, 5 figures, to be published in a special issue of General Relativity and Gravitation
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO); Galaxy Astrophysics (astro-ph.GA)

The relation between the mass of supermassive black holes located in the center of the host galaxies and the kinetic energy of random motions of the corresponding bulges can be reinterpreted as an age-temperature diagram for galaxies. This relation fits the experimental data better than the M_bh-M_G, M_bh-L_G, and M_bh-sigma laws. The validity of this statement has been confirmed by using three samples extracted from different catalogues of galaxies. In the framework of the LambdaCDM cosmology our relation has been compared with the predictions of two galaxy formation models based on the Millennium Simulation.

[64]  arXiv:1002.1704 [pdf, other]
Title: Asteroseismological Analysis of Rich Pulsating White Dwarfs
Authors: A. Bischoff-Kim
Comments: 4 pages, 1 figure Proceedings for the International Conference on Stellar Pulsations: Challenges for Theory and Observation, Santa Fe, NM, June 2009 Published in AIP Conference Proceedings
Journal-ref: AIP Conference Proceedings, Volume 1170, pp. 621-624 (2009)
Subjects: Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR)

We present the results of the asteroseismological analysis of two rich DAVs, G38-29 and R808, recent targets of the Whole Earth Telescope. 20 periods between 413 s and 1089 s were found in G38-29's pulsation spectrum, while R808 is an even richer pulsator, with 24 periods between 404 s and 1144 s. Traditionally, DAVs that have been analyzed asteroseismologically have had fewer than half a dozen modes. Such a large number of modes presents a special challenge to white dwarf asteroseismology, but at the same time has the potential to yield a detailed picture of the interior chemical make-up of DAVs.We explore this possibility by varying the core profiles as well as the layer masses.We use an iterative grid search approach to find best fit models for G38-29 and R808 and comment on some of the intricacies of fine grid searches in white dwarf asteroseismology.

[65]  arXiv:1002.1705 [ps, pdf, other]
Title: The M-Sigma Relation Derived from Sphere of Influence Arguments
Authors: D. Batcheldor (Florida Institute of Technology)
Comments: ApJ Letters, accepted
Subjects: Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO); Galaxy Astrophysics (astro-ph.GA)

The observed relation between supermassive black hole (SMBH) mass (M) and bulge stellar velocity dispersion (Sigma) is described by log(M) = alpha + beta*log(Sigma/200 km/s). As this relation has important implications for models of galaxy and SMBH formation and evolution, there continues to be great interest in adding to the M catalog. The "sphere of influence" (r) argument uses spatial resolution to exclude some M estimates and pre-select additional galaxies for further SMBH studies. This Letter quantifies the effects of applying the r argument to a population of galaxies and SMBHs that do not follow the M-Sigma relation. All galaxies with known values of Sigma, closer than 100 Mpc, are given a random M and selected when r is spatially resolved. These random SMBHs produce an M-Sigma relation of alpha=8.3, beta=4.0, consistent with observed values. Consequently, future proposed M estimates should not be justified solely on the basis of resolving r. This Letter shows the observed M-Sigma relation may simply be a result of available spatial resolution. However, it also implies the observed M-Sigma relation defines an upper limit. This potentially provides valuable new insight into the processes of galaxy and SMBH formation and evolution.