The Universe >100 MeV - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Universe >100 MeV

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... 50 times the sensitivity of EGRET. Large Effective Area (20 MeV 300 ... EGRET discovered GeV emission from 4 bright GRBs with no evidence of a spectral ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Universe >100 MeV


1
The Universe gt100 MeV
  • Brenda Dingus
  • Los Alamos National Laboratory

2
EGRET
  • 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

3
GLAST
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
4
GLAST 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)
5
Natures 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

6
Exotic 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

7
High 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
8
Crab Nebula
Electron Energies
  • Spinning Neutron Star Fills Nebula with Energetic
    Electrons
  • Synchrotron Radiation and Inverse Compton
    Scattering

9
Active Galactic Nuclei
  • Massive Black Hole Accelerates Jet of Particles
    to Relativistic Velocities
  • gt Synchrotron Emission and Inverse Compton
    and/or Proton Cascades

10
AGN 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
11
Gamma-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

12
Typical GRB Broad Band Spectra
13
GRB 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
14
GRB 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

15
Gamma-Ray Detected Pulsars
16
Pulsars
  • Extend of gamma-ray pulsars to of order 100
  • Differentiate between different accelerators

17
gt100 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 (?)
18
Supernova 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.

19
Supernova 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)
21
Extragalactic 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)
22
Conclusions
  • 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
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