Icranet
The 2012 Scientific Report
Presented to
The Scientific Committee
by
Remo Ruffini
Director of ICRANet
Introduction by the Director
ICRANet was created by a decision of the Italian Government, ratified
unanimously by the Italian Parliament and signed by the President of the
Republic of Italy on February 10 2005. The Republic of Armenia, the Republic of
Italy, the Vatican State, ICRA, the University of Arizona and the University of
Stanford were the Founding Members. All of them have ratified the Statute of
ICRANet (see
Enclosure 1 ). On September 12 2005 the Board of Governors was established and had its
first meeting. Professors Remo Ruffini and Fang Li-Zhi were appointed
respectively Director and Chairman of the Board. On December 19 2006 the
Scientific Committee was established and had its first meeting in Washington
DC. Prof. Riccardo Giacconi was appointed Chairman and John Mester Co-Chairman.
On September 21st2005 the Director of ICRANet signed with the
Ambassador of Brazil Dante Coelho De Lima the adhesion of Brazil to ICRANet.
The entrance of Brazil, requested by the President of Brazil Luiz Ignácio Lula
Da Silva has been unanimously ratified by the Brazilian Parliament. On February
2009 the board renewed the position of Prof. Fang Li-Zhi as the Chairman of the
Board. On December 2009 the Scientific Committee renewed the position of Prof.
Riccardo Giacconi as the Chairman of the Committee. On February 2010 the board
renewed the position of Prof. Remo Ruffini as the Director of the ICRANet. On
August 12th, 2011 the President of Brazil Dilma Rousseff signed the
entrance of Brazil in ICRANet (details in http://www.icranet.org/ ).
During the
2012, we have:
- adjourned and recruited
the Scientific Staff of ICRANet, including the adjunct Faculty, Lecturers,
Research Scientists, Visiting Scientists; adjourned and recruited the
Administrative Staff of ICRANet;
- established the Brazilian
Science Data Center (BSDC) and signed a memorandum of Understanding with
CAPES (Brazilian Fed. Agency for Support and Evaluation of Grad.
Education) to support the Cesare Lattes Program for exchange of Scientists
(see
Enclosure 2 );
- started the operations of
the Seat of ICRANet in Nice: Villa Ratti (see
Enclosure 3 );
- prepared the proceedings
of the meetings of 2011 and organized meetings and PhD schools (see
Enclosure 4 );
- updated and signed
co-operation agreements with Universities and Research Centers, including
BSU (Belarusian State University, Belarus), CAPES (Brazilian Fed. Agency
for Support and Evaluation of Grad. Education), CBPF (Brazil), Cearà State
(Brazil), ENEA (National Agency for new technologies, energy and the
economic sustainable development, Italy), ICTP (The Abdus Salam
International Center for Theoretical Physics, Italy), IHEP (Institute of
High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China), INFN (National
Institute for Nuclear Physics, Italy), ITA (Instituto Tecnológico de
Aeronáutica, Brazil), GARR (Italy), LeCosPa (Leung Center for Cosmology
and Particle Astrophysics, Taiwan), NAS (National Academy of Science,
Armenia), Nice University Sophia Antipolis (France), Pescara University
“D’Annunzio” (Italy), Physics Department of University of Rome “Sapienza”
(Italy), UERJ (Rio de Janeiro State University, Brazil), UFPB
(Universidade Federal da Paraíba, Brazil) University of Rome “Sapienza”
(Italy), UNS (Universidad Nacional del Sur, Argentina) (see
Enclosure 5 );
- recruited new students,
organized the teaching programs and the Thesis works of the International
Relativistic Astrophysics Doctoral program (IRAP-PhD), jointly sponsored
by ICRANet and ICRA in collaboration with AEI – Albert Einstein Institute
– Potsdam (Germany), Berlin Free University (Germany), CBPF – Brazilian
Centre for Physics Research (Brazil), ETH – Zurich (Switzerland), Ferrara
University (Italy), IHES (France), Indian centre for space physics
(India), Nice University Sophia Antipolis (France), Observatory of the
Côte d'Azur (France), Rome University – “Sapienza” (Italy), Savoie
University (France), Shanghai Astronomical Observatory (China), Stockholm
University (Sweden), Tartu Observatory (Estonia) (see
Enclosure 6 );
- developed the Erasmus
Mundus program of the European Commission and recruited additional nine
students (see
Enclosure 7 );
- followed the project for
the ICRANet Center at the Casino de Urca in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (see
Enclosure 8 );
- started the process for
adhesion of South Korea to ICRANet;
- fostered the lines of
research and publication activities which are the objects of the present
report.
1) The ICRANet Staff
In the establishment of the ICRANet Scientific Staff we have followed the
previously adopted successful strategy:
- To appoint talented young
scientists, as well as senior scientists who have already contributed
significantly to those areas which led to the establishment of ICRANet.
- To create an adjunct
Faculty containing many renowned scientists who have made internationally
recognized contributions to the field of relativistic astrophysics and
whose research interests are closely related to those of ICRANet. These
scientists spend from one to six months at the Pescara Center, thereby
linking it with their home institutions.
- To develop a program of
Lecturers, Research Scientists and Visiting Scientists, necessary to the
scientific operations of the Center.
This strategy has created an outstanding research institute with strong
connections to some of the most advanced Research Centers in the world. It also
promotes the vital connections between all the ICRANet Member Institutions. The
Curricula of the ICRANet Staff are given in the Accompanying Document “The
ICRANet Staff, Visiting Scientists and Graduate Students at the Pescara Center”
PROFESSORS OF
THE FACULTY
- Belinski
Vladimir
|
ICRANet
|
- Bianco
Carlo Luciano
|
Università di
Roma “Sapienza” and ICRANet
|
- Einasto
Jaan
|
Tartu
Observatory, Estonia
|
- Novello
Mario
|
(Cesare
Lattes ICRANet Chair)
CBPF and
ICRA-BR, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
|
- Rueda,
Jorge A.
|
Università di
Roma “Sapienza” and ICRANet
|
- Ruffini
Remo
|
Università di
Roma “Sapienza” and ICRANet
|
-
Vereshchagin Gregory
|
ICRANet
|
- Xue
She-Sheng
|
ICRANet
|
ADJUNCT PROFESSORS OF THE FACULTY
Typically and Adjunct Professor spends at ICRANet a period varying from one
month to six months every year and keeps ongoing collaborations for the rest of
the year.
- Aharonian Felix Albert
|
(Benjamin
Jegischewitsch Markarjan ICRANet Chair)
Dublin
Institute for Advanced Studies, Dublin, Ireland
Max-Planck-Institut
für Kernphysis, Heidelberg, Germany
|
-
Amati Lorenzo
|
Istituto
di Astrofisica Spaziale e Fisica Cosmica, Italy
|
-
Arnett David
|
(Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar ICRANet Chair)
University of Arizona, Tucson, USA
|
- Chakrabarti
Sandip K.
|
Center for Space Physics, India
|
- Chardonnet
Pascal
|
Université de
la Savoie, France and ICRANet
|
-
Chechetkin Valeri
|
(Mstislav Vsevolodich Keldysh ICRANet Chair)
Keldysh Institute for Applied Mathematics Moscow,
Russia
|
-
Damour Thibault
|
(Joseph-Louis Lagrange ICRANet Chair)
IHES, Bures sur Yvette, France
|
-
Della Valle Massimo
|
Osservatorio
di CapodiMonte, INAF-Napoli, Italy
|
-
Everitt Francis
|
(William Fairbank ICRANet Chair) Stanford University,
USA
|
-
Frontera Filippo
|
University
of Ferrara
|
-
Jantzen Robert
|
(Abraham
Taub ICRANet Chair) Villanova University USA
|
-
Kerr Roy
|
(Yevgeny Mikhajlovic Lifshitz ICRANet Chair)
University of Canterbury, New Zealand
|
-Khalatnikov
Markovich Isaak
|
(Lev Davidovich Landau ICRANet Chair)
Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics, Russia
|
-
Kleinert Hagen
|
(Richard Feynmann ICRANet Chair) Freie Universität
Berlin
|
-
Lee Hyung Won
|
(Yong Duk Kim ICRANet Chair)
School of Computer Aided Science, Inje, Korea
|
-
Madey John
|
University
of Hawaii
|
-
Misner Charles
|
(John Archibald Wheeler ICRANet Chair)
University
of Maryland, USA
|
-
Nicolai Herman
|
Albert Einstein Institute – Potsdam, Germany
|
-
Pelster Alex
|
Institute for Advanced Study, Germany
|
-
Pian Elena
|
INAF
and Osservatorio Astronomico di Trieste
|
-
Piran Tsvi
|
(Yuval Neeman ICRAnet Chair)
The Hebrew University - Jerusalem
|
-
Popov Vladimir
|
ITEP,
Russia
|
-
Punsly Brian Matthew
|
Mathew California University, Los Angeles USA
|
-
Quevedo C. Hernando
|
Institute of Nuclear Science, UNAM
|
-
Rafelski Johann
|
University
of Arizona, USA
|
-
Rosati Piero
|
European
Southern Observatory, Germany
|
-
Rosquist Kjell
|
(Karl Gustav Jacobi ICRANet Chair)
Stockholm University, Sweden
|
-
’t Hooft Gerard
|
Institut for Theoretical Physics, Utrecht Universiteit,
Holland
|
-
Titarchuk Lev
|
(Victor Sobolev ICRANet Chair) US Naval Laboratory,
USA
|
LECTURERS
The Lecturers participate in the many schools
and meetings organized by ICRANet, as well as in the International Relativistic
Astrophysics Ph.D. program (IRAP-PhD), sponsored by ICRANet and ICRA (see
below). The Lecture series span from a minimum of a few weeks to the entire
year.
- Aksenov
Alexey
|
Institute for CAD, Russian Academy of Sciences
|
- Alekseev
Georgy
|
Steklov Mathematical Institute – Russian Academy of Sciences
|
- Bini Donato
|
CNR and
ICRANet, Italy
|
- Boccaletti
Dino
|
ICRANet and
Università di Roma "Sapienza"
|
- Chen Pisin
|
National Taiwan University
Kavli Instit. Particle
Astrophysics and Cosmology
|
- Chieffi
Alessandro
|
INAF, Rome,
Italy
|
- Coullet
Pierre
|
Université de
Nice - Sophia Antipolis, France
|
- Di Castro
Carlo
|
Università di
Roma "Sapienza", Italy
|
- Filippi
Simonetta
|
ICRANet and Campus Biomedico, Italy
|
- Jing Yi-Peng
|
Shangai
Astronomy Observatory
|
- Kim Sang
Pyo
|
Kunsan
National University, Korea
|
- Kim
Sung-Won
|
Institute of Theor. Physics for Asia-Pacific, Korea
|
- Lee Chul
Hoon
|
Hanyang
University, Korea
|
- Lee Hyun
Kyu
|
Department of Physics, Hanyang University, Korea
|
- Limongi
Marco
|
INAF, Rome,
Italy
|
- Lou You
Qing
|
Tsinghua
University, Beijing
|
- Malheiro
Manuel
|
ITA, Brazil
|
- Mester John
|
Stanford
University, USA
|
- Mignard
François
|
Observatoire
de la Côte d‘Azur, Nice, France
|
- Ohanian
Hans
|
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, New York, USA
|
- Pacheco
José
|
Observatoire
de la Côte d ‘Azur, Nice, France
|
- Perez
Bergliaffa Santiago
|
Univesidade
do Estado de Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
|
- Pucacco
Giuseppe
|
Università di
Tor Vergata Roma
|
- Sepulveda
Alonso
|
University of
Antioquia, Columbia
|
- Song Doo
Jong
|
National Institute of Astronomy Korea
|
- Starobinsky
Alexei
|
Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics, Russia
|
- Vissani
Francesco
|
Gran Sasso
National Laboratory, Italy
|
- Wiltshire
David
|
University of Canterbury, New Zealand
|
RESEARCH SCIENTISTS
The research scientists are generally at a
post-doctoral level and they are extremely active in all research topics.
