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Astrophysical jets

Astrophysical jets. Yuri Lyubarsky. Ben-Gurion University. Universality of relativistic jet phenomenon 1. Radio galaxies and quasars. M 87. Universality of relativistic jet phenomenon 1. Radio galaxies and quasars (cont). Apparent superluminal motion (Rees 1967 ). c.

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Astrophysical jets

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  1. Astrophysical jets Yuri Lyubarsky Ben-Gurion University

  2. Universality of relativistic jet phenomenon 1. Radio galaxies and quasars M 87

  3. Universality of relativistic jet phenomenon 1. Radio galaxies and quasars (cont) Apparent superluminal motion (Rees 1967) c towards observer q v

  4. Universality of relativistic jet phenomenon 1. Radio galaxies and quasars (cont) Blazars - AGNs with jet pointing towards the observer. The observed emission is dominated by the jet. IC synchrorton Rapid (few-minute) variability in TeV flux of blazars implies g>50 (Levinson 06;Begelman etal 08) PKS 2155-304 The flux above 200 GeV (Aharonian et al 07)

  5. Universality of relativistic jet phenomenon 2. Microquasars Microquasar is a scaled down (by a factor of 106) version of active galactic nuclei Superluminal motion in microquasar GRS 1915+105; Vapparent =1.5c

  6. Scaling of X-ray binaries to AGNs Merloni et al 03; Falcke et al 04

  7. Distribution of Lorentz factors inferred from superluminal motion Blue – AGNs; red – microquasars (Fender 05)

  8. Universality of relativistic jet phenomenon 3. Gamma-ray bursts Optical afterglow of GRB 990510 time, s

  9. Universality of relativistic jet phenomenon 3. Gamma-ray bursts (cont) GRBs apparently involve ultrarelativistic (g=100-1000), highly collimated (q=1o-5o) outflows. They likely arise during the collapse of star’s core.

  10. All relativistic cosmic jet sources may be connected by a common basic mechanism: acceleration by rotating, twisted magnetic fields Rotation twists up field into toroidal component, slowing rotation Pulsar magnetosphere Collapsing, magnetized supernova core Magnetized accretion disks around neutron stars and black holes Magnetospheres of rotating black holes Courtesy to David Meier

  11. Energy balance in magnetized outflows By definition, ultrarelativistic flow implies Ekinetic>> rc2 Relativistic flow can be produced by having a very strong rotating magnetic field such that B2>>4c2  low “mass loading” of the field lines The flow starts as Poynting dominated. How the EM energy transformed into the plasma energy? Rotational energy Poynting ?

  12. The characteristic size of the magnetosphere, RL=c/W. For rapidly rotating BH, RL~Rg. At RL: Equipartition: Formation of jet during collapse of a rotating massive star into a rotating BH (Barkov&Komissarov 08)

  13. Force balance in Poynting dominated flows Magnetic hoop stress Plasma pressure and inertia<< Lorentz force. Does it mean that huge tension of wound up magnetic field (hoop stress) compresses the flow towards the axis? NO! In the current closure region, the force is decollimating. An external confinement is necessary!

  14. Externally confined jets In accreting systems, the relativistic outflows from the black hole and the internal part of the accretion disc could be confined by the (generally magnetized) wind from the outer parts of the disk. In GRBs, a relativistic jet from the collapsing core pushes its way through the stellar envelope.

  15. Force balance in Poynting dominated flows (cont) Total electromagnetic force . In the far zone, v c and E B. In highly relativistic flows, the electric force nearly cancels the Lorentz force. Acceleration is very slow! As the jet moves out, acceleration converts the EM energy into the matter kinetic energy. How efficient is this conversion?

  16. Externally confined jets. What do we want to know? What are the conditions for acceleration and collimation? What is the final collimation angle? Where and how the EM energy is released? Conversion to the kinetic energy via gradual acceleration? Or to the thermal and radiation energy via dissipation? How and where s decreases from >>1 to <<1?

  17. When the flow becomes matter dominated? The flow could be considered as matter dominated if most of the energy could be released at the termination shock. This condition is fulfilled only if s<0.1-0.2. Jump conditions at relativistic shock. f- fraction of energy transferred to the plasma. Compression ratio = c/v2

  18. Structure of relativistic MHD jet Axisymmetric flows are nested magnetic surfaces of constant magnetic flux. These surfaces are equipotential. Plasma flows along these surfaces. At RL: In the far zone: E, Bf.>>Bp

  19. Simple example: cylindrical configuration. Bp 1. v=0; E=0 Bf Bp 2. v c; B’p= Bp; B’f=gBf; E’=(v/c)gBf v E Bf

  20. Relativistic MHD in the far zone, Wr>>c Intimate connection between collimation and acceleration Without external confinement, the flow is nearly radial; the acceleration stops at an early stage (Tomimatsu94; Beskin et al 98) gmax>>1 - the Lorentz factor achieved when and if the Poynting flux is completely transformed into the kinetic energy Jet confined by the external pressure: the spatial distribution of the confining pressure determines the shape of the flow boundary and the acceleration rate (Tchekhovskoy et al 08,09; Komissarov et al 09; Lyubarsky 09,10).

