Title: The Universe >100 MeV
1The Universe gt100 MeV
- Brenda Dingus
- Los Alamos National Laboratory
2EGRET
- Compton Observatory
- 1991-2000
- BATSE, OSSE, and Comptel at lt MeV
- EGRET 30 MeV 30 GeV
- 1st proposed in late 1970s
- Spark Chamber with NaI calorimeter
3GLAST
Instrument
16 towers ? modularity height/width 0.4 ?
large field-of-view Si-strips fine pitch 228
µm, high efficiency 0.44 X0 front-end ? reduce
multiple scattering 1.05 X0 back-end ? increase
sensitivity gt 1 GeV CsI wide energy range
0.1-100 GeV hodoscopic ? cosmic-ray rejection
? shower leakage correction XTOT 10.1
X0 ? shower max contained lt100GeV segmented
plastic scintillator ? minimize self-veto gt
0.9997 efficiency redundant readout
TKR
CAL
Expected Launch Date 2007 First of 16 towers
delivered March 2005 to integrate and test with
the spacecraft
ACD
4GLAST Instrument Performance
More than 50 times the sensitivity of
EGRET Large Effective Area (20 MeV gt 300
GeV) Optimized Point Spread Function (0.35o _at_ 1
GeV) Wide Field of View (2.4 sr) Energy
Resolution (DE/E lt 10, E gt100 MeV)
5Natures Particle Accelerators
- Electromagnetic Processes
- Synchrotron Emission
- E g a (Ee/mec2)2 B
- Inverse Compton Scattering
- E f (Ee/mec2)2 E i
- Bremmstrahlung
- E g 0.5 E e
- Hadronic Cascades
- p g -gt p po -gt e n g
- p p -gt p po -gt e n g
6Exotic Gamma-Ray Production
- Particle-Antiparticle Annihilation
- WIMP called neutralino, c, is postulated by SUSY
- 50 GeVlt mclt few TeV
- Primordial Black Hole Evaporation
- As mass decreases due to Hawking radiation,
temperature increases causing the mass to
evaporate faster - Eventually temperature is high enough to create a
quark-gluon plasma and hence a flash of
gamma-rays
7High Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy
Typical Multiwavelength Spectrum from High Energy
g-ray source
E 2 dN/dE or n F n
Energy Emitted
Radio
Optical
X-ray
GeV
TeV
Photon Energy
8Crab Nebula
Electron Energies
- Spinning Neutron Star Fills Nebula with Energetic
Electrons - Synchrotron Radiation and Inverse Compton
Scattering
9Active Galactic Nuclei
- Massive Black Hole Accelerates Jet of Particles
to Relativistic Velocities - gt Synchrotron Emission and Inverse Compton
and/or Proton Cascades
10AGN Theory, e.g. WComae Blazar
- Electrons produce gammas via Inverse Compton
scattering of synchrotron photons - Protons produce gammas via m synchrotron
Boettcher, Mukherjee, A. Reimer, 2002
11Gamma-Ray Bursts
- EGRET discovered GeV emission from 4 bright GRBs
with no evidence of a spectral break at higher
energies - One GRB had GeV emission extending for over an
hour
12Typical GRB Broad Band Spectra
13GRB 941017
- M.M. González, B.L. Dingus, Y. Kaneko, R.D.
Preece, C.D. Dermer and M.S. Briggs, Nature, 424,
749 (2003) - This burst is the first observation of a distinct
higher energy spectral component in a GRB - Power released in higher energy component is more
than twice the lower energy component - Higher energy component decays slower than lower
energy component - Peak of higher energy component is above the
energy range of the detector
-18 to 14 sec
14 to 47 sec
47 to 80 sec
80 to 113 sec
113 to 200 sec
14GRB GeV-TeV Theories
- Requires GRBs are more energetic phenomena
- Different timescale of low and high energy
implies an evolving source environment or
different high energy particles - Shape of high energy component applies tight
constraints to ambient densities and magnetic
fields - Or evidence of origin of Ultra High Energy Cosmic
Rays - More and Higher Energy observations are needed
15Gamma-Ray Detected Pulsars
16Pulsars
- Extend of gamma-ray pulsars to of order 100
- Differentiate between different accelerators
17gt100 MeV Astrophysical Sources
- Active Galactic Nuclei, Gamma Ray Bursts, and
Pulsars are ONLY identified classes of individual
sources. - ¾ of EGRET point sources NOT identified with
known objects.
Individual Examples of Sources Solar Flare Large
Magellenic Cloud X-ray Binary (?) Cen A (?)
18Supernova Remnants (SNR)
- SNR are predicted by some to be source of cosmic
rays - 19 EGRET sources are positionally coincident with
SNR - Probability of chance coincidents 10-5
- Several are non-variable and spectra consistent
with that expected by SNR - However, other sources associated with SNR
- Pulsars that might not be known at other
wavelengths - Pulsar Wind Nebula accelerate electrons with
energy of pulsar and the electrons radiate
gamma-rays. - See D. Torres et al. Physics Reports 2003 for
review.
19Supernova Remnants with GLAST
- Example of GLAST sensitivity to SNR
- Improved spectra to resolve po bump
- Improved localization to resolve correlation with
dense proton target of molecular cloud
SNR g-Cygni
20 Galactic Plane
- Galactic Diffuse Spectrum of Region blt10 and
300lt l lt60 - Nucleon-Nucleon (po decay) component should
dominate above 1 GeV and should have the same
E-2.7 differential photon spectrum as cosmic
rays. - However, the observed flux gt1 GeV is greater
resulting in an E-2.4 differential photon
spectrum. - Strong, Moskolenko, Reimer 2004 require cosmic
ray flux in galaxy gt2 times local flux - Other theories such as increasing Inverse Compton
ruled out by TeV observation of Galactic plane by
Milagro
Hunter, et al. ApJ 481,205-240
Nucleon-Nucleon
Electron Bremstrahlung
Inverse Compton
Isotropic Diffuse E-2.1 (Extragalactic)
21Extragalactic Diffuse
- Whats left over?
- Unresolved point sources
- Diffuse sources, both in and out of our galaxy
- No predicted sources can over produce this limit
of diffuse emission
(Sreekumar et al. 1998)
22Conclusions
- EGRET detected 300 sources
- 1/4 individual identifications
- Active Galactic Nuclei
- Pulsars
- Gamma-ray bursts
- Large Magellenic Cloud, Solar Flare
- Possibly Cen A and an x-ray binary
- Unidentified Source possibilities include
- Supernova Remnants
- Pulsar Wind Nebula
- Galactic Black Holes
- Galaxy Clusters
- Luminous IR Galaxies
GLAST predicted to detect 10000 sources