2,437 research outputs found

    Making Clean Energy with a Kerr Black Hole: a Tokamak Model for Gamma-Ray Bursts

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    In this paper we present a model for making clean energy with a Kerr black hole. Consider a Kerr black hole with a dense plasma torus spinning around it. A toroidal electric current flows on the surface of the torus, which generates a poloidal magnetic field outside the torus. On the surface of the tours the magnetic field is parallel to the surface. The closed magnetic field lines winding around the torus compress and confine the plasma in the torus, as in the case of tokamaks. Though it is unclear if such a model is stable, we look into the consequences if the model is stable. If the magnetic field is strong enough, the baryonic contamination from the plasma in the torus is greatly suppressed by the magnetic confinement and a clean magnetosphere of electron-positron pairs is built up around the black hole. Since there are no open magnetic field lines threading the torus and no accretion, the power of the torus is zero. If some magnetic field lines threading the black hole are open and connect with loads, clean energy can be extracted from the Kerr black hole by the Blandford-Znajek mechanism. The model may be relevant to gamma-ray bursts. The energy in the Poynting flux produced by the Blandford-Znajek mechanism is converted into the kinetic energy of the electron-positron pairs in the magnetosphere around the black hole, which generates two oppositely directed jets of electron-positron pairs with super-high bulk Lorentz factors. The jets collide and interact with the interstellar medium, which may produce gamma-ray bursts and the afterglows.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figure, accepted by Ap

    Will GRB 990123 Perform an Encore?

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    The recent gamma ray burst, GRB 990123, has an absorption redshift z_s=1.60, implying an apparent energy E3×1054ergE \ge 3 \times 10^{54} erg, and a peak luminosity Lmax6×1053erg/sL_{max} \ge 6 \times10^{53}erg/s, assuming isotropic emission. This energy is ten times larger than hitherto measured and in excess of the rest mass of the sun. Optical observations have revealed an associated galaxy displaced from the line of sight by 0.6\sim 0.6''. This raises the possibility that the burst is enhanced by gravitational lensing. We argue that existing observations probably only allow magnifications μ>400\mu>400 if the galaxy is at z_d=1.60 and the burst originates at much higher redshift. It should be possible to exclude this possibility by examining the burst time structure. If, as we anticipate, multiple imaging can be excluded, GRB 990123 remains the most intrinsically luminous event yet observed in its entirety.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS: 4 pages, latex, no figure

    To the Lighthouse

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    The extreme hypothesis that essentially all types of ultrarelativistic outflow -- specifically AGN jets, pulsar wind nebulae and GRB --are electromagnetic, rather than gas dynamical, phenomena is considered. Electromagnetic flows are naturally anisotropic and self-collimating so as to produce jet-like features. The relativistic force-free description of these flows, which is simpler than the relativistic MHD description, is explained. It is suggested that the magnetic field associated with AGN jets and GRB is quite extensively distributed in latitude, without necessarily increasing by much the total power. It is also proposed that the observed emission from these sources traces out regions of high current density where global instabilities drive a turbulence spectrum that is ultimately responsible for the particle acceleration and the synchrotron, inverse Compton and synchro-Compton emission. The direct extraction of spin energy from a black hole is re-examined and an electromagnetic model of GRB explosions is developed. It is also suggested that some GRB ``lighthouses'' be identified with accretion-induced collapse of a neutron star to form a black hole in a binary system.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figures. To appear in "Lighthouses of the Universe" Proc. Symposium held in Garching, Germany (Aug 6-9 2001) ed. M. Gilfanov, R. Sunyaev et al. Berlin:Springer. Revised version, correcting minor error

    Current Issues

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    Cosmic explosions are observed in many astrophysical environments. They range in scale from hydromagnetic instabilities in the terrestrial magnetotail and solar ``nanoflares'' to cosmological gamma ray bursts, supernovae and the protracted intervals of nuclear activity that produce the giant quasars and radio galaxies. There are many parallels in the analyses of the explosion sites that are highlighted at this workshop, specifically stellar coronae, accretion disks, supernovae and compact objects. In this introductory talk, some general issues are discussed and some more specific questions relating to the individual sites are raised.Comment: To appear in Cosmic Explosions: Proc. 10th Maryland Conference on Astrophysics. Ed. S. Holt and W. Zhang AI

