Radiative Process: Techniques and Applications

2017 ◽  
pp. 106-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael J. Wolff ◽  
Miguel Lopéz-Valverde ◽  
Jean-Baptiste Madeleine ◽  
R. John Wilson ◽  
Michael D. Smith ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2016 ◽  
Vol 73 (10) ◽  
pp. 4151-4169
Author(s):  
Tatsuya Yamashita ◽  
Masatsugu Odaka ◽  
Ko-ichiro Sugiyama ◽  
Kensuke Nakajima ◽  
Masaki Ishiwatari ◽  
...  

Abstract Cloud convection of a CO2 atmosphere where the major constituent condenses is numerically investigated under a setup idealizing a possible warm atmosphere of early Mars, utilizing a two-dimensional cloud-resolving model forced by a fixed cooling profile as a substitute for a radiative process. The authors compare two cases with different critical saturation ratios as condensation criteria and also examine sensitivity to number mixing ratio of condensed particles given externally. When supersaturation is not necessary for condensation, the entire horizontal domain above the condensation level is continuously covered by clouds irrespective of number mixing ratio of condensed particles. Horizontal-mean cloud mass density decreases exponentially with height. The circulations below and above the condensation level are dominated by dry cellular convection and buoyancy waves, respectively. When 1.35 is adopted as the critical saturation ratio, clouds appear exclusively as intense, short-lived, quasi-periodic events. Clouds start just above the condensation level and develop upward, but intense updrafts exist only around the cloud top; they do not extend to the bottom of the condensation layer. The cloud layer is rapidly warmed by latent heat during the cloud events, and then the layer is slowly cooled by the specified thermal forcing, and supersaturation gradually develops leading to the next cloud event. The periodic appearance of cloud events does not occur when number mixing ratio of condensed particles is large.


2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (S290) ◽  
pp. 364-366
Author(s):  
Z. Zhang ◽  
J. L. Qu ◽  
H. Q. Gao ◽  
J. N. Zhou

AbstractX-ray source IGR J17091-3624 was discovered by INTEGRAL observatory on 2003 April (Kuulkers 2003). A outburst was detected with Swift/Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) in late January 2011 (Krimm 2011). IGR J17091-3624 has a similar timing phenomena to microquasar GRS 1915+105(Belloni 2000; Altamirano 2011). We have analyzed the evolution of temporal and spectral characteristic of IGR J17091-3624 during the 2011 outburst. We find that (1) all the QPOs can be divided into two types, QPO-AB and QPO-C, (2) a small outburst tracks clockwise in the HID, (3) the relationship between hardness and disk color temperature forms a V-shape. Those results will give a strong constraint on the disk radiative process.


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Ghisellini ◽  
A. Comastri ◽  
L. Angelini ◽  
M. Cappi

2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. P. Prajapati ◽  
R. K. Chhajlani ◽  
Vladimir Yu. Nosenko ◽  
Padma K. Shukla ◽  
Markus H. Thoma ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Teresa Monteiro ◽  
Estela Pereira

AbstractIn n-type GaP doping with Mn gives rise to a deep centre due to Mn+2. Its luminescence occurs in the near infrared.The behaviour of this centre is studied as a function of temperature and the thermal quenching of the luminescence interpreted as due to a non-radiative process to the ground state. The behaviour of another band that appears upon doping with Mn is also discussed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (S337) ◽  
pp. 108-111
Author(s):  
Zorawar Wadiasingh ◽  
Matthew G. Baring ◽  
Peter L. Gonthier ◽  
Alice K. Harding

AbstractPulsed non-thermal quiescent emission between 10 keV and around 150 keV has been observed in ~10 magnetars. For inner magnetospheric models of such hard X-ray signals, resonant Compton upscattering of soft thermal photons from the neutron star surface is the most efficient radiative process. We present angle-dependent hard X-ray upscattering model spectra for uncooled monoenergetic relativistic electrons. The spectral cut-off energies are critically dependent on the observer viewing angles and electron Lorentz factor. We find that electrons with energies less than around 15 MeV will emit most of their radiation below 250 keV, consistent with the observed turnovers in magnetar hard X-ray tails. Moreover, electrons of higher energy still emit most of the radiation below around 1 MeV, except for quasi-equatorial emission locales for select pulses phases. Our spectral computations use new state-of-the-art, spin-dependent formalism for the QED Compton scattering cross section in strong magnetic fields.


Author(s):  
János L. Lábár

Radiative and non-radiative transitions present alternative ways for the excited atom to reduce its energy when the initial state is an atom singly ionised in one of its inner electron shells. Since the fluorescence yield gives the probability that the empty state in the inner (sub)shell is filled in by a radiative process, it seems that the generated x-ray intensities are independent of the non-radiative rearrangements from the point on where the value of fluorescence yield is given for the (sub)shell in question. In that way the intensity of an x-ray line would solely be dependent on the ionisation probability of the given (sub)shell and on the rates of the radiative transitions (determining the relative intensities of the lines originating from the same subshell). That image involves that the non-radiative processes only influence the value of the fluorescence yield. For the simplest case i.e. for the K shell it is true.


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