- Bernardini
Maria Grazia
|
ICRANet and OAB–Merate, Italy
|
- Cherubini
Christian
|
Campus
Biomedico, Rome, Italy
|
- Geralico
Andrea
|
ICRANet and
Università di Roma “Sapienza”, Italy
|
- Izzo Luca
|
ICRANet and
/spanUniversità di Roma “Sapienza”, Italy
|
- Lattanzi
Massimiliano
|
ICRANet and
Università di Roma “Sapienza”, Italy
|
- Patricelli
Barbara
|
ICRANet and
UNAM, México
|
- Rotondo Michael
|
ICRANet and
Università di Roma “Sapienza”, Italy
|
VISITING SCIENTISTS
They include experts who have given essential
contributions in ongoing activities at ICRANet.
- Abishev
Medeu
|
Al-Farabi Kazakh National University, Kazakhstan
|
- Bittencourt
Eduardo
|
CBPF, Brasil
|
- Corvino
Giovanni
|
University of
Rome La Sapienza, Italy
|
- Gell-Mann
Murray
|
Sante Fe
Institute, USA
|
- Kim Hyuong
Yee
|
INJE, South
Korea
|
- Mohammadi
Rohollah
|
Isfahan University of Technology, Pakistan
|
- Mosquera
Cuesta Herman
|
CBPF, Brasil
|
- Perez
Martinez Aurora
|
Instituto de
Cibernetica Matematica Y Fisica, Cuba
|
- Piechocki
Wlodzimierz
|
Institute for Nuclear Studies, Poland
|
- Qadir Asgar
|
National Univ. Of Sciences And Technology, Pakistan
|
- Raffaelli
Bernard
|
Université de
Corse, France
|
- Romero
Gustavo E.
|
Instituto
Argentino de Radioastronomia IAR-CONICET, Argentina
|
- Van Putten
Maurice
|
Korean Institute for Advanced Study, South Korea
|
ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF
The administrative and secretarial staff of the
Center is:
- Adamo
Cristina
|
Administrative
Office (Pescara)
|
- Barbaro
Pina
|
ICRANet Nice
|
- Del Beato
Annapia
|
Documentation
Office (Pescara)
|
- Di
Berardino Federica
|
Head of the Secretarial Office (Pescara)
|
- Latorre
Silvia
|
Administrative
Office (Pescara)
|
- London
Luzia
|
ICRANet BR –
Rio de Janeiro
|
- Regi
Massimo
|
System Manager till September 2012 (Pescara)
|
2) The Collaboration with
Brazil (see
Enclosure 2 )
During 2012 the Brazilian Science Data Center (BSDC) started its
operations, and is currently being expanded. Prof. Remo Ruffini, Director of
ICRANet, also signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Dr. Jorge Almeida
Guimaraes, President of CAPES (Brazilian Federal Agency for Support and
Evaluation of Graduate Education), to support the Cesare Lattes Program for
exchange of Scientists.
3) Inauguration of the Seat in Nice: Villa Ratti (see
Enclosure 3 )
We have completed the restructuring of Villa Ratti for the ICRANet Seat in
Nice. We been very pleased to receive the invitation by the Municipality of
Nice to open ICRANet activities in France, in order to maximize our contacts with
other European Countries and more generally with Countries all over the world.
The appeal for the town of Nice and his splendid surroundings, the existence of
a modern and efficient airport, the electronic backbones for internet
communications are all important elements which add to the splendid decision of
the Nice Municipality to offer the historical Villa Ratti as a seat for ICRANet
in Nice. The first stone for the restructuring of the Villa has been laid down
on November 23rd 2007. Since, an important finding of wall paintings
of circa 1750 occurred in the Villa. A large amount of activities has being
carried out in renovating the building and the park around. The headquarter of
the IRAP-PhD program will be in Villa Ratti. We were very pleased to have, as
the first visitor of the freshly opened ICRANet Seat in Villa Ratti, the Nobel
Laureate Murray Gell-Mann.
4) International Meetings (see
Enclosure 4 )
We are completing the proceedings of:
- IRAP PhD School, Les Houches, France,
April 3-8 and October 2-7, 2011.
- 12th
Italian-Korean Symposium, Pescara, Italy, July 4-8, 2011.
- 3rd Galileo –
Xu Guangqi Meeting, Beijing, China, October 11-15, 2011.
We have also organized the following meetings:
- XIII Marcel Grossmann
Meeting, Stockholm, Sweden July 1-7, 2012.
- XXXI ESOP-Clavius fourth
centennial meeting, Pescara, Italy, August 24-27, 2012.
- IRAP Ph.D. School, Nice, France, September
3-21, 2012.
- Current Issues on
Relativistic Astrophysics 2012, Seoul, South Korea, November 5-6, 2012.
5) Scientific Agreements (see
Enclosure 5 )
The following Agreements have been signed, updated and renewed by the
Director (see Fig. 1):
- BSU (Belarusian State
University, Belarus),
- CAPES (Brazilian Fed. Agency
for Support and Evaluation of Grad. Education),
- CBPF (Brazil),
- Cearà State (Brazil),
- ENEA (National Agency for new
technologies, energy and the economic sustainable development, Italy),
- ICTP (The Abdus Salam
International Center for Theoretical Physics, Italy),
- IHEP (Institute of High
Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China),
- INFN (National Institute for
Nuclear Physics, Italy),
- ITA
(Instituto Tecnológico de Aeronáutica, Brazil),
- GARR (Italy),
- LeCosPa (Leung Center for
Cosmology and Particle Astrophysics, Taiwan),
- NAS (National Academy of
Science, Armenia),
- Nice University Sophia
Antipolis (France),
- Pescara University “D’Annunzio” (I414
taly),
- Physics Department of
University of Rome “Sapienza” (Italy),
- UERJ (Rio de
Janeiro State University, Brazil),
- UFPB
(Universidade Federal da Paraíba, Brazil)
- University of Rome “Sapienza” (Italy),
- UNS
(Universidad Nacional del Sur, Argentina).
These collaborations are crucial in order to give ICRANet scientists the
possibility to give courses and lectures in the Universities and, vice versa,
to provide to the Faculty of such Universities the opportunity to spend
research periods in ICRANet institutions.
6) The International Relativistic Astrophysics Ph.D. (IRAP-PhD) program (see Enclosure 6 )
One of the major success of ICRANet has been to participate in the
International competition of the Erasmus Mundus Ph.D. program and the starting
of this program from the 2010 (see Fig. 2). The participating institutions are:
- AEI – Albert Einstein
Institute – Potsdam (Germany)
- Berlin Free University (Germany)
- CBPF – Brazilian Centre
for Physics Research (Brazil)
- ETH Zurich
- Ferrara University (Italy)
- Indian centre for space
physics (India)
- Institut Hautes Etudes
Scientifiques – IHES (France)
- Nice University Sophia
Antipolis (France)
- Observatory of the Côte
d'Azur (France)
- Rome University – “Sapienza” (Italy)
- Savoie University (France)
- Shanghai Astronomical Observatory (China)
- Stockholm University (Sweden)
- Tartu Observatory (Estonia)
The IRAP PHD program intends to create conditions for high level education
in Astrophysics mainly in Europe to create a new generation of leading
scientists in the region. No single university in Europe today has the
expertise required to attain this ambitious goal by itself. For this reason we
have identified universities which offers a very large complementarity
expertise. The students admitted and currently following courses and doing
research in such a program are given in the following:
Third Cycle 2004-07
-Chiappinelli Anna France
-Cianfrani Francesco Italy
-Guida Roberto Italy
-Rotondo Michael Italy
-Vereshchagin Gregory Belarus
-Yegoryan Gegham Armenia
Fourth Cycle 2005-08
-Battisti Marco Valerio Italy
-Dainotti Maria.Giovanna Italy
-Khachatryan Harutyun Armenia
-Lecian Orchidea Maria Italy
-Pizzi Marco Italy
-Pompi Francesca Italy
Fifth Cycle 2006-09
-Caito Letizia Italy
-De Barros Gustavo, Brasil
-Minazzoli Olivier, Switzerland
-Patricelli Barbara, Italy
-Rangel Lemos Luis Juracy, Brasil
-Rueda Hernandez Jorge Armando Colombia
Sixth Cycle 2007-2010
-Ferroni Valerio Italy
-Izzo Luca Italy
-Kanaan Chadia Lebanon
-Pugliese Daniela Italy
-Siutsou Ivan Belarus
-Sigismondi Costantino Italy
Seventh Cycle 2008-2011
-Belvedere Riccardo Italy
-Ceccobello Chiara Italy
-Ferrara Walter Italy
-Ferrari Francesca Italy
-Han Wenbiao China
-Luongo Orlando Italy
-Pandolfi Stefania Italy
-Taj Safia Pakistan
Eight Cycle 2009-2012
-Boshkayev Kuantay Kazakhstan
-Bravetti Alessandro Italy
-Ejlli Damian Albanian
-Fermani Paolo Italian
-Haney Maria German
-Menegoni Eloisa Italy
-Sahakyan Narek Armenia
-Saini Sahil Indian
Ninth Cycle 2010-2013
-Arguelles Carlos Argentina
(including Erasmus -Benetti Micol Italy
Mundus call) -Muccino Marco Italy
-Baranov Andrey Russia
-Benedetti Alberto Italian
-Dutta Parikshit India
-Fleig Philipp Germany
-Gruber Christine Austria
-Liccardo Vincenzo Italy
-Machado De Oliveira Fraga Bernardo Brazil
-Martins De Carvalho Sheyse Brazil
-Penacchioni Ana Virginia Argentina
-Valsan Vineeth India
Tenth Cycle 2011-2014
-Cáceres Uribe, Diego Leonardo Colombia
(including Erasmus-Raponi, Andrea Italy
Mundus call) -Rau, Gioia Italy
-Wang, Yu China
-Begue, Damien France
-Dereli, Husne Turkey
-Gregoris, Daniele Italy
-Iyyani, Shabnam Syamsunder India
-Pereira, Jonas Pedro Brazil
-Pisani, Giovanni Italy
-Rakshit, Suvendu India
-Sversut Arsioli, Bruno Brazil
-Wu, Yuanbin China
Eleventh Cycle 2012-2015
-Barbarino, Cristina Italy
(including Erasmus -Bardho, Onelda Albania
Mundus call) -Cipolletta, Federico Italy
-Enderli, Maxime France
-Filina, Anastasia Russia
-Galstyan, Irina Armenia
-Gomes De Oliveira, Fernp
margin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-align: justify; line-height: normalanda Brazil
-Khorrami, Zeinab Iran
-Ludwig, Hendrik Germany
-Sawant, Disha India
-Strobel, Eckhard Germany
We enclose the Posters of the IRAP-PhD for all the above cycles.
7) The Erasmus Mundus Ph.D.
program (see
Enclosure 7 )
Each student admitted to the Erasmus Mundus program of the IRAP Ph.D. will
be part of a team inside one of the laboratories of the consortium. Each year
they will have the opportunity to visit the other laboratories of the
consortium and enlighten themselves with new topics in the forefront research
from world leading experts. In this way the students will come in direct
contact with some of the leading scientists in the world working in General
Relativity, Relativistic Astrophysics and in Quantum Field Theory. In addition
to the theoretical centers, we associate experimental and observational center
as well. This will provide an opportunity to the Ph.D students to obtain a
complete education in theoretical relativistic astrophysics and also an
experience on how to carry out a specific astrophysical mission.
