* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Astroparticle physics 1. stellar astrophysics and solar neutrinos
Survey
Document related concepts
Photon polarization wikipedia , lookup
First observation of gravitational waves wikipedia , lookup
Advanced Composition Explorer wikipedia , lookup
Outer space wikipedia , lookup
X-ray astronomy detector wikipedia , lookup
Astronomical spectroscopy wikipedia , lookup
Transcript
Astroparticle physics Introduction and astrophysical information Alberto Carramiñana Instituto Nacional de Astrofísica, Óptica y Electrónica Tonantzintla, Puebla, México Xalapa, 2 August 2004 The composition of the Universe • Planets. • Stars: nuclear burning & degenerate corpses. • Gas, dust (magnetic fields (cosmic-rays)). • Galaxies: normal, active. • Cosmological background(s). • Protons, neutrons baryons. • Electrons, muons leptons. • Neutrinos. • Mesons hadrons quarks. Early Universe / Cosmic-rays / astrophysical neutrinos / non baryonic dark matter / dark energy Astroparticle physics • • • • • Astrophysics oriented course. Astrophysical information. Stellar physics (solar neutrinos). Interstellar medium (cosmic-rays). Supernovae and degenerate stars (cosmic-rays, neutrinos). • Beyond our galaxy (high energy cosmicrays, (relic neutrinos), dark matter). Astrophysical information carriers • Photons: radio waves to -rays. • Neutrinos: MeV to ZeV. • Gravitational waves: not today... • Elementary particles: cosmic-rays. Photons • Electromagnetic waves: solution to EM wave equations: – polarization vector – dispersion relation wavelength / frequency – Planck relation photon energy • Electromagnetic spectrum Electromagnetic spectrum Radio, mm, infrared space, infrared ground, optical ground and space, uv, X-ray space, -ray space and ground-based telescopes. Focusing telescopes • Radiation is focussed to a detector (radio to a few keV). High energy telescopes • Photoelectric effect • Compton telescopes. • Pair production telescopes. Neutrinos • Weak force interaction spin • Energy • Flavour: e, , . • Mass! Neutrino detectors • Chemical – Chlorine: – Gallium: • e-scattering Cerenkov: Kamiokande & Super-Kamiokande (water). • Charged and neutral current: Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (D2O) flavour sensitive. • Very high energy -cascades: Pierre Auger. Gravitational waves Not today! Cosmic-rays • Earth “bombarded” by highenergy particles: cosmicrays. • Charged particles do not conserve direction in the Galaxy. • Observed energies: below 108eV to 1020.5 eV. – low and intermediate energies (1015eV) from balloon or space. – high energy (above 1015eV) from ground. astro.uchicago.edu/~smoneil/background.html Cosmic-rays from space Composition Solar particles Solar modulation At Spacelab 2 Grunsfeld et al. 1988 Access: Advanced Cosmic-ray Composition Experiment for the Space Station hep.uchicago.edu/~swordy/access.html Cosmic-rays from ground • Particle cascades from incoming cosmic-ray. – Direct detection of secondary particles (e,) at ground level. – Atmospheric fluorescence emission. • Cerenkov emission very high energy -ray telescopes (> 100 GeV). http://www.bartol.udel.edu/~neutronm/catch/cr2.html