MASSIVE STARS IN COLLIDING WIND SYSTEMS: THE HIGH-ENERGY GAMMA-RAY PERSPECTIVE

Similar documents
GAMMA-RAYS FROM MASSIVE BINARIES

Colliding winds in massive star binaries: expectations from radio to gamma rays

Colliding winds in massive star binaries: expectations from radio to gamma-rays

Modelling the synchrotron emission from O-star colliding wind binaries

Fermi-Large Area Telescope Observations of Pulsar Wind Nebulae and their associated pulsars

On the location and properties of the GeV and TeV emitters of LS 5039

Remnants and Pulsar Wind

Gamma-rays from black-hole binaries (?)

On the physics of colliding stellar-pulsar winds

Pulsar Wind Nebulae as seen by Fermi-Large Area Telescope

High Energy Emissions from the PSR /SS2883 Binary System

Radio Observations of TeV and GeV emitting Supernova Remnants

Gamma-ray binaries as pulsars spectral & variability behaviour Guillaume Dubus. Laboratoire d Astrophysique de Grenoble UMR 5571 UJF / CNRS

Observing Galactic Sources at GeV & TeV Energies (A Short Summary)

EXPECTED GAMMA-RAY EMISION FROM X-RAY BINARIES

Gamma rays from supernova remnants in clumpy environments.! Stefano Gabici APC, Paris

Propagation of very high energy γ-rays inside massive binaries LS 5039 and LSI

PoS(ICRC2017)746. Fermi acceleration under control: η Carinae

Gas 1: Molecular clouds

microquasars and binary pulsar systems

H.E.S.S. Unidentified Gamma-ray Sources in a Pulsar Wind Nebula Scenario And HESS J

Supernova Remnants and GLAST

A New View of the High-Energy γ-ray Sky with the Fermi Telescope

The multi-messenger approach to particle acceleration by massive stars : a science case for optical, radio and X-ray observatories

Gamma-ray absorption in the massive TeV Binary LS 5039

HESS J : A new gamma-ray binary?

Nonthermal Emission in Starburst Galaxies

The High-Energy Interstellar Medium

The Gamma-ray Sky with ASTROGAM GAMMA-RAY BINARIES. Second Astrogam Workshop Paris, March Josep M. Paredes

Publ. Astron. Obs. Belgrade No. 86 (2009), X-RAY FORMATION MECHANISMS IN MASSIVE BINARY SYSTEMS

Probing the Pulsar Wind in the TeV Binary System

Interstellar gamma rays. New insights from Fermi. Andy Strong. on behalf of Fermi-LAT collaboration. COSPAR Scientific Assembly, Bremen, July 2010

Extended X-ray object ejected from the PSR B /LS 2883 binary

Probing Colliding Wind Binaries with High-Resolution X-ray Spectra

Active Galactic Nuclei-I. The paradigm

What can Simbol-X do for gamma-ray binaries?

(X-ray) binaries in γ-rays

Fermi-LAT and WMAP observations of the SNR Puppis A

Extreme high-energy variability of Markarian 421

Constraints on Extragalactic Background Light from Cherenkov telescopes: status and perspectives for the next 5 years

The puzzling emission of γ-ray binaries

Astronomy 422! Lecture 7: The Milky Way Galaxy III!

Recent Observations of Supernova Remnants

Constraining Dark Matter annihilation with the Fermi-LAT isotropic gamma-ray background

GAMMA-RAY EMISSION FROM BINARY SYSTEMS

Exploring the Ends of the Rainbow: Cosmic Rays in Star-Forming Galaxies

Stellar Binary Systems and CTA. Guillaume Dubus Laboratoire d Astrophysique de Grenoble

99 Years from Discovery : What is our current picture on Cosmic Rays? #6 How cosmic rays travel to Earth? Presented by Nahee Park

arxiv: v1 [astro-ph.he] 13 Feb 2015

Observing TeV Gamma Rays from the Jet Interaction Regions of SS 433 with HAWC

arxiv: v1 [astro-ph.he] 9 Nov 2010

Gamma-ray binaries. Guillaume Dubus. HEPRO III, Barcelona 2011 Institut de Planétologie et d Astrophysique de Grenoble