All the institutions participating in IRAP PhD have an extensive experience
in international collaborations including visiting professors, post-doctoral
researchers and training of Ph.D. students. All of our partners have enrolled
Ph.D. students inside their laboratories in various aspects of astrophysics.
8) Project for the ICRANet
Center at Casino de Urca (see
Enclosure 8 )
We have followed the architectural project for the ICRANet Center at the
Casino de Urca in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
9) Adhesion of South Korea to
ICRANet
We have started the procedure for the adhesion of South Korea to ICRANet,
with a Seat at the EWHA University in Seoul.
10) Lines of research
We turn now to the research activity of ICRANet, which by Statute addresses
the developments of research in Astrophysics in the theoretical framework of
Albert Einstein’s theories of special and general relativity. Thanks to an
unprecedented developments of observational techniques from the ground, from
Space, and even in underground experiments in astroparticle physics, we are
today capturing signals never before conceived and received in all the history
of homo sapiens. The Einstein theory of relativity, for many years relegated to
the boundaries of physics and mathematics, has become today the authentic
conceptual and theoretical “backbone” of this exponentially growing field of
relativistic astrophysics.
In the Report of 2009, as a testimonial of this developments, I enclosed
the paper “The Ergosphere and Dyadosphere of Black Holes” which has appeared in
“The Kerr spacetime”, edfont-size: 10pt; font-family: ited by David L. Wiltshire, Matt Visser and Susan M.
Scott (Cambridge University Press, 2009). In it, I traced the exciting
developments, which started with the understanding on the nuclear evolutions of
stars, and had then led to the discovery of neutron stars, and through the
splendid work of Riccardo Giacconi and colleagues, to the first identification
of a black hole in our galaxy. I also enclosed the paper “Moments with Yakov
Borisovich Zeldovich” (appeared in the Proceedings of the International
Conference “The Sun, the Stars, the Universe, and General Relativity” in honor
of Ya.B. Zeldovich's 95th Anniversary, Editors R. Ruffini and G.V.
Vereshchagin, AIP Conference Proceedings, Vol. 1205 (2010) p. 1-10), recalling
some of the crucial moments in the developments of relativistic astrophysics in
Soviet Union around the historical figure of Ya.B. Zeldovich. I recalled how
the initial activities of ICRANet were guided by three major scientific
components (see Fig. 3), which have indeed seen, in recent times, further
important developments:
1. The knowledge made possible by general relativity and especially by the
Kerr solution and its electrodynamical generalization in the Kerr-Newman black
hole (see e.g. the recent development of the dyadotorus concept, Fig. 4).
2. The great knowledge gained in relativistic quantum field theories
originating from particle accelerators, colliders and nuclear reactors from
laboratories distributed worldwide (see e.g. the recent developments at CERN,
Fig. 5).
3.
The splendid facilities orbiting in space, from the Chandra to the XMM, to
the Swift and Fermi missions as well as many other satellites, the VLT and Keck
telescopes on the ground, as well as the radio telescope arrays offer us the
possibility, for the first time, of the observations of the most transient and
energetic sources in the universe: the Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) (see e.g. the
recent developments thanks to additional scientific missions, Fig. 6).
In the 2009 report I have shown that, thanks to
a fortunate number of events and conceptual and scientific resonances, a marked
evolution of these topics had occurred. New fields of research had sprouted up
from the previous ones at the ICRANet Center in Pescara, at ICRA in Rome and at
the other Member Institutions. The synergy created by the theoretical
developments and the new astrophysical observations had stimulated novel and
important results in a vast range of theoretical topics (see Fig. 7).
The topic about the Kerr-Newman Black Holes
had been sprouting up in three new fields: The Kerr-Newman Black holes (L,
M, Q); The solitonic equations of GR; GR solutions with L, M, Q, X.
Kerr-Newman Black Holes (L, M,
Q): We had and we have the opportunity of the
presence in Pescara of Prof. Roy Kerr as ICRANet Adjunct Professor and
discussed the fundamental issues of the uniqueness of the Kerr-Newman Black
Hole. A distinct progress in this collaboration has appeared in the paper by D.
Bini, A. Geralico, R. Kerr, “The Kerr-Shild ansatz revised”, International
Journal of Geometric Methods in Modern Physics (IJGMMP) 7 (2010), 693-703.
The solitonic equations of GR: An alternative derivation of the Kerr solution
had been advanced in a classical paper of 1978 by V. Belinski and V. Zakharov
using inverse scattering method. The generalization of this method to the
presence of electromagnetic field was constructed in 1980 by G. Alekseev and
Kerr-Newman solution has been derived by him in analogous way at the same year.
Prof. V. Belinski is now an ICRANet Faculty Member and has further developed
this research with the effective collaboration of Prof. G. Alekseev which is an
ICRANet Lecturer. This activity was presented at the 12th Marcel
Grossmann Meeting and at number of other conferences and has reached a new
maturity.
GR solutions with L, M, Q, X: The unsolved problem of a physical solution in
general relativity of an astrophysical object which must be characterized
necessarily by four parameters, mass, charge, angular momentum and quadrupole
moment, has also been debated for years and it is yet not satisfactorily
solved. The presence of ICRANet of Prof. Quevedo as an Adjunct Professor has
shown an important result published by Bini, Geralico, Longo, Quevedo [Class.
Quant. Grav., 26 (2009), 225006]. This result has been obtained for the special
case of a Mashhooon-Quevedo solution characterized only by mass, angular
momentum and quadrupole moment. It has been shown that indeed such a
Mashhoon-Quevedo solution can be matched to an internal solution solved in the
post-Newtonian approximation by Hartle and Thorne for a rotating star.
Similarly, the Gamma-Ray Bursts topic had
been sprouting up two additional new fields: Ultra high energy sources
and Supernovae.
Gamma-Ray Bursts: The research on GRBs in ICRANet is wide and has
been participated by many Members of the Faculty and of the Adjunct Faculty, as
well as by many Lecturers, Research Scientists and graduate students.
Traditionally, GRBs are divided into two classes, “short” GRBs and “long” GRBs,
arranged in a bimodal distribution with a separation around a duration of 2s.
In 2001 we proposed that both short and long GRBs are created by the same
process of gravitational collapse to a black hole. The energy source is the e+e-plasma
created in the process of the black hole formation. The two parameters
characterizing the GRB are the total energy Ee±tot of
such an e+e-plasma and its baryon loading B defined as
B=MBc2/Ee±tot, where MB
is the mass of the baryon loading. The e+e-plasma evolves
as a self-accelerating optically thick fireshell up to when it become
transparent, hence we refer to our theoretical model as the “fireshell model”.
We have defined a “canonical GRB” light curve with two sharply different
components. The first one is the Proper-GRB (P-GRB), which is emitted when the
optically thick fireshell becomes transparent and consequently has a very well
defined time scale determined by the transparency condition. The second
component is the emission due to the collision between the accelerated baryonic
matter and the CircumBurst Medium (CBM). This comprises what is usually called
the “afterglow”. The relative energetics of the two components is a function of
B. For B < 10-5 the GRB is “P-GRB dominated”, since the P-GRB is
energetically dominant over the second component. The contrary is true for B
larger than such a critical value. Since 2001 it has been a major point of our
theoretical model that the long GRBs are simply identified with the peak of
this second component. As such, they don’t have an intrinsic time scale: their
duration is just a function of the instrumental noise threshold. This
prediction has been strongly supported by the observations of Swift and now of
Fermi and Agile satellites. It is now clear, therefore, that the duration
usually quoted as characterizing the so-called long GRB class is not related to
intrinsic properties of the source but it only depends on the instrumental
noise threshold. This is quite different from the case of the short GRBs. In
the last year report we have strengthen our aim to identify different families
of GRBs originating from different precursors.
Ultra high energy sources: This additional topic was motivated by the
interaction with Brian Punsly and was well documented in his volume “Black hole
gravitohydromagnetics” (Springer) as well as in the joining of ICRANet by Prof.
Felix Aharonian as representative of Armenia in the Scientific Committee and by
his appointment as the Adjunct Professor of ICRANet. Many of the observational
work done by Prof. Aharonian are crucial for the theoretical understanding of
the ultra high energy sources. Prof. Aharonian started also his collaboration
with the IRAP PhD program where he is following the thesis of graduate students
as thesis advisor.
Supernovae: GRBs have broaden the existing problematic of
the study of Supernovae. In some models, e.g. the “collapsar” one, all GRBs are
assumed to originate from supernovae. Within our approach, we assume that
core-collapse supernovae can only lead to neutron stars, and we also assume
that GRBs are exclusively generated in the collapse to a black hole. Within
this framework, supernovae and GRBs do necessarily originate in a binary system
composed by an evolved main sequence star and a neutron star. The concept of induced
gravitational collapse leads to the temporal coincidence between the
transition from the neutron star to the black hole and the concurrent
transition of the late evolved star into a supernova. Support to our model was
given in last year report by GRB 0606014. The above mentioned binary systems
are expected to be by far the most frequent, but they are the less energetics
and they are observable only up to redshifts z < 0.5. We gave reason
in the lat year report that the most energetic GRBs do originate from the
merging of binary systems formed by two neutron stars or a neutron star and a
white dwarf, not giving rise to a supernova. This very wide topic has been
promoted by the collaboration with Prof. Massimo Della Valle, who is an Adjunct
Professor at ICRANet. This kind of research is particularly important for
trying to find a coincidence between electromagnetic radiation, high-energy
particles, ultra high-energy cosmic rays and gravitational radiation, possible
observable for existing or future detectors.
Similarly, the Relativistic Quantum Field
Theory topic has been sprouting up two additional new fields: “Von
Kerner Zum Sterner” and Plasma Thermalization.
“Von Kerner Zum Sterner”: A
multi-year study in ICRA and ICRANet has been devoted to the relativistic
Thomas-Fermi equations. The early work was directed to the analysis of
superheavy nuclei. In the last years, a special attention has been given to
formulate a unified approach which, on one side, describes the superheavy
nuclei and, on the other, what we have called “Massive Nuclear Cores”. These
last ones are systems of about 1057 nucleons, kept together in beta
equilibrium and at nuclear density due to the effect of self gravity. The most
surprising result has been that the analytic treatment used by Prof. Popov and
his group in their classical work on superheavy nuclei can be scaled to the
Massive Nuclear Core regime in presence of gravity. The consequences of this is
that an electric field close to the critical value Ec = me2c3/(eh)can be found on the surface layer of such Massive
Nuclear Cores. This fortunate result has triggered a great interest and has
opened what it can be considered a new approach to the electrodynamics of
neutron stars within ICRANet.
Relativistic Quantum Field
Theory: A major effort in the last
years has been to review the electron-positron creation and annihilation
processes in physics and astrophysics. Particularly in the paper by Ruffini,
Vereshchagin, Xue [Phys. Rep. 487 (2010) 1-140] there are reviewed the
conceptual developments which led Dirac to describe the system e+e-
®2g, Breit Wheeler to describe
the system 2g ®e+e- and the classical papers of Sauter, Euler, Heisenberg and Schwinger to the
analysis of vacuum polarization and pair creation in an overcritical electric
field Ec = me2c3/(eh). In addition three ultrarelativistic processes have been in depth
reviewed. They deal with (1) the vacuum polarization process in the field of a
Kerr-Newman black hole; (2) the feedback of the electron-positron pair creation
on the overcritical electric field; and (3) the thermalization process of the
created e+e-plasma. This reports, with more than
500 references, gives the background necessary to initiate the study of the
quantum field theory description of the electrodynamical approach in the
process of gravitational collapse.
