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Physical Sciences and Mathematics Commons

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Astrophysics and Astronomy

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Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications and Presentations

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Accretion

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Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Strongly Magnetized Accretion In Two Ultracompact Binary Systems, Thomas J. Maccarone, Thomas Kupfer, Edgar Najera Casarrubias, Liliana E. Rivera Sandoval, Aarran W. Shaw, Christoper T. Britt, Jan Van Roestel, David R. Zurek Mar 2024

Strongly Magnetized Accretion In Two Ultracompact Binary Systems, Thomas J. Maccarone, Thomas Kupfer, Edgar Najera Casarrubias, Liliana E. Rivera Sandoval, Aarran W. Shaw, Christoper T. Britt, Jan Van Roestel, David R. Zurek

Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications and Presentations

We present the discoveries of two of AM CVn systems, Gaia14aae and SDSS J080449.49+161624.8, which show X-ray pulsations at their orbital periods, indicative of magnetically collimated accretion. Both also show indications of higher rates of mass transfer relative to the expectations from binary evolution driven purely by gravitational radiation, based on existing optical data for Gaia14aae, which show a hotter white dwarf temperature than expected from standard evolutionary models, and X-ray data for SDSS J080449.49+161624.8 which show a luminosity 10−100 times higher than those for other AM CVn at similar orbital periods. The higher mass transfer rates could be driven …


On The Disk Wind Mass Loss Rates In Qsos, Nicolas A. Pereyra Nov 2015

On The Disk Wind Mass Loss Rates In Qsos, Nicolas A. Pereyra

Physics and Astronomy Faculty Publications and Presentations

We derive here a relatively simple expression for the total wind mass loss rates in QSOs within the accretion disk wind scenario. We show that the simple expression derived here for QSO disk wind mass loss rate is in a very good agreement with the more “exact” values obtained through significantly more complex and detailed numerically intensive 2.5D time-dependent simulations. Additionally we show that for typical QSO parameters, the disk itself will be emitting mostly in the UV/optical spectrum, in turn implying that the X-ray emission from QSOs likely is produced through some physical mechanism acting at radii smaller than …