1 / 16

High energy Astrophysics

High energy Astrophysics. Mat Page. Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL. 2. X-ray and g -ray sources. Slide 2. 2. The X-ray / g -ray sources (the zoo). This lecture: An exhaustive inventory of X-ray sources Why they emit X-rays Where they are in the sky

gala
Download Presentation

High energy Astrophysics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. High energy Astrophysics Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 2. X-ray and g-ray sources

  2. Slide 2 2. The X-ray / g-ray sources (the zoo) • This lecture: • An exhaustive inventory of X-ray sources • Why they emit X-rays • Where they are in the sky • Where they are in the electromagnetic spectrum

  3. Slide 3 The Sun Images of the sun over its 11 year activity cycle from the Yohkoh Soft X-ray telescope X-ray luminosity 1019-1021 W

  4. Slide 4 Planets, the moon and comets Jupiter seen by Chandra Jupiter at time of Shoemaker-Levy 9 impact (Rosat) X-ray luminosity ~ 5x109 W

  5. Slide 5 Planets, the moon and comets The Moon! You can also see the X-ray background in this picture! X-ray luminosity ~ 4x106 W

  6. Slide 6 Planets, the moon and comets Comet Hyakutake! X-ray luminosities 106-109W

  7. Slide 7 Normal stars X-ray luminosities of up to 1024 W Stars in the open cluster NGC 2516 (Rosat)

  8. Slide 8 Massive stars The bright source in the centre of NGC 3606 is due to the colliding winds from massive stars X-ray luminosities of up to 1026 W

  9. Slide 9 Supernova remnants Cas-A and Tycho supernova remnants (Chandra) X-ray luminosities of up to 1030 W

  10. Slide 10 Compact stars This 5 hour time sequence from the Einstein observatory shows pulses of X-ray emission from the Crab pulsar X-ray luminosities of up to 1029 W

  11. Slide 11 Interacting binaries Interacting binaries in the globular cluster 47-Tuc X-ray luminosities of up to 1032 W

  12. Slide 12 galaxies M82 as seen by Chandra, with an optical image (in blue) superimposed in the right panel X-ray luminosities of up to 1035 W

  13. Slide 13 AGN The quasar 3C273 and its X-ray jet as seen by Chandra X-ray luminosities of up to 1039 W

  14. Slide 14 Clusters of galaxies Coma X-ray luminosities of up to 1038 W

  15. Slide 15 Luminosities (W)

  16. Slide 16 Some key points: • Surprisingly, a whole host of objects have been detected as X-ray sources. • Strong magnetic fields can accelerate particles to high velocities to produce X-ray emission, for example in the coronae of the Sun and other normal stars, and in planetary aurorae. • Fast shock waves are another source of high energy emission, for example in supernova remnants and when stellar winds collide. • The most luminous X-ray sources (AGN, clusters of galaxies, accreting binaries) are powered by gravitational potential energy.

More Related