Plasma thermalization: The physics of electron-positron plasma has
appeared to be relevant for GRBs, but also for the Early Universe, in
laboratory experiments with ultraintense lasers etc. We study both
nonequilibrium effects such as thermalization and associated timescales, as
well as dynamical effects such as accelerated expansion in the optically thick
regime. Relativistic numerical codes are designed and widely implemented in
this research. The basic outcomes include: determination from the first
principles of relaxation timescales of optically thick electron-positron plasma
with baryonic loading in the wide range of plasma parameters; conclusion that
deviations from a simple "frozen radial profile" in spatial distributions
of energy and matter densities of expanding electron-positron plasma with
baryonic loading are possible. The last conclusion imply in particular the
possibility to recover the spatial distribution of matter and energy in the
process of collapse of a GRB progenitor to a black hole.
Out of these developments twelve scientific
presentation were presented in the last meeting of the Scientific Committee. In
Fig. 8 there are presented in blue the topics of selected oral presentations to
the Scientific Committee on December 14th–15th, 2009.
In 2010 report all the topics have further
developed and strengthened and additional topics have sprouted, as it is shown
in Fig. 9a, where the projection of these researches are represented. This has
led to a deeper understanding of the initial field of research, but has led as
well to a wider number of fundamental topics covered by the scientific programs
developed at ICRANet.
In the 2011 report and in this 2012 report I
report the consolidation of this program, also thanks to the involvement of all
the IRAP-PhD students (see Fig. 9b). I will review here just a few topics,
which will also be presented in the oral contributions of this Scientific
Meeting.
The topic of BKL cosmology is one of the
most important and classical contributions of Einstein theory to the study of
cosmology. This classic work, developed by Belinski, Kalatnikov and Lifshitz,
has already been reviewed in all the major treaties on general relativity, but
only recently a new insight has come from the impressive discoveries made by
Thibault Damour at the IHES in Paris, by Prof. Mark Henneaux at the University
of Bruxelles, and by Herman Nicolai at the Albert Einstein Institute in
Potsdam, on the way to generalize the BKL theory of cosmological singularity to
the string theories. The new results can be of essential importance for
understanding the problem of cosmological singularity and for the
identification of hidden internal symmetries in fundamental physics. Prof.
Belinski has already finished his part of a new book on “Cosmological
singularities” which will written in co-authorship with Prof. Damour. The book
has planned to be published by Cambridge University Press. A shortened and
adapted version of this book has already been presented in the AIP conference proceedings
of XIV Brazilian School of Cosmology and Gravitation (V. Belinski “On the
Singularity Phenomenon in Cosmology”, in: Chapter 2, Cosmology and Gravitation:
XIV Brazilian School of Cosmology and Gravitation, Cambridge Scientific
Publishers, 2011). Three graduate students of the IRAP PhD program are actually
working on this topic for their theses with Profs. Hagen Kleinert and Hermann
Nicolai in Berlin (Dutta, Fleig, and Gruber).
On a different topic, during the last year the
solitonic solutions of GR has received new interest in respect of the exact
solutions of Einstein and Einstein-Maxwell equations: a) The old problem
how to generate the exact stationary axisymmetric solutions corresponding to
the charged masses with horizons in the framework of Inverse Scattering Method
(ISM) was investigated. It was shown that applicability of the ISM in presence
of electromagnetic field is not restricted only to the cases with naked
singularities (as it have been erroneously stated by some authors). In fact solutions
of Einstein-Maxwell equations with horizon also follows from ISM and they are
of the same solitonic character. The mathematical procedure of analytical
continuations of the naked-singularity solitonic solutions in the space of
their parameters which procedure results in solitonic solutions with horizon
has been described (G. Alekseev and V. Belinski “Soliton Nature of Equilibrium
State of Two Charged Masses in General Relativity”, arXiv:gr-qc/1103.0582,
IJMP(D) in press, 2011); b) It was found the new way of derivation of the Kerr
solution by adding to the Schwarzchild black hole the solitonic vortex made
from the pure gravitational field. With this method, one can figure out how
rotational energy can contribute to the mass of the resulting Kerr black hole.
Also the relation of the Hanson-Regge type between the mass and angular
momentum of a Kerr black hole has been established and its connection with the
Christodoulou-Ruffini concept of irreducible mass was analyzed (V. Belinski and
H. W. Lee “Kerr rotation as solitonic whirl around Schwarzschild black hole”,
Nuovo Cimento, submitted, 2011). The report is on Page 1 .
The report on Gamma-Ray Bursts starts on
page 15 . Major progresses have been accomplished this years in the
following aspects: 1) We evidenced a broadening of the spectral energy
distribution within the fireshell model for highly energetic GRBs (~1053-1054
ergs). 2) We identified a new family of very energetic sources (GRB 080319B and
GRB 050904); both these sources are at an energy of 1054 ergs and
they offer unprecedented opportunities since one is located at z ~ 1 and
the other at z ~ 6.3: the nearby source allow a most significant
high-quality data on very short time scale which has allowed to reach a deeper
understanding of the instantaneous spectrum vs. the average one. Both of them
appear to originate from a collapse of a black hole of 10 solar masses. Still
members of this family appears to be GRB 090423 at z ~ 8. New outlook
has been brought to this field by the Fermi and AGILE satellites and the very
exciting preliminary results have been obtained on GRB 080916C and GRB 090902B.
3) We analyzed the P-GRB observed spectra. Particularly exciting is the new
possibility of having components yet to be observed in GRB sources. In fact, we
have shown that it is not possible to interpret GRB 090618 and GRB 101023
within the framework of the traditional single component GRB model. We argue
that the observation of the first episode of duration of around 50s could not
be a part of a canonical GRB, while the residual emission could be modeled
easily with the models existing in literature. This led to the definition of
the novel concept of “proto-black hole emission”. 4) Thanks to this new
understanding, we studied the X-ray emission shown by GRBs associated to SNe as
due to the newly born neutron star, introducing the concept of the “neo neutron
stars” and further developing the Induced Gravitational Collapse (IGC)
scenario. 5) We identified the first example of genuine short GRBs. 6) The new
developments of the IGC scenario led us to explore the possibility to introduce
a new redshift estimator for members of the subclass of IGC-GRBs (see Figs.
10-18). Particularly interesting is also the possible collaboration with
Brazil on space projects (see the report on page 493 ).
|
|
Figure 10:A candidate Genuine Short GRB
|
Figure 11:Spectrum of the genuine short
|
|
|
Figure 12: GRB 090618 light curve
|
Figure 13: GRB 101023 light curve |
|
|
Figure 14: Temperature evolution in Episode 1 of
GRB 090618
|
Figure 15: Radius evolution in Episode 1 of GRB
090618
|
|
|
Figure 16: Comparison between X-Ray afterglows of GRB 090618 at z = 0.54 and GRB101023 for selected z values. |
Figure 17: Comparison between X-Rayafterglows of GRB 090618 at z = 0.54 and GRB101023 assuming z = 0.9 |
|
|
|
Figure 18: Arnett and Meakin 2D computations of core collapse. |
In the report “Relativistic effects in
Physics and Astrophysics” (see page 431 ) it is studied the distribution of
the GRB bolometric luminosity over the EQTSs, with special attention to the
prompt emission phase. We analyze as well the temporal evolution of the EQTS
apparent size in the sky. We use the analytic solutions of the equations of
motion of the fireshell and the corresponding analytic expressions of the EQTSs
which have been presented in recent works and which are valid for both the
fully radiative and the adiabatic dynamics. We find the novel result that at
the beginning of the prompt emission the most luminous regions of the EQTSs are
the ones closest to the line of sight. On the contrary, in the late prompt
emission and in the early afterglow phases the most luminous EQTS regions are
the ones closest to the boundary of the visible region (see Fig. 19). We find
as well an expression for the apparent radius of the EQTS in the sky, valid in
both the fully radiative and the adiabatic regimes. Such considerations are
essential for the theoretical interpretation of the prompt emission phase of
GRBs.
The collaboration on Supernovae is mainly
centered from almost daily scientific contact with Prof. Massimo Della Valle,
who is currently PI of a VLT proposal “/span
A spectroscopic study of the
supernova/GRB connection”. A short summary of the internationally well-known
activities of Prof. Della Valle, who is an Adjunct Professor at ICRANet, is
given in the report on page 1795 , which contains the many publications
in international journals. Prof. Della Valle is also very active following one
graduate student of the IRAP PhD program.
Figure 19: Evolution of luminosity over the EQTSs
The Report on “Cosmology and Large Scale
Structures” on page 497 manifests the progress made by the ICRANet group at
the University of Arizona. It deals with three different topics. A.
Turbulence behavior of cosmic baryon gas. With hydrodynamic simulation
sample of the LCDM universe produced by the WENO algorithm, we show that the intermittency
of the velocity field of cosmic baryon fluid at redshift z=0 in the
scale range from the Jeans length to about 16h-1 Mpc can be
extremely well described by the She-Lévĕque's scaling formula, which is used to
describe a fully developed turbulence. We also found that the non-Gaussian
features of the cosmic baryon fluid and Ly-a transmitted flux of quasar
absorption spectrum can be well described by a log-Poisson hierarchy. B.
Wouthuysen-Field coupling. With a state-of-the-art numerical method, we
show that the resonant scattering of Ly-a photons with neutral hydrogen
atoms will lock the color temperature of the photon spectrum around the Ly-a frequency to be equal to the
kinetic temperature of hydrogen gas. The time scales of the onset of
Wouthuysen-Field coupling, the profile of frequency distribution of photons in
the state of local thermal equilibrium, the effects of the expansion of the
universe on the Wouthuysen-Field coupling in a optical thick halos have also
been found. These results are essential for studying the 21 cm signal from high
redshift sources. C. Time-dependent behavior of Lya photon transfer. Lya photons have been widely
applied to study cosmological problems in high redshifts. Since the time scales
of high redshift sources, such as GRBs, generally are short, time-dependent
solutions of Lya photon transfer becomes serious. However, no reliable numerical solvers of
the time-dependent problem of radiative transfer equation with resonant
scattering have been developed till 2006. The time-dependent solver (Meiksin,
MN, 370, (2006), 2025-2037) still cannot pass the test of analytical solutions
(Field, ApJ, 129, (1959), 551). The solver based on the WENO scheme has been
established. It can very well pass various tests (Roy et al ApJ, 716, 2010,
604). It reveals many interesting features of the time evolution of resonant
photons Lya in optical thick medium. It provides the solutions of studying the
time-dependent effect of resonant scattering on the profile of red damping wing
of GRBs. It is crucial to understand the halos of GRBs.
The Report “Theoretical Astroparticle
Physics” on page 547 represents the summary of activities during the last
year on this topic by the group including: Carlo Luciano Bianco, Massimiliano
Lattanzi, Remo Ruffini, Gregory Vereshchagin, She-Sheng Xue. Students working
within the group include: Micol Benetti, Alberto Benedetti, Damien Begue,
Eloisa Menegoni, Stefania Pandolfi, Ivan Siutsou. Astroparticle physics is a
new field of research emerging at the intersection of particle physics,
astrophysics and cosmology. We focused on several topics with three major
directions of research: a) electron-positron plasma, b) photospheric emission
from ultrarelativistic outflows, c) correlation dynamics in cosmology, d)
neutrinos and large scale structure formation in cosmology, e) semidegenerate
self-gravitating systems of fermions as a model for dark matter halos and f)
constraining cosmological models with CMB observations.
Electron-positron plasma appear relevant for GRBs and
also for the Early Universe, in laboratory experiments with ultraintense
lasers, etc. We study nonequilibrium effects such as thermalization and
associated timescales, dynamical effects such as accelerated expansion in the
optically thick regime and the photospheric emission from relativistic plasma.
