Presentation Transcript
Slide1: High Energy Astrophysics High energy astrophysics typically deals with x-rays and
higher energy radiation. It also deals with high energy
neutrinos and other particles such as protons, electrons,
positrons etc. High energy radiation is produced by objects at high
temperatures and/or relativistic particles. 1 ev = 10,000 K, 1 kev = 107 K • • • • • • • • • • This usually requires compact objects such as white dwarfs,
neutron stars or blackholes with deep gravitational potential. Vesp=(2GM/R)1/2 approaching c Or R not much greater than the Schwarzschild radius:
2 GM/c2 (2.95 km for a solar mass object).
Slide3: X-ray astronomy: 0.1 to 100 kev Gamma-ray astronomy: >100 kev. E=h \nu = k T ==> x-rays probe 106 -- 109 K
and gamma-rays > 109 K Eddington Luminosity: 1.3x1038 erg/s for 1 Mo. Optically thick blackbody radiation in x-ray
requires a compact object! (derive the Eddington limit) Thus if the radiation is black-body and luminosity is close to Eddington,
Then x-ray temperature is reached provided that R\sim R_s and
M is not much greater than M_sun.
This result is violated, as it often is, when the radiation is non-thermal. T as a function of object mass, radius (in units of Schwarzschild radius) and Luminosity (in units of Eddington luminosity), is given by:
T ~ 7 kev (L/L_Edd)^{1/4} (R/R_s)^{-1/2} (M/M_sun)^{-1/4}
Slide4: Brief Property and History of Compact Objects White dwarfs: R~10,000 km, Vesc~0.02 c, density~ 106 g/cc (Nuclear reaction is more efficient source of energy
than the PE release of in-falling gas on WDs). 1. 1914: Adams-- Sirius B has M~ 1Mo, T~ 8000 K, R~10,000km 2. 1925: Adams confirmed M & R by measuring gravitational
redshift -- z ~ GM/(R c2)=0.0003. 3. 1926: F-D statistics discovered. Fowler applied it to model WDs. 4. 1930: Chandrasekhar: WD model including relativity; mass limit. 5. 1983: Nobel prize to Chandrasekhar.
Slide5: Neutron Stars 1. 1931: Chadwick --discovers neutrons. 2. 1934:Baade & Zwicky suggested neutron-stars, and
postulated their formation in supernovae. 3. 1967: Hewish, Bell et al. Discover radio pulsars. 4. 1968: Gold proposed rotating NS model. 5. 1974: Nobel prize to Ryle (aperture synthesis)
Hewish (pulsars). 6. 1975: Hulse & Taylor discover binary pulsar PSR 1913-16. 7. 1993: Nobel prize to Hulse & Taylor. Neutron stars: R~15 km, Vesc~0.32 c, density~ 1014 g/cc (Nuclear reaction is much less efficient source of energy
than the PE release of in-falling gas on NSs).
Slide6: Black Holes 1795: Laplace noted the possibility of light not being able to escape. 1915: Einstein’s theory of general relativity. 1916: Schwarzschild -- metric for a spherical object 1963: Kerr --metric for a spinning BH. 1972: Discovery of Cyg X-1 1995: Miyoshi et al. -- NGC 4258. 1997: Eckart & Genzel -- (Sgr A*) Galactic center. 2002: Nobel prize in physics to Giacconi (x-ray astronomy). Schwarzschild radius = 2.95 km M/Mo Efficiency of energy production 6% to 42%.
Slide7: Summary of last lecture 1. Derivation of the Eddington limit. 2. We showed that bright sources of high energy
photons are typically compact objects such
as WD, NS or BH. High speed, strong, shocks are another way
of generating high energy photons; however
high speed shocks are usually produced when
compact objects form eg. SNe, GRB etc.
(an exception is x-rays from clusters.)
Slide8: (1 Ao = 12.5 kev)
Slide10: (SOHO) at 171 A = 74 ev EUV picture of the Sun Corona & several Active regions
are visible Coronal luminosity:
~ 1026 erg/s X-ray luminosity of corona for O-stars is ~ 10^33 erg/s (~10^{-6} the optical/UV
luminosity of the star). 1. The coronal emission is free-free radition from hot plasma at a few million K.
