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Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At Oxford we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Adrianne Slyz

Professor of Astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Beecroft Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology
Adrianne.Slyz@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)83013
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 555D
  • About
  • Publications

Time-Independent Gravitational Fields in the BGK Scheme for Hydrodynamics

ArXiv astro-ph/9905247 (1999)

Authors:

Adrianne Slyz, Kevin H Prendergast

Abstract:

We incorporate a time-independent gravitational field into the BGK scheme for numerical hydrodynamics. In the BGK scheme the gas evolves via an approximation to the collisional Boltzmann equation, namely the Bhatnagar-Gross-Krook (BGK) equation. Time-dependent hydrodynamical fluxes are computed from local solutions of the BGK equation. By accounting for particle collisions, the fundamental mechanism for generating dissipation in gas flow, a scheme based on the BGK equation gives solutions to the Navier-Stokes equations: the fluxes carry both advective and dissipative terms. We perform numerical experiments in both 1D Cartesian geometries and axisymmetric cylindrical coordinates.
Details from ArXiV
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Time-Independent Gravitational Fields in the BGK Scheme for Hydrodynamics

(1999)

Authors:

Adrianne Slyz, Kevin H Prendergast
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A catalog of intracluster gas temperatures

Astrophysical Journal 412:2 (1993) 479-488

Authors:

LP David, A Slyz, C Jones, W Forman, SD Vrtilek, KA Arnaud

Abstract:

We have searched the Einstein Monitor Proportional Counter (MPC) data base for observations of clusters of galaxies. The MPC was a nonfocal plane instrument on board the Einstein Observatory and accumulated data during all pointed observations with the four focal plane instruments. By co-adding the MPC spectra obtained during all pointed observations of clusters with IPC count rates greater than 0.1 counts per second, we have obtained sufficient photon statistics to estimate the X-ray temperature of 84 clusters. Combining the MPC results with EXOSAT and Ginga results reported in the literature yields a combined sample of 104 clusters with known X-ray temperatures. This is approximately twice as large as any previously published sample. One of the best studied X-ray correlations between clusters is that between their X-ray luminosity and gas temperature. We show that the best-fit power-law relation for our combined cluster sample can be explained by the observed increase in the gas-to-stellar mass ratio between low- and high-temperature clusters. There have been several recent reports in the literature concerning the evolution of X-ray luminous clusters at fairly low redshifts. The statistical significance of any evolution in our combined X-ray sample has been examined and compared with the statistical properties of clusters culled from optical catalogs. We find that there is strong evidence for a decrease in the X-ray luminosity of optically rich clusters beyond z ≈ 0.06. This result is used to estimate the normalization of the primordial power spectrum of density fluctuations.
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Beyond halo mass: the role of vorticity-rich filaments in quenching galaxy mass assembly

Authors:

Hyunmi Song, Clotilde Laigle, Ho Seong Hwang, Julien Devriendt, Yohan Dubois, Katarina Kraljic, Christophe Pichon, Adrianne Slyz, Rory Smith

Abstract:

We examine how the mass assembly of central galaxies depends on their location in the cosmic web. The HORIZON-AGN simulation is analysed at z~2 using the DISPERSE code to extract multi-scale cosmic filaments. We find that the dependency of galaxy properties on large-scale environment is mostly inherited from the (large-scale) environmental dependency of their host halo mass. When adopting a residual analysis that removes the host halo mass effect, we detect a direct and non-negligible influence of cosmic filaments. Proximity to filaments enhances the build-up of stellar mass, a result in agreement with previous studies. However, our multi-scale analysis also reveals that, at the edge of filaments, star formation is suppressed. In addition, we find clues for compaction of the stellar distribution at close proximity to filaments. We suggest that gas transfer from the outside to the inside of the haloes (where galaxies reside) becomes less efficient closer to filaments, due to high angular momentum supply at the vorticity-rich edge of filaments. This quenching mechanism may partly explain the larger fraction of passive galaxies in filaments, as inferred from observations at lower redshifts.
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Galaxies flowing in the oriented saddle frame of the cosmic web

Authors:

K Kraljic, C Pichon, Y Dubois, S Codis, C Cadiou, JULIEN Devriendt, M Musso, C Welker, S Arnouts, HS Hwang, C Laigle, S Peirani, A Slyz, M Treyer, D Vibert

Abstract:

The strikingly anisotropic large-scale distribution of matter made of an extended network of voids delimited by sheets, themselves segmented by filaments, within which matter flows towards compact nodes where they intersect, imprints its geometry on the dynamics of cosmic flows, ultimately shaping the distribution of galaxies and the redshift evolution of their properties. The (filament-type) saddle points of this cosmic web provide a local frame in which to quantify the induced physical and morphological evolution of galaxies on large scales. The properties of virtual galaxies within the Horizon-AGN simulation are stacked in such a frame. The iso-contours of the galactic number density, mass, specific star formation rate (sSFR), kinematics and age are clearly aligned with the filament axis with steep gradients perpendicular to the filaments. A comparison to a simulation without feedback from active galactic nuclei (AGN) illustrates its impact on quenching star formation of centrals away from the saddles. The redshift evolution of the properties of galaxies and their age distribution are consistent with the geometry of the bulk flow within that frame. They compare well with expectations from constrained Gaussian random fields and the scaling with the mass of non-linearity, modulo the redshift dependent impact of feedback processes. Physical properties such as sSFR and kinematics seem not to depend only on mean halo mass and density: the residuals trace the geometry of the saddle, which could point to other environment-sensitive physical processes, such as spin advection, and AGN feedback at high mass.
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