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Gamma-Ray Observations of SLAC Summer Institute, August 4th - August 15, 2008 Olaf Reimer Hansen Experimental Physics Labs & Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology, Stanford University AGILE first gamma-ray detection of a GRB: GRB 080514B (Mereghetti et al., to be submitted) SuperAGILE 1-D SuperAGILE – Mars Odyssey annulus GRB 080514B has been localized jointly by SuperAGILE and IPN (GCN 7715) and shows a significant gamma ray emission (GCN 7716). Follow-up by Swift (GCN 7719 and 7750) provided the afterglow in X-rays. Many telescopes participated in the observation of the optical afterglow: Watcher (GCN 7718), GRON (GCN 7722), KPNO (GCN 7725) and NOT (GCN 7734). Gamma-ray Observations of Supernova Remnants EGRET sources and Supernova Remnants A mixed blessing: • Spatial coincidences of UNIDs and cataloged (radio-)SNRs -23.0 W28 2.00 W44 -23.2 1.75 Declination Declination -23.4 -23.6 1.25 -23.8 1.00 270.4 γ Cyg 1.50 270.2 R.A. 270.0 269.8 269.6 284.75 284.50 R.A. 284.25 284.00 IC443 41.5 22.8 Declination Declination 41.0 40.5 22.4 40.0 Esposito et al. 1996 22.6 306.0 305.5 305.0 R.A. 304.5 304.0 • No detections in cases like SN1006, Tycho & Kepler 94.6 94.4 R.A. 94.2 • multifrequency support, that several synchrotron nebulae in SNR harbour magnetospherically active neutron stars (i.e. CTA1) • GeV-measured gamma-ray source positions do not correlate well with Xray bright rim/shell features (although hampered by angular resolution) • GeV-cutoffs already significant in EGRET-spectra → serious consideration of neutron star origin at GeV SNR-associations CTA1 W28 γCyg IC443 Zhang & Cheng 98 Cheng & Zhang 98 EGRET sources and Supernova Remnants – the X-ray view on the associations Cas A : central X-ray point source (Chakrabarty et al. 2001), unpulsed IC443 : X-ray point source + PWN outside EGRET contour (Olbert et al. 2001), hard point source (Keohane et al. 1997, Bykov& Bocchino 2001) γCyg: complete identification of EGRET GeV-contour (Brazier et al. 1996) → RX J2020.2+4026 However: Becker et al. 2005 CTA1: complete identification of EGRET GeV-contour (Brazier et al. 1998) → RX J0070.0+7302 W44: association with PSR 1853+01 + PWN (Harrus et al. 1997) W28: associaton with PSR 1801-23 ? 2EG J0008+73 / RX J0007.0+7302 G119.5+10.2 (CTA1) 2EG J2020+4026 / RX J2020.3+4026 SNR G78.2+2.1 74o00' 15' 41 o00' 23°00' 30' HD 193322 30' HD 229119 AGN DECLINATION DECLINATION DECLINATION RX J2020.3+4026 o 73 00' RX J0007.0+7302 45' 30' 15' o 40 00' 22°00' 30' 21°45' 30' o 72 00' h 20 25 m h m 20 20 RIGHT ASCENSION h 20 15 m h 00 15 m h 00 05 m RIGHT ASCENSION h 23 55 m 06h 2 2m 20 18 RIGHT ASCENSION (2 000) 16 Nevertheless: statistical significant correlations with galactic objects found Montmerle et al. 1979 Sturner & Dermer 1995 Esposito et al. 1996 Romero et al. 1999 • • • COS-B, SNRs, OBs → "SNOB" EGRET, SNRs → significant positional correlation EGRET, SNRs (X-ray) → 14 associations EGRET, SNRs (radio), OB, WR → 22 associations overwhelming statistical evidence for SNR correlation significant evidence for OB association correlation marginal support for WRs and/or Of stars Torres, Romero et al. 2003 More than a single population of galactic γ-ray sources present in the EGRET data. SNR as prime candidate sources for Galactic Cosmic Rays TeV electrons – YES! → SN1006 as seen by ASCA (Koyama et al. 1995) But what about the hadrons? Evidence for hadronic particle acceleration in SNRs? “The spectrum is a good match to that predicted by pion decay, and cannot be explained by other mechanisms.” (Enomoto et al. 2002, Nature) IC