(X-ray) binaries in γ-rays

Discovering the colliding wind binary HD 93129A

The 2006 Giant Flare in PKS and Unidentified TeV Sources. Justin Finke Naval Research Laboratory 5 June 2008

The Milky Way Galaxy

Pulsar Wind Nebulae: A Multiwavelength Perspective

Neutrino Oscillations and Astroparticle Physics (5) John Carr Centre de Physique des Particules de Marseille (IN2P3/CNRS) Pisa, 10 May 2002

Gamma-ray binaries: from low frequencies to high resolution

EBL Studies with the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope

Multiwavelength emission of the gamma-ray binary LS I

Galactic Accelerators : PWNe, SNRs and SBs

Structure of Dark Matter Halos

The FIR-Radio Correlation & Implications for GLAST Observations of Starburst Galaxies Eliot Quataert (UC Berkeley)

Fermi: Highlights of GeV Gamma-ray Astronomy

Particle acceleration and pulsars

Preliminary results from the e-merlin Legacy Cyg OB2 Radio Survey

Gamma-ray emission from nova outbursts

Gamma-ray binaries: hydrodynamics and high energy emission

Galactic Diffuse Gamma-Ray Emission

Dark Matter ASTR 2120 Sarazin. Bullet Cluster of Galaxies - Dark Matter Lab

Gamma ray emission from supernova remnant/molecular cloud associations

High Energy Emission. Brenda Dingus, LANL HAWC

Radio Continuum: Cosmic Rays & Magnetic Fields. Rainer Beck MPIfR Bonn

Exploring the powering source of the TeV X-ray binary LS 5039

Supernova Remnants and Cosmic. Rays

Pulsars and Pulsar-Wind Nebulae: TeV to X-Ray Connection. Oleg Kargaltsev (University of Florida) George Pavlov (Penn State University)

Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Lecture Outline

observation of Galactic sources

Modeling X-ray and gamma-ray emission in the intrabinary shock of pulsar binaries. Hongjun An Roger Romani on behalf of the Fermi-LAT Collaboration

Galactic Variable Sky with EGRET and GLAST. S. W. Digel. Stanford Linear Accelerator Center 2575 Sand Hill Road Menlo Park, CA 94025

AGILE and Blazars: the Unexpected, the Unprecedented, and the Uncut

Discovery of a New Gamma-Ray Binary: 1FGL J

Cosmic Rays, Photons and Neutrinos

The Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope

Diffusive shock acceleration: a first order Fermi process. jan.-fév NPAC, rayons cosmiques E. Parizot (APC)

MWL. A Brief Advertisement Before Your Regularly Scheduled Program

Some HI is in reasonably well defined clouds. Motions inside the cloud, and motion of the cloud will broaden and shift the observed lines!

Sep. 13, JPS meeting

PERSPECTIVES of HIGH ENERGY NEUTRINO ASTRONOMY. Paolo Lipari Vulcano 27 may 2006

FERMI. YOUNG PULSAR SPECTRA WITH THE LAT FERMI TELESCOPE Ateliers pulsars. 25 novembre 2008 Damien Parent. Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope

Can blazar flares be triggered by the VHE gamma-rays from the surrounding of a supermassive black hole?

The Time Evolution of Pulsar Wind Nebulae

Cosmic Ray acceleration at radio supernovae: perspectives for the Cerenkov Telescope Array

The Impact of the Galactic Center Arches Cluster: Radio & X-ray Observations

VERITAS Observations of Supernova Remnants

The dominant X-ray wind in massive star binaries

High-Energy Plasma Astrophysics and Next Generation Gamma-Ray Observatory Cherenkov Telescope Array

Cosmic ray electrons from here and there (the Galactic scale)

Constraints on cosmic-ray origin from gamma-ray observations of supernova remnants

Transcription:

MASSIVE STARS IN COLLIDING WIND SYSTEMS: THE HIGH-ENERGY GAMMA-RAY PERSPECTIVE Anita Reimer, HEPL & KIPAC, Stanford University Scineghe 2008, Padova, Oct. 2008

Massive Stars......are hot (~3-6 10 4 K), massive (~20-80 M o ), luminous (~10 5-6 L o )...show large mass loss rates in stellar winds: ~10-6...-3 M o /yr...possess supersonic winds: V(x) V (1-R * /x), V ~1-5 10 3 km/s evolution [From: Moffat 2001]

