Title: Pulsars
1Pulsars
- A pulsar is a neutron star that beams radiation
along a magnetic axis that is not aligned with
the rotation axis
2Pulsars
- The radiation beams sweep through space like
lighthouse beams as the neutron star rotates
3Why Pulsars must be Neutron Stars
Circumference of NS 2p (radius) 60
km Spin Rate of Fast Pulsars 1000 cycles per
second Surface Rotation Velocity 60,000
km/s 20 speed of light
escape velocity from NS
Anything else would be torn to pieces!
4What can happen to a neutron star in a close
binary system?
5Matter falling toward a neutron star forms an
accretion disk, just as in a white-dwarf binary
6Accreting matter adds angular momentum to a
neutron star, increasing its spin Episodes of
fusion on the surface lead to X-ray bursts
7A black hole is an object whose gravity is so
powerful that not even light can escape it.
8Supernovae/Supernova Remnants
- Massive stars fuse heavier elements, up to Iron
(Fe) - Core is billions of Kelvin and greater than
Chandrasekhar Limit (1.4 Msun) - Rapid collapse to neutron star
- Rebound of core results in expulsion of outer
layers ? Supernova Remnant
9Before/After!
10Tycho SNR (1572)
11(No Transcript)
12Supernova 1987A (light took 170,000 years to get
here!)
13Black HolesThe Science Behind The Science
Fiction
14A black hole is an object whose gravity is so
powerful that not even light can escape it.
15Thought Question
- What happens to the escape velocity from an
object if you shrink it? - A. It increases
- B. It decreases
- C. It stays the same
-
- Hint
16Escape Velocity
Initial Kinetic Energy
Final Gravitational Potential Energy
(escape velocity)2 G x (mass)
2 (radius)
17Eluding Gravitys Grasp
Escape Velocity
Escape Velocity Speed Needed To Escape An
Objects Gravitational Pull
Mass M Radius R
Earth Vesc 27,000 miles/hour (11 km/s) Sun
Vesc 1.4 million miles/hour (600 km/s)
18Dark Stars Rev. John Michell (1783)
Pierre-Simon Laplace (1796)
Speed of light ? 1 billion miles/hour (3x105 km/s)
- What if a star were so small, escape speed gt
speed of light? - A star we couldnt see!
Earth mass R ? 1 inch Solar mass R ? 2
miles
Vesc speed of light ?
19Surface of a Black Hole
- The surface of a black hole is the radius at
which the escape velocity equals the speed of
light. - This spherical surface is known as the event
horizon. - The radius of the event horizon is known as the
Schwarzschild radius.
20Neutron star
3 MSun Black Hole
The event horizon of a 3 MSun black hole is also
about as big as a small city
21No Escape
- Nothing can escape from within the event horizon
because nothing can go faster than light. - No escape means there is no more contact with
something that falls in.
22Mass versus radius for a neutron star
Objects too heavy to be neutron stars collapse to
black holes
23Neutron Star Limit
- Neutron pressure can no longer support a neutron
star against gravity if its mass exceeds about 3
Msun - Some massive star supernovae can make black hole
if enough mass falls onto core
24Singularity
- Beyond the neutron star limit, no known force can
resist the crush of gravity. - As far as we know, gravity crushes all the matter
into a single point known as a singularity.
25Singularity
- The shrunken star too small to be measured but
with indefinite density
26If the Sun shrank into a black hole, its gravity
would be different only near the event horizon
Black holes dont suck!
27Einsteins theory of gravity is built on the
principle that
- The speed of light is constant.
- As an object speeds up its clock runs faster.
- The effects of gravity cannot be distinguished
from the effects of acceleration. - Motion is a relative state.
28How about if there is wind?
29Speed of light is constant
30Our conceptions of space and time has to be
changed.
- Facts
- Regardless of speed or direction, observers
always measure the speed of light to be the same
value. - Speed of light is maximum possible speed.
- Consequences
- The length of an object decreases as its speed
increases - Clocks passing by you run more slowly than do
clocks at rest (example solar wind particles)
31Time dilation
32Special Relativity Length Contraction
33Equivalence principle
34Gravitational redshift
35Gravity deforms space-time
36Precession of Mercurys orbit
37Gravity bends the path of light
38Geodesics in curved spacetime
39 40Gravity bends the path of light
41Light waves are stretched out leading to a
gravitational redshift
42Tidal forces near the event horizon of a 3 MSun
black hole would be lethal to humans Tidal
forces would be gentler near a supermassive black
hole because its radius is much bigger
43Falling into a black hole
Falling into a black hole gravitational tidal
forces pull spacetime in such a way that time
becomes infinitely long (as viewed by distant
observer). The falling observer sees ordinary
free fall in a finite time.
44Falling into a black holes
- With a sufficiently large black hole, a freely
falling observer would pass right through the
event horizon in a finite time, would be not feel
the event horizon. - A distant observer watching the freely falling
observer would never see her fall through the
event horizon (takes an infinite time). - Falling into smaller black hole, the freely
falling observer would be ripped apart by tidal
effects.
45Falling into a black hole
- Signals sent from the freely falling observer
would be time dilated and redshifted. - Once inside the event horizon, no communication
with the universe outside the event horizon is
possible. - But incoming signals from external world can
enter. - Time travel and other fairy tales
46Seeing black holes
47Seeing black holes
48How do we know its a BH?
- Nature is tricky couldnt it be another small
star like a neutron star or a
white dwarf? - Measure mass of X-ray star by motion of its
companion (a star like the sun) -
-
- Mass gt 3 solar
- masses ? BH!
- Roughly a dozen BHs found this way (tip of the
iceberg)
Chandrasekhar
49Black Hole Verification
- Need to measure mass
- Use orbital properties of companion
- Measure velocity and distance of orbiting gas
- Its a black hole if its not a star and its mass
exceeds the neutron star limit (3 MSun)
50One famous X-ray binary with a likely black hole
is in the constellation Cygnus
51Gamma-Ray Bursts
- Brief bursts of gamma-rays coming from space were
first detected in the 1960s
52- Observations in the 1990s showed that many
gamma-ray bursts were coming from very distant
galaxies - They must be among the most powerful explosions
in the universecould be the formation of a black
hole
53Supernovae and Gamma-Ray Bursts
- Observations show that at least some gamma-ray
bursts may be produced by supernova explosions - Some others may come from collisions between
neutron stars
54Quasars
- Small, powerful source of energy thought to be
cores of distant spiral galaxies
55Quasars and Active Galaxies
- Active galaxies are galaxies with exceptionally
bright and compact nuclear regions, called
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN). - The energy source of AGN is ultimately gravity,
in the form of accretion of gas onto a
super- massive black hole, one the most
efficient engines in the Universe.
56THE AGN ZOO jet-powered radio lobes
57What is the energy source of AGN?
The one characteristic that all AGN share is fast
variability, from which astronomers infer the
size of the central engine.
58A Unified Model for AGN
Are the different classes of AGN truly different
beasts? In the Unified Model for AGN, the
apparent differences are mainly due to
inclination effects. The ingredients are the
hole, the disk, the jet, some orbiting clouds of
gas, plus a dusty torus that surrounds the inner
disk.
59A Unified Model for AGN
60A Unified Model for AGN observational
confirmations