Relativistic kinetic and hydrodynamic numerical codes are designed and widely implemented
in this research. We examine the quantum corrections to the collision integrals
and determine the timescales of relaxation towards thermal equilibrium for high
temperature electron-positron-photon plasma. Since in such case the
characteristic timescales of two-body and three-body interactions are no longer
different, the collision integrals for three-particle interactions have to be
computed directly from the QED matrix elements, similar to the two-body
interactions. We point out that unlike classical Boltzmann equation for binary
interactions such as scattering, more general interactions are typically
described by four collision integrals for each particle that appears both among
incoming and outgoing particles (A.G. Aksenov, R. Ruffini. I.A. Siutsou and
G.V. Vereshchagin, “Bose enhancement and Pauli blocking in the pair plasma”, in
preparation). These results extend the previous results obtained in A.G.
Aksenov, R. Ruffini and G.V. Vereshchagin, Physical Review D, Vol. 79 (2009)
043008; Physical Review Letters, Vol. 99 (2007) No 12, 125003, and oral report
on this topic will be made by I.A. Siutsou. Using relativistic Boltzmann
equations we study microphysical interactions and photon emission from
optically thick relativistic electron-positron plasma initially
energy-dominated and confined to a spherical region. Due to numerical
limitations we cannot consider very high optical depths relevant for GRBs.
However we may follow the process of self acceleration and formation of the
shell which reaches mildly relativistic bulk velocity of expansion before it
becomes transparent for radiation, similarly to electron-positron plasma in GRB
sources. We follow dynamical evolution of particle number density, optical
depth, hydrodynamic velocity, luminosity and spectra. We find unexpectedly that
the spectrum of emission near its peak is different from pure thermal one, and
contains more power in the low energy part of the spectrum (A.G. Aksenov, R.
Ruffini. I.A. Siutsou and G.V. Vereshchagin, “Dynamics and emission ofmildly
relativistic plasma”, to appear in proceedings of the 2nd Galileo-XuGuangqi
meeting, 12-17 July 2010, Hanbury Gardens, Ventimiglia, Italy). The oral report
on this topic will be made by G.V. Vereshchagin. We investigate the behavior of
the electron-positron pairs created by a strong electric field. This problem
has been studied in our previous work (A. Benedetti, W.-B. Han, R. Ruffini and
G.V. Vereshchagin, Physics Letters B, Vol. 698 (2011) 75-79.) using simple
formalism based on continuity and energy-momentum conservation equations. Now
we extend that work using the more general kinetic approach (A.G. Aksenov, R.
Ruffini and G.V. Vereshchagin, Physical Review D, Vol. 79 (2009) 043008). It
allows us to obtain some new results. Simultaneous creation and acceleration of
electron-positron pairs in an external electric field creates a peculiar
distribution of pairs in momentum space. After few oscillations this
distribution relaxes to a certain equilibrium which may be characterized by two
“temperatures”: orthogonal and parallel to the direction of electric field. The
orthogonal temperature is much smaller than the parallel one. The internal
energy intrinsic to this peculiar distribution of pairs in the momentum space
after few oscillations dominates the energy budget of the system, thus damping
oscillations significantly, compared to the simple above mentioned treatment.
The effects of interactions with photons are also under investigation (A.
Benedetti, R. Ruffini and G.V. Vereshchagin, “Evolution of the pair plasma
generated by a strong electric field”, in preparation). The oral report on this
topic will be made by A. Benedetti. We consider analogies and differences of
physical conditions of electron-positron plasma in GRBs and in cosmology. In
particular, we derive the basic conservation equations which are valid for
electron-positron plasma both in GRBs and in the early Universe. We show that
the range of number densities and temperatures for both cases are similar, and
consequently nuclear reprocessing should take place in GRB sources, similarly
to the cosmological nucleosynthesis. Finally, we obtain the lower limit on the
temperature in GRB plasma before it reaches the transparency condition. This
lower limit turns out to be extremely insensitive to the basic parameters and
initial conditions, being always higher than the ionization potential of
hydrogen. It implies that hydrogen recombination does not occur in GRB plasma,
unlike the early Universe (R. Ruffini and G.V. Vereshchagin, ”Electron-positron
plasma in GRBs and in cosmology”, in preparation (2011)). The oral report on
this topic will be made by G.V. Vereshchagin.
We study the photospheric emission from
ultrarelativistic outflows, focusing on dynamics of photospheres and
relativistic effects (see Figs. 20-21). It is our main finding that the
photospheric emission appears non thermal, and may be described by the Band
function well known in the GRB literature, when time integrated spectra are
analyzed. We also find that only time integrated spectra may be observed from
energetic GRBs (R. Ruffni, I. A. Siutsou and G. V. Vereshchagin, “Theory of
photospheric emission from relativistic outflows”, submitted to the
Astrophysical Journal (2011)). The oral report on this topic will be made by
G.V. Vereshchagin.In the framework of cosmology two fundamental
processes are known to occur in a self-gravitating system of collisionless
massive particles: gravitational instability and violent relaxation. A new
analytic approach is aimed in describing these two apparently distinct
phenomena as different manifestations of essentially the same physical process:
gravitational structure formation. Thisapproach is based on application of two
averaging schemes: spatial averaging and coarse-graining. A master equation for
spatially averaged coarse grained distribution function of dark matter is
constructed and its limiting cases are analyzed. Discussion of the related
works, such as the recent work of J. Einasto et al., (A&A, 531, A75, 2011)
discussing phase synchronization in the large scale structure is presented (R.
Ruffini and G.V. Vereshchagin and R. Zalaletdinov, ”Correlation dynamics in
cosmology”, in preparation (2011)). The oral report on this topic will be made
by G.V. Vereshchagin. We show how the distribution of Dark Matter (DM) in
galaxies can be explained within a model based on a semidegenerate
self-gravitating system of fermions in General Relativity. We reproduce the
observed properties of galaxies as the core, the halo, as well as the
flattening of the rotation curves. In order to account for the evaporation
phenomena (the escape velocity) we introduced a cut-off in the fermion momentum
space. The model provides physical interpretation of phenomenological
pseudo-isothermal sphere and Burkert DM profiles. It is consistent with a mass
of the DM particle of the order of 14 KeV, compatible with a possible sterile
neutrino interpretation. The oral report on this topic will be made by I.A.
Siutsou.
Figure 20: Evolution of the photospheric EQTS and the light curve of photospheric emission (thick red curve) from the photon thin coasting outflow. Observed temperature of photospheric emission is illustrated by color, see legend.
Figure 21: Evolution of the photospheric EQTS and the light curve of photospheric emission (thick red curve) from the photon thick coasting outflow. Observed temperature of photospheric emission is illustrated by color, see legend.
Constraining cosmological models with Cosmic Microwave Background bservations: Precision measurement of the cosmological observables have led to believe hat we leave in a flat Friedmann Universe, seeded by nearly scale-invariant adiabatic primordial fluctuations. The majority (∼ 70%) of the energy density of the Universe is in the form of a fluid with a cosmological constant-like equation of state (w ∼ −1), dubbed dark energy, that is responsible for the observed acceleration of the Universe. This socalled concordance model is adequately described by just six parameters, namely the baryon density, the cold dark matter density, the Hubble constant, the reionization optical depth, the amplitude and the spectral index of the primordial spectrum of density fluctuations. These parameters are measured to a very high precision. However, even if the concordance model gives a very satisfactory fit of all available data, it is worth to consider extended models and to constraint their parameters. In some cases these extended models simply arise when considering properties that, to a first approximation, can be neglected when interpreting cosmological data. This is the case for parameters like the neutrino mass and the curvature of the Universe. Both are very small and can be put to zero as a first approximation; however, allowing them to vary allows to put useful constraints on their value.C
Cosmology can set bounds on both the active
and sterile neutrino masses, as well as on the number of sterile neutrino
species. Indeed, neutrino oscillation experiments have brought to light the
first departure from the standard model of particle physics, indicating that
neut
span style=text-align: justify; line-height: normalrinos have nonzero masses and opening the possibility for a number of extra
sterile neutrinos. We find that models with two massive sub-eV sterile
neutrinos plus three sub-eV active states are perfectly allowed at the 95% CL by
current cosmic microwave background, galaxy clustering, and Supernova Ia data
(Giusarma et al. Phys. Rev. D., Vol 83 (2011) 115023). This bounds have been
obtained in the context of a ΛCDM cosmology, and other scenarios with a dark
energy component could allow for larger neutrino masses and/or abundances. We
have also shown that big bang nucleosynthesis helium-4 and deuterium abundances
exclude (3+2) models at the 95% CL. However, the extra sterile states do not
necessarily need to feature thermal abundances at decoupling. Their precise
abundances are related to their mixings with the active neutrinos in the early
Universe. Moreover, we have found that future cosmological data like those from
the Planck satellite are expected to measure sub-eV active and sterile neutrino
masses and sterile abundances with 10-30% precision, for sub-eV (0.5 eV> mν >0.1 eV) sterile neutrino
masses (E. Giusarma et al. Phys. Rev. D., Vol 83 (2011) 115023). We have also
shown that the presence of massive sterile neutrinos in the Universe could be
inferred from inconsistencies among the values of H0 obtained from cosmic
microwave and galaxy clustering probes and those arising from independent
measurements of the Hubble constant over the next decade. Comparing
cosmological measurements of the active neutrino mass with those obtained from
tritium beta-decay experiments could also test the validity of the cosmological
assumptions. The oral report on this topic will be made by S. Pandolfi.
In the concordance model, reionization is
assumed to happen instantaneously. Indeed, details of the reionization
processes in the late universe are not very well known and thus a more
realistic description is definetely in order. We have explored the imprints of
general reionization histories on the CMB spectra. Making use of the
parameterization of reionization based on a principal component approach we
have deduced information about tensor modes, and explored how the inflation
constraints are modified when the standard reionization assumption is relaxed
(S. Pandolfi et al, Phys. Rev. D Vol 82 (2010), 123527). The tensor-to-scalar
ratio bounds are largely unmodified under more general reionization scenarios.
Therefore, present (future) primordial gravitational wave searches are (will
be) unaffected by the precise details of reionization processes. Hybrid models,
ruled out in the standard reionization scheme, are still allowed at the 95%
c.l. by WMAP7 data. The constraints on other inflationary models, such as
large-field or small-field models, do not change. With the aim of constraining
the evolution of cosmic reionization, we also have extended the previous work
based on the use of Principal Components analysis (Pandolfi et al., accepted
for publication in Phys. Rev. D). The main novelty of our analysis is
represented on one hand by complementing available CMB data with additional
astrophysical results from quasar absorption line experiments, as the
Gunn-Peterson test and the redshift evolution of Lyman Limit Systems. In
addition, we have for the first time explored the effects of a joint variation
of both the cosmological and astrophysical parameters. We have concluded that
inclusion of astrophysical datasets, allowing to robustly constrain the
reionization history, in the extraction procedure of cosmological parameters
leads to relatively important differences in the final determination of their
values.
