Science Briefing October 4, 2018

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Science Briefing October 4, 2018 Science Briefing October 4, 2018 Deaths and Afterlives of Stars Dr. Bethany Cobb Kung (George Washington University) Dr. Elizabeth Ferrara (University of Maryland / NASA GSFC) Prof. Lynn Cominsky (Sonoma State University) Facilitator: Dr. Brandon Lawton (STScI) Additional Resources http://nasawavelength.org/list/2311 Featured Resources: Gamma-ray Burst Educator Guide (specific activities in Wavelength list)1 Supernova Educator Guide (specific activities in Wavelength list)1 Fermi Pulsar Explorer Merging Neutron Star Resources: Multi-messenger Astronomy: A New Era in Space Science (November 2017 Breaking News Briefing) Multimedia products for LIGO/Virgo Observations Additional Activities: Gamma-ray Bursts and Supernova video Star Maps: Stars Likely to Go Supernova A Universe with Supernovae Stellar Evolution: Our Cosmic Connection How to Hold a Dead Star in Your Hand Supernova Explosions 2 Outline of this Science Briefing 1. Dr. Bethany Cobb Kung (George Washington University) Supernovae, GRBs and Swift 2. Dr. Elizabeth Ferrara (University of Maryland / NASA GSFC) Gravity & Light from Merging Neutron Stars 3. Q & A 4. Prof. Lynn Cominsky (Sonoma State University) Educational Resources for Pulsars and Gamma-ray Bursts 5. Q&A 3 Supernovae, GRBs and Swift Dr. Bethany Cobb Kung 4 Stellar Balance: Gravity vs. Pressure • Hydrogen fusion energy/heat pressure • Stellar mass gravity • In hydrostatic equilibrium, gravity = pressure (Image: NASA/SDO) (Illustration: NASA/CXC/M.Weiss) 5 “Core Collapse” Supernovae • ≳ 8 Solar Masses • Iron doesn’t fuse, so gravity “wins” SN 1987a • Implosion rebound supernova (Image: David Malin, Anglo-Australian Observatory) (Illustration: A. C. Phillips, The Physics of Stars, 2nd Edition) Cassiopeia A, SN remnant (Image: NASA/CXC/MIT/UMass Amherst/M.D.Stage et al.) 6 Supernovae Stellar Remnants Neutron Star or Black Hole • Mass ~ 2 Solar Masses • Mass > 3 Solar Masses • Radius ~ 10 km • Radius = 3 km × Mass (Illustration: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center) (Illustration: Alain Riazuelo) 7 Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) • Some GRB are “super” supernovae or hypernovae (other GRBs are caused by neutron stars colliding) • Death of stars originally maybe 20 – 50 Solar Masses • Incredibly energetic: 1048 – 1052 ergs (released in only a few seconds) more energy than the Sun produces in its entire 10 billion year lifetime! • Visible from incredibly large distances (up to 13 billion lightyears, from when the universe was only about half a billion years old) 8 (Illustration: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center) Gamma Ray Burst Jet Structure (Illustration: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center) 9 Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory (Illustration: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center and 2MASS/J. Carpenter, T. H. Jarrett, and R. Hurt) 10 Swift GRB Localization Gamma-rays X-rays Optical ~ a few arcminutes ~ a few arcseconds < 1 arcsecond (full Moon = 30 arcminutes) (Illustration: NASA) 11 GRB Optical Afterglow Precise localizations from Swift allow ground-based follow-up work GRB afterglows = transient X-ray/Optical/Radio sources Fade away rapidly (timescales of minutes to hours) DSS “before” image Observed by the SMARTS 1.3m telescope at CTIO in Chile (pre-burst) GRB 050730 ~ 3 hrs ~ 28 hrs ~ 10 days 12 Multi-telescope/Multi-wavelength GRB Observations = PHYSICS! (Credit: NASA/GSFC) 13 Gravity & Light from Merging Neutron Stars Dr. Elizabeth C. Ferrara 14 Supernovae Explode In as well as Out 15 Supernovae Explode In as well as Out 16 Supernovae Explode In as well as Out 17 Mass Determines Final State ? 18 Mass Determines Final State White Dwarf ? 