radioactive heating
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Author(s):  
Philip Judge

‘Solar impacts on earth’ focuses on space weather—rapidly changing conditions in the earth’s ionosphere and above. The Sun’s natural tendency to emit variable high energy radiation causes problems for us that it did not for our ancestors, as eruptions and storms interrupt our dependence on electronics. The ‘faint young sun’ paradox arises from the idea that the newly formed earth only received two-thirds of the Sun’s radiation today, yet water formed on earth without freezing; popular explanations include the Sun losing mass with age or an increase in greenhouse warming or radioactive heating. There seems to be no heating trend in the Sun correlating with recent global warming.


2019 ◽  
Vol 489 (1) ◽  
pp. 1110-1119 ◽  
Author(s):  
L J Wang ◽  
X F Wang ◽  
Z Cano ◽  
S Q Wang ◽  
L D Liu ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT It is well known that ordinary supernovae (SNe) are powered by 56Ni cascade decay. Broad-lined type Ic SNe (SNe Ic-BL) are a subclass of SNe that are not all exclusively powered by 56Ni decay. It was suggested that some SNe Ic-BL are powered by magnetar spin-down. iPTF16asu is a peculiar broad-lined type Ic supernova discovered by the intermediate Palomar Transient Factory. With a rest-frame rise time of only 4 d, iPTF16asu challenges the existing popular models, for example, the radioactive heating (56Ni-only) and the magnetar +56Ni models. Here we show that this rapid rise could be attributed to interaction between the SN ejecta and a pre-existing circumstellar medium ejected by the progenitor during its final stages of evolution, while the late-time light curve can be better explained by energy input from a rapidly spinning magnetar. This model is a natural extension to the previous magnetar model. The mass-loss rate of the progenitor and ejecta mass are consistent with a progenitor that experienced a common envelope evolution in a binary. An alternative model for the early rapid rise of the light curve is the cooling of a shock propagating into an extended envelope of the progenitor. It is difficult at this stage to tell which model (interaction+magnetar + 56Ni or cooling+magnetar + 56Ni) is better for iPTF16asu. However, it is worth noting that the inferred envelope mass in the cooling+magnetar + 56Ni is very high.


2019 ◽  
Vol 876 (2) ◽  
pp. 128 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Kasen ◽  
Jennifer Barnes

Author(s):  
Kazuki Takahashi ◽  
Daiki Kobayashi ◽  
Hiroki Mitsui ◽  
Atsushi Taniguchi ◽  
Satoru Kato ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Francis Nimmo

This article consists of three sections. The first discusses how we determine satellite internal structures and what we know about them. The primary probes of internal structure are measurements of magnetic induction, gravity, and topography, as well as rotation state and orientation. Enceladus, Europa, Ganymede, Callisto, Titan, and (perhaps) Pluto all have subsurface oceans; Callisto and Titan may be only incompletely differentiated. The second section describes dynamical processes that affect satellite interiors and surfaces: tidal and radioactive heating, flexure and relaxation, convection, cryovolcanism, true polar wander, non-synchronous rotation, orbital evolution, and impacts. The final section discusses how the satellites formed and evolved. Ancient tidal heating episodes and subsequent refreezing of a subsurface ocean are the likeliest explanation for the deformation observed at Ganymede, Tethys, Dione, Rhea, Miranda, Ariel, and Titania. The high heat output of Enceladus is a consequence of Saturn’s highly dissipative interior, but the dissipation rate is strongly frequency-dependent and does not necessarily imply that Saturn’s moons are young. Major remaining questions include the origins of Titan’s atmosphere and high eccentricity, the regular density progression in the Galilean satellites, and the orbital evolution of the Saturnian and Uranian moons.


2017 ◽  
Vol 605 ◽  
pp. A107 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Cano ◽  
L. Izzo ◽  
A. de Ugarte Postigo ◽  
C. C. Thöne ◽  
T. Krühler ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 453 (4) ◽  
pp. 4467-4484 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jon C. Mauerhan ◽  
G. Grant Williams ◽  
Douglas C. Leonard ◽  
Paul S. Smith ◽  
Alexei V. Filippenko ◽  
...  

Abstract We present seven epochs of spectropolarimetry of the Type IIb supernova (SN IIb) 2011dh in M51, spanning 86 d of its evolution. The first epoch was obtained 9 d after the explosion, when the photosphere was still in the depleted hydrogen layer of the stripped-envelope progenitor. Continuum polarization is securely detected at the level of P ≈ 0.5 per cent through day 14 and appears to diminish by day 30, which is different from the prevailing trends suggested by studies of other core-collapse SNe. Time-variable modulations in P and position angle are detected across P-Cygni line features. H α and He i polarization peak after 30 d and exhibit position angles roughly aligned with the earlier continuum, while O i and Ca ii appear to be geometrically distinct. We discuss several possibilities to explain the evolution of the continuum and line polarization, including the potential effects of a tidally deformed progenitor star, aspherical radioactive heating by fast-rising plumes of 56Ni from the core, oblique shock breakout, or scattering by circumstellar material. While these possibilities are plausible and guided by theoretical expectations, they are not unique solutions to the data. The construction of more detailed hydrodynamic and radiative-transfer models that incorporate complex aspherical geometries will be required to further elucidate the nature of the polarized radiation from SN 2011dh and other SNe IIb.


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