114 research outputs found

    Thin discs, thick discs and transition zones

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    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

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    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

    The case for super-critical accretion onto massive black holes at high redshift

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    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

    DIM light on Black Hole X-ray Transients

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    The current model for the outburst of stellar-mass black holes X-ray binaries is the disk instability model (DIM). An overview of this model and a discussion of its theoretical and observational challenges are given.Comment: 6 pages, 7 figures, sollicited talk for "Astrophysical Sources of High Energy Particles and Radiation" (Torun, June 20-24, 2005), to be published in AIP Proceedings Serie

    The gamma-ray binaries LS 5039, LS I +61 303 and PSR B1259-63

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    Three binaries are now established sources of emission at very high energies (>1e11 eV). They are composed of a massive star and a compact object. The emission can be due to the interaction of the relativistic wind from a young ms pulsar with the stellar wind of the companion, by which rotation-power ends up as non-thermal flux. Variations at VHE energies are explained as due to gamma-gamma absorption and/or changes in shock location along the orbit. Resolved radio emission is due to cooling particles trailing the pulsar.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, proceedings Vulcano workshop (22nd - 27th May, 2006), Frontier Objects in Astrophysics and Particle Physics, F. Giovannelli & G. Mannocchi (eds.), Italian Physical Society, Editrice Compositori, Bologna, Ital

    High-energy radiation from the relativistic jet of Cygnus X-3

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    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

    Shining in the Dark: the Spectral Evolution of the First Black Holes

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    Massive Black Hole (MBH) seeds at redshift z10z \gtrsim 10 are now thought to be key ingredients to explain the presence of the super-massive (10910M10^{9-10} \, \mathrm{M_{\odot}}) black holes in place <1Gyr < 1 \, \mathrm{Gyr} after the Big Bang. Once formed, massive seeds grow and emit copious amounts of radiation by accreting the left-over halo gas; their spectrum can then provide crucial information on their evolution. By combining radiation-hydrodynamic and spectral synthesis codes, we simulate the time-evolving spectrum emerging from the host halo of a MBH seed with initial mass 105M10^5 \, \mathrm{M_{\odot}}, assuming both standard Eddington-limited accretion, or slim accretion disks, appropriate for super-Eddington flows. The emission occurs predominantly in the observed infrared-submm (11000μm1-1000 \, \mathrm{\mu m}) and X-ray (0.1100keV0.1 - 100 \, \mathrm{keV}) bands. Such signal should be easily detectable by JWST around 1μm\sim 1 \, \mathrm{\mu m} up to z25z \sim 25, and by ATHENA (between 0.10.1 and 10keV10 \, \mathrm{keV}, up to z15z \sim 15). Ultra-deep X-ray surveys like the Chandra Deep Field South could have already detected these systems up to z15z \sim 15. Based on this, we provide an upper limit for the z6z \gtrsim 6 MBH mass density of ρ2.5×102MMpc3\rho_{\bullet} \lesssim 2.5 \times 10^{2} \, \mathrm{M_{\odot} \, Mpc^{-3}} assuming standard Eddington-limited accretion. If accretion occurs in the slim disk mode the limits are much weaker, ρ7.6×103MMpc3\rho_{\bullet} \lesssim 7.6 \times 10^{3} \, \mathrm{M_{\odot} \, Mpc^{-3}} in the most constraining case.Comment: Submitted for publication in MNRA

    Colliding wind binaries and gamma-ray binaries : relativistic version of the RAMSES code

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    Gamma-ray binaries are colliding wind binaries (CWB) composed of a massive star a non-accreting pulsar with a highly relativistic wind. Particle acceleration at the shocks results in emission going from extended radio emission to the gamma-ray band. The interaction region is expected to show common features with stellar CWB. Performing numerical simulations with the hydrodynamical code RAMSES, we focus on their structure and stability and find that the Kelvin-Helmholtz instability (KHI) can lead to important mixing between the winds and destroy the large scale spiral structure. To investigate the impact of the relativistic nature of the pulsar wind, we extend RAMSES to relativistic hydrodynamics (RHD). Preliminary simulations of the interaction between a pulsar wind and a stellar wind show important similarities with stellar colliding winds with small relativistic corrections.Comment: Proceeding of the 5th International Symposium on High-Energy Gamma-Ray Astronomy (Gamma2012). arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1212.404
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