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J. A. Miralles

Bio: J. A. Miralles is an academic researcher from University of Alicante. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neutron star & Magnetic field. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 22 publications receiving 699 citations.
Topics: Neutron star, Magnetic field, Flux, Magnetar, Pulsar

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the mutual influence of thermal and magnetic evoluti on in a neutron star's crust in axial symmetry, and showed that the feedback between Joule heating and magnetic diffusion is strong, resulting in a faster dissipation of the stronger fields during the first 10 5 − 10 6 years of a star's life.
Abstract: Context. The presence of magnetic fields in the crust of neutron stars c auses a non-spherically symmetric temperature distribution. The strong temperature dependence of the magnetic diffusivity and thermal conductivity, together with the heat generated by magnetic dissipation, couple the magnetic and thermal evolution of NSs, that cannot be formulated as separated one‐dimensional problems. Aims. We study the mutual influence of thermal and magnetic evoluti on in a neutron star’s crust in axial symmetry. Taking into account realistic microphysical inputs, we find the heat rel eased by Joule effect consistent with the circulation of currents in the crust , and we incorporate its effects in 2‐dimensional cooling calculations. Methods. We solve the induction equation numerically using a hybrid method (spectral in angles, but a finite‐di fferences scheme in the radial direction), coupled to the thermal diffusion equation. To improve the boundary conditions, we also revisit the envelope stationary solutions updating the well known Tb− Ts‐relations to include the effect of 2‐D heat transfer calculations and new microphysical inputs. Results. We present the first long term 2‐dimensional simulations of t he coupled magneto-thermal evolution of neutron stars. This substantially improves previous works in which a very crude approximation in at least one of the parts (thermal or magnetic diffusion) has been adopted. Our results show that the feedback between Joule heating and magnetic diffusion is strong, resulting in a faster dissipation of the stronger fields during the first 10 5 − 10 6 years of a NS’s life. As a consequence, all neutron stars born with fields larger than a critical value (> 5×10 13 G) reach similar field strengths (≈ 2−3×10 13 G) at late times. Irrespectively of the initial magnetic field strength, after 10 6 years the temperature becomes so low that the magnetic diffusion timescale becomes longer than the typical ages of radio‐pulsars, thus resulting in apparently no diss ipation of the field in old NS. We also confirm the strong correl ation between the magnetic field and the surface temperature of relatively young NSs discussed in preliminary works. The effective temperature of models with strong internal toroidal components are systematically higher than those of models with purely poloidal fie lds, due to the additional energy reservoir stored in the toroidal field tha t is gradually released as the field dissipates.

279 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, population synthesis of different types of neutron stars (thermally emitting isolated NSs, normal radio pulsars, magnetars) was performed taking into account the magnetic field decay and using results from the most recent advances in NS cooling theory.
Abstract: We perform population synthesis studies of different types of neutron stars (NSs) (thermally emitting isolated NSs, normal radio pulsars, magnetars) taking into account the magnetic field decay and using results from the most recent advances in NS cooling theory. For the first time, we confront our results with observations using simultaneously the log N-log S distribution for nearby isolated NSs, the log N-log L distribution for magnetars, and the distribution of radio pulsars in the P-P diagram. For this purpose, we fix a baseline NS model (all microphysics input), and other relevant parameters to standard values (velocity distribution, mass spectrum, birth rates, etc.), allowing us to vary the initial magnetic field strength. We find that our theoretical model is consistent with all sets of data if the initial magnetic field distribution function follows a lognormal law with (log (B 0 /G)〉 ∼ 13.25 and σ log B 0 ∼ 0.6. The typical scenario includes about 10 per cent of NSs born as magnetars, significant magnetic field decay during the first million years of a NS life (only about a factor of 2 for low-field NSs but more than an order of magnitude for magnetars), and a mass distribution function dominated by low-mass objects. This model explains satisfactorily all known populations. Evolutionary links between different subclasses may exist, although robust conclusions are not yet possible.