There is ample experimental evidence showing
that fundamental couplings run with energy, and many particle physics
and cosmology models suggest that they should also roll with time. In fact,
both the European Space Agency (ESA) and the European Southern Observatory
(ESO) now list varying fundamental constants among their key science drivers
for the next generation of facilities. In particular the presence of a scalar
field at recombination could induce variations in the fine structure constant. While
the effects of a cosmological constant at recombination are completely
negligible, dynamical scalar fields could track the dominant energy component,
be present at the recombination and induce variations in α if coupled to the
electromagnetic sector. Searching for relations in the variations of the fine
structure constant and a non-negligible scalar field at recombination, it is
possible to describe the scalar field with a Early Dark Energy. We have
modified the CAMB code for early dark energy including the variations of the
fine structure constant and, using WMAP-7 years data and HST data, constrained
the variation of aand the coupling between the
scalar field and the electromagnetic sector. Moreover, we have performed a
Fisher matrix analysis in order to assess the future sensitivity to these
parameters from CMB data, in particular from Planck and CMBPol. (E. Calabrese
et al., Phys. Rev. D Vol. 84 (2011) 023518). The oral report on this topic will
be made by E. Menegoni.
Cosmological observations are in excellent
agreement with the inflationary prediction of adiabatic primordial
perturbations with a nearly scale-invariant power spectrum. In its simplest
implementation, inflation is driven by the potential energy of a single scalar
field, the inflaton, slowly rolling down towards a minimum of its potential and
in more general inflationary models, there is the possibility that slow roll is
briefly violated. A violation of slow-roll (due for example to phase
transitions occurring during the slow roll in multi-field inflationary model)
will possibly lead to detectable effects on the cosmological observables, or at
least to the opportunity to constraint these models by the absence of such
effects. In particular, step-like features in the primordial power spectrum
have been shown to lead to characteristic localized oscillations in the power
spectrum of the primordial curvature perturbation. Such oscillations have been
considered as a possible explanation to the “glitches” observed by WMAP in the
temperature anisotropy spectrum of the CMB. We have updated the constraints on
possible features in the primordial inflationary density perturbation spectrum
using the latest data from WMAP7 and ACT Cosmic Microwave Background experiments
(Benetti et al., Phys. Rev. D Vol 84 (2011) 063509). In particular, we have
compared the theoretical predictions of a specific model, i.e., chaotic
inflation, and of a more general phenomenological model to the WMAP7 and ACT
data, in order to find constraints on the parameter describing the model. We
have found that models with features can improve the fit to the WMAP7 data when
the step in the potential is placed in way to produce oscillations in the
region 20 < l < 60, i.e., in correspondence of the WMAP glitches.
Increasing the dataset with ACT data, we found confirmation but not further
evidence for small scales glitches; however, models with too high step are
excluded by the data. We can conclude that models with a step provide a
significantly better fit than standard featureless power-law spectra, even if
there is not a clear statistical evidence in the data for extensions to the
simplest inflationary model. We have also found that forthcoming temperature
and polarization data from Planck will allow to measure the model parameters
with remarkable precision, possibly confirming the glitches presence in the
region 20 < l < 60. The oral report on this topic will be made by M.
Benetti.
The most important metrics in general relativity
is the Kerr-Newman solution which describes the gravitational and
electromagnetic fields of a rotating charged mass, characterized by its mass M,
charge Q and angular momentum L in geometrical units. This solution
characterizes the field of a black hole. For astrophysical purposes, however,
it is necessary to take into account the effects due to the moment of inertia
of the object. To attack this problem, an exact solution of the
Einstein-Maxwell equations have been proposed by Mashhoon and Quevedo which
posses an infinite set of gravitational and electromagnetic multipole moments.
It is not clear, however, how this external solution to an astrophysical object
can be matched to a physical internal solution corresponding to a physically
acceptable rotating mass. The report “Generalization of the Kerr-Newman
solution” on page 805 reports on current progresses in using an explicit
solution of the Hartle-Thorne equation to an eternal solution with N
independent quadrupole moments.
The report on “Cosmology and non linear relativistic
field theories” on page 899 covered a wide range thematic in cosmology and
non linear relativistic field theory studied by Prof. M. Novello and his group.
This include the geometrical description of quantum mechanics where it is shown
that quantum mechanics could be interpreted as a modification of the euclidean
nature of a 3D space into a particular affine space. In this formulation,
deformation of physical distances are in the core of quantum effects allowing a
geometrical formulation of the uncertainty principle. Prof. Novello also
studied the Higgs mechanism without Higgs boson. The purpose of this work is to
show that the gravitational interaction is able to generate mass for all body.
It is extremely important with the LHC experiment which soon will enlight us
about the existing or not of the Higgs particle. A main part of his activity is
related to bouncing cosmology
The report on Black Holes and Quasars
refers to the activity of Prof. Brian Punsly (see page 985 ), who is
actively participating within ICRANet with the publication of his
internationally recognized book on “Black hole gravitohydromagnetics”, the
first and second edition (2010) being published with Springer. In addition,
Prof. Punsly have been interested in observational properties of quasars such
as broad line emission excess in radio loud quasars accentuated for polar line
of sight and excess narrow line widths of broad emission lines in broad
absorption line quasars, showing that this is best explained by polar lines of
sight.
The problem “The electron-positron pairs in
physics and astrophysics: from heavy nuclei to black holes” has been the
subject of a physics reports of more than 500 references, which is inserted on
page 1107 , by Ruffini, Vereshchagin and Xue. There, all the different
aspects of the field has been reviewed: The fundamental contributions to the
electron-positron pair creation and annihilation and the concept of critical
electric field; Nonlinear electrodynamics and rate of pair creation; Pairquot;sans-serifem
production and annihil/strongation in QED; Semi-classical description of pair
production in a general electric field; Phenomenology of electron-positron pair
creation and annihilation; The extraction of blackholic energy from a black
hole by vacuum polarization processes; Plasma oscillations in electric fields;
Thermalization of the mildly relativistic pair plasma. Due to the interaction
of physics and astrophysics we are witnessing in these years a splendid
synthesis of theoretical, experimental and observational results originating
from three fundamental physical processes. They were originally proposed by
Dirac, by Breit and Wheeler and by Sauter, Heisenberg, Euler and Schwinger. For
almost seventy years they have all three been followed by a continued effort of
experimental verification on Earth-based experiments. The Dirac process, e+e-
→ g, has been by far the most
successful. It has obtained extremely accurate experimental verification and
has led as well to an enormous number of new physics in possibly one of the
most fruitful experimental avenues by introduction of storage rings in Frascati
and followed by the largest accelerators worldwide: DESY, SLAC etc. The
Breit-Wheeler process, 2g → e+e-,
although conceptually simple, being the inverse process of the Dirac one, has
been by far one of the most difficult to be verified experimentally. Only
recently, through the technology based on free electron X-ray laser and its
numerous applications in Earth-based experiments, some first indications of its
possible verification have been reached. The vacuum polarization process in
strong electromagnetic field, pioneered by Sauter, Heisenberg, Euler and
Schwinger, introduced the concept of critical electric field. It has been
searched without success for more than forty years by heavy-ion collisions in
many of the leading particle accelerators worldwide. In view of the recent
developments in the free electron lasers, we have invited at ICRANet Prof. John
Madey, the inventor of the free electron lasers, to give a set of lectures (see
enclosure 9 ) and to explore the possibility to have, by focusing the free electron
laser signals, the realization in the laboratory of the Breit-Wheeler process.
Prof. Madey has also accepted the position of Adjunct Professor at ICRANet, and
he is planning a collaboration with us in the forthcoming years.
In the report on page 991 , using the
formula obtained for the rate of pair production in spatially varying external
electric field dynamical equations describing the space and time evolutions of
pair-induced electric charges, currents and fields bounded within a given
spatial region are solved. These results imply the wave propagation of the
pair-induced electric field and wave-transportation of the electromagnetic
energy in the strong field region. Analogously to the electromagnetic radiation
emitted from an alternating electric current, the space and time variations of
pair-induced electric currents and charges emit an electromagnetic radiation.
We show that this radiation has a peculiar energy-spectrum that is clearly
distinguishable from the energy-spectra of the bremsstrahlung radiation,
electron–positron annihilation and other possible background events. This
possibly provides a distinctive way to detect the radiative signatures for the
production and oscillation of electron–positron pairs in ultra-strong electric
fields that can be realized in either ground laboratories or astrophysical
environments. (Wen-Biao Han, Remo Ruffini, She-Sheng Xue “Electron–positron
pair oscillation in spatially inhomogeneous electric fields and radiation”
Physics Letters B 691 (2010) 99). We study the frequency of the plasma
oscillations of electrons-positron pairs created by the vacuum polarization in
an uniform electric field in the range 0.2Ec < E < 10Ec.
We work out one second order ordinary differential equation for the velocity
from which we can recover the plasma oscillation equation as a limiting case
with vanishing E. For this reason, we focus our attention on its evolution in
time studying how this oscillation frequency approaches the plasma frequency.
Also the time scale needed to approach the plasma frequency and the power
spectrum of these oscillations are computed. The spectrum of this dipole
radiation shows a unique line-like feature, as discussed above. The position of
this feature, is determined as a function of the initial value of electric
field strength. (A. Benedetti , W.-B. Han, R. Ruffini, G.V. Vereshchagin, “On
the frequency of oscillations in the pair plasma generated by a strong electric
field”, Physics Letters B6 98 (2011) 75).
The e+e− pairs
generated by the vacuum polarization process around a gravitationally
collapsing charged core are entangled in the electromagnetic field (R. Ruffini,
L. Vitagliano, S.-S. Xue, Phys. Lett. B 573, (2003) 33), and thermalize in an
electron–positron–photon plasma on a time scale ~ 104 tC (R. Ruffini, L. Vitagliano,
S.-S. Xue, Phys. Lett. B 559, (2003) 12). As soon as the thermalization has
occurred, the hydrodynamic expansion of this electrically neutral plasma starts
(R. Ruffini, J. Salmonson, J. Wilson, S.-S. Xue, Astronomy and Astrophysics
Vol. 335 (1999) 334; Vol. 359 (2000) 855). While the temporal evolution of the e+e−gravitationally
collapsing core moves inwards, giving rise to a further amplified supercritical
field, which in turn generates a larger amount of e+e−pairs
leading to a yet higher temperature in the newly formed e+e−g plasma. We study this
theoretically challenging process, which is marked by distinctive and precise
quantum and general relativistic effects, and follow the dynamical phase of the
formation of Dyadosphere and of the asymptotic approach to the horizon by
examining the time varying process at the surface of the gravitationally
collapsing core. We conclude that the core is not discharged or, in other
words, the electric charge of the core is stable against vacuum polarization
and electric field is amplified during the gravitational collapse. As a
consequence, an enormous amount of pairs is left behind the collapsing core and
Dyadosphere (G. Preparata, R. Ruffini, S.-S. Xue, Astronomy and Astrophysics
Vol. 338 (1998) L87) is formed. Recently, we study this pair-production process
in a neutral collapsing core, rather than a charged collapsing core, as
described above. Neutral stellar cores at or over nuclear densities are
described by positive charged baryon cores and negative charged electron gas
since they possess different masses and interactions (equations of state). In
static case, the equilibrium configuration of positive charged baryon cores and
negative charged electron gas described by Thomas-Fermi equation shows an
overcritical electric field on the surface of baryon core. Based on such an initial
configuration and a simplified model of spherically collapsing cores, we
approximately integrate the Einstein-Maxwell equations and the equations for
the particle number and energy-momentum conservations. It is shown that in
gravitational core-collapse, such an electric field dynamically evolves in the
space-time and electron-positron pairs are produced and gravitational energy is
converted to electron-positron energy, leading to the Dyadosphere of
electron-positron pairs. This important result has been submitted to Physics
Review Letter for publication (W. B. Han, R. Ruffini, S.-S. Xue). The oral
report on this topic will be made by S.-S. Xue (see Figs. 22-23).
|
Figure 22: The space and time evolution of the electric field for vp=0.1c |
|
Figure 23: The space and time evolution of the charge-separation for vp=0.1c
|
We turn now to the report From nuclei to
compact stars on page 1407 . This activity has been carried out by a
collaboration between D. Arnett, H. Kleinert, V. Popov, M. Rotondo, J. Rueda,
R. Ruffini and S.-S. Xue. One of the most active field of research has been to
analyze a general approach to Compact Stars like White-Dwarfs and Neutron
Stars, based on the Thomas-Fermi ultrarelativistic equations amply adopted in
the study of superheavy nuclei. The analysis of superheavy nuclei has
historically represented a major field of research, developed by Prof. V. Popov
and Prof. W. Greiner and their schools. In 2007 the ICRANet group found the
welcome result that all the analytic work developed by Prof. V. Popov and the
Russian school can be applied using scaling laws satisfied by the relativistic
Thomas-Fermi equation to the case of nuclear matter cores of stellar
dimensions, if the beta equilibrium condition is properly taken into account.
