Formulation for the Relativistic Blast Waves Z. Lucas Uhm Research Center of MEMS Space Telescope (RCMST) & Institute for the Early Universe (IEU), Ewha.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
AMS 691 Special Topics in Applied Mathematics Review of Fluid Equations James Glimm Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, Stony Brook University.
Advertisements

Supernova Remnants Shell-type versus Crab-like Phases of shell-type SNR.
Understanding the prompt emission of GRBs after Fermi Tsvi Piran Hebrew University, Jerusalem (E. Nakar, P. Kumar, R. Sari, Y. Fan, Y. Zou, F. Genet, D.
Hamiltonian Formalism
References: DK, M. Georganopoulos, A. Mastichiadis 2002 A. Mastichiadis, DK 2006 DK, A. Mastichiadis, M. Georaganopoulos 2007 A. Mastichiadis, DK 2009.
Professor Walter W. Olson Department of Mechanical, Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering University of Toledo Lumped Parameter Systems.
The structure and evolution of stars
MABS21 Israel 2010 Julius Mezaros Lecture 53 Years of Blast Wave Research A Personal History by John M. Dewey Dewey McMillin & Associates Professor Emeritus,
Low-luminosity GRBs and Relativistic shock breakouts Ehud Nakar Tel Aviv University Omer Bromberg Tsvi Piran Re’em Sari 2nd EUL Workshop on Gamma-Ray Bursts.
‘Dark Side’ The ‘Dark Side’ of Gamma-Ray Bursts and Implications for Nucleosynthesis neutron capture elements (‘n-process’) light elements (spallation?)
GRB afterglows in the Non-relativistic phase Y. F. Huang Dept Astronomy, Nanjing University Tan Lu Purple Mountain Observatory.
Outline Introduction Continuous Solution Shock Wave Shock Structure
Reverse Shocks and Prompt Emission Mark Bandstra Astro
Gamma-ray bursts Discovered in 1968 by Vela spy satellites
GRBs and Magnetic Fields Shiho Kobayashi (小林史歩) Liverpool John Moores University.
Modelling the Broad Line Region Andrea Ruff Rachel Webster University of Melbourne.
GLAST Science LunchDec 1, 2005 E. do Couto e Silva 1/21 Can emission at higher energies provide insight into the physics of shocks and how the GRB inner.
X-ray/Optical flares in Gamma-Ray Bursts Daming Wei ( Purple Mountain Observatory, China)
 The GRB literature has been convolved with my brain 
1/39 New Relativistic Particle-In-Cell Simulation Studies of Prompt and Early Afterglows from GRBs Ken Nishikawa National Space Science & Technology Center/CSPAR.
Marco Miceli, INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo Consorzio COMETA, Italy Collaborators F. Bocchino, INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Palermo,
K. Alatalo - Extensions to the Standard Model1 Extensions to the Standard Afterglow Model Katey Alatalo October 10 th, 2005.
1 MODELING DT VAPORIZATION AND MELTING IN A DIRECT DRIVE TARGET B. R. Christensen, A. R. Raffray, and M. S. Tillack Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering.
Introductio n The guiding of relativistic laser pulse in performed hollow plasma channels Xin Wang and Wei Yu Shanghai Institute of Optics and Fine Mechanics,
Modeling GRB B Xuefeng Wu (X. F. Wu, 吴雪峰 ) Penn State University Purple Mountain Observatory 2008 Nanjing GRB Workshop, Nanjing, China, June
© 2011 Autodesk Freely licensed for use by educational institutions. Reuse and changes require a note indicating that content has been modified from the.
Dr. R. Nagarajan Professor Dept of Chemical Engineering IIT Madras Advanced Transport Phenomena Module 2 Lecture 4 Conservation Principles: Mass Conservation.
Compressible Flow Introduction
Concluding Remarks about Phys 410 In this course, we have … The physics of small oscillations about stable equilibrium points Re-visited Newtonian mechanics.
R. Oran csem.engin.umich.edu SHINE 09 May 2005 Campaign Event: Introducing Turbulence Rona Oran Igor V. Sokolov Richard Frazin Ward Manchester Tamas I.