interpretation in conflict with data ! π0 decay interpretation in conflict with data, too ! (Reimer & Pohl 2002) The steepness of previously measured spectrum not confirmed by HESS (Aharonian et al. 2004, 2006) And then there came H.E.S.S. – SNR seen by ground-based Cherenkov telescopes Supernova Remnants seen – primariy particle distribution > 100 TeV RX J1713.7-3946 as seen by H.E.S.S. RA 6:17 8:52 14:42 17:13 18:00 23:23 SNR IC 443 RX J0852-4622 RCW 86 RX J1713.7-3946 W28 Cas A seen by MAGIC, VERITAS CANGAROO, HESS HESS CANGAROO, HESS HESS HEGRA, MAGIC, VERITAS Particles accelerated in shock On the scale of kyrs, fields decay / are damped and particles diffuse out of the source Particles are confined to source region by pre-existing or dynamically generated magnetic fields X-ray / gamma ray correlation H.E.S.S. Porter et al. (2006) Katz & Waxman (2007) Plaga (2007) … electrons X-rays ~ IC γ-rays B ~ 10 μG Key issue: Strenght of magnetic field protons + 10-4 electrons/proton Berezkho & Völk (2006) + gas → B2 ~ ρ B ~ 100 μG Lucek & Bell MNRAS 2000 Contour lines: ASCA X-rays Y. Uchiyama et al. 2002 + gas → πo → γ-rays ~ X-rays Where are we now with RXJ1713.7-3946? Archetypal SNR protons electrons • – Close correlation with X-rays [+electrons] – Spectral shape [+protons] – IC interpretation implies (too) low B-field [+protons] – No tight correlation with molecular material [+electrons] Not yet clear… – Need data at lower energies to be sure, e.g. GLAST H.E.S.S. Who will settle this quest? Simulated GeV-Spectrum of RXJ1713? Yes (in b/w perspective) GLAST GeV-Imaging of RXJ1713? GLAST Assumptions on 3EGJ1714 made, underlying: 5 year exposure, E > 3 GeV (Funk et al. 2006) If hadronic, do we see enough SNR, and at the right places? → GLAST The remaining freedom in the interpretation of VHE data will be constraint by E < 100 GeV data – and sensitive X-ray data (Uchiyama et al. 2007) (a) 3EGJ1714 will be refined/disentangled from RXJ1713. → Molecular Cloud interaction → improved (CfA & Nanten) CO surveys (b) GeV emission from RXJ1713 will be detected or an u.l. will be truly sensitive → sanity check for the leptonic models/hadronic models → SNR ACCELERATION SITE FOR HADRONS OR NOT ? (c) Nature of 1WGA J1713.4-3949 ? Compact object? Progenitor?? 1xx GeV to ~100 TeV – ground-based Cherenkov telescopes Non-morphological resolved SNR-detections: Cas A: HEGRA, MAGIC, VERITAS W28: HESS IC443: MAGIC, VERITAS ↓ shellsize < instumental resolution: unresolved ↓ The “composite” SNR/PWN: e.g. G0.0+0.1, HESS J1813, … Gamma-Rays from Pulsar Wind Nebulae Energy Flux Synchrotron π0 decay Inverse Compton Synchrotron: Ex(keV) = 4 (B/1mG)(Ee/10TeV)2 Radio IR/Optical X-rays γ-rays VHE γ-rays Eγ(TeV) ~ (0.05Ee)2 Energy Neutral pion decay: 〈Eγγ〉 ~ 0.15 Ep X-ra y 10 keV X-ray → 10 TeV e1 TeV γ-ray → 20 TeV e- io d a → 6 TeV p a γ-r R y Synchrotron IC (on CMB): IC on target: Synch. (+CMB) Gamma-Rays from Pulsar Wind Nebulae The PWN Population • • Many known X-ray PWN now identified as TeV emitters and almost all of the highest spin-down power radio pulsars have associated TeV emission – Efficient particle accelerators May be easier to detect in TeV than keV ? – Integration over pulsar lifetime for TeV electrons (less cooling) – TeV instruments sensitive to more extended objects – no confusion with thermal emission – Many of our unidentified sources may be PWN H.E.S.S. sources near energetic pulsars 435 pulsars in HESS survey region* preliminary Implied efficiency Spin-down → TeV ~ 1% Systematic studies possible ! ATNF PSRs vs. TeV Carrigan et al. 2007 GeV vs. TeV Funk Reimer Torres Hinton 2008 random