19 Mass Determines Final State White Dwarf ? Black Hole 20 Mass Determines Final State White Dwarf Neutron ? Star Black Hole 21 Mass Determines Final State Mass Size White Dwarf Low Large Neutron ? Star Black Hole High Small 22 Binary Stars can be More Complicated 23 Binary Stars can be More Complicated 24 Eventually both stars evolve into Remnants Neutron Star Normal Star 25 Eventually both stars evolve into Remnants Neutron Star Normal Star 26 August 17, 2017 was a Very Special Day Play video: Fermi_GRB_1 (Sound On, please) 27 August 17, 2017 was a Very Special Day 28 29 30 So, What Happened Next? NGC 4993 31 So, What Happened Next? NGC 4993 32 33 3434 3535 Discovery Drives Understanding 36 Putting it all together Play video: Fermi_GRB_2 (No Sound, please) 37 We are All (Neutron Star) Stuff Thank You 38 Educational Resources for Pulsars and Gamma-ray Bursts Prof. Lynn Cominsky Sonoma State University 39 Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory • Launched November 21, 2004 • Three instruments: – Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) – Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope (UVOT) – X-ray Telescope (XRT) • Studies Gamma-Ray Bursts with a swift response – usually within ~1 minute http://swift.gsfc.nasa.gov 40 Gamma-ray Burst Educator Guide Includes: • Background Information • Activity 1 – Sorting out the Cosmic Zoo • Activity 2 – Angling for GRBs • Activity 3 – GRB Distribution on the Sky: The Plots Thicken • Activity 4 – Beam Me Hard copies of guide and poster available! Up! Send email to [email protected] 41 SortingSorting Out Out the the Cosmic Cosmic Zoo Zoo • Not everything that makes blastsAre these of X-rays the and gamma-rays is a GRB! same type of • This classification activity mimicsastrophysical the historical process that scientistsphenomenon? used to sort out events that appear similar at first glance Explain your reasoning by citing observational evidence. 42 Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope • Launched June 11, 2008 • Studies gamma rays over a very wide energy range • Two different instruments: – Large Area Telescope – Gamma-ray Burst Monitor • http://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov https://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/fermi10/ 43 Fermi Pulsar Explorer https://fermi.gsfc.nasa.gov/science/pulsar5/ Interactive describing many pulsars seen with Fermi Large Area Telescope 44 Supernova Educator Guide Includes: • Background Information • Activity 1 - Fishing for Supernovae • Activity 2 - The Crawl of the Crab • Activity 3 - Magnetic Poles and Pulsars A. Seeing Magnetic Fields B. Make Your Own Pulsar C. Transfer Activity: Comparing the Earth to a Pulsar • Activity 4 - Neutron Stars in the News https://www.universe-of-learning.org/science- briefings/2017/7/21/cosmic-beacons 45 LIGO Educator Guide Includes: • Background Information • Activity 1 - Coalescing Black Holes • Activity 2 - Warping of Spacetime Multimedia products for LIGO/Virgo Observations of merging neutron star binary are here: https://www.ligo.org/detections /GW170817.php https://www.universe-of- learning.org/science- briefings/2017/10/25/multi-messenger- astronomy 46 LIGO FAQ for Kids 47 To ensure we meet the needs of the education community (you!), NASA’s UoL is committed to performing regular evaluations, to determine the effectiveness of Professional Learning opportunities like the Science Briefings. If you prefer not to participate in the evaluation process, you can opt out by contacting Kay Ferrari <[email protected]>. This product is based upon work supported by NASA under award number NNX16AC65A to the Space Telescope Science Institute, working in partnership with Caltech/IPAC, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, and Sonoma State University. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. 48.