2. The corona is heated by magnetosonic waves, and magnetic reconnections. Mention that: 3. Stellar corona are the most numerous source of x-rays in our galaxy.
Slide11: SOHO EUV picture of the Sun at 195 A = 65 ev from Corona, active regions and a flare
is visible
Slide12: at 195 A = 65 ev
Slide13: 1. This is a low mass x-ray binary system (the companion star is low mass which
Supplying gas to the compact star via Roche-lobe overflow).
2. X-ray binaries are some of the most luminous x-ray sources in the Galaxy;
Some of these have luminosity close to 10^{38} erg/s or the Eddington Lum.
3. The luminosity is generated by a combination of emission from the disk and
thermal emission from hot gas accreted by the n-star (nuclear reactions
provide ~ 10 times less energy than PE release when the compact object is
a neutron star.
Slide15: Crab nebula Blue: x-ray Red: optical Green:radio Luminosity ~ 1038 erg/s (mostly x-ray & gamma) Synchrotron radiation: (linear polarization of 9%
averaged over nebula). Electrons with energy > 1014 ev
are needed for emission at 10 kev;
lifetime for these e’s 50 Mev! And moreover
The pulse shape is nearly the same over this entire EM spectrum, suggesting
A common origin for the radition which is believed to be synchrotron
(curvature radiation). The radio is produced not too far away from the
Neutron star (within 5-10 radaii) and high energy pulsed radiation is
Likely produced near the light cylinder.
The bolometric luminosity is pulsed radiation is about a factor 100 smaller
Than nebular radiation; pulsed radio is smaller than total pulsed radiation
By a factor of 10^4.
Slide16: SN remnant: Cas A (3-70 kev; Chandra) Age 300 yr
(1670 AD) SNe II remnant Mass of x-ray gas
10-15 solar mass. (Plerion) X-ray luminosity:
3.8x1036 erg/s
Slide17: Pulsar wind nebula G292(Chandra 3-80 kev) (Plerion)
Slide18: SN remnant G11.2-0.3 in x-ray (Chandra) X-ray luminosity:
~ 1036 erg/s. The radiation is
produced by shock
heated gas at ~ 109 K
via bremsstrahlung. Calculate the temperature of the shocked gas (speed~ 5,000 km/s) and
Bremsstrahlung luminosity using:
Emissivity/volume = 1.4x10^{-27} n_e n_I T^{1/2} z^2 erg/s/cc
Also describe the Bremsstrahlung spectrum. Note the bright (blue)
Pulsar nebula at the
Center. Produced in SN of 386 AD
Slide19: Gamma-ray burst: note the relativistic jet, and supernova explosion.
Slide20: AGN jet from the quasar
GB 1508+5714 (distance 4Gpc) Chandra x-ray obs. (x-ray produced by IC of
CMB-photons with jet e-s) Obs. jet size~30 kpc
Slide21: Cen A HST & 6 cm VLA VLA: 6 cm (distance ~ 2.5 Mpc) Cen A (Centaurus A) is our NEAREST Active galaxy (distance of 2-3 Mpc).
It is a giant elliptical galaxy that has got a dust lane usually associated with
Spiral gamaxies (Cen A has properties of both elliptical & spirals). Radio lobe size ~ 200 kpc! The radio lobes are fed by
relativistic jets; we see only
one sided jet due to
relativistic beaming. The energy in the radio lobe is ~ 10^{55} ergs (need to check this).
Slide23: Stephan’s Quintet Blue: Chadra x-ray SDSS optical Yellow: Compact group of interacting
galaxies. Gas is stipped and
shock heated to 6 million K
produces x-rays. F is a foreground galaxy. So the
cluster (A, B, D & E) is in fact
a quartet.
Slide24: Cluster x-ray & optical Chandra x-ray; ~ 2 kev HST - optical image
(note lensing of background gals) Abel -2390
.5 Gpc MS2137.3-2353
(1 Gpc)
Slide27: SN remnant G11.2-0.3
Slide34: M87 jet