coinc. Spin-down energy flux in ergs/kpc2 HESS J1825-137 • • • PSR J1826-1334 – 3×1036 erg/s spin-down power, ~2×104 years old 5’ X-ray PWN – G 18.0-0.7 (Gaensler et al 2002) 1° TeV γ-ray source – HESS J1825-137 (Aharonian et al 2005) – Energy dependent morphology • A first at TeV energies – Cooling of electrons away from pulsar? (tcool ∝ 1/E) [ 2 keV synchrotron emission comes from 200 TeV electrons (if B ≈ 10 μG)…, γ-rays come from lower energy electrons ] HESS PWN (numerically) most prominent class of identified galactic γ-ray sources Archetypal (before HESS): Crab Now: diversity among the PWNs! • often extended, • displaced from PSR, • energy dependend morphology change Vela X Horns 2006 The binary system PSR B1259-63 / SS 2883 Periastron 7. March 2004 Be Star 10 M~ Discovery: H.E.S.S.,March 2004 First variable galactic TeV source. First in a new source class in HE g-rays. 48 ms Pulsar 3.4 y period Complex interaction between pulsar and star during periastron Pulsar Massive star Shock front PSR B1259-63 Johnston et al. 1992 Millisecond pulsar (T=48 ms) Mass of ca. 1.4 solar masses Massive Be-type companion star of ca. 10 solar masses Highly eccentric orbit (T= 3.4year) Closest impact is ~1013 cm or ~20 stellar radii Electron wind from a pulsar terminates onto the strong Be-star outflow Shocked electrons radiate in synchrotron (X-rays) & IC (TeV Gamma-rays) Very plausible scenario, theoretically predicted. Periastron Flux >380 GeV [cm-2 s-1] The PSR B1259-63 field of view H.E.S.S. Feb. 04 March 04 Apr./May 04 X-Ray Binaries as Gamma-Ray Sources Binary systems of a compact object (neutron star or black hole) and a stellar companion Matter is flowing over from the stellar companion onto the compact object. Angular momentum conservation => Formation of an accretion disk Matter in the accretion disk heats up to ~ 106 K => X-ray emission …more on X-Ray Binaries As in most accretion disk systems, this results in the formation of collimated outflows: Mildly relativistic jets: Γ ~ 2 Generally identified as radio jets X-ray binary spectra typically consist of a thermal disk component plus a hard power-law. Gamma-ray binaries • Similarities – massive star (O, Be) e≠0 – TeV emission ~ 1033-34 erg/s – Low, ~ stable radio and X-ray emission (periodic radio outbursts in LS I+61 303 and PSR B1259-63) – Spectral energy distributions LS I +61 303 PSR B1259-63 windpowered Be BH or PSR ? PSR Be 0.7 au 10 au 26 d 3.5 yr Cyg X-1 LS 5039 accretion powered O6.5V BH BH or PSR ? O9.7I 0.2 au 4d 0.2 au obs. 5.6 d © G. Dubus γ-ray binaries: They are orbitally modulated! H.E.S.S.: LS5039 (Aharonian et al. 2005) MAGIC: LS I 61°303 (TeVPA 2007) MAGIC TeVPA 2007 VERITAS: LS I 61°303 (TeVPA 2007) γ-ray binaries: They flare! • Small FoV telescopes depend on alerts or luck ! • NEW: Contemporaneous data will always be there! allsky capability/high duty cycle: SWIFT/MAXI/GLAST vs. small FoV/low duty cycle but high sensitivity/angular resolution: VHE LS I +61o 303: MAGIC (Albert et al. 2006) → Analogy to blazars!? Controversy: microquasar or pulsar ? Mirabel 2006 High-Energy Emission Model for Microquasar Jets Synchrotron emission Qe (γ,t) νFν Injection, acceleration of ultrarelativistic electrons Relativistic jet outflow with Γ ≈ 2 ν Compton emission γ1 γ2 γ Injection over finite length near the base of the jet. Leptonic Models Additional contribution from → Include abs. by γγ absorption along the jet companion star light! νFν γ-q ν Seed photons: Synchrotron (SSC), Accr. Disk + BLR (EC) + Companion star light Orbital modulation of VHE γ-rays can be explained by γγ absorption alone! Pulsar Wind Nebula