Potential sites of particle acceleration various kinds of shocks/instabilities: Intra-Wind interactions: clumps, shocks from line-driven instabilities ( chaotic wind model ) Wind-Wind collisions Wind-ISM collisions Collective effects of stellar winds: large scale shocks at core of association (e.g. Bykov et al. 1992) or: HESS J1023-575 contours from Klepach et al. 2000 on MOST 843 MHz image

Radio band: free-free emission (S ~ ν 0.6 for isothermal spherical wind) + synchrotron radiation ( proof for existence of relativistic electrons!) IR: Broadband characteristics thermal (episodic dust formation during periastron in WC-binaries) The low-energy SED of WR 140 (WC7 + O4-5).

Broadband characteristics: X-rays thermal (shock-heated gas) + non-thermal? L x ~ L bol for single O-stars; L x (binary) > L x (2 x single) phase-locked variability in binaries WR 140: RXTE [from: Pollock et al. 2005] WR 147 [from: Pittard et al. 2002]

Broadband characteristics: γ-rays COS-B: WR 140 EGRET: Population studies imply correlation of some still unidentified γ-ray sources (Unids) with massive star populations (OB-associations, WR-, Of-stars) [Montmerle 1979, Romero et al. 1999, ] Today: [from: Funk et al. 2008]

A schematic view on a COLLIDING WIND REGION D ~ 3... 10 5 R o Stagnation point (ram pressure balance): η «1 for WR-binaries Magnetic field: from: Eichler & Usov 1993 estimated surface magnetic field: B S ~10-10 4 G [Ignace et al. 1998; Mathys 1999; Donati et al. 2001,2002] > mg-fields at tenths of pc

The Model [Reimer et al. 2006, ApJ] diffusion dominated convection dominated uniform wind neglect interaction of stellar radiat. field on wind structure restrict to wide binaries cylinder-like emission region (x»r, emission from large r negligible) photon field of OB-comp. monochromatic: n(ε) ~ δ(ε-ε T ), ε T»10eV electron distribution isotropically convection velocity V = const. magnetic field B = const. throughout emission region

Constituting the γ-ray output: Operating processes Inverse Compton scattering off stellar photons (anisotropic, KN?) i=45 o ϕ B = 180 o 90 o, 270 o 0 o 0 o ϕ B = OB 90 o WR anisotropic IC scattering emitted power increases with scattering angle! 180 o Relativistic bremsstrahlung NN/pp inelastic scattering orbital variation of IC radiation expected γ-absorption due to γγ-collision: E γ,cr ~66 (T 4 /K) -1 GeV, T 4 =T/(5 10 4 K) propagation (convection, diffusion): spectral softening in post-shock flow alternative: cascade models if ions reach suff.high E [e.g. Bednarek 05]

Example: WR 140 (WC7+O4-5V) [from: Reimer et al. 2006, ApJ] Phase=0.9 5 Phase=0.8 D~2.5AU Phase=0.2 Phase=0.6 7 Orbital variations expected with amount depending on system parameters

WR 147 (WN8+B0.5V) MAGIC: WFPC2 INTEGRAL: MERLIN 5-GHz map on top of an optical image [from: Dougherty 2002] [from: Niemela et al. 1998] [from: De Becker etal. 2007] distance ~ 650 pc L B ~ 1.9 10 38 erg/s T eff ~ 28 500 K WN: V~950km/s, M~2.5 10-5 M o /yr (O)B: V~800km/s, M~4 10-7 M o /yr D ~ 417 AU / cos i

Constraining WR 147 s particle spectrum observational constraints: synchrotron spectrum (γ e,max, B, norm.), projected stellar separation ( inclination i affects magnetic/photon field density at shock) physics constraints: acceleration rate to overcome Coulomb losses, Bohm limit for diffusive shock acceleration, energy & particle number conservation κ acc allows >GeV photon/e - production within obs./physics constraints higher field strengths at shock location for small inclination systems allows particle acceleration to larger particle energy ) i=0 o i=30 o i=45 o i=60 o i=75 o i=85 o P R E L I M I N A R Y! maximum particle energy increases with decreasing inclination angle [Reimer et al. 2008, submitted]