Recommended publications
  • GRB 180418A: a Possibly Short Gamma-Ray Burst with a Wide-Angle Outflow in a Faint Host Galaxy
    GRB 180418A: A Possibly Short Gamma-Ray Burst with a Wide-angle Outflow in a Faint Host Galaxy Item Type Article; text Authors Rouco Escorial, A.; Fong, W.; Veres, P.; Laskar, T.; Lien, A.; Paterson, K.; Lally, M.; Blanchard, P.K.; Nugent, A.E.; Tanvir, N.R.; Cornish, D.; Berger, E.; Burns, E.; Cenko, S.B.; Cobb, B.E.; Cucchiara, A.; Goldstein, A.; Margutti, R.; Metzger, B.D.; Milne, P.; Levan, A.; Nicholl, M.; Smith, N. Citation Rouco Escorial, A., Fong, W., Veres, P., Laskar, T., Lien, A., Paterson, K., Lally, M., Blanchard, P. K., Nugent, A. E., Tanvir, N. R., Cornish, D., Berger, E., Burns, E., Cenko, S. B., Cobb, B. E., Cucchiara, A., Goldstein, A., Margutti, R., Metzger, B. D., … Smith, N. (2021). GRB 180418A: A Possibly Short Gamma-Ray Burst with a Wide-angle Outflow in a Faint Host Galaxy. Astrophysical Journal, 912(2). DOI 10.3847/1538-4357/abee85 Publisher IOP Publishing Ltd Journal Astrophysical Journal Rights © 2021. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Download date 28/09/2021 16:20:20 Item License http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ Version Final published version Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/660724 The Astrophysical Journal, 912:95 (19pp), 2021 May 10 https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/abee85 © 2021. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. GRB 180418A: A Possibly Short Gamma-Ray Burst with a Wide-angle Outflow in a Faint Host Galaxy A. Rouco Escorial1, W. Fong1 , P. Veres2 , T. Laskar3 , A. Lien4,5, K. Paterson1 , M. Lally1 , P. K.
    [Show full text]
  • GRIPS-Gamma-Ray Imaging, Polarimetry and Spectroscopy
    Experimental Astronomy manuscript No. (will be inserted by the editor) GRIPS - Gamma-Ray Imaging, Polarimetry and Spectroscopy www.grips-mission.eu? Jochen Greiner · Karl Mannheim · Felix Aharonian · Marco Ajello · Lajos G. Balasz · Guido Barbiellini · Ronaldo Bellazzini · Shawn Bishop · Gennady S. Bisnovatij-Kogan · Steven Boggs · Andrej Bykov · Guido DiCocco · Roland Diehl · Dominik Els¨asser · Suzanne Foley · Claes Fransson · Neil Gehrels · Lorraine Hanlon · Dieter Hartmann · Wim Hermsen · Wolfgang Hillebrandt · Rene Hudec · Anatoli Iyudin · Jordi Jose · Matthias Kadler · Gottfried Kanbach · Wlodek Klamra · J¨urgenKiener · Sylvio Klose · Ingo Kreykenbohm · Lucien M. Kuiper · Nikos Kylafis · Claudio Labanti · Karlheinz Langanke · Norbert Langer · Stefan Larsson · Bruno Leibundgut · Uwe Laux · Francesco Longo · Kei'ichi Maeda · Radoslaw Marcinkowski · Martino Marisaldi · Brian McBreen · Sheila McBreen · Attila Meszaros · Ken'ichi Nomoto · Mark Pearce · Asaf Peer · Elena Pian · Nikolas Prantzos · Georg Raffelt · Olaf Reimer · Wolfgang Rhode · Felix Ryde · Christian Schmidt · Joe Silk · Boris M. Shustov · Andrew Strong · Nial Tanvir · Friedrich-Karl Thielemann · Omar Tibolla · David Tierney · Joachim Tr¨umper · Dmitry A. Varshalovich · J¨orn Wilms · Grzegorz Wrochna · Andrzej Zdziarski · Andreas Zoglauer Received: 21 April 2011 / Accepted: 2011 ? See this Web-site for the author's affiliations. Jochen Greiner Karl Mannheim MPI f¨urextraterrestrische Physik Inst. f. Theor. Physik & Astrophysik, Univ. W¨urzburg arXiv:1105.1265v1 [astro-ph.HE] 6 May 2011 85740 Garching, Germany 97074 W¨urzburg,Germany Tel.: +49-89-30000-3847 Tel.: +49-931-318-500 E-mail: [email protected] E-mail: [email protected] 2 Abstract We propose to perform a continuously scanning all-sky survey from 200 keV to 80 MeV achieving a sensitivity which is better by a factor of 40 or more compared to the previous missions in this energy range (COMPTEL, INTEGRAL; see Fig.