    Current High Energy Emission from Black Holes

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    Two related topics are discussed. 1. Accretion onto black holes at low and high (though not very high) rates is believed to proceed adiabatically ({\em ie} non-radiatively). It is argued that the liberated energy is carried off by an outflow, probably involving almost all of the gas that is supplied. Two dimensional, fluid, accretion disks, in which mass, angular momentum and energy are transported to the disk surface, are summarized. It is conjectured that relatively minor changes are needed to describe magnetised disks. By contrast, the disk surface physics is argued to dictate the character of the outflow. 2. Ultrarelativistic jets appear to be produced by active galactic nuclei (AGN), pulsars and γ\gamma-ray bursts (GRB). In all three cases, it is argued that the power is generated electromagnetically by a magnetic rotator, (in a DC not AC form), and transported in this manner to the emission site. A model of a relativistically expanding electromagnetic shell is described and used to provide a simple model of a GRB in which the γ\gamma-rays are produced by unstable electrical currents flowing along the rotation axis. The shell drives a relativistic blast wave into the surrounding medium with a speed that varies with latitude and whose afterglow emission may exhibit achromatic breaks. Similar processes may be at work in non-relativistic plerions like the Crab Nebula and, possibly, AGN jets. The observational implications of these two classes of model and the prospects for performing instructive, numerical experiments to elucidate them further are briefly outlined.Comment: 18 pages, 1 figure. To appear in "Current High-Energy Emission around Black Holes" Proc. 2nd KIAS Astrophysics Workshop held in Seoul, Korea (Sep 3-7 2001) ed. C.-H. Lee Singapore:World Scientifi

    Black Holes and Relativistic Jets

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    There is strong observational evidence that AGN, Galactic X-ray transients and (probably) γ\gamma-ray bursts are associated with black holes, and that these sources are able to form collimated, ultrarelativistic outflows. There is much interest in trying to understand how these prime movers are able to release energy from accreting gas and their own spin energy. Electromagnetic field plays a large role in many of the mechanisms under active consideration. In this article, several of the many possible ``metabolic pathways'' through which mass, angular momentum and energy can flow around and away from black hole magnetospheres are discussed. Particular importance is attached to the interactions between the inflowing disk, the outflowing wind, the black hole and the jet. Some important unresolved questions are identified and it is argued that large scale numerical computation will almost certainly be necessary to address them.Comment: 21 pages Progress of Theoretical Physics Supplement in pres

    The Phenomena of High Energy Astrophysics

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    A brief summary of some highlights in the study of high energy astrophysical sources over the past decade is presented. It is argued that the great progress that has been made derives largely from the application of new technology to observation throughout all of the electromagnetic and other spectra and that, on this basis, the next decade should be even more exciting. However, it is imperative to observe cosmic sources throughout these spectra in order to obtain a full understanding of their properties. In addition, it is necessary to learn the universal laws that govern the macroscopic and the microscopic behavior of cosmic plasma over a great range of physical conditions by combining observations of different classes of source. These two injunctions are illustrated by discussions of cosmology, hot gas, supernova remnants and explosions, neutron stars, black holes and ultrarelativistic outflows. New interpreations of the acceleration of Galactic cosmic rays, the cooling of hot gas in rich clusters and the nature of ultrarelativistic outflows are outlined. The new frontiers of VHE γ\gamma-ray astronomy, low frequency radio astronomy, neutrino astronomy, UHE cosmic ray physics and gravitational wave astronomy are especially promising.Comment: To appear in "High Energy Processes and Phenomena in Astrophysics, IAU Symposium 214", X. Li, Z. Wang, V. Trimble (eds

    Origin and Evolution of Massive Black Holes in Galactic Nuclei

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    Beyond all reasonable doubt, black holes are commonly found in the nuclei of most normal galaxies. In recent years, dynamical measurements of hole masses have transformed the study of their functioning and evolution. In particular, relating their masses, as measured contemporaneously, to the properties of distant quasars can constrain models of the combined evolution of black holes and their host galaxies. It is suggested that black hole growth is radiation-dominated and demand-limited with an e-folding time of 40\sim40 Myr and that most local black hole mass was assembled in AGN with redshifts, z>2, whose counterparts are not directly observed today. Black hole binaries have additional features and observable consequences.Comment: 13pp. To appear in Galaxy Dynamics ed. Meritt, Valluri and Sellwood ASP conf. serie
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