Orbital modulations of IC spectrum MAGIC/INTEGRAL upper limits rule out this setting i=45 o P R E L I M I N A R Y! MAGIC/INTEGRAL upper limits constrain starcentered line-of-sight angle Θ L <50 o i=75 o >100GeV observations have no constraining power i=85 o [Reimer etal. 2008, submitted]

... in summary: High energy flux limits indicate preference for WR 147 to possess large inclination angles i, OR particle acceleration is not sufficiently effective to allow GeV photon production. Sufficient sensitive γ-ray measurements < 1-10 GeV (e.g. Fermi LAT) have the potential to constrain WR 147 s system geometry. For geometric well known systems, sufficient sensitive γ-ray measurements allow to constrain particle acceleration efficiency.

The massive binaries population in our Galaxy: How many are detectable at γ-rays at most? 227 WR-stars/-systems detected in the Milky Way [ v.d. Hucht 01+ 06: 7 th cat. Galactic WR-stars + extension] WR-binary frequency (incl. probable binaries) ~ 40-50% 88 systems distance 4 kpc - 42 systems [γ-ray flux dilution factor ~ distance 2 ] shock location above star s photosph. - 14 systems [shock location determined by winds ram pressure balance] orbital period/stellar separation known - 11 systems [required to determine shock location and environment] 21 WR-binaries for potential γ-ray detectibility

Parameters & Assumptions IC component only [likely dominant; Reimer etal. 06 model used] max. possible acceleration rate. [mechanism not specified] system parameters [L bol, M OB,WR, M OB,WR, V,OB,WR, T eff, D WR-OB, d L ]: van der Hucht `01, Markova et al `05, Nugi & Lamers `00, Schaerer & Maeder `92, Cherepashchuk `01 e=0 assumed [<e> obs low, e max ~0.9], i=0 o for unknown systems inclination B * =100G + magnetic rotator model [Weber & Davis 1967] energy (particles) injection: (a) particle number conservation: rel. particle flux wind particle flux enter acc.zone (b) energy conservation: L inj L wind ε target ~T eff, u target ~L OB /x 2, x=d WR-OB η/1+ η,.. η=(m OB V OB )/(M WR V WR ) S 0.1-100GeV

Results LAT-source, if: E IC,max > E LAT, min F IC(>100MeV) > F min,lat(>100mev) [used: 2 10-8 cm -2 s -1 +2-5 6-7 WR-binaries at most detectable by Fermi LAT tend to be very-long-period binaries for 1yr exp. at b <0.5] [otherwise severe IC-losses cause low E cutoff of e - spectr. inhibition of GeV-prod. in shorter-period binaries], x>10 12 cm all but one turn out to be non-thermal radio emitters only most nearby (< 1kpc) WR-systems safely LAT-detectable

γ-ray production >100 GeV? Cherenkov source, if: E IC,max > 100 GeV F IC(>100GeV) =? +1-2 2 WR-binaries potentially emit > 100 GeV photons expected F IC(>100GeV) very low even under favourable orbital geometry tend to be very-long-period binaries, x>10 13 cm individual WR-binary systems are not favourable Cherenkov sources Stellar clusters possibly more promising (see Westerlund 2)?

Summary Massive star-star binary systems are potential γ-ray sources Characteristics of observables in the γ-ray band: - concentrated towards spiral arms, not spatially extended - orbital variations, amplitude depends on system geometry (IC anisotropic, modulations of target photon density, wind density at shock and/or size/geometry of emission region, etc.; non-orbital variations from wind clumping?) Sensitive γ-ray measurements (e.g. Fermi LAT) have the potential to constrain the system geometry and/or provide information on particle acceleration process for geometric well known systems. E.g. WR 147: HE flux limits indicate preference large inclination angles, OR: particle acceleration efficiency does not allow GeV photon production. +2 6-5 WR-binaries at most detectable by Fermi LAT (1yr): highest chance for very-long period, nearby systems [Most promising candidates: WR 11, 70, 125, 137, 140, 146, 147] individual star-star binaries not favourable sources for current Cherenkov telescopes -Anita Reimer, HEPL/KIPAC Stanford University -