140 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the thermal emission from isolated neutron stars with strong magnetic fields B > 10 13 G was studied to explain the origin of the anisotropy in the surface temperature distribution.
Abstract: Context. The thermal emission from isolated neutron stars is not well understood. The X-ray spectrum is very close to a blackbody but there is a systematic optical excess flux with respect to the extrapolation to low energy of the best blackbody fit. This fact, in combination with the observed pulsations in the X-ray flux, can be explained by anisotropies in the surface temperature distribution. Aims. We study the thermal emission from neutron stars with strong magnetic fields B > 10 13 G in order to explain the origin of the anisotropy. Methods. We find (numerically) stationary solutions in axial symmetry of the heat transport equations in the neutron star crust and the condensed envelope. The anisotropy in the conductivity tensor is included consistently. Results. The presence of magnetic fields of the expected strength leads to anisotropy in the surface temperature. Models with toroidal components similar to or larger than the poloidal field reproduce qualitatively the observed spectral properties and variability of isolated neutron stars. Our models also predict spectral features at energies between 0.2 and 0.6 keV for B = 10 13 -10 14 .

98 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the thermal emission from magnetic neutron star surfaces in which the cohesive effects of the magnetic field have produced the condensation of the atmosphere and the external layers.
Abstract: We investigate the thermal emission from magnetic neutron star surfaces in which the cohesive effects of the magnetic field have produced the condensation of the atmosphere and the external layers. This may happen for sufficiently cool (T ≤ 10 6 ) atmospheres with moderately intense magnetic fields (about 10 13 G for Fe atmospheres). The thermal emission from an isothermal bare surface of a neutron star shows no remarkable spectral features, but it is significantly depressed at energies below some threshold energy. However, since the thermal conductivity is very different in the normal and parallel directions to the magnetic field lines, the presence of the magnetic field is expected to produce a highly anisotropic temperature distribution, depending on the magnetic field geometry. In this case the observed flux of such an object looks very similar to a BB spectrum, but depressed by a nearly constant factor at all energies. This results in a systematic underestimation of the area of the emitter (and therefore its size) by a factor 5-10 (2-3).

52 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the transverse structure and stability properties of relativistic jets formed in the course of the collapse of a massive progenitor were investigated and the presence of a strong shear in the bulk velocity of such jets was shown to be responsible for a very rapid shear driven instability that arises for any velocity profile.
Abstract: We consider the transverse structure and stability properties of relativistic jets formed in the course of the collapse of a massive progenitor. Our numerical simulations show the presence of a strong shear in the bulk velocity of such jets. This shear can be responsible for a very rapid shear-driven instability that arises for any velocity profile. This conclusion has been confirmed both by numerical simulations and theoretical analysis. The instability leads to rapid fluctuations of the main hydrodynamical parameters (density, pressure, Lorentz factor, etc.). However, the perturbations of the density are eectively decoupled from those of the pressure because the beam of the jet is radiation-dominated. The characteristic growth time of instability is much shorter than the life time of the jet and, therefore, may lead to a complete turbulent beam. In the course of the non-linear evolution, these fluctuations may yield to internal shocks which can be randomly distributed in the jet. In the case that internal shocks in a ultrarelativistic outflow are responsible for the observed phenomenology of gamma-ray bursts, the proposed instability can well account for the short-term variability of gamma-ray light curves down to milliseconds.

42 citations


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the current theoretical understanding of the physical processes believed to take place in GRB's can be found in this article, where the authors focus on the afterglow itself, the jet break in the light curve, and the optical flash that accompanies the GRB.
Abstract: Gamma-ray bursts (GRB's), short and intense pulses of low-energy $\ensuremath{\gamma}$ rays, have fascinated astronomers and astrophysicists since their unexpected discovery in the late sixties. During the last decade, several space missions---BATSE (Burst and Transient Source Experiment) on the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory, BeppoSAX and now HETE II (High-Energy Transient Explorer)---together with ground-based optical, infrared, and radio observatories have revolutionized our understanding of GRB's, showing that they are cosmological, that they are accompanied by long-lasting afterglows, and that they are associated with core-collapse supernovae. At the same time a theoretical understanding has emerged in the form of the fireball internal-external shocks model. According to this model GRB's are produced when the kinetic energy of an ultrarelativistic flow is dissipated in internal collisions. The afterglow arises when the flow is slowed down by shocks with the surrounding circumburst matter. This model has had numerous successful predictions, like the predictions of the afterglow itself, of jet breaks in the afterglow light curve, and of the optical flash that accompanies the GRB's. This review focuses on the current theoretical understanding of the physical processes believed to take place in GRB's.

