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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A numerical model for simulating the dynamic response of an inertial confinement fusion cavity gas to a target explosion

McCarville, Thomas J. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1982. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 159-165).
2

Star formation in the assembly of the first galaxies

Johnson, Jarrett Lawrence 10 August 2012 (has links)
The character of the first galaxies at redshifts z [greater-than or equal to] 10 strongly depends on the star formation which takes place during their assembly. Conducting cosmological hydrodynamics simulations, we study how the radiative output and chemical enrichment from the first stars impacts the properties of the first galaxies. We find that the radiative feedback from the first stars suppresses the star formation rate at redshifts z [greater-than or equal to] 15 by a factor of only a few. In turn, this suggests that a large fraction of the first galaxies may form from gas which has already been enriched with the first heavy elements ejected by primordial supernovae. In order to characterize the properties of primordial dwarf galaxies, we carry out radiation hydrodynamics simulations which allow to determine how the luminosities in hydrogen and helium emission lines depend on the initial mass function of the stars in the galaxy. As well, we show that the chemical abundance patterns observed in metal-poor Galactic halo stars contain the signature of the first supernovae, and we use this data to indirectly probe the properties of the first stars. / text
3

Fyzika rentgenových dvojhvězd / Physics of X-ray binaries

Čechura, Jan January 2014 (has links)
Title: Physics of X-ray binaries Author: Jan Čechura Department: Astronomical Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic Supervisor: doc. RNDr. Petr Hadrava, DrSc. Abstract: We present a novel observation interpreting method for the high-mass X-ray binaries (HMXBs) based on a combination of spectroscopic data and numerical results of a radiation hydrodynamic model of stellar wind in HMXBs. By using an indirect imaging method of Doppler tomography, we calculate synthetic tomograms of a predicted emission in Low/Hard and High/Soft X-ray states and compare them with tomograms produced using phase-resolved optical spectra of Cygnus X-1, a prototype of HMXBs. The emis- sions of HMXBs are determined by the local conditions within the circumstellar medium - namely by local density, temperature, and ionization parameter. These quantities are computed by the radiation hydrodynamic code and strongly depend on the X-ray state of such systems. By increasing intensity of an X-ray emission produced by the compact companion in the HMXB-model, we achieved a complete redistribution of the circumstel- lar medium in the vicinity of the modelled system. These changes (which simulate the transitions between two major spectral states) are also apparent in the synthetic Doppler tomograms which are in a good...
4

Cloudy with a chance of starlight : coupling of smoothed particle hydrodynamics and Monte Carlo radiative transfer for the study of ionising stellar feedback

Petkova, Maya Atanasova January 2018 (has links)
Ionising radiation is present in a variety of astrophysical problems, and it is particularly important for shaping the process of star formation in molecular clouds, containing hot, high-mass stars. In order to account for the effects of ionising radiation within numerical models of star formation, we need to combine a hydrodynamics method with a radiative transfer method and obtain a radiation hydrodynamics scheme (RHD). In this thesis I achieve live radiation hydrodynamics by coupling the Smoothed Particle Hydrodynamics (SPH) code Phantom with the Monte Carlo Radiative Transfer (MCRT) code CMacIonize. Since SPH is particle-based and MCRT is grid-based, I construct an unstructured, Voronoi grid in order to establish a link between the two codes. In areas with large density gradients, a Voronoi grid based purely on the SPH particle positions achieves insufficient resolution, and therefore I propose a novel algorithm for inserting a small number of additional grid cells to improve the local resolution. Furthermore, the MCRT calculations require the knowledge of an average density for each Voronoi cell. To address this, I develop an analytic density mapping from SPH to a Voronoi grid, by deriving an expression for the integrals of a series of kernel functions over the volume of a random polyhedron. Finally, I demonstrate the validity of the live RHD through the benchmark test of D-type expansion of an H II region, where good agreement is shown with the existing literature. The RHD implementation is then used to perform a proof-of-concept simulation of a collapsing cloud, which produces high-mass stars and is subsequently partially ionised by them. The presented code is a valuable tool for future star formation studies, and it can be used for modelling a broad range of additional astronomical problems involving ionising radiation and hydrodynamics.
5

Cosmological RHD simulations of early galaxy formation / RHD simulations cosmologiques de la formation des premieres galaxies

