3,050 research outputs found
Thin discs, thick discs and transition zones
Accretion onto a compact object must occur through a disc when the material
has some initial angular momentum. Thin discs and the thicker low radiative
efficiency accretion flows are solutions to this problem that have been widely
studied and applied. This is an introduction to these accretion flows within
the context of X-ray binaries and cataclysmic variables.Comment: 27 pages, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the Aussois
summer school "Stades Ultimes de l'Evolution Stellaire", EAS pub. serie
Gamma-ray binaries and related systems
After initial claims and a long hiatus, it is now established that several
binary stars emit high (0.1-100 GeV) and very high energy (>100 GeV) gamma
rays. A new class has emerged called 'gamma-ray binaries', since most of their
radiated power is emitted beyond 1 MeV. Accreting X-ray binaries, novae and a
colliding wind binary (eta Car) have also been detected - 'related systems'
that confirm the ubiquity of particle acceleration in astrophysical sources. Do
these systems have anything in common ? What drives their high-energy emission
? How do the processes involved compare to those in other sources of gamma
rays: pulsars, active galactic nuclei, supernova remnants ? I review the wealth
of observational and theoretical work that have followed these detections, with
an emphasis on gamma-ray binaries. I present the current evidence that
gamma-ray binaries are driven by rotation-powered pulsars. Binaries are
laboratories giving access to different vantage points or physical conditions
on a regular timescale as the components revolve on their orbit. I explain the
basic ingredients that models of gamma-ray binaries use, the challenges that
they currently face, and how they can bring insights into the physics of
pulsars. I discuss how gamma-ray emission from microquasars provides a window
into the connection between accretion--ejection and acceleration, while eta Car
and novae raise new questions on the physics of these objects - or on the
theory of diffusive shock acceleration. Indeed, explaining the gamma-ray
emission from binaries strains our theories of high-energy astrophysical
processes, by testing them on scales and in environments that were generally
not foreseen, and this is how these detections are most valuable.Comment: 71 pages, 23 figures, minor updates to text, references, figures to
reflect published versio
What caused the GeV flare of PSR B1259-63 ?
PSR B1259-63 is a gamma-ray binary system composed of a high spindown pulsar
and a massive star. Non-thermal emission up to TeV energies is observed near
periastron passage, attributed to emission from high energy e+e- pairs
accelerated at the shock with the circumstellar material from the companion
star, resulting in a small-scale pulsar wind nebula. Weak gamma-ray emission
was detected by the Fermi/LAT at the last periastron passage, unexpectedly
followed 30 days later by a strong flare, limited to the GeV band, during which
the luminosity nearly reached the spindown power of the pulsar. The origin of
this GeV flare remains mysterious. We investigate whether the flare could have
been caused by pairs, located in the vicinity of the pulsar, up-scattering
X-ray photons from the surrounding pulsar wind nebula rather than UV stellar
photons, as usually assumed. Such a model is suggested by the geometry of the
interaction region at the time of the flare. We compute the gamma-ray
lightcurve for this scenario, based on a simplified description of the
interaction region, and compare it to the observations. The GeV lightcurve
peaks well after periastron with this geometry. The pairs are inferred to have
a Lorentz factor ~500. They also produce an MeV flare with a luminosity ~1e34
erg/s prior to periastron passage. A significant drawback is the very high
energy density of target photons required for efficient GeV emission. We
propose to associate the GeV-emitting pairs with the Maxwellian expected at
shock locations corresponding to high pulsar latitudes, while the rest of the
non-thermal emission arises from pairs accelerated in the equatorial region of
the pulsar wind termination shock.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in A&
International social work field placement or volunteer tourism? Developing an asset-based justice-learning field experience
This paper examines a developing model for building an international social work placement that meets the needs of the host agency and community first. The paper addresses the challenges for social work departments to develop a strong learning environment while also keeping primary the needs of the host community and agency
The case for super-critical accretion onto massive black holes at high redshift
Short-lived intermittent phases of super-critical (super-Eddington) growth,
coupled with star formation via positive feedback, may account for early growth
of massive black holes (MBH) and coevolution with their host spheroids. We
estimate the possible growth rates and duty cycles of these episodes, both
assuming slim accretion disk solutions, and adopting the results of recent
numerical simulations. The angular momentum of gas joining the accretion disk
determines the length of the accretion episodes, and the final mass a MBH can
reach. The latter can be related to the gas velocity dispersion, and in
galaxies with low-angular momentum gas the MBH can get to a higher mass. When
the host galaxy is able to sustain inflow rates at 1-100 msunyr, replenishing
and circulation lead to a sequence of short (~1e4-1e7 years), heavily obscured
accretion episodes that increase the growth rates, with respect to an
Eddington-limited case, by several orders of magnitude. Our model predicts that
the ratio of MBH accretion rate to star formation rate is 1e2 or higher,
leading, at early epochs, to a ratio of MBH to stellar mass higher than the
"canonical" value of ~1e-3, in agreement with current observations. Our model
makes specific predictions that long-lived super-critical accretion occurs only
in galaxies with copious low-angular momentum gas, and in this case the MBH is
more massive at fixed velocity dispersion.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
High-energy radiation from the relativistic jet of Cygnus X-3
Cygnus X-3 is an accreting high-mass X-ray binary composed of a Wolf-Rayet
star and an unknown compact object, possibly a black hole. The gamma-ray space
telescope Fermi found definitive evidence that high-energy emission is produced
in this system. We propose a scenario to explain the GeV gamma-ray emission in
Cygnus X-3. In this model, energetic electron-positron pairs are accelerated at
a specific location in the relativistic jet, possibly related to a
recollimation shock, and upscatter the stellar photons to high energies. The
comparison with Fermi observations shows that the jet should be inclined close
to the line of sight and pairs should not be located within the system.
Energetically speaking, a massive compact object is favored. We report also on
our investigations of the gamma-ray absorption of GeV photons with the
radiation emitted by a standard accretion disk in Cygnus X-3. This study shows
that the gamma-ray source should not lie too close to the compact object.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the SF2A conference held in
Marseille, 21-24 June 201
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