1,800 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the exotic physics of high magnetic field regime was discussed, where a new array of processes becomes possible and even dominant and where familiar processes acquire unusual properties, including free particles, atoms, molecules, plasma and condensed matter in strong magnetic fields, photon propagation in magnetized plasmas, freeparticle radiative processes, the physics of neutron star interiors and field evolution and decay mechanisms.
Abstract: There has recently been growing evidence for the existence of neutron stars possessing magnetic fields with strengths that exceed the quantum critical field strength of 4.4 × 1013 G, at which the cyclotron energy equals the electron rest mass. Such evidence has been provided by new discoveries of radio pulsars having very high spin-down rates and by observations of bursting gamma-ray sources termed magnetars. This paper will discuss the exotic physics of this high-field regime, where a new array of processes becomes possible and even dominant and where familiar processes acquire unusual properties. We review the physical processes that are important in neutron star interiors and magnetospheres, including the behaviour of free particles, atoms, molecules, plasma and condensed matter in strong magnetic fields, photon propagation in magnetized plasmas, free-particle radiative processes, the physics of neutron star interiors and field evolution and decay mechanisms. Application of such processes in astrophysical source models, including rotation-powered pulsars, soft gamma-ray repeaters, anomalous x-ray pulsars and accreting x-ray pulsars will also be discussed. Throughout this review, we will highlight the observational signatures of high magnetic field processes, as well as the theoretical issues that remain to be understood.

740 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a catalog of the 26 currently known magnetars and magnetar candidates, and investigate and plot possible correlations between their timing, X-ray, and multiwavelength properties.
Abstract: We present a catalog of the 26 currently known magnetars and magnetar candidates. We tabulate astrometric and timing data for all catalog sources, as well as their observed radiative properties, particularly the spectral parameters of the quiescent X-ray emission. We show histograms of the spatial and timing properties of the magnetars, comparing them with the known pulsar population, and we investigate and plot possible correlations between their timing, X-ray, and multiwavelength properties. We find the scale height of magnetars to be in the range 20–31pc, assuming they are exponentially distributed. This range is smaller than that measured for OB stars, providing evidence that magnetars are born from the most massive O stars. From the same fits, we find that the Sun lies ∼13–22pc above the Galactic plane, consistent with previous measurements. We confirm previously identified correlations between quiescent X-ray luminosity LX and magnetic field B, as well as X-ray spectral power-law index and B, and show evidence for an excluded region in a plot of LX vs. . We also present an updated kT versus characteristic age plot, showing magnetars and high-B radio pulsars are hotter than lower-B neutron stars of similar age. Finally, we observe a striking difference between magnetars detected in the the hard X-ray and radio bands; there is a clear correlation between the hard and soft X-ray flux, whereas the radio-detected magnetars all have low soft X-ray flux suggesting, if anything, that the two bands are anti-correlated. An online version of the catalog is located at http://www.physics.mcgill.ca/~pulsar/magnetar/main.html.

638 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the formation and large-scale propagation of Poynting-dominated jets produced by accreting, rapidly rotating black hole systems are studied by numerically integrating the general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic equations of motion to follow the self-consistent interaction between accretion discs and black holes.
Abstract: The formation and large-scale propagation of Poynting-dominatedjets produced by accreting, rapidly rotating black hole systems are studied by numerically integrating the general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic equations of motion to follow the self-consistent interaction between accretion discs and black holes. This study extends previous similar work by studying jets till t ≈ 10 4 GM/c 3 out to r ≈ 10 4 GM/c 2 , by which the jet is superfast magnetosonic and moves at a lab-frame bulk Lorentz factor of Γ ∼ 10 with a maximum terminal Lorentz factor of Γ ∞ ≤ 10 3 . The radial structure of the Poynting-dominated jet is piece-wise self-similar, and fits to flow quantities along the field line are provided. Beyond the Alfven surface at r ∼ 10-100GM/c 2 , the jet becomes marginally unstable to (at least) current-driven instabilities. Such instabilities drive shocks in the jet that limit the efficiency of magnetic acceleration and collimation. These instabilities also induce jet substructure with 3 ≤ Γ ≤ 15. The jet is shown to only marginally satisfy the necessary and sufficient conditions for kink instability, so this may explain how astrophysical jets can extend to large distances without completely disrupting. At large distance, the jet angular structure is Gaussian-like (or uniform within the core with sharp exponential wings) with a half-opening angle of ≈5° and there is an extended component out to ≈ 27°. Unlike in some hydrodynamic simulations, the environment is found to play a negligible role in jet structure, acceleration, and collimation as long as the ambient pressure of the surrounding medium is small compared to the magnetic pressure in the jet.

637 citations