  21. Collimation vs acceleration: two flow regimes 1. Wr2<<cz – equilibrium regime cylindrical equilibrium at any z Z=Wr2/c equilibrium 2. Wr2>>cz – non-equilibrium regime non-equilibrium purely azimuthal field, Bp=0

  22. MHD jet confined by the external pressure v pext Bf E Bp

  23. MHD jet confined by the external pressure (cont) equilibrium regime, Equipartition, g~gmax, at g/gin Beyond the equipartition: s

  24. MHD jet confined by the external pressure (cont) non-equilibrium equilibrium

  25. Some implications AGNs: g~10 impliesthe size of the confining zone z0>100Rg~1016cm. The condition of efficient acceleration gQ~1 is fulfilled: <qg>=0.26 (Pushkarevetal 09) GRBs:g~few 102; minimal z0~1011 cm – marginally OK. But achromatic breaks in the afterglow light curves and statistics imply gQ>>1, which is fulfilled only if the flow remains Poynting dominated. Magnetic dissipation is necessary. The observed opening angles vs Lorentz factor (Pushkarev etal 09)

  26. To summarize the dissipationless MHD acceleration The flow could be accelerated till s~1 provided it is confined by an external pressure, which decreases with distance but not too fast. The acceleration zone spans a large range of scales so that one has to ensure that the conditions for acceleration are fulfilled all along the way. Transition to the matter dominated stage, s~0.1, could occur only at an unreasonably large scale. These conditions are rather restrictive. It seems that in real systems, some sort of dissipation (reconnection) is necessary in order to utilize the electromagnetic energy completely.

  27. Some evidence for slow acceleration and • collimation of Poynting dominated jets. 1. M87: a large opening angle near the base of the jet and tighter collimation on larger scales Walker et al 2008 Gracia et al 2005 2. The absence of bulk-Comptonization spectral signatures in blazars implies that Lorentz factors >10 must be attained at least on the scale 1000Rg ~ 1017 cm (Sikora et al. 05). But according to spectral fitting, jets are already matter dominated at ~1000 Rg (Ghisellini et al 10). Violent dissipation somewhere around1000Rg?

  28. Beyond the ideal MHD: magnetic dissipation in Poynting dominated outflows The magnetic energy could be extracted via anomalous dissipation in narrow current sheets. current sheet How differently oriented magnetic field lines could come close to each other? • Global MHD instabilities could disrupt the regular structure of the magnetic field thus liberating the magnetic energy. • Alternating magnetic field could be present in the flow from the very beginning.

  29. Global MHD instabilities The most dangerous is the kink instability (Lyubarsky 92, 99; Eichler 93; Spruit et al. 97; Begelman 98; Giannios&Spruit 06). Mizuno et al 09 But: The necessary condition for the instability – causal connection, gQ<1. Not fulfilled in GRBs; may be fulfilled in AGNs. The growth rate is small in relativistic case (Istomin&Pariev 94,96; Lyubarsky 99). Some evidence for saturation of the instability (McKinney&Blandford 09) Moll et al 10

  30. Dissipation of alternating magnetic fields in the jet (Levinson & van Putten 97; Levinson 98; Heinz & Begelman 00; Drenkhahn 02; Drenkhahn & Spruit 02; Giannios & Spruit 05;07; Giannios 06;08) j g B l~Rg If the reconnection rate is vrec=xc, the energy release scale is AGNs GRBs

  31. Advantage of the magnetic dissipation models 1. Dissipation easily provides large radiative efficiencies and strong variability inferred in GRBs. 2. Reconnection at high s produces relativistic “jets in a jet”; this could account for the fast TeV variability of blazars (Giannios et al 10; also talk by Giannios) Caveat: why the fast reconnection occur in jets?

  32. current sheet Anomalous resistivity implies vcurrent=j/en~c or rB=kT/eB~d In AGNs and GRBs, rB<<l~Rg

  33. Fast reconnection at rB<<l inflow outflow resistivity We still do not understand why such a configuration is maintained within the jet

  34. Conclusions 1. Magnetic fields are the most likely means of extracting the rotational energy of the source and of producing relativistic, outflows from compact objects (pulsars, GRBs, AGNs, galactic X-ray binaries) 2. External confinement is crucial for efficient collimation and acceleration of Poynting dominated outflows. 3. An extended acceleration region is a distinguishing characteristic of the Poyntyng dominated outflows. 4. Efficient acceleration (up to g~gmax) is possible only in causally connected flows, . 5. Dissipation (reconnection) is necessary in order to utilize the EM energy of the outflow.

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