144 research outputs found

    Compton Scattering in Jets: A Mechanism for ∌\sim 0.4 and \lsim 0.2 Mev Line Production

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    We show that gamma ray line emission at ∌\sim0.4 MeV and \lsim 0.2 MeV can be produced by Compton scattering of beamed radiation in the jets of Galactic black hole candidates. This mechanism has the novel feature of not invoking the presence of e+e^+--e−e^- pairs. To produce the two lines we employ a symmetric double sided jet with bulk flow velocity of about 0.5 c and incident beam radiation with a hard energy spectrum. We show that the two lines can be seen at viewing angle cosines relative to the jet ranging from 0.2 to 0.6. This comprises 40\% of the total solid angle. In addition, the line radiation is approximately 10\% polarized. Depending on the bulk flow and viewing angle the model can produce lines at other energies as well. In particular a broad feature near 1 MeV can be seen by viewing the jet close to its axis. Our model can also accommodate single line spectra if the beamed gamma ray emission or the jets themselves are asymmetric.Comment: 10 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript with figures, NRL94-05-0

    JT9D engine diagnostics. Task 2: Feasibility study of measuring in-service flight loads

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    The feasibility of measuring JT9D propulsion system flight inertia loads on a 747 airplane is studied. Flight loads background is discussed including the current status of 747/JT9D loads knowledge. An instrumentation and test plan is formulated for an airline-owned in-service airplane and the Boeing-owned RA001 test airplane. Technical and cost comparisons are made between these two options. An overall technical feasibility evaluation is made and a cost summary presented. Conclusions and recommendations are presented in regard to using existing inertia loads data versus conducting a flight test to measure inertia loads

    Is the High-Energy Emission from Centaurus A Compton-Scattered Jet Radiation?

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    We consider whether the hard X-ray and soft gamma-ray emission from Centaurus A is beamed radiation from the active nucleus which is Compton-scattered into our line-of-sight. We derive the spectrum and degree of polarization of scattered radiation when incident beamed radiation is scattered from a cold (kT<<mec2kT<<m_ec^2) electron cloud moving with bulk relativistic motion along the jet axis, and calculate results for an unpolarized, highly-beamed incident power-law photon source. We fit the OSSE data from Centaurus A with this model and find that if the scatterers are not moving relativistically, then the angle the jet makes with respect to our line-of-sight is 61∘±5∘61^\circ\pm 5^\circ. We predict a high degree of polarization of the scattered radiation below ∌300\sim300 keV. Future measurements with X-ray and gamma-ray polarimeters could be used to constrain or rule out such a scenario.Comment: 12 pages, Postscript file with 3 Figures, NRL 017-331-09

    Evidence for an Additional Heat Source in the Warm Ionized Medium of Galaxies

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    Spatial variations of the [S II]/H-Alpha and [N II]/H-Alpha line intensity ratios observed in the gaseous halo of the Milky Way and other galaxies are inconsistent with pure photoionization models. They appear to require a supplemental heating mechanism that increases the electron temperature at low densities n_e. This would imply that in addition to photoionization, which has a heating rate per unit volume proportional to n_e^2, there is another source of heat with a rate per unit volume proportional to a lower power of n_e. One possible mechanism is the dissipation of interstellar plasma turbulence, which according to Minter & Spangler (1997) heats the ionized interstellar medium in the Milky Way at a rate ~ 1x10^-25 n_e ergs cm^-3 s^-1. If such a source were present, it would dominate over photoionization heating in regions where n_e < 0.1 cm^-3, producing the observed increases in the [S II]/H-Alpha and [N II]/H-Alpha intensity ratios at large distances from the galactic midplane, as well as accounting for the constancy of [S II]/[N II], which is not explained by pure photoionization. Other supplemental heating sources, such as magnetic reconnection, cosmic rays, or photoelectric emission from small grains, could also account for these observations, provided they supply to the warm ionized medium ~ 10^-5 ergs s^-1 per cm^2 of Galactic disk.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur

    Thermal Comptonization in Mildly Relativistic Pair Plasmas

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    We use a Monte Carlo simulation to calculate the spectra of mildly relativistic thermal plasmas in pair balance. We use the exact integral expression for the electron-positron thermal annihilation spectrum, and provide accurate expressions for the Gaunt factors of electron-ion, electron-electron, and electron-positron thermal bremsstrahlung in the transrelativistic temperature regime. The particles are assumed to be uniformly distributed throughout a sphere, and the pair opacity is self-consistently calculated from the energy and angular distribution of scattered photons. The resultant photon spectra are compared with the nonrelativistic diffusion treatment of Sunyaev and Titarchuk, the bridging formulas of Zdziarski, and the relativistic corrections proposed by Titarchuk. We calculate allowed pair-balanced states of thermal plasmas with no pair escape which include bremsstrahlung and internal soft photons. The results are presented in the spectral index/compactness plane, and can be directly compared with observations of spectra from AGNs and Galactic black hole candidates. By comparing with X-ray spectral indices of Seyfert AGNs and compactnesses inferred from X-ray variability data, we find that the allowed solutions for pair equilibrium plasma imply that the temperatures of Seyfert galaxies are â‰Č300\lesssim 300 keV. This prediction can be tested with more sensitive gamma-ray observations of Seyfert galaxies. We find that if the X-ray variability time scale gives an accurate measure of the compactness, pair-dominated solutions are inconsistent with the data.Comment: 32 pages with 9 figures, compressed and uuencoded postscrip