emission 9 Proven mechanism (Crab) Proposed long ago for LS I+61 303 by Maraschi & Treves (1981) 9 Low steady emission 9 Radio pulse ? absorbed in strong stellar wind (tighter orbits in LS 5039, LS I+61 303) Modeling in a PWN model [from G. Dubus] Conclusions: gamma-ray binaries as compact PWN • Interpretation as pulsar / stellar wind interaction explains similarities between VHE emitting binaries. • VHE emission occurs close to pulsar/star (γγ absorption should modulate TeV flux in LS 5039). • Large scale emission can be explained by comet-like shocked material, radio morphology depends on orbit. AGILE: Micro-QSO observations • Cyg X-1 • GRS 1915+105 Cyg X-1 the longest continuous hard X-ray monitoring of Cyg X-1 Total Observation Time: ~ 4.5 Ms (1196 Orbits) 1 Month ~1.3 Crab Flare (see also INTEGRAL ATels #1533,1536) Cyg X-1 SuperAGILE 1.61curve +/- 0.13 SuperAGILE Γ~ light Low/Hard State LE (20-25 keV): Yellow Searching for transitions… HE (25-50 keV): Cyan GRID …and gamma-ray emission Del Monte et al., in preparation GRS 1915+105 GRS 1915+105 15 April 2008 Recent reactivation of the microquasar GRS 1915+105 GRS 1915+105 (Trushkin S. et al., ATel #1509) 18-60 keV gamma-ray U.L. gamma-ray map Galactic gamma-ray transients EGRET: Seen one over mission life time. Never identified. AGILE: • Cygnus region • Carina region • Crux region AGILE observes variability and detects new transients on time scales of 1 day at flux levels of 106 cm-2s-1 , even in crowded, high diffuse emission Galactic plane regions. NO detectable simultaneous hard X-ray emission (F < 20-30 mCrab, 18-60 keV, 1-day integration) GLAST: Expectations translated into full-scale transient trigger and follow-up program, in place by now. Gamma-Ray Emission from active and passive Molecular Clouds The most prominent GeV source is our Milkyway itself! The diffuse γ-ray emission is observational evidence of CR interactions in the interstellar medium via Bremsstrahlung, IC, π0-decay ~85% of all γ in galactic diffuse ~15% in sources CR propagation near sources or in molecular clouds GLAPROP might give us a prediction based on largescale consistency of nuclear reactions, ISRF, gas distributions, CR and γ-ray measurements. May or may not be correct for → CS used, avoiding opacity problems a localized diffuse emission problem! for 12CO (Aharonian et al. 2006) High-lat molecular clouds often coincidences yielding ambiguity between expanding SNR and molecular cloud (Gabici & Aharonian ’07) The TeV Galactic Centre 1 degree • Two bright point-sources in the central part of the Galaxy HESS Diffuse Emission 1 degree • After subtracting point-sources, diffuse emission is seen extending along the galactic plane Diffuse Emission HESS CS Line Emission (dense clouds) smoothed to match H.E.S.S. PSF 1 degree Diffuse Emission • Molecular clouds are ‘glowing’ in TeV γ-rays after being bombarded by cosmic ray protons and nuclei! • Energy spectrum harder than local cosmic ray spectrum (proximity to accelerator?) SNR/cloud interactions? • Correlations with available target material – IC 443 and W 28, Old (>104 yr) SNRs near mol. Clouds – Both have associated GeV sources pp → π0 → γγ ? Have we spoken lately about the role of stellar winds in the quest for Cosmic Ray acceleration? early 80s: COS-B and the “SNOBs“ Montmerle 1979: no 1:1 between SNRs (as a class) and gamma-ray sources, rather linked with young objects early…late 90 – EGRET era: more g-ray sources, more coincidences (sic!) Kaaret & Cottam – correlation EGRET <-> OB associations Yadigaroglu & Romani – OB associations, (open clusters, HIIs, PSRs, SNRs) Romero et al. – associations