UV, X-ray, and gamma ray astronomy

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UV, X-ray, and gamma ray astronomy ASTR 3010 Lecture 22 Not from Textbook

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UV, X-ray, and gamma ray astronomy. ASTR 3010 Lecture 22 Not from Textbook. UV, X-ray, Gamma-ray. Index of Refraction. n (real part) : phase speed β ( imag part) : amount of absorption For high energy photons, . Material become transparent to high energy photons!!. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of UV, X-ray, and gamma ray astronomy

Page 1: UV, X-ray, and gamma ray astronomy

UV, X-ray, and gamma ray astronomy

ASTR 3010

Lecture 22

Not from Textbook

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UV, X-ray, Gamma-ray

Wavelength Energy

UV 10nm – 400nm 124eV – 3.1eV

X-ray 1pm - 10nm 124eV – 1MeV

Gamma ray < 1pm > 1MeV

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Index of Refraction

• n (real part) : phase speed• β (imag part) : amount of absorption

For high energy photons,

Material become transparent to high energy photons!!

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If high energy photons are transparent to all material, how can we focus them to form an image?

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Snell’s Law and Total internal reflection

For high energy photons, n<1 and nvac=1This means that incident angle should be close to 90 degrees!For heavy metal atoms w.r.t. hard X-ray, n~0.995 angle~88 degrees

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Design of X-ray Telescopes

Effective light collecting area is very small!

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Design of X-ray Telescopes : confocal mirrors

Focal length is large! long telescope tube!

Wolter type telescope

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XMM Newton

Chandra

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Next generation• Multiple mirror assembly to increase the light collecting area!

FOXSI (for Focusing Optics X-ray Solar Imager)

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Telescope designs : Coded Apperture• Single, small aperture very low efficiency

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Telescope designs : Coded Apperture• Multiple apertures (of known pattern) interference pattern

• interference pattern is deconvolved by a computer to form an image

• Disadvantage : a single noise on the detector can propagate into multiple pixels of the final image!

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Detectors : Proportional counter• using electron cascade. Similar to Geiger counters. Using gas proportional

counter (Ne or Ar) which has a typical ionization potential of 25eV. So, if an incoming X-ray photon ionizes one gas atom produces a photoelectron, this electron then continue to ionize other atoms until most of the input energy is used to create N number of 25eV electrons.

By counting the produced primary electrons, one can trace the energy of the original input X-ray photon energy. E.g., for 4keV photon 4000/25 = 160 electrons. Sqrt(160)= noise.

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Detectors : Scintillators• at higher E (hard X-ray and gamma ray). Using Compton scattering or pair

production generated high E electron. Using high Z material, these high E electron lose energy via bremsstrahlung and ionization eventually in excited electrons which fluoresce. Measure the fluorescent light E of incident photon.

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UV astronomy• Most stars are too cold to emit UV

photonso Young massive starso Old white dwarfs

• Interstellar medium is opaque to UV (ionizing Hydrogen!)

• Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX)M81

Mira

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X-ray Astronomy• Thermal radiation requires temperature above millions of degrees (solar

corona)• Bremsstrahlung X-rays :

• Supernova remnants• Active galactic nuclei• Cataclysmic binaries (WDs, Neutron star + Blackhole)

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Gamma ray astronomy• Cosmic rays interact with ISM gas• Supernova explosions• Relativistic electrons interact with magnetic field synchrotron radiation • Gamma-ray bursts

Gamma-ray bubbles in our Galaxy! (by Fermi)

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In summary…

Important Concepts• Telescope designs for high energy

photons• Detectors for high energy photons

• UV astronomy• X-ray astronomy• Gamma ray astronomy

Important Terms

Chapter/sections covered in this lecture :