    [Show full text]
  • NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Laboratory for High Energy
    1 NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics Greenbelt, Maryland 20771 @S0002-7537~99!00301-7# This report covers the period from July 1, 1997 to June 30, Toshiaki Takeshima, Jane Turner, Ken Watanabe, Laura 1998. Whitlock, and Tahir Yaqoob. This Laboratory’s scientific research is directed toward The following investigators are University of Maryland experimental and theoretical research in the areas of X-ray, Scientists: Drs. Keith Arnaud, Manuel Bautista, Wan Chen, gamma-ray, and cosmic-ray astrophysics. The range of inter- Fred Finkbeiner, Keith Gendreau, Una Hwang, Michael Loe- ests of the scientists includes the Sun and the solar system, wenstein, Greg Madejski, F. Scott Porter, Ian Richardson, stellar objects, binary systems, neutron stars, black holes, the Caleb Scharf, Michael Stark, and Azita Valinia. interstellar medium, normal and active galaxies, galaxy clus- Visiting scientists from other institutions: Drs. Vadim ters, cosmic-ray particles, and the extragalactic background Arefiev ~IKI!, Hilary Cane ~U. Tasmania!, Peter Gonthier radiation. Scientists and engineers in the Laboratory also ~Hope College!, Thomas Hams ~U. Seigen!, Donald Kniffen serve the scientific community, including project support ~Hampden-Sydney College!, Benzion Kozlovsky ~U. Tel such as acting as project scientists and providing technical Aviv!, Richard Kroeger ~NRL!, Hideyo Kunieda ~Nagoya assistance to various space missions. Also at any one time, U.!, Eugene Loh ~U. Utah!, Masaki Mori ~Miyagi U.!, Rob- there are typically between twelve and eighteen graduate stu- ert Nemiroff ~Mich. Tech. U.!, Hagai Netzer ~U. Tel Aviv!, dents involved in Ph.D. research work in this Laboratory. Yasushi Ogasaka ~JSPS!, Lev Titarchuk ~George Mason U.!, Currently these are graduate students from Catholic U., Stan- Alan Tylka ~NRL!, Robert Warwick ~U.
    [Show full text]
  • The High Energy Astrophysics Division Newsletter
    SPRING 2017 The High Energy Astrophysics Division Newsletter In this Issue: View from the Chair — special advertising section — hidden black holes revealed, and others — second running — finding a path through spacetime — announcing mysteries under the ice — performance enhancements for Chandra — milestones for XMM — the hunt continues for Swift — ULXNS — on the trail of the wild neutrino with INTEGRAL — searching at home with Fermi — energetic electrons seen at the ISS — news from the cosmos — of scientific interest — a Universe of learning — NICER launch prep — SRG progress — the wisdom of Athena — the slant on IXPE — the XARM — building CTA — all-seeing Lynx — in memoriam From the Chair for the discovery of merging black hole binaries, and for beginning the new era of gravitational-wave astronomy. CHRIS REYNOLDS (U. MD) Prof. González will give the Rossi Prize Lecture at the All systems are go for our 16th Divisional meeting to 231st AAS meeting to be held at National Harbor, MD be held in Sun Valley, Idaho, 20-24 August 2017! Regis- in January 2018. Please join me in congratulating all of tration and abstract submission is now open and we’re this year’s HEAD prize winners. looking forward to an exciting scientific program cover- ing all aspects of high-energy astrophysics, kicked off by The past few months has been eventful in the world a total solar eclipse! of high-energy astrophysics missions. NICER and ISS- CREAM are at the Kennedy Space Center and ready for One of the most important aspects of these meet- launch to the International Space Station. Further in the ings is the chance to honor a new batch of HEAD future, NASA has formally selected the Imaging X-ray Po- prize winners.
