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X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008
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X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries

Shane Davis (IAS)Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008

Page 2: X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

Magnetic Fields in Accretion Disks

Big Question: What is the source of angular momentum transport in accretion disks?

Probable Answer: Turbulence/Magnetic Fields (MRI?)

This implies near equipartition field strengths:R~BRB~ B2 ~ P

Hirose et al. 2007

Prad ~ Pgas > Pmag

Prad ~ Pgas < Pmag

Prad ~ Pgas < Pmag

Thus far, there no direct observationalevidence for strong (equipartition) magneticfields.

Indirect evidence in the form of magnetized wind from GRO J1655-40 (Miller et al. 2006, 2008)?

Page 3: X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

Polarization: Estimating Spin & Inclination

Future X-ray polarimeters may be able to directly constrain the black hole spin and/or disk inclination in X-ray binaries using the thermal disk spectra (see e.g. Dovciak et al. 2008; Li et al. 2008 for recent work). Most work assumes Chandrasekhar polarization in scattering dominated limit.

a*=0 a*=0.99

Agol 1997 -- KERRTRANS

Page 4: X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

Electron Scattering of Polarized Light

After scattering the polarization vector p’ isperpendicular to the photon momentum k’ and in the plane of the original polarization. k

k’

p p’

Stokes Parameters: P2 = Q2 + U2 + V2

Q & U = linear polarization (differ by 45o)V = circular polarization = 0

Q > 0

Q < 0 Consider an observer viewing a scattering dominated atmosphere (disk) edge on: If photons are mostly upward moving (limb darkened), polarization is parallel to surface (Q > 0). If photons are mostly horizontal (limb brightened), polarization is normal to surface (Q < 0). In both cases U = 0 by symmetry.

Page 5: X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

Faraday Rotation of Polarized Light

Faraday Rotation: In the presence of a magnetized plasma, the left and right circularly polarized EM waves have different phasevelocities, causing the polarization of linearly polarized light to rotate.

For sufficiently large B and/or , F >> . In the presence of tangled fields or when the photon trajectories differ due to scattering, light rays arriving at the same observer will have different polarization angles, even if they were initially identical. This leads to depolarization rather than a net rotation.

The last scattering dominates the effect so T ~ 1. If B is sufficiently large (>106 G), we can have F ~ 1 even for ~ 10 ang.

For radiation pressure dominated,thin accretion disks we have:

Page 6: X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

Spectra: The Effects of Faraday Rotation

Monte Carlo spectra from simulations (patch of disk) show depolarization from low energies all the way up to the spectral peak.Green dotted curve shows a simple where:

P = Pch (1 + 2 F(B0,)/)-1

We consider three simulations with varying ratios of Pgas & Prad. All show depolarization at low energies and the rise in polarization scales roughly with the peak energy of the spectra (indicated by red arrows).

Page 7: X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

Spectra: The Effects of Compton Scattering

Full treatment of Compton scattering yields different results at high energy end than in Thomson scattering limit.

Page 8: X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

Spectra: The Effects of Compton Scattering

Page 9: X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

Spectra: Full Disk Models

i ~ 72o

a*=0

a*=0.99Full disk spectra generated assuming blackbody emission, w/ limb darkening, and assuming surface field B0 = 1/40 Beq.

At and below the peak, Faraday rotation reduces polarization; at high energy Compton effects rotate polarization angle by 90o.

Effect of changing B field assumptions: curves (from top to bottom) correspond to no Faraday rotation, 1/10 B0, 1/3 B0, B0, and 3 B0. Declining polarization near spectral peak is a sign of strong (near equipartition) magnetic fields.

Page 10: X-ray Polarization as a Probe of Strong Magnetic Fields in X-ray Binaries Shane Davis (IAS) Chandra Fellows Symposium, Oct. 17, 2008.

Conclusions and Future Prospects

Conclusions

The Bad: Faraday rotation and Compton Scattering will likely complicate efforts to use the thermal emission of X-ray binaries to estimate spin and inclination.

The Good: Faraday rotation effects are a feasible means of measuring magnetic fields (albeit crudely) in X-ray binaries as long as detectors have some sensitivityat softer energies (~1 keV or lower).

Prospects for Observations and Future Work

Work thus far has neglected effects of bound-free absorption opacity. This should be included since there may be significant effects at or below 1 keV. This could cause a downturn which might mimic the effects of Faraday rotation, although ionization is probably high enough that this will be a small effect.

Last X-ray polarization measurements taken before I was born. Several polarimeter missions are in development stages: IXO(?), NASA small explorer missions using Bragg crystals or angular distribution of photoelectrons.