


Vol 43, No 9 (2017)
- Year: 2017
- Articles: 6
- URL: https://journal-vniispk.ru/1063-7737/issue/view/11930
Article
Structure of the bulge of the galaxy NGC 4258
Abstract
The superfine structure of the bulge of the galaxy NGC 4258 has been investigated in H2O maser emission at the epochs on February 4, 2013, and November 29, 2013. The peak intensities of the spectral components reached F ≈ 5 Jy. The emission of the component at v = 476 km s-1 dominated at the beginning of this period; the second component at v = 487 km s-1 was observed at the end of the period. The structure is a chain of compact components up to 200 µas or 7mpc in extent. The velocity of the local standard of rest is vLSR = 482 km s-1. Two bright compact components with a separation between them Δρ ≈ 35 µas or 1.3 mpc and a pair of components spaced 13 µas apart, whose brightness reaches 30% of the peak value corresponding to a brightness temperature Tb ≈ 1018 K, are located at the center. The sizes of the components are ~2–3 µas. A splitting and a shift of the two pairs of components relative to each other by 8 µas or 0.3 mpc in the 45° direction are observed at the end of the period. The velocity gradient of the structure is dV/dρ = 224 km s-1 mas-1, suggesting a solid-body rotation with a period T ≈ 760 years. The compact components correspond to the tangential directions of the arm. Two parallel chains of components corresponding to the tangential directions of the walls of the bipolar outflow carrying away an excess angular momentum are ejected from the central part of the bulge, two sources. The outflow is oriented at an angle X ≈ 15° relative to the disk axis. The brightness of the outflow fragments does not exceed 1.5% of the peak value. The ejection of material from the central part in the northward direction at a level up to 0.2%, Tb ≈ 1015 K, is observed at the epoch on February 4, 2013, at v = 478 km s-1. The core structure suggests a double system: parallel disks–vortices spaced 0.25 mpc apart.



Multiple X-ray bursts and the model of a spreading layer of accreting matter over the neutron star surface
Abstract
We report the detection of series of close type I X-ray bursts consisting of two or three events with a recurrence time much shorter than the characteristic (at the observed mean accretion rate) time of matter accumulation needed for a thermonuclear explosion to be initiated on the neutron star surface during the JEM-X/INTEGRAL observations of several X-ray bursters. We show that such series of bursts are naturally explained in the model of a spreading layer of accreting matter over the neutron star surface in the case of a sufficiently high (Ṁ ≳ 1 × 10−9M⊙ yr−1) accretion rate (corresponding to a mean luminosity Ltot ≳ 1 × 1037erg s−1). The existence of triple bursts requires some refinement of the model—the importance of a central ring zone is shown. In the standard model of a spreading layer no infall of matter in this zone is believed to occur.



Numerical simulations of dissipationless disk accretion
Abstract
Our goal is to study the regime of disk accretion in which almost all of the angular momentum and energy is carried away by the wind outflowing from the disk in numerical experiments. For this type of accretion the kinetic energy flux in the outflowing wind can exceed considerably the bolometric luminosity of the accretion disk, what is observed in the plasma flow from galactic nuclei in a number of cases. In this paper we consider the nonrelativistic case of an outflow from a cold Keplerian disk. All of the conclusions derived previously for such a system in the self-similar approximation are shown to be correct. The numerical results agree well with the analytical predictions. The inclination angle of the magnetic field lines in the disk is less than 60°, which ensures a free wind outflow from the disk, while the energy flux per wind particle is greater than the particle rotation energy in its Keplerian orbit by several orders of magnitude, provided that the ratio rA/r ≫ 1, where rA is the Alfvénic radius and r is the radius of the Keplerian orbit. In this case, the particle kinetic energy reaches half the maximum possible energy in the simulation region. The magnetic field collimates the outflowing wind near the rotation axis and decollimates appreciably the wind outflowing from the outer disk periphery.



Pulsations of intermediate–mass stars on the asymptotic giant branch
Abstract
Evolutionary tracks from the zero age main sequence to the asymptotic giant branch were computed for stars with initial masses 2 M⊙ ≤ MZAMS ≤ 5 M⊙ and metallicity Z = 0.02. Some models of evolutionary sequences were used as initial conditions for equations of radiation hydrodynamics and turbulent convection describing radial stellar pulsations. The early asymptotic giant branch stars are shown to pulsate in the fundamental mode with periods 30 day ≲ Π ≲ 400day. The rate of period change gradually increases as the star evolves but is too small to be detected (Π̇/Π < 10−5 yr−1). Pulsation properties of thermally pulsing AGB stars are investigated on time intervals comprising 17 thermal pulses for evolutionary sequences with initial masses MZAMS = 2 M⊙ and 3 M⊙ and 6 thermal pulses for MZAMS = 4 M⊙ and 5 M⊙. Stars with initial masses MZAMS ≤ 3 M⊙ pulsate either in the fundamental mode or in the first overtone, whereas more massive red giants (MZAMS ≥ 4 M⊙) pulsate in the fundamental mode with periods Π ≲ 103 day. Most rapid pulsation period change with rate −0.02 yr−1 ≲ Π̇/Π ≲ −0.01 yr−1 occurs during decrease of the surface luminosity after the maximum of the luminosity in the helium shell source. The rate of subsequent increase of the period is Π̇/Π ≲ 5 × 10−3 yr−1.



Electron acceleration in solar-flare magnetic traps: Model properties and their observational confirmations
Abstract
Using an analytical solution of the kinetic equation, we have investigated the model properties of the coronal and chromospheric hard X-ray sources in the limb flare of July 19, 2012. We calculated the emission spectrum at the flare loop footpoints in the thick-target approximation with a reverse current and showed it to be consistent with the observed one. The spectrum of the coronal source located above the flare loop was calculated in the thin-target approximation. In this case, the slope of the hard X-ray spectrum is reproduced very accurately, but the intensity of the coronal emission is lower than the observed one by several times. Previously, we showed that this contradiction is completely removed if the additional (relative to the primary acceleration in the reconnecting current layer) electron acceleration in the coronal magnetic trap that contracts in the transverse direction and decreases in length during the impulsive flare phase is taken into account. In this paper we study in detail this effect in the context of a more realistic flare scenario, where a whole ensemble of traps existed in the hard X-ray burst time, each of which was at different stages of its evolution: formation, collapse, destruction. Our results point not only to the existence of first-order Fermi acceleration and betatron electron heating in solar flares but also to their high efficiency. Highly accurate observations of a specific flare are used as an example to show that the previously predicted theoretical features of the model find convincing confirmations.



Double Hall instability: A catalyzer of magnetic energy release
Abstract
A pictorial explanation for shear-Hall instability is suggested and shows that the shear flow is not necessary for the instability because its role can be played by the Hall effect of an inhomogeneous backgroundmagnetic field. Linear stability analysis for a simplemodel of magnetic field varying periodically in space confirms such a “double Hall” instability. Numerical computations show a considerable increase in Ohmic dissipation rate at the nonlinear stage of instability development. Field dissipation has a spiky character associated with magnetic reconnection in current sheets and X-points. Double Hall instability can be significant for magnetic field dissipation in neutron star crusts and, possibly, in the solar corona.