    [Show full text]
  • Gehresl WFIRST AAS V2.Pptx
    WFIRST Mission Status Neil Gehrels WFIRST Project Scientist NASA/GSFC AAS WFIRST Session January 5, 2016 Discovery Science • WFIRST was highest ranked large space mission in 2010 Decadal Survey • Use of 2.4m telescope enables - Hubble quality imaging over 100x more sky - Imaging of exoplanets with 10-9 contrast with a coronagraph Dark Energy Exoplanets Astrophysics microlensing M63 HST WFIRST coronagraph 2 WFIRST Surveys • Multiple surveys: – High-Latitude Survey • Imaging, spectroscopy, supernova monitoring – Repeated galactic bulge observations for microlensing – 25% Guest Observer Program – Coronagraph observations • Flexibility to choose optimal approach Near Infrared Surveys 3 WFIRST Instruments Wide-Field Instrument • Imaging & spectroscopy over 1000s of sq. deg. • Monitoring of SN and microlensing fields • 0.7-2.0 mm (imaging), 1.35-1.89 mm (spec.) • 0.28 deg2 FoV (100x JWST FoV) • 18 H4RG detectors (288 Mpixels) • 6 filter imaging, grism + IFU spectroscopy Coronagraph • Image and spectra of exoplanets from super-Earths to giants • Images of debris disks • 430 – 970 nm (imaging) & 600 – 970 nm (IFS spec.) • Final contrast of 10-9 or better • Exoplanet images from 0.1 to 1.0 arcsec 4 Wide Field Instrument Layout M3$Assembly$ Radiator' IFU$ Cryocooler' M3' Outer'Enclosure' Op#cal' F1$Assembly$ Bench' IFU' FPA$ F2$Assembly$ Element$Wheel$Assembly$(EWA)$ Latches'(3)' Radia#on'Shield' FPA' Fold'Flats'(2)' Element'Wheel' 5 Coronagraph Instrument Layout • Primary Architecture: Occulting Mask + Shaped Pupil • SP and HL masks share very
    [Show full text]
  • 2019 Astrophysics Senior Review Senior Review Subcommittee Report
    2019 Astrophysics Senior Review Senior Review Subcommittee Report 2019 Astrophysics Senior Review - Senior Review Subcommittee Report June 4-5, 2019 SUBCOMMITTEE MEMBERS Dr. Alison Coil, University of California San Diego Dr. Megan Donahue, Michigan State University Dr. Jonathan Fortney, University of California Santa Cruz Ms. Maura Fujieh, NASA Ames Research Center Dr. Roberta Humphreys, University of Minnesota Dr. Mark McConnell, University of New Hampshire / Southwest Research Institute Dr. John O’Meara, Keck Observatory Dr. Rebecca Oppenheimer, American Museum of Natural History Dr. Alexandra Pope, University of Massachusetts Amherst Dr. Wilton Sanders, NASA/University of Wisconsin-Madison, retired Dr. David Weinberg, The Ohio State University - Chair ​ 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The eight missions evaluated by the 2019 Astrophysics Senior Review constitute a portfolio of extraordinary scientific power, on topics that range from the atmospheres of planets around nearby stars to the nature of the dark energy that drives the accelerating expansion of the cosmos. The missions themselves range from the venerable Great Observatories Hubble and Chandra to the newest Explorer missions NICER and TESS. ​ ​ ​ ​ ​ All of these missions are operating at a high level technically and scientifically, and all have sought ways to make their operations cost-efficient and their data valuable to a broad community. The complementary nature of these missions makes the overall capability of the portfolio more than the sum of its parts, and many of the most exciting developments in contemporary astrophysics draw on observations from several of these observatories simultaneously. The Senior Review Subcommittee recommends that NASA continue to operate and support all eight of these missions.