Rosdahl, Karl Joakim 15 June 2012 (has links)
Avec l’essor actuel de la sophistication et de l’efficacité des codes de cosmologie hydrodynamique,il est devenu possible d’inclure le transfert radiatif (RT) des photons ionisants dansles simulations cosmologiques, soit en post-traitement, soit en simulations couplées rayonnement+hydrodynamique (RHD). Malgré de nombreux obstacles, il y a eu cette derniéredécennie beaucoup de recherches menées sur les différentes stratégies et implémentations,dû au fait qu’un nombre de problèmes intéressants peuvent être désormais abordés par laRT et RHD, par exemple comment et quand l’Univers s’est réionisé, comment l’émissionradiative des étoiles et des noyaux actifs de galaxies se comportent pour réguler la formationdes structures à des échelles petites et grandes, et quelles prédictions et interprétationsnous pouvons faire des phénomènes observés, tels que la forêt Lyman-alpha et des sourcesdiffuses de rayonnement.Cela coïncide avec l’avènement du télescope spatial James Webb (JWST) et d’autresinstruments de pointe qui sont sur le point de nous donner un aperçu sans précédent sur lafin des âges sombres de l’Univers, quand le cosmos est passé d’un état froid et neutre à unétat chaud et ionisé, à la suite de l’apparition des sources radiatives.Notre préoccupation principale étant les rétroactions radiatives des premieres structures,nous avons mis en place une version RHD du code cosmologique Ramses, que nous appelonsRamsesRT, basée sur la méthode des moments. Ce code nous permet d’étudier les effets durayonnement ionisant dans les simulations cosmologiques RHD qui tirent pleinement profitdes stratégies de raffinement adaptif de grille et de parallélisation de Ramses. Pour rendreauto-cohérent le RHD nous avons également mis en oeuvre une thermochimie hors-équilibreincluant des espèces de l’Hydrogène et de l’Hélium qui interagissent avec le rayonnementtransporté.Je présente dans cette thèse une description détaillée de RamsesRT et de nombreux testscontribuant à sa validation.Jusqu’à présent nous avons utilisé RamsesRT pour étudier l’émission Lyman-alpha decourants d’accrétion, qui sont prédits à grand redshift par les simulations cosmologiques,mais n’ont jamais été clairement identifiés par les observations. Nous avons également étudiéle chauffage gravitationnel dans ces courants pour déterminer si ce dernier pouvait être lasource motrice principale des Lyman-alpha blobs, un phénomène observé qui a été beaucoupétudié et débattu au cours de la dernière décennie. Cet étudie nous permet de conclure queles Lyman-alpha blobs peuvent, en principe, être alimentés par le chauffage gravitationnel,et que d’autre part, les courants d’accrétion sont sur le point d’être directement détectablesavec des instruments à venir.Mes intentions futures sont d’utiliser RamsesRT dans les simulations cosmologiques àhaute résolution, de la formation des premiéres galaxies jusqu’à l’époque de la réionisation,et ainsi étudier comment la rétroaction radiative affecte la formation et l’évolution de cesgalaxies et de faire des prévisions d’observation qui peuvent être testées avec des instrumentssophistiqués tels que le JWST. / With the increasing sophistication and efficiency of cosmological hydrodynamics codes, ithas become viable to include ionizing radiative transfer (RT) in cosmological simulations,either in post-processing or in full-blown radiation-hydrodynamics (RHD) simulations. Inspite of the many hurdles involved, there has been much activity during the last decade or soon different strategies and implementations, because a number of interesting problems canbe addressed with RT and RHD, e.g. how and when the Universe became reionized, howradiation from stars and active galactic nuclei plays a part in regulating structure formationon small and large scales, and what predictions and interpretations we can make of observedphenomena such as the Lyman-alpha forest and diffuse sources of radiation.This coincides with the advent of the James Webb space telescope (JWST) and otherstate-of-the-art instruments which are about to give us an unprecedented glimpse into theend of the dark ages of the Universe, when the cosmos switched from a cold and neutralstate to a hot and ionized one, due to the turn-on of ionizing radiative sources.With a primary interest in the problem of radiative feedback in early structure formation,we have implemented an RHD version of the Ramses cosmological code we call RamsesRT,which is moment based and employs the local M1 Eddington tensor closure. This code allowsus to study the effects of ionizing radiation on-the-fly in cosmological RHD simulationsthat take full advantage of the adaptive mesh refinement and parallelization strategies ofRamses. For self-consistent RHD we have also implemented a non-equilibrium chemistry ofthe atomic hydrogen and helium species that interact with the transported radiation.I present in this thesis an extensive description of the RamsesRT implementation andnumerous tests to validate it.Thus far we have used the RHD implementation to study extended line emission fromaccretion streams, which are routinely predicted to exist at early redshift by cosmologicalsimulations but have never been unambiguously verified by observations, and to investigatewhether gravitational heating in those streams could be the dominant power source ofso-called Lyman-alpha blobs, an observed phenomenon which has been much studied anddebated during the last decade or two. Our conclusions from this investigation are thatLyman-alpha blobs can in principle be powered by gravitational heating, and furthermorethat accretion streams are on the verge of being directly detectable for the first time withupcoming instruments.My future intent is to use RamsesRT for high-resolution cosmological zoom simulations ofearly galaxy formation, up to the epoch of reionization, to study how radiative feedbackaffects the formation and evolution of those galaxies and to make observational predictionsthat can be tested with upcoming instruments such as the JWST.

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