Since then, a large variety of problems has emerged, which have seen the direct
participation of the above mentioned ICRANet Faculty and Adjunct Faculty staff.
In a set of seven appendixes, they have been presented the recent progresses
made in the intervening years. First, the consideration made for an isolated
core with constant proton density whose boundary has been sharply defined by a
step function. No external forces are exerted. Then when the assumption of a
sharp proton density profile has been relaxed and, consequently, a smooth
surface modeled by a Woods-Saxon-like proton distribution has been introduced.
The analysis of globally neutral and compressed configurations composed by a
relativistic fluid of degenerate neutrons, protons, and electrons in beta equilibrium
has been recently accomplished. It has been generalized the
Feynman-Metropolis-Teller treatment of compressed atoms to relativistic
regimes, and the concept of compressed nuclear matter cores of stellar
dimensions has been introduced. Finally we studied the construction of neutron
star configurations within a fully consistent formulation of the equations of
equilibrium in general relativity and strong interactions, which is being
covered currently in the Ph. D. thesis of D. Pugliese, R. Belvedere and S.
Martins de Carvalho (see Fig. 24). This entire program has been developed in
order to identify the initial boundary conditions for the electrodynamical
process occurring at the onset of gravitational collapse leading to a black
hole. An oral presentation of these topics will be made by J. Rueda.
|
Figure 24: The core-crust transition in a fully general relativistic treatment of a neutron star consideringstrong, weak, electromagnetic and gravitational interactions
|
In parallel to this work on the neutron star,
the introduction of the techniques for solving a compressed atom in a
Wigner-Seitz cell has allowed to give a new approach to the study of degenerate
matter in white dwarfs. This problem presents, still today, open issues of
great interest such as the equilibrium of the electron gas and the associated
nuclear component, taking into account the electromagnetic, the gravitational
and the weak interactions formulated in a correct special and general
relativistic framework. A complete analysis of the properties of such
configurations as a function of the compression can be duly done through the
relativistic generalization of the Feynman-Metropolis-Teller approach. It is
then possible to derive a consistent equation of state for compressed matter
which generalizes both the uniform free-electron fluid approximation, adopted
for instance by Chandrasekhar in his famous treatment of white-dwarfs, and the
well-known work of Salpeter which describes the electrodynamical and
relativistic effects by a sequence of approximations. Apart from taking into
account all possible electromagnetic and special relativistic corrections to
the equation of state of white-dwarf matter, the new equation of state, which
incorporates the beta equilibrium condition, leads to a self-consistent
calculation of the onset for inverse beta-decay of a given nuclear composition
as function of the Fermi energy of electrons or equivalently, as a function of
the density of the system. This important achievement, leads to a
self-consistent calculation of the critical mass of white-dwarfs with heavy
nuclear composition. In addition, the numerical value of the mass, of the
radius, and of the critical mass of white-dwarfs turn to be smaller with
respect to the ones obtained with approximate equations of state. Therefore,
the analysis of compressed atoms following the relativistic
Feynman-Metropolis-Teller treatment has important consequences in the
determination of the mass-radius relation of white dwarfs, leading to the
possibility of a direct confrontation of these results with observations, in
view of the current great interest for the cosmological implications of the
type Ia supernovae. These two topics are leading to the preparation of a new
book with Springer with the title “Von Kerner zum Sterner”.
The generalization of the general relativistic
theory of white dwarfs to the rotating case is part of the thesis work of K.
Boshkayev. The entire family of uniformly rotating stable white dwarfs has been
already obtained by studying the mass-shedding, the inverse b-decay, as well as the
axisymmetric instabilities. The maximum mass and the minimum (maximum) rotation
period (frequency) have been obtained for selected nuclear compositions. These
results are relevant both for the theory of type Ia supernovae as well as for
the recent work of M. Malheiro, J. Rueda and R. Ruffini on the description of
Soft-Gamma-Ray Repeaters (SGRs) and Anomalous X-Ray Pulsars (AXPs) as rotation
powered white dwarfs, following a pioneer idea of M. Morini et al. (1988) and
of B. Paczynski (1990) on the AXP 1E 2259+586. The recent observation of SGR
0418+5729 promises to be an authentic Rosetta Stone, a powerful discriminant
for alternative models of SGRs and AXPs. The loss of rotational energy of a
neutron star cannot explain the X-ray luminosity of SGR 0418+5729, excludquot;Times New Romanp style=ing
the possibility of identifying this source as an ordinary spin-down powered
neutron star. The inferred upper limit of the surface magnetic field of SGR
0418+5729 B < 7.5x1012 G, describing it as a neutron star
within the magnetic braking scenario, is well below the critical magnetic field
Bc=2pm2ec3/(he) ~ 4.4x1013
Gauss, challenging the power mechanism based on magnetic field decay purported
in the magnetar scenario. We have shown that the observed upper limit on the
spin-down rate of SGR 0418+5729 is, instead, perfectly in line with a model
based on a massive fast rotating highly magnetized white dwarf of fiducial mass
M=1.4MSun, radius R=103 km, and
moment of inertia I ~ 1049 g cm2. We have analyzed
the energetics of all SGRs and AXPs including their steady emission, the
glitches and their subsequent outburst activities. It can be then shown that
the occurrence of the glitch, the associated sudden shortening of the period,
as well as the corresponding gain of rotational energy, can be explained by the
release of gravitational energy associated to a sudden contraction and decrease
of the moment of inertia of the white dwarfs, consistent with the conservation
of their angular momentum. The energetics of the steady emission as well as the
one of the outbursts following the glitch can be simply explained in term of
the loss of the rotational energy in view of the moment of inertia of the white
dwarfs, much larger than the one of neutron stars. There is no need here to invoke
the decay of ultrastrong magnetic fields of the magnetar model (see Figs.
25,27).
|
Figure 25: Rotation period derivative versus the rotation period of SGRs and AXPs (red, blue and green). The dashed curves are contours of constant magnetic field, for a model based on white dwarfs.
|
|
Figure 26: Thermal evolution of neo-neutron stars for selected values of the heating source H0=1012, 5x1012, 1015$ erg/g/s and for an initial temperature of the atmosphere T0=8.7x106 K. The observed data represents the X-ray light curve of the GRB-SN.
|
S. Martins de Carvalho is working on the influence of the temperature on
the properties of the core and the crust of the novel globally neutral neutron
star equilibrium configurations. The traditional study of neutron star cooling
has been generally applied to quite old objects as the Crab Pulsar (957 years)
or the Central Compact Object in Cassiopeia A (330 years) with an observed
surface temperature ~ 106 K. However, recent observations of the
late (t=108-109 s) emission of Supernovae
associated to GRBs (GRB-SN) show a distinctive emission in the X-ray regime
consistent with temperatures ~ 107-108 K. Similar
features have been also observed in two Type Ic Supernova SN 2002ap and SN
1994I not associated to GRBs. We have recently advanced the possibility that
such a late (t=108-109 s) X-ray emission observed
in GRB-SN and in isolated SN is associated to a hot neutron star just formed in
the Supernova event, what we have defined as a neo-neutron star. The
major role played by the neutrino emissions from the crust of a neo-neutron
star at the initial stages of the object is illustrated in Fig. 26. We have
shown that the presence of an additional heating source H0 ~
1012-1015 erg/g/s (or H0 ~ 10-6-10-3
MeV/Nucleon/s) in the evolution of the neo-neutron star at early times, is
enough to match the late X-ray emission of the GRB-SN. Particularly interesting
in this respect are the processes of e+e- pair
creation expected to occur in the interface between the core and the crust
during the neutron star formation leading to the appearance of critical fields.
It is also worth to mention that the above numerical value of H0,
is in striking agreement with the heat released from nuclear fusion reactions,
radiative neutron captures and photodisintegrations that take place e.g. in the
early stages of neutron star mergers. All this suggests the exciting
possibility that we are, for the first time, observing a nascent hot neutron
star. This possibility alone warrants further studies on this subject, so we
might obtain a more concrete picture of the thermal evolution of neo-neutron
stars. An oral presentation of these specific results will be made by R.
Negreiros.
|
Figure 27: Glitch in AXPs and SGRs
|
The topic about Symmetries in General
Relativity (the full report is on page 1813 ) has been developed as an
intense collaboration between various research groups. Profs. R.T. Jantzen, L.
Stella (Observatory of Monte Porzio, Rome), O. Semerak (Czech Republic), D.
Bini and Dr. A. Geralico have studied the problem of motion of test particles
in black hole spacetimes, in presence of a superposed radiation field. The
scattering of radiation by the test particles causes a friction-like drag force
which forces particles on certain equilibrium orbits outside the black hole
horizon. This interesting effect, known as Poynting-Robertson effect, has been
deeply investigated in many different contexts: besides the Schwarzschild and
Kerr black hole, novel results have been published for the case of a Vaidya
radiation metric. In the latter case, in fact, one takes the advantages of
having an exact solution of the Einstein’s field equations whose source is a
null field. Among the various consequences we mention that while a unique
equilibrium circular orbit exists if the photon flux has zero angular momentum,
multiple such orbits appear if the photon angular momentum is sufficiently
high. Furthermore other solutions of the Weyl class with cylindrical symmetry
as well as solutions within the class of exact gravitational plane waves and
electromagnetic plane waves have been examined in the context of
Poynting-Robertson like effects obtaining a number of physically relevant
situations. Bini and Geralico have also considered the motion of spinning test
particles in Kerr spacetime in full generality with the aim to study deviations
between the world lines of spinning objects in comparison with those of
geodesic test particles, generalizing some recent works on the same topic where
motion were but constrained on the equatorial plane. Bini, Geralico and Jantzen
have been able to obtain new foliations in spacetimes admitting separable
geodesics. These “separable geodesic action slicing” have been used then to
explore certain geometrical properties of horizon penetrating coordinates in
black hole spacetimes. Other collaborations, again for what concerns the topics
included in symmetries in General Relativity, have been started with Profs. A.
Ortolan (INFN Legnaro, Padova, Italy) and P. Fortini (University of Ferrara,
Italy) to study of the interaction of electromagnetic waves with gravitational
waves, with the gravitational waves considered in the exact theory and not in
its linear approximation.
In collaboration with Campus Bio-Medico in Rome
there are ongoing researches on galactic structures. The Reports “Self
Gravitating Systems, Galactic Structures and Galactic Dynamics” on page 1923
is focused on analytical and numerical methods for the study of classical
self-gravitating fluid/gaseous masses. A series of papers of this group have
been devoted in the past to the generalization of the classical theory of
ellipsoidal figures of equilibrium using virial methods. The research
activities of the group have focused subsequently on functional methods for
obtaining equilibrium solutions for polytropic self-gravitating systems that
rotate and have a non uniform vorticity. The group has recently published a
novel and important result in the context of analogous geometry theory. It is
well known that the wave equation for the perturbations of given a perfect
barotropic and irrotational Newtonian fluid can be rewritten as an “effective
General Relativity”. They have extended this result including the possibility
for the fluid to be self-gravitating. This work opens the path for a new
interpretation of classical white-dwarf theory in terms of curved space-time
techniques. The group has also studied the perturbations of classical
compressible rotating but not gravitating fluids as occurring in generalized
acoustic black holes. It has also analyzed the Analog Gravity formalism at full
nonlinear level through Von Mises’ Wave Equation for irrotational
configurations.