    [Show full text]
  • 50 Years of Pulsars: Jocelyn Bell Burnell an Interview P
    LIGO Scientific Collaboration Scientific LIGO issue 11 9/2017 LIGO MAGAZINE O2: Third Detection! 10:11:58.6 UTC, 4 January 2017 ELL F, H O L P IS L A E ! Y B D O O G 50 Years of Pulsars: Jocelyn Bell Burnell An interview p. 6 The Search for Continuous Waves To name a neutron star p.10 ... and in 1989: The first joint interferometric observing run p. 26 Before the Merger: Spiraling Black Holes Front cover image: Artist’s conception shows two merging black holes similar to those detected by LIGO. The black holes are spinning in a non-aligned fashion, which means they have different orientations relative to the overall orbital motion of the pair. LIGO found a hint of this phenomenon in at least one black hole of the GW170104 system. Image: LIGO/Caltech/MIT/Sonoma State (Aurore Simonnet) Image credits Front cover main image – Credit: LIGO/Caltech/MIT/Sonoma State (Aurore Simonnet) Front cover inset LISA – Courtesy of LISA Consortium/Simon Barke Front cover inset of Jocelyn Bell Burnell and the 4 acre telescope c 1967 courtesy Jocelyn Bell Burnell. Front cover inset of the supernova remnant G347.3-0.5 – Credit: Chandra: NASA/CXC/SAO/P.Slane et al.; XMM-Newton:ESA/RIKEN/J.Hiraga et al. p. 3 Comic strip by Nutsinee Kijbunchoo p. 4-5 Photos by Matt Gush, Bryce Vickmark and Josh Meister p. 6 Jocelyn Bell Burnell and the 4 acre telescope courtesy Jocelyn Bell Burnell. Paper chart analysis courtesy Robin Scagell p. 8 Pulsar chart recordings courtesy Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory p.
    [Show full text]
  • Investigating the Multiwavelength Behaviour of the Flat Spectrum Radio Quasar CTA 102 During 2013–2017
    Investigating the multiwavelength behaviour of the flat spectrum radio quasar CTA 102 during 2013–2017 Item Type Article Authors D’Ammando, F; Raiteri, C M; Villata, M; Acosta-Pulido, J A; Agudo, I; Arkharov, A A; Bachev, R; Baida, G V; Benítez, E; Borman, G A; Boschin, W; Bozhilov, V; Butuzova, M S; Calcidese, P; Carnerero, M I; Carosati, D; Casadio, C; Castro-Segura, N; Chen, W-P; Damljanovic, G; Di Paola, A; Echevarría, J; Efimova, N V; Ehgamberdiev, Sh A; Espinosa, C; Fuentes, A; Giunta, A; Gómez, J L; Grishina, T S; Gurwell, M A; Hiriart, D; Jermak, H; Jordan, B; Jorstad, S G; Joshi, M; Kimeridze, G N; Kopatskaya, E N; Kuratov, K; Kurtanidze, O M; Kurtanidze, S O; Lähteenmäki, A; Larionov, V M; Larionova, E G; Larionova, L V; Lázaro, C; Lin, C S; Malmrose, M P; Marscher, A P; Matsumoto, K; McBreen, B; Michel, R; Mihov, B; Minev, M; Mirzaqulov, D O; Molina, S N; Moody, J W; Morozova, D A; Nazarov, S V; Nikiforova, A A; Nikolashvili, M G; Ohlert, J M; Okhmat, N; Ovcharov, E; Pinna, F; Polakis, T A; Protasio, C; Pursimo, T; Redondo-Lorenzo, F J; Rizzi, N; Rodriguez-Coira, G; Sadakane, K; Sadun, A C; Samal, M R; Savchenko, S S; Semkov, E; Sigua, L; Skiff, B A; Slavcheva-Mihova, L; Smith, P S; Steele, I A; Strigachev, A; Tammi, J; Thum, C; Tornikoski, M; Troitskaya, Yu V; Troitsky, I S; Vasilyev, A A; Vince, O; Hovatta, T; Kiehlmann, S; Max-Moerbeck, W; Readhead, A C S; Reeves, R; Pearson, T J; Mufakharov, T; Sotnikova, Yu V; Mingaliev, M G Citation D’Ammando, F., Raiteri, C.
