740 research outputs found
Particle acceleration in the vacuum gaps in black hole magnetospheres
We consider particle acceleration in vacuum gaps in magnetospheres of black
holes powered through Blandford-Znajek mechanism and embedded into
radiatively-inefficient accretion flow (RIAF) environment. In such situation
the gap height is limited by the onset of gamma-gamma pair production on the
infrared photons originating from the RIAF. We numerically calculate
acceleration and propagation of charged particles taking into account the
detailed structure of electric and magnetic field in the gap and in the entire
black hole magnetosphere, radiative energy losses and interactions of gamma
rays produced by the propagated charged particles with the background radiation
field of RIAF. We show that the presence of the vacuum gap has clear
observational signatures. The spectra of emission from gaps embedded into a
relatively high luminosity RIAF are dominated by the inverse Compton emission
with a sharp, super-exponential cut-off in the very-high-energy gamma-ray band.
The cut-off energy is determined by the properties of the RIAF and is largely
independent of the structure of magnetosphere and geometry of the gap.The
spectra of the gap residing in low-luminosity RIAFs are dominated by
synchrotron / curvature emission with the spectra extending into 1-100 GeV
energy range. We also consider the effect of possible acceleration of protons
in the gap and find that proton energies could reach the ultra-high-energy
cosmic ray (UHECR) range only in extremely low luminosity RIAFs.Comment: 10 pages, 15 figure
A rotating hollow cone anisotropy of TeV emission from binary systems
We show that TeV gamma-ray emission produced via interactions of high-energy
particles with anisotropic radiation field of a massive star in binary systems
should have a characteristic rotating hollow cone anisotropy pattern. The
hollow cone, whose axis is directed away from the massive star, rotates with
the period equal to the orbital period of the system. We note that the two
maxima pattern of the TeV energy band lightcurve of the gamma-ray loud binary
LS 5039 can be interpreted in terms of this rotating hollow cone model.
Adopting such an interpretation, we are able to constrain the geometry of the
system - either the inclination angle of the binary orbit, or the elevation of
the gamma-ray emission region above the orbital plane.Comment: Ap.J.Lett., accepte
IceCube Sensitivity for Neutrino Flux from Fermi Blazars in Quiescent States
We investigate the IceCube detection potential of very high energy neutrinos
from blazars, for different classes of "hadronic" models, taking into account
the limits imposed on the neutrino flux by the recent Fermi telescope
observations. Assuming the observed gamma-ray emission is produced by the decay
of neutral pions from proton-proton interactions, the measurement of the
time-averaged spectral characteristics of blazars in the GeV energy band
imposes upper limits on the time-averaged neutrino flux. Comparing these upper
limits to the 5 sigma discovery threshold of IceCube for different neutrino
spectra and different source locations in the sky, we find that several BL Lacs
with hard spectra in the GeV band are within the detection potential of
IceCube. If the gamma-ray emission is dominated by the neutral pion decay flux,
none of the flat-spectrum radio quasars are detectable with IceCube. If the
primary high energy proton spectrum is very hard and/or neutrinos are produced
in proton-photon, rather than proton-proton reactions, the upper limit on the
neutrino flux imposed by the measured gamma-ray spectra is relaxed and
gamma-ray observations impose only lower bounds on the neutrino flux. We
investigate whether these lower bounds guarantee the detection of blazars with
very hard neutrino spectra, expected in the latter type model. We show that all
the "hadronic" models of activity of blazars are falsifiable with IceCube.
Furthermore, we show that models with gamma-ray emission produced by the decay
of neutral pions from proton-proton interactions can be readily distinguished
from the models based on proton-gamma interactions and/or models predicting
very hard high energy proton spectra via a study of the distribution of
spectral indices of gamma-ray spectra of sources detected with IceCube.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Evidence for the Galactic contribution to the IceCube astrophysical neutrino flux
We show that the Galactic latitude distribution of IceCube astrophysical
neutrino events with energies above 100~TeV is inconsistent with the isotropic
model of the astrophysical neutrino flux. Namely, the Galactic latitude
distribution of the events shows an excess at low latitudes |b|<10 degrees and
a deficit at high Galactic latitude |b|> 50 degrees. We use Monte-Carlo
simulations to show that the inconsistency of the isotropic signal model with
the data is at > 3 sigma level, after the account of trial factors related to
the choice of the low-energy threshold and Galactic latitude binning in our
analysis.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted to Astroparticle Physic
Galactic sources of E>100 GeV gamma-rays seen by Fermi telescope
We perform a search for sources of gamma-rays with energies E>100 GeV at low
Galactic latitudes |b|<10 deg using the data of Fermi telescope. To separate
compact gamma-ray sources from the diffuse emission from the Galaxy, we use the
Minimal Spanning Tree method with threshold of 5 events in inner Galaxy
(Galactic longitude |l|<60 deg) and of 3 events in outer Galaxy. Using this
method, we identify 22 clusters of very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-rays, which we
consider as "source candidates". 3 out of 22 event clusters are expected to be
produced in result of random coincidences of arrival directions of diffuse
background photons. To distinguish clusters of VHE events produced by real
sources from the background we perform likelihood analysis on each source
candidate. We present a list of 19 higher significance sources for which the
likelihood analysis in the energy band E>100 GeV gives Test Statistics (TS)
values above 25. Only 10 out of the 19 high-significance sources can be readily
identified with previously known VHE gamma-ray sources. 4 sources could be
parts of extended emission from known VHE gamma-ray sources. Five sources are
new detections in the VHE band. Among these new detections we tentatively
identify one source as a possible extragalactic source PMN J1603-4904 (a blazar
candidate), one as a pulsar wind nebula around PSR J1828-1007. High
significance cluster of VHE events is also found at the position of a source
coincident with the Eta Carinae nebula. In the Galactic Center region, strong
VHE gamma-ray signal is detected from Sgr C molecular cloud, but not from the
Galactic Center itself.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Galactic and extragalactic contributions to the astrophysical muon neutrino signal
Spectral and anisotropy properties of IceCube astrophysical neutrino signal
reveal an evidence for a significant Galactic contribution to the neutrino flux
in Southern hemisphere. We check if the Galactic contribution is detectable in
the astrophysical muon neutrino flux observed from a low positive declinations
region of the Northern sky. Estimating the Galactic neutrino flux in this part
of the sky from gamma-ray and Southern sky neutrino data, we find that the
Northern sky astrophysical muon neutrino signal shows an excess over the
Galactic flux. This points to the presence of an additional hard spectrum
(extragalactic or large scale Galactic halo) component of astrophysical
neutrino flux. We show that the Galactic flux component should still be
detectable in the muon neutrino data in a decade long IceCube exposure.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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