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Neutron Stars and Black Holes

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Presentation on theme: "Neutron Stars and Black Holes"— Presentation transcript:

1 Neutron Stars and Black Holes
Remnant cores of massive stars: produce pulsars, jets and gamma-ray bursts Relativity theory is needed!

2 Results of 2nd Exam Raw mean: 54.92; so curve of 20 pts
Curved mean: 74.92;  = 9.80 Distribution: High, 100; Low, ≥ 90: ≥ 80: 15 ≥ 70: 16 ≥ 60: 13 < 60: 3 Random guessing: 52 (after curve) -- no one did that badly

3 It’s Hard to Find Black Holes
They don’t emit (significant) radiation Light bending means they don’t even show up as dark spots:  Unless distance is close to RS, gravity is close to that of a regular star of the same mass

4 Origin of Black Holes Collapse of very massive stars (>30 M) can lead to BHs of ~3-25 M (neutron stars must have masses below about 2 M ). A NS could accrete more gas from a binary companion, kicking it over the upper mass limit Collapse of densest regions of forming galaxies, either directly or through merger of stars in dense clusters can yield BHs with M > 1000 M . Quantum fluctuations in the early universe could give primordial BHs of a wide range of masses.

5 Accretion Disks Form when gas spirals down into a massive object. Seen in: Stars (and planetary systems) being born (earlier) Binary stellar systems with compact component: white dwarf neutron star black hole Active Galactic Nuclei (later)

6 In an Accretion Disk Mass moves inward
Angular momentum is carried outward Friction (viscosity) in the gas heats it up Usually most of this heat is radiated from the disk surface giving: Ultraviolet radiation from white dwarfs X-rays from neutron stars and stellar mass BHs Mostly visible and UV from AGN BHs Most logical way to launch jets

7 One famous X-ray binary with a very likely black hole is in the constellation Cygnus

8 Cyg X-1: Radio Image & X-ray light curve
Combining observations: optical of blue giant; Doppler shifted lines of star and gas stream we conclude star has M>15 M and X-ray emitting companion has M>10 M, so

9 Cygnus X-1 is a Black Hole Binary

10 Accretion Disks are Efficient
E = mc2 Complete conversion of mass to energy is only possible in matter-antimatter annihilation But normal accretion disks can convert > 5.7% but probably < 32% of mass to energy This is far better than chemical reactions (~ %) or even nuclear fusion (~0.7 %) Full conversion of 1 M /year = 5.7  1039W

11 Jets Launched From Disks
Artist’s rendition of jets launched from vicinity of BH in the center of an AD.

12 Gamma-Ray Bursts Tremendous powers in high energy photons emitted in just a few seconds First discovered by spy satellites in 1960s looking for atomic bomb tests: isotropic in the sky Usually have “afterglows”: emission in X-rays, optical and radio bands that decay more slowly Generic model: a “fireball” of very hot plasma, bursting out as a very relativistic jet (~100) This makes it look even brighter if jet points at us, but still involves great powers, since many are very distant

13 Where do gamma-ray bursts come from?

14 GRB Light Curves and Locations

15 GRBs are Far Away Since 1997 many have had galaxies identified as their hosts; at large cosmological redshifts, therefore billions of parsecs away

16 Competing Models: NS-NS Mergers or Hypernovae (or both)?

17 Some GRBs are Hypernovae
Light curves brightening and looking like SN have been seen in a few cases, making it likely that some (many?, all?) GRBs are exceptionally powerful SN But could just be long GRBs, w/ short ones NS-NS mergers.

18 End of Stars We now turn to collections of stars
Galaxies, starting with our Home Galaxy Clusters and superclusters of galaxies Then the whole Universe: Cosmology and the Big Bang


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