    [Show full text]
  • Searching for the Most Powerful Thermonuclear X-Ray Bursts with the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory J
    A&A 621, A53 (2019) Astronomy https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201834270 & c ESO 2019 Astrophysics Searching for the most powerful thermonuclear X-ray bursts with the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory J. J. M. in ’t Zand1, M. J. W. Kries1,2, D. M. Palmer3, and N. Degenaar4 1 SRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research, Sorbonnelaan 2, 3584 CA Utrecht, The Netherlands e-mail: [email protected] 2 Dep. of Physics, Utrecht University, PO Box 80000, 3508 TA Utrecht, The Netherlands 3 Los Alamos National Laboratory, B244, Los Alamos, NM 87545, USA 4 Anton Pannekoek Instituut for Astronomy, University of Amsterdam, Science Park 904, 1098 XH Amsterdam, The Netherlands Received 18 September 2018 / Accepted 25 October 2018 ABSTRACT We searched for thermonuclear X-ray bursts from Galactic neutron stars in all event mode data of the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory collected until March 31, 2018. In particular, we are interested in the intermediate-duration bursts (shell flashes fueled by thick helium piles) with the ill-understood phenomenon of strong flux fluctuations. Nine such bursts have been discussed in the literature to date. Swift is particularly suitable for finding additional examples. We find and list a total of 134 X-ray bursts; 44 are detected with BAT only, 41 with XRT only, and 49 with both. Twenty-eight bursts involve automatic slews. We find 12 intermediate-duration bursts, all detected in observations involving automatic slews. Five show remarkably long Eddington-limited phases in excess of 200 s. Five show fluctuations during the decay phase; four of which are first discussed in the present study.
    [Show full text]
  • NASA Budget Update
    NASA Astrophysics Update Astronomy and Astrophysics Advisory Committee Telecon Meeting June 3, 2019 Paul Hertz Director, Astrophysics Division Science Mission Directorate @PHertzNASA Astrophysics Strategic Planning To be updated in 2019 Astro2020 Decadal Survey (per GPRAMA) underway 2018 update includes: • Independent reviews of Webb & WFIRST • Planning for 2020 Decadal Survey https://science.nasa.gov/astrophysics/documents 2 NASA Astrophysics Budget Update 3 FY20 Budget Request The FY20 President’s Budget Request requests a decreased level of funding for NASA Astrophysics. Total funding requested for FY20 (Astrophysics including Webb) is ~1.197B, a decrease of $187M (14%) from the FY18 appropriation and a decrease of $299M (20%) from the FY19 appropriation. https://nasa.gov/budget 4 FY20 President’s Budget Request for Astrophysics including Webb Telescope What’s Changed • Webb budget increased consistent with 2018 replan, Webb proceeding toward launch in 2021 • Probe program deferred to fund Webb replan • SPHEREx begun within Explorers program as next Astrophysics MIDEX • SOFIA mission funded beyond end of 5-year prime mission in 2019, details pending 2019 independent reviews • Provides no funding for WFIRST space telescope What’s the Same • Cadence of four Explorer and Mission of Opportunity AOs per decade • Spitzer ends operations January 2020 per 2016 Senior Review • Phase A studies of Small Explorers (SMEX) and Missions of Opportunity from 2019 AO • IXPE, GUSTO, XRISM, and Euclid development remains on track and within budget • Hubble,
    [Show full text]
  • Committee Brief – July 2021 PDF
