Top Banner
Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March 21, 2005 GRBs – The Prompt Emission
39

Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Mar 27, 2015

Download

Documents

David Wentworth
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

 

Jerry Fishman

NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center

National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC)

Huntsville, AL

AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March 21, 2005

GRBs – The Prompt Emission

Page 2: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

GRBs – The Prompt Emission& Space-Borne Observations of GRBs

• A short history of observations

• Observable aspects of the prompt emission

– Temporal aspects (time profiles)

– Duration of prompt emission

– Spectral properties of the gamma radiation

• GRB energy source – “The Central Engine”

• Conversion of energy into gamma rays

• Future observations

Page 3: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.
Page 4: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Vela military satellites, 1963 Vela 4 – July 2, 1967: curious spike in gamma-ray detector readings First Gamma-Ray Burst was identified as an extra-terrestrial phenomenon 16 bursts in all between 1969 and 1972 Bursts coming from random directions in the sky GRBs baffled scientists, theorists began offering explanations

An Accidental Discovery

Page 5: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

GRB Roadblock - during the 1970’s & 1980’s

• Numerous observations with small spacecraft

(primarily Russian & U.S.) • No new, fundamental observations

(except reports of gamma-ray line features)• A “Scientific Enigma”• Assumed to be Associated with Neutron Stars in

the Galaxy• Random nature frustrated observations

Page 6: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

ComptonGRO

Page 7: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Compton Gamma Ray Observatory

April 5, 1991 – June 3, 2000 CGRO – four separate gamma-ray detection devices: EGRET, COMPTEL, OSSE, and BATSE 30 KeV – 30 GeV BATSE proved to be the most useful instrument for GRB detection

Page 8: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.
Page 9: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

The Breakthrough Observations -1997:

Italian/Dutch Satellite Satellite - BeppoSAX

•Combined good GRB location with fast response

•Led to x-ray & optical afterglow observations

•The optical location, in turn, led to observations of host galaxies and redshift determinations

Page 10: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Beppo-SAX discovery of X-ray afterglow of a GRB

Page 11: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.
Page 12: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

• Temporal aspects (time profiles)

• Duration of prompt emission

• Spectral properties of the gamma

radiation

The Prompt Gamma-Ray Emission

Page 13: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Diversity of GRB Profiles

Page 14: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Examples of Double-Peaked GRBs

Page 15: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Multiple-Episode Bursts

Page 16: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Distinct subclasses of –ray bursts: short/hard & long/soft

Hard Spectra Softer

Spectra

0.1 s 20 s

Page 17: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.
Page 18: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Prompt Optical Emission Observed with ROTSE:

GRB990123, an intense GRB

-An amazing feat that may not be repeated for some time

-Fully automated, robotic telescope

-Very wide FoV

Page 19: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

ROTSE Cameras (4)

Page 20: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.
Page 21: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Simultaneous Optical & Optical Observations of a GRB

Page 22: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Peaked at

9th mag at

50 sec(z = 1.6)

ROTSE I

GRB 990123

Page 23: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Typical GRB Spectrum

– the Band function

Page 24: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Briggs, et al. 1999

Page 25: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Spectral Evolution of GRBs

-from Crider, et al. 1997

Page 26: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Launched November 2004

Localizations 1' – 4' at 20 sec 5" at 1 – 2 min 0.3" at 3 – 4 min

SWIFT

Page 27: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Swift Mission

• Burst Alert Telescope (BAT)– New CZT detectors– Detect ~300 GRBs per year– Most sensitive gamma-ray

imager ever

• X-Ray Telescope (XRT)– Arcsecond GRB positions– CCD spectroscopy

• UV/Optical Telescope (UVOT)– Sub-arcsecond imaging– Grism spectroscopy– 24th mag sensitivity (1000 sec)– Finding chart for other observers

• Autonomous re-pointing in 20 - 70 sec• Onboard and ground triggers

Instruments

Page 28: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

The Burst Alert Telescope on Swift

Page 29: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Some GRB Theories

General Requirements:

-A Compact Object is needed; Black Hole formation is usually invoked

-Likely involves beamed emission from a highly relativistic jet

-Emission degrades in succession: gamma-ray > X-ray > Optical > Radio

-Role of magnetic field, its origin and its strength is under great debate

Page 30: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

What is the trigger?

The duration of the burst is determined by the viscous timescale of the accreting gas

The duration of the burst is given by the fall-back time of the gas.

Page 31: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Collapsar Model Supermassive star burns off H, becomes Wolf-Rayet star with He, Fe core

Core burned, star collapses and forms black hole with matter accretion jets

Jets shatter outer shell of star, creates hypernova

Jets speed on and collide with other nearby material to create the subsequent gamma-ray burst

Page 32: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Gamma Ray Bursts

Page 33: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.
Page 34: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Page 35: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Merging Neutron Stars

Page 36: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Jets, Disks and Bursts from Coalescing Compact Binaries

(Neutron Stars)

Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz (IAS, Princeton)& Collaborators

Page 37: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

The GLAST Spacecraft- to be Launched in 2007

Page 38: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

GLAST Burst Monitor

• 12 NaI scintillation crystals- few keV to about one MeV

• 2 BGO scintillation crystals- about 150 keV to about 30 MeV

Image provided by Gamma Ray Astronomy Team at MSFC

Page 39: Jerry Fishman NASA - Marshall Space Flight Center National Space Science and Technology Center (NSSTC) Huntsville, AL AAVSO – HEA3 - Las Cruces, NM - March.

Energetic X-ray Imaging Survey Telescope (EXIST)