The game of life on a magnetar crust: from $γ$-ray flares to FRBs [HEAP]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2209.08598


This paper presents a model to unify the diverse range of magnetar activity, through the building and release of elastic stress from the crust. A cellular automaton drives both local and global yielding of the crust, leading to braiding of coronal loops and energy release. The model behaves like a real magnetar in many ways: giant flares and small bursts both occur, as well as periods of quiescence whose typical duration is either $\lesssim 1$ yr or $\sim 10-30$ yr. The burst energy distribution broadly follows an earthquake-like power law over the energy range $10^{40}-10^{45}\,{\rm erg}$. The local nature of coronal loops allows for the possibility of high-energy and fast radio bursts from the same magnetar. Within this paradigm, magnetar observations can be used to constrain the poorly-understood mechanical properties of the neutron-star crust.

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S. Lander
Tue, 20 Sep 22
6/81

Comments: 8 pages, 5 figures. Comments welcome. Animations related to figure 3 available here: sklander.wordpress.com/animations/

Advanced Aspects of the Galactic Habitability [CL]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1904.01062


Context. Astrobiological evolution of the Milky Way (or the shape of its “astrobiological landscape”) has emerged as one of the key research topics in recent years. In order to build precise, quantitative models of the Galactic habitability, we need to account for two opposing tendencies of life and intelligence in the most general context: the tendency to spread to all available ecological niches (conventionally dubbed “colonization”) and the tendency to succumb to various types of existential catastrophes (“catastrophism”). These evolutionary tendencies have become objects of study in fields such as ecology, macroevolution, risk analysis, and futures studies, while a serious astrobiological treatment has been lacking so far. Aims. Our aim is to numerically investigate the dynamics of opposed processes of expansion (panspermia, colonization) and extinction (catastrophic mechanisms) of life in the Galaxy. Methods. We employ a new type of numerical simulation based on 1D probabilistic cellular automaton with very high temporal resolution, in order to study astrobiological dynamics. Results. While the largest part of the examined parameter space shows very low habitability values, as expected, the remaining part has some observationally appealing features that imply, among other things, a reduction in the amount of fine-tuning necessary for resolving the Fermi paradox. Conclusions. Advanced aspects of Galactic habitability are amenable to precision studies using massive parallel computer simulations. There are regions of parameter space corresponding to a quasi-stationary state satisfying observable constraints and possessing viable SETI targets.

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V. Đošović, B. Vukotić and M. Ćirković
Wed, 3 Apr 19
45/68

Comments: N/A