    IAF Committee Briefs July 2021 IAF SPACE ASTRONOMY TECHNICAL COMMITTEE 1. Introduction/Summary space observatories in Astronomy, Astrophysics, and Astroparticles has been recently boosted by the newly Ground and Space Astronomy synergy has recently emerged field ofMultimessenger physics. Observations permitted a phase of remarkable discovery and growth. in this new field of front-line research include detection Public recognition is the several Nobel physics prizes of electromagnetic counterparts of cosmic phenomena gained in (observational) cosmology, exoplanets, seen in different “windows”: Gravitational Waves, gravitational waves, X-ray astronomy, and astrophysical Neutrinos, Fast Radio Bursts, and High Energy Cosmic neutrinos. Although the field of astrophysics is vast, the Rays observed in parallel in the classic electromagnetic SATC Committee concentrates its work in the area of band. space astronomy and in particular, serve as a forum for the exchange of information and interaction between The second version of this report, due by the end of the scientific community, space industry, and space 2021, will address planetary science and other topics agencies involved in the preparation and the future not included in the current version. development of new astronomy missions. Therefore, the SATC action will cover the very early phases of 2.2 Future perspective mission conception before missions are proposed to the Agencies for assessment. As such, the SATC role The increasing size and complexity of large space-based comes up-front and is largely complementary to the observatory missions place a growing emphasis on current work that the Agencies achieve. Its principal international collaboration. This is particularly marked intended role is to enable or improve the emergence of by the increasing range of joint missions involving new science mission concepts.
    [Show full text]
  • Gamma-Ray Astrophysics in the Mev Range: the ASTROGAM Concept
    Noname manuscript No. (will be inserted by the editor) Gamma-ray Astrophysics in the MeV Range The ASTROGAM Concept and Beyond Alessandro De Angelis · Vincent Tatischeff · Andrea Argan · Søren Brandt · Andrea Bulgarelli · Andrei Bykov · Elisa Costantini · Rui Curado da Silva · Isabelle A. Grenier · Lorraine Hanlon · Dieter Hartmann · Margarida Hernanz · Gottfried Kanbach · Irfan Kuvvetli · Philippe Laurent · Mario N. Mazziotta · Julie McEnery · Aldo Morselli · Kazuhiro Nakazawa · Uwe Oberlack · Mark Pearce · Javier Rico · Marco Tavani · Peter von Ballmoos · Roland Walter · Xin Wu · Silvia Zane · Andrzej Zdziarski · Andreas Zoglauer Received: date / Accepted: date Abstract The energy range between about 100 keV and 1 GeV is of interest for a vast class of astrophysical topics. In particular, (1) it is the missing ingredient for understanding extreme processes in the multi-messenger era; (2) it allows localizing cosmic-ray interactions with background material and radiation in the Universe, and spotting the reprocessing of these particles; (3) last but not least, gamma-ray emission lines trace the formation of elements in the Galaxy and beyond. In addition, studying the still largely unexplored MeV domain of astronomy would provide for a rich observatory science, including the study of compact objects, solar- and Earth-science, as well as fundamental physics. The technological development of silicon microstrip detectors makes it possible now to detect MeV photons in space with high efficiency and low background. During the last decade, a concept of detector (\ASTROGAM") has been proposed to fulfil these goals, based on a silicon hodoscope, a 3D position-sensitive calorimeter, and an anticoincidence detector. In this paper A. De Angelis Dipartimento di Fisica e Astronomia \Galileo Galilei" via Marzolo 8, Padova I-35131, Italy Tel.: +39-049-827-5942 E-mail: [email protected] V.
    [Show full text]