We recall the successful attempt of applying
methodologies developed in Relativistic Astrophysics and Theoretical Physics to
researches in the medicine domain. The Report “Interdisciplinary Complex
Systems” on page 1953 adopts analytical and numerical methods for the study
of problems of nonlinear dynamics focusing on biological systems and using a
theoretical physics approach. It is well established both numerically and
experimentally that nonlinear systems involving diffusion, chemotaxis, and/or
convection mechanisms can generate complicated time-dependent spiral waves, as
in happens in chemical reactions, slime molds, brain and in the heart. Because
this phenomenon is global in Nature and arises also in astrophysics with spiral
galaxies, the goal of this research activity has been to clarify the role of
this universal spiraling pattern. The group has studied numerically the
nonlinear partial differential equations of the theory (Reaction-Diffusion)
using finite element methods. The group has recently published moreover a novel
and important result: an electromechanical model of cardiac tissue, on which
spiral moves and causes the domain to deform in space and time (see Fig. 28).
This model is a real breakthrough in the context of theoretical biophysics,
leading to new scenarios in the context of computational cardiology. In 2011
the group has focused its research on classical hydrodynamics, evaluating the
stress exerted by the fluid on the domain walls and introducing an indicator of
risk for their damage. Such a methodology, named as “three-band decomposition
analysis of wall shear stress in pulsatile flows”, has been immediately applied
to hemodynamical problems which have been numerically integrated (see Fig. 29),
but results promising also for other problems of physical and biological
sciences and for engineering.
|
Figure 28: Electrical activity map of an electro-elastic deformed patch of cardiac-type tissue.
|
|
Figure 29: Turbulent flow structure (specifically the velocity amplitude) in a deformed vessel, obtained by numerical integration through finite elements of the incompressible Navier-Stokes equations. |
The next contribution is the one by Jaan Einasto
of the Tartu Astronomical Observatory. Prof. Einasto has been collaborating in the
previous year intensively within ICRA about the large scale structure of the
Universe and its possible fractal structure. With Prof. Einasto there is also
the collaboration of Prof. G. Hutsi. Since two years Prof. Einasto is an
Adjunct Professor of ICRANet and an active member of the Faculty of the IRAP
PhD. In this role Prof. Einasto has delivered a set of lectures in the months
of February and September 2010 on “The large scale structure of the universe: a
powerful probe for fundamental physics”. This topic was covered with a
quantitative analysis of the distribution of galaxies, on dark matter, on the
cosmological parameters and dark energy. At the moment, Prof. Einasto has been
invited to prepare a book reviewing the status of the dark matter and the large
scale structure of the universe by World scientific. This book is going to
cover the material of the lectures delivered in the IRAP PhD program as well as
an historical perspective between the different approaches to the study of the
dark matter content of the universe in the west and in the former Soviet uniquot;on.
The full report is on page 989 , which is followed by the lecture
delivered at the 12th Marcel Grossmann Meeting in the occasion of
the presentation to him of the Marcel Grossmann award.
An important fundamental research topic is the
investigation of “analogue models of gravity”. Such models have been used to
understand many aspect of gravitational phenomena, in particular the mechanism
of Hawking- and Unruh-Radiation, by studying in supersonic flow nozzles. These
were of great help in dispersing criticism of these radiations based on our
ignorance of the divergences of local quantum field theory at ultrashort
distances. Another important analogy is bases on the relation between
Einstein-Cartan Physics and the theory of defects in solids, worked out in
detail in the textbook by our adjunct faculty members H. Kleinert: <http://users.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/kleinert/?p=booklist&details=1>. This analogy has
recently allowed to understand the equivalence of Einstein's theory of
gravitation with his Teleparallel Theoryfont-size: 10pt; font-family: quot;sans-serif of Gravitation as a result of a novel
gauge symmetry. The first uses only the curvature of spacetime to explain
gravitational forces, while the second uses only torsion. The equivalence
relies on the fact that crystalline defects of rotation and translation (disclinations
and dislocations, respectively) are not independent of each other, but the ones
can be understood as superpositions of the other. Moreover, the analogy has
allowed to set up an infinite family of intermediate theories in which
curvature and torsion appear both <http://klnrt.de/385/385.pdf>. Finally, all geometries
relevant in gravitational physics has been derived from a completely new theory
of multivalued fields <http://www.physik.fu-berlin.de/~kleinert/kleinert/?p=booklist&details=9>.
A volume dedicated to Fermi and Astrophysics has
been edited in the recent years and has been finally completed (“Fermi and Astrophysics”,
edited by D. Boccaletti and R. Ruffini, World Scientific, 2011). This book has
some different goals: 1) to present some papers which were published at ICRA in
the occasion of the centenary of the birth of Enrico Fermi; 2) to translate
into English a set of papers by Fermi which were available only in Italian; 3)
to try to understand the reason why, having been one of the greatest experts on
Einstein theory in the earliest years of his life, after his transfer to Rome
and later on to the United States Fermi never published anything on Einstein
theory. In the latest part of his life Fermi realized that astrophysics offers
a great future to physics. The only paper by Fermi mastering general relativity
and cosmology was to prove George Gamow work being wrong. On the contrary, he
managed in matter of fact to give one of the greatest contribution to cosmology
and to Gamow theory and to Einstein theory of general relativity.
Other books which are currently in preparation
are:
1. J. Einasto, “Dark Matter and
Large Scale Structure Story”, World Scientific, expected in 2013.
2. M. Rotondo, J. Rueda and R.
Ruffini, “White Dwarfs”, World Scientific, expected in 2013.
3. J. Rueda and R. Ruffini,
“Neutron Stars”, Springer, expected in 2013.
4. R. Ruffini, G.V. Vereshchagin
and S.-S. Xue, “Oscillations and radiation from electron-positron plasma”,
World Scientific, expected in 2013.
5. V. Belinski and E.
Verdaguer, “Gravitational Solitons”, Secomargin-bottom: 0.0001pt; text-align: justify; line-height: normalnd Edition, Cambridge University
Press, expected in 2013.
6. V. Belinski, “Cosmological
Singularity”, Cambridge University Press, expected in 2013.
7. D. Bini, S. Filippi and R.
Ruffini, “Rotating Physical Solutions”, Springer, expected in 2013.
8. C.L. Bianco, L. Izzo, R.
Ruffini and S.-S. Xue, “The Canonical GRBs”, World Scientific, expected in
2013.
9. H.C. Ohanian, R. Ruffini,
“Gravitation and Spacetime”, Third Edition, Norton and Company, expected in
2013.
Finally, there will be an oral presentation by
Pascal Chardonnet of the current situation of the IRAP PhD and the Erasmus
Mundus program co-sponsored by the European Commission, as well as a report on
the first 28 graduate students enrolled in the program (see
enclosure 7 ).
Acknowledgements
I am very happy to express, on behalf of all the
Members of ICRANet and myself, our profound gratitude to the Minister of
Foreign Affairs, to the Minister of Economy and Finances of Italy. Gratitude as
well is expresses to the Minister of University and Research of Italy for the
support of ICRA, which collaborates with ICRANet on all activities within
Italy. Special gratitude to Prof. Immacolata Pannone for her continuous
attention to the ICRANet activities since their beginning, as well as to the
Ragioneria Generale of the Ministry of Economy and Finances, for their
attention in the activities of ICRANet. A special recognition goes to the
activities of the many Ambassadors and Consuls who have greatly helped in the
intense series of activities carried out by ICRANet in Belarus, Brazil, France,
China, Korea and New Zealand. Special gratitude to Minister Gherardo La
Francesca who first signed the Seat Agreement of ICRANet in Pescara, then
unanimously ratified by the Italian Parliament and signed by the Italian
President, for following our activities in Brazil where he is currently
Ambassador of Italy.
This year has been marked by an intense series
of lectures organized by ICRANet at the University of Nice Sofia Antipolis for
the graduate students and by the completion of the seat of Villa Ratti in Nice.
We are grateful for this common effort to the President, Albert Marouani, and
the Vice President, Pierre Coullet, of the University of Nice Sofia Antipolis.
We are grateful to the Mayor of Pescara, Luigi Albore-Mascia, to the Mayor of
Nice, Christian Estrosi, to the Adjunct for Science, Research and Culture, Dr.
Agnes Rampal, and to the President of the Conseil Général des
Alpes-Maritimes, Eric Ciotti, for their generous support in granting to
ICRANet the logistics of the Centers in their respective townships.
We are equally very grateful to the Brazilian
Institutions, the Foreign Minister of Brazil, the Minister of Science of
Brazil, the Governor of the State of Cearà, the Mayor of Rio for their
essential support in the establishment of the ICRANet seat in Brazil. All this
has been made possible thanks to the very effective presence of Mario Novello
and Joao Braga in the board and in the Scientific Committee of ICRANet. A
special sign of gratitude goes to Minister Roberto Amaral and to Prof.
Francisco José Amaral Vieira for their continuous support. All this work could
not have been achieved without the help of all Members institutions of ICRANet.
Clearly, a special mention of satisfaction goes
to all the Scientific Institutions and Research Centers which have signed with
us a collaboration agreement which include BSU (Belarusian State University,
Belarus), CAPES (Brazilian Fed. Agency for Support and Evaluation of Grad.
Education), CBPF (Brazil), Cearà State (Brazil), ENEA (National Agency for new
technologies, energy and the economic sustainable development, Italy), ICTP
(The Abdus Salam International Center for Theoretical Physics, Italy), IHEP
(Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China), INFN
(National Institute for Nuclear Physics, Italy), ITA (Instituto Tecnológico de
Aeronáutica, Brazil), GARR (Italy), LeCosPa (Leung Center for Cosmology and
Particle Astrophysics, Taiwan), NAS (National Academy of Science, Armenia),
Nice University Sophia Antipolis (France), Pescara University “D’Annunzio”
(Italy), Physics Department of University of Rome “Sapienza” (Italy), UERJ (Rio
de Janeiro State University, Brazil), UFPB (Universidade Federal da Paraíba,
Brazil) University of Rome “Sapienza” (Italy), UNS (Universidad Nacional del
Sur, Argentina).
ICRANet, as sponsor of the IRAP-PhD program,
expresses its gratitude to AEI – Albert Einstein Institute – Potsdam (Germany),
Berlin Free University (Germany), CBPF – Brazilian Centre for Physics Research
(Brazil), ETH – Zurich (Switzerland), Ferrara University (Italy), IHES
(France), Indian centre for space physics (India), Nice University Sophia
Antipolis (France), Observatory of the Côte d'Azur (France), Rome University –
“Sapienza” (Italy), Savoie University (France), Shanghai Astronomical
Observatory (China), Stockholm University (Sweden), Tartu Observatory
(Estonia), for their joint effort in creating and activating this first European
Ph.D. program in Relativistic Astrophysics which has obtained the official
recognition of the Erasmus Mundus program of the European Community. All these
activities were achieved thanks to the dedicated work of Prof. Pascal
Chardonnet.
Finally, thanks goes to the Physics Department
and to the Rector of the University of Rome “Sapienza” for all the
collaboration in the teaching, in the electronic links and in the common
research. A special mention of gratitude, of course, goes to the administrative,
secretarial and technical staff of ICRANet and ICRA for their essential and
efficient daily support.
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