of individual SNR, OB associations …but got stuck at 3σ conficence level (compared to the 5-6σ for SNRs) 2002 onwards – TeVs scored: HEGRA TeVJ2032+4130 inital detection report (112 h obs, 4.6σ) + hint of confirmation* from Whipple in massive Cygnus OB2 association ~2600 OBs estimated final 237 h observations (!), 6.1σ, extended 0.1° (compared 0.07° psf) “highscore”: the deepest MWL follow-up for an UNID VHE source so far (55 ksec Chandra, 50 ksec XMM) Possibility of - at least two - explanations – Faster diffusion of higher energy hadrons and subsequent interaction in molecular clouds yielding a source a bit separated from the accelerator - Particle acceleration by stellar winds itself – GRB-remnants in our Galaxy ?! – photo-de-exitation of PeV CRs after photodesintegration on UV-photons ??! 2006: H.E.S.S. observed the stellar cluster Westerlund 2 (seen here with SPITZER eyes) • embedded in a giant molecular cloud • ongoing star formation Westerlund 2 WR 20b WR 20a • stellar winds blow cavities around massive Wolf-Rayet (WR) stars • WR 20a itself is known as the most massive binary star in our Galaxy (two stars of ~80 Msolar in a 3.8 day orbit) Therein: young, hot & massive stars -> 8 evolutionary earlier then O7, 2 WRs, and in particular WR20a, the most massive measured stars in our Galaxy (WN6+WN6 binary) 1 r= Ro d ~ 51..53 Ro orbital period: 3.686 d 9.3 Rauw et al. 2005 The H.E.S.S. observations: • detection of a new very-high-energy gamma ray source, probably associated with the stellar cluster Westerlund 2 based on 14h data, at Ethres = 380 GeV, Γ=2.53 ±0.16stat ±0.1syst • origin of energetic γ-rays unlikely the WR stars itself # excess events -> HESS J1023-575 is an extended and constant source point source for H.E.S.S. 150 observed source extension σ = 0.18° ± 0.02° 100 WR20a WR20b 50 0 VHE γ-ray image -50 0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0.2 0.25 θ2 (deg 2) The “blister” (Whiteoak & Uchida 1997): indicative for rapid expansion into a ambient low-density medium (superbubble?) WR20a WR20b γ-ray image radio: 843 MHz Shock acceleration at the boundaries of the blister Analogy with SN-driven expansions with expanding stellar winds. Outbreak phenomenon from winds of hot and massive star ensembles (TenarioTagle 1979, Völk & Forman 1982, Cesarsky & Montmerle 1983) ? Contribution to Cosmic Rays ? -> Need to see more := common phenomenon or not! Implications of the H.E.S.S. findings: • intriguing new type of VHE gamma-ray source • archetypal for other young massive clusters ? • if this association is confirmed and further stellar clusters will be detected in γ-rays (by ground-based γ-telescopes, or GLAST) WR20a WR20b 843 MHz radio image -> consider a new class of extreme particle accelerators in our Galaxy -> consequences for CRs: Will contribute, fraction unclear! Milagro Pevatron? GeV Sources Emit TeV Gamma-Rays ? E. Ona-Wilhelmi, et al., ICRC 2007 • • Milagro has discovered 3 new sources & 4 candidates in the Galaxy. 5/7 of these TeV sources have GeV counterparts. Only 13 GeV counterparts in this region - excluding Crab. Probability = 3x10-6 Abdo, et al. ApJ Lett 2007 Milagro TeV “spectrum” of MGRO J1908+06 & HESS J1908+063 Median energy for this angle and α=-2.0 is 50 TeV Cut on A4> 4 & 9 gives median E of 60 and 90 TeV 60 90 Things to come? • Abundance of sources, many different types • Need more sensitivity, better (spatial / temporal) resolution and better MWL to probe underlying physics • Many highly interesting source types just (?) below current sensitivity – Starburst galaxies – Clusters of galaxies – GRBs – … One γ-ray eye is always on now…