    The Beaming Pattern of Doppler Boosted Thermal Annihilation Radiation: Application to MeV Blazars

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    The beaming pattern of thermal annihilation radiation is broader than the beaming pattern produced by isotropic nonthermal electrons and positrons in the jets of radio-emitting active galactic nuclei which Compton scatter photons from an external isotropic radiation field. Thus blueshifted thermal annihilation radiation can provide the dominant contribution to the high-energy radiation spectrum at observing angles theta > 1/Gamma, where Gamma is the bulk Lorentz factor of the outflowing plasma. This effect may account for the spectral features of MeV blazars discovered with the Compton Telescope on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. Coordinated gamma-ray observations of annihilation line radiation to infer Doppler factors and VLBI radio observations to measure transverse angular speeds of outflowing plasma blobs can be used to determine the Hubble constant.Comment: 15 pages including 3 figures, requires AAS Latex macros, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journa

    Annihilation Fountain in the Galactic Center Region

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    Two different model-independent mapping techniques have been applied to OSSE, SMM, TGRS and balloon data and reveal a feature in the 0.511 MeV electron-positron annihilation radiation pattern of our galaxy centered roughly at l=-2 deg. and b=10 deg. with a flux of 5x10^(-4) 0.511 MeV ph/cm^2/s. If near the galactic center, then positron sources are producing approximately 10^42 positrons/s which annihilate 1-2 kpc above the galactic plane. A starburst episode within the inner few hundred pc of our galaxy would drive hot pair-laden gas into the halo, with the one-sidedness pointing to the site of initial pressure release at the onset of the starburst activity. Positrons lose energy and annihilate as they are convected upward with the gas flow, and we calculate high-latitude annihilation patterns and fluxes in accord with the observations. Changes in the ionization state when the escaping gas cools could give annihilation radiation substructure. The fountain of hot (10^6-10^7 K) gas rising into the galactic halo would be seen through its enhanced dispersion measure, thermal emission, and recombination radiation.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, requires AASTEX macros and psfig.tex, 2 postscript figures, Submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letter

    High-Energy Spectral Complexity from Thermal Gradients in Black Hole Atmospheres

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    We show that Compton scattering of soft photons with energies near 100 eV in thermally stratified black-hole accretion plasmas with temperatures in the range 100 keV - 1 MeV can give rise to an X-ray spectral hardening near 10 keV. This could produce the hardening observed in the X-ray spectra of black holes, which is generally attributed to reflection or partial covering of the incident continuum source by cold optically thick matter. In addition, we show that the presence of very hot (kT=1 MeV) cores in plasmas leads to spectra exibiting high energy tails similar to those observed from Galactic black-hole candidates.Comment: 11 pages, uuencoded gziped postscript, ApJ Letters in pres

    OSSE Observations of the Soft Gamma Ray Continuum from the Galactic Plane at Longitude 95 Degrees

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    We present the results of OSSE observations of the soft gamma ray continuum emission from the Galactic plane at longitude 95 degrees. Emission is detected between 50 and 600 keV where the spectrum is fit well by a power law with photon index -2.6+-0.3 and flux (4.0+-0.5) 10^{-2} photons/s/cm^2/rad/MeV at 100 keV. This spectral shape in this range is similar to that found for the continuum emission from the inner Galaxy but the amplitude is lower by a factor of four. This emission is either due to unresolved and previously unknown point sources or it is of diffuse origin, or a combination of the two. Simultaneous observations with OSSE and smaller field of view instruments operating in the soft gamma ray energy band, such as XTE or SAX, would help resolve this issue. If it is primarily diffuse emission due to nonthermal electron bremsstrahlung, as is the >1 MeV Galactic ridge continuum, then the power in low energy cosmic ray electrons exceeds that of the nuclear component of the cosmic rays by an order of magnitude. This would have profound implications for the origin of cosmic rays and the energetics of the interstellar medium. Alternatively, if the emission is diffuse and thermal, then there must be a component of the interstellar medium at temperatures near 10^9 K.Comment: 11 pages, Latex, requires AASTEX macros and psfig.tex, 2 postscript figures, Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Letter

    Diffuse Galactic Soft Gamma-Ray Emission

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    The Galactic diffuse soft gamma-ray (30-800 keV) emission has been measured from the Galactic Center by the HIREGS balloon-borne germanium spectrometer to determine the spectral characteristics and origin of the emission. The resulting Galactic diffuse continuum is found to agree well with a single power-law (plus positronium) over the entire energy range, consistent with RXTE and COMPTEL/CGRO observations at lower and higher energies, respectively. We find no evidence of spectral steepening below 200 keV, as has been reported in previous observations. The spatial distribution along the Galactic ridge is found to be nearly flat, with upper limits set on the longitudinal gradient, and with no evidence of an edge in the observed region. The soft gamma-ray diffuse spectrum is well modeled by inverse Compton scattering of interstellar radiation off of cosmic-ray electrons, minimizing the need to invoke inefficient nonthermal bremsstrahlung emission. The resulting power requirement is well within that provided by Galactic supernovae. We speculate that the measured spectrum provides the first direct constraints on the cosmic-ray electron spectrum below 300 MeV.Comment: 26 pages, 7 figure, submitted to Ap
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