1 MAE 5130: VISCOUS FLOWS Conservation of Mass September 2, 2010 Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Department Florida Institute of Technology D. R.
Rino Bandiera, Arcetri Obs., Firenze, ItalyA Basic Course on SNRs A Basic Course on Supernova Remnants Lecture #1 –How do they look and how are observed?
Predictions for Multi-Scale Shock Heating Of a Granular Energetic Material By Venugopal Jogi ( M.S Candidate ) Advisor: Dr. Keith A. Gonthier Support Air.
The Early Time Properties of GRBs : Canonical Afterglow and the Importance of Prolonged Central Engine Activity Andrea Melandri Collaborators : C.G.Mundell,
A numerical study of the afterglow emission from GRB double-sided jets Collaborators Y. F. Huang, S. W. Kong Xin Wang Department of Astronomy, Nanjing.
1 Physics of GRB Prompt emission Asaf Pe’er University of Amsterdam September 2005.
Waves Disturbances which travel through space and matter Carry energy and information Sometimes need medium to propagate in (mechanical waves, sound),
A. MacFadyen & W. Zhang (NYU), Alexandria (Magneto-) Hydrodynamics of GRB Outflows 2D Afterglow Jet Relativistic MHD Turbulence arXiv: arXiv:
General Relativistic MHD Simulations with Finite Conductivity Shinji Koide (Kumamoto University) Kazunari Shibata (Kyoto University) Takahiro Kudoh (NAOJ)
Photospheric emission from Structured Jet Hirotaka Ito Collaborators Shigehiro Nagataki YITP @ YITP Lunch Seminar /30 Shoichi Yamada Waseda University.
Magnetohydrodynamic Effects in (Propagating) Relativistic Ejecta Yosuke Mizuno Center for Space Plasma and Aeronomic Research University of Alabama in.
Colliding winds in pulsar binaries S.V.Bogovalov 1, A.V.Koldoba 2,G.V.Ustugova 2, D. Khangulyan 3, F.Aharonian 3 1-National Nuclear Research University.
High-energy radiation from gamma-ray bursts Zigao Dai Nanjing University Xiamen, August 2011.
11/01/2016 Variable Galactic Gamma-Ray Sources, Heidelberg, Germany 1 Maxim Barkov MPI-K, Heidelberg, Germany Space Research Institute, Russia, University.
MAE 5360: Hypersonic Airbreathing Engines
Y. Matsuo A), M. Hashimoto A), M. Ono A), S. Nagataki B), K. Kotake C), S. Yamada D), K. Yamashita E) Long Time Evolutionary Simulations in Supernova until.
Gamma-Ray Bursts and unmagnetized relativistic collisionless shocks Ehud Nakar Caltech.
Parameters of the NF Target Proton Beam pulsed10-50 Hz pulse length1-2  s energy 2-30 GeV average power ~4 MW Target (not a stopping target) mean power.
Lecture 3 & 4 : Newtonian Numerical Hydrodynamics Contents 1. The Euler equation 2. Properties of the Euler equation 3. Shock tube problem 4. The Roe scheme.
The prompt optical emission in the Naked Eye Burst R. Hascoet with F. Daigne & R. Mochkovitch (Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris) Kyoto − Deciphering then.
Prof. dr. A. Achterberg, Astronomical Dept., IMAPP, Radboud Universiteit.
FESR Consorzio COMETA - Progetto PI2S2 Supernova Remnants and Grid Computing at INAF-OAPa Marco Miceli Consorzio COMETA, INAF-OAPa.
Advanced Numerical Techniques Mccormack Technique CFD Dr. Ugur GUVEN.
The signature of a wind reverse shock in GRB’s Afterglows
Implementation of All-Optical Toffoli gate in Λ- systems
Fundamental principles of particle physics
Convective instability of a decelerating relativistic shell: an origin of magnetic fields in the early afterglow phase? Amir Levinson, Tel Aviv University.
Myeong-Gu Park (Kyungpook National University, KOREA)
Gamma-ray bursts from magnetized collisionally heated jets
Solve the differential equation. {image}
Thermodynamic Energy Balances in Solids
Modelling of non-thermal radiation from pulsar wind nebulae
MAE 3241: AERODYNAMICS AND FLIGHT MECHANICS
Gamma-Ray Bursts Ehud Nakar Caltech APCTP 2007 Feb. 22.
Andrei M. Beloborodov Columbia University
Swift observations of X-Ray naked GRBs
Tight Liso-Ep-Γ0 Relation of Long Gamma-Ray Bursts
Physics 451/551 Theoretical Mechanics
The structure and evolution of stars
Presentation transcript:

Formulation for the Relativistic Blast Waves Z. Lucas Uhm Research Center of MEMS Space Telescope (RCMST) & Institute for the Early Universe (IEU), Ewha Womans University, Seoul, South Korea Friday, April 23rd 2010 Deciphering the Ancient Universe with Gamma-Ray Bursts, Kyoto, Japan

Formulation for the Relativistic Blast Waves Uhm, Z. Lucas 2010 submitted (arXiv: )

A central engine ejects a relativistic outflow – ejecta Forward shock (FS) & Reverse shock (RS) develop FS sweeps up the ambient medium, and RS propagates through the ejecta (Meszaros & Rees 1997) Relativistic Blast Waves

Schematic Diagram of a Relativistic Blast Wave Blast – a compressed hot gas between FS & RS General class of explosions with arbitrary radial stratification of ejecta and ambient medium Non-relativistic RS & mildly-relativistic RS How to find a dynamical evolution of the blast wave for this general problem ?

Jump Conditions 3 jump conditions for 4 independent unknowns: the shock has 1 free parameter Kappa varies in between 1/3 and 2/3, depending on the shock strength

Shock strength described by relative Lorentz factor (Blandford & McKee 1976)

Relation between kappa and mean Lorentz factor (Uhm 2010 submitted)

Jump conditions for a monoenergetic gas Exact solutions for a monoenergetic gas Apply to shocks of arbitrary strength, relativistic or non- relativistic Conservation laws across FS and RS are applied

Radially stratified ejecta Continuity equation for ejecta ∇ α (ρ ej u α ) = 0 Lagrangian coordinate τ r(τ,t) = v ej (τ) * (t - τ) (Uhm 2010 submitted)

Trajectory of the RS through ejecta Given by jump condition at RS (Uhm 2010 submitted)

Two different methods are described for finding the evolution of the blast Lorentz factor (1)Customary pressure balance p r = p f (2)Mechanical model (Beloborodov & Uhm 2006)

Customary pressure balance : p r =p f Depends only on input parameters

“ Mechanical model” for relativistic blast waves (Beloborodov & Uhm 2006)

Need to solve coupled differential equations

Example model An example burst is specified by the luminosity L ej (τ) = L 0 = erg/s and the Lorentz factor Γ ej (τ) = τ for 0 ≤ τ ≤ τ b = 50 s Total isotropic energy ejected by the burst is E b = L 0 τ b = 5 * ergs Ambient medium density is assumed to be n 1 = 1 cm -3 These define the problem completely

Dynamics found for the customary pressure balance p r = p f (Uhm 2010 submitted) (a) τ r -shell passing through the RS at radius r r (b) the ejecta density n ej (RS) of the τ r -shell (c) the Lorentz factor Γ ej (RS) of the τ r -shell and Γ of the blast (d) the relative Lorentz factor γ 43 (e) pressure p = p r = p f across the blast This numerical solution does not satisfy the energy-conservation law for adiabatic blast wave

Energy of adiabatic blast Lagrangian description (Uhm 2010 submitted)

Total energy found for the customary pressure balance Customary pressure balance p r = p f violates the energy- conservation law significantly for the adiabatic blast wave Total energy E tot of the entire system (blast + unshocked ejecta) E tot = E blast + E 4

Dynamics found for the mechanical model (Uhm 2010 submitted) Numerical solutions for the blast-wave driven by the same example burst Solid (blue) curves are calculated using the mechanical model For comparison, the solution of customary pressure balance is also shown in dotted (red) curves

Total energy found for the mechanical model (Uhm 2010 submitted) Mechanical model becomes a successful remedy for the the energy-violation problem

We suggest that one should use the mechanical model to solve for the dynamics of a blast wave in order to correctly find the afterglow light-curves!!

Summary We present a detailed description of our blast-wave modeling technique for a very general class of GRB explosions with arbitrary radial stratification of ejecta and ambient medium. See arXiv: for details. We demonstrate that the customary pressure balance for the blast wave violates the energy-conservation law significantly for adiabatic blast wave. We show that the energy-violation problem is successfully resolved by the mechanical model.