ROSAT Isolated Neutron Stars
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Transcript ROSAT Isolated Neutron Stars
Isolated Neutron Stars
XDINSs, AXPs, SGRs,
RRATs
R Turolla
Department of Physics
University of Padova, Italy
Artist impression of a magnetar
Proper motion of RX J1856.5-3754 with HST (F. Walter)
A detected RRAT
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Basics
Compact objects are born in the core
collapse following a type II supernova
explosion
Present rate of SN events in the Galaxy:
≈ 0.01/yr (possibly higher in the past)
Galactic population of compact objects:
≈ 108 – 109 (≈ 1% of stars)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Nature of compact remnant depends on progenitor mass
8 < M/M < 20-25
M/M > 20-25
If N(>M) ~ M-1.3 only ~ 20% of stars with M > 8 M are
more massive than 25 M
Very massive stars may form “magnetars” (Muno et al 2006),
black holes about 10% of the total
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Pulsars and…
Most neutron stars are known through their pulsed
radio-emission
Galactic pulsar population ≈ 105 (≈ 1800 detected)
The majority of neutron stars are old, dead objects
Observations in the X- and γ-rays revealed the
existence of different populations of neutron stars
X-ray binaries
Geminga, CCOs in SNR
X-ray dim isolated neutron stars (XDINSs)
Soft γ-repeaters (SGRs)
ISOLATED
Anomalous X-ray pulsars (AXPs)
Rotating Radio Transients (RRATs)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Neutron Stars in a Nutshell
Vast majority (~ 80-90%) of Galactic compact objects
are compact stars (no horizon)
Electron capture e-+p → n+ν energetically favorable at ρ
> 107 g/cm3, or R < 104 km for M ~ 1 M
Typical radius ≈ 10 km, masses in the range
0.1 < M/M < 3 (theoretical estimates)
Highly relativistic objects
M/R ~ 0.15 (M/M)(R/10 km)-1
J/M ~ 0.25 (1 ms/P) (M/M)(R/10 km)2 (the Kerr solution does not
describe spacetime outside a rotating star though)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
ds 2 exp( 2)dt 2 exp( 2)dr 2 r 2 (d 2 sin 2 d 2 )
Spherically symmetric space-time
d
1 dp
dr
p dr
Einstein
equation
dp
m
p 4r
2 1 1
dr
r
m
3
dm
4r 2
dr
exp g 00
p 2m
1
r
Gravitational mass
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
1
2M
1
r
Hydrostatic
equilibrium
(TOV)
(0) c
m(0) 0
R, p ( R ) 0
M m( R )
or
R, p ( R ) 0
m(0) 0
M m( R )
Compute sequence of equilibrium models:
the Mass-radius relation
P = P(ρ) ?
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Nuclear Matter EOS: The Holy Grail
“Neutron” stars: a
misnomer
Inner core may
contain
– Hyperons (Σ, Ξ, Λ)
– Meson (K-,π-)
condensates
– Deconfined quarks (u,
d, s) – Hybrid Stars
Strange quark stars
Page & Reddy (2006)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
R=2GM/c2
P=ρ
R~3GM/c2
Page & Reddy (2006)
R∞=R(1-2GM/Rc2)-1/2
Lattimer & Prakash (2004)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
ω=ωK
NS Masses
Stellar masses directly measured only~ Initial
in Mass
binary systems
Accurate NS mass determination for PSRs
in relativistic systems by measuring PK
> Initial Mass
corrections
Gravitational redshift may provide M/R in
NSs by detecting a known
spectral line,
BHs ?
E∞ = E(1-2GM/Rc2)1/2
Fe and O lines in EXO 0748-676,
M/R ~ 0.22 (Cottam et al 2002)
Page & Reddy (2006)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
NS Cooling
NSs are born very hot, T > 1010 K
At early stages neutrino cooling dominates
The core is isothermal
dEth
dT
CV
L L
dt
dt
Photon luminosity
Neutrino luminosity
L 4 R 2 Ts4 , Ts T 1/ 2 ( 1)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Fast Cooling
(URCA cycle)
n p e e
p e n e
Slow Cooling
(modified URCA cycle)
n n n p e e
n p e n n e
p n p p e e
p p e p n e
Fast cooling possible only if np > nn/8
Nucleon Cooper pairing important
Minimal cooling scenario (Page et al 2004):
no exotica
no fast processes
pairing included
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
“Minimal” Cooling Curves
Geppert
& Weber (2006)
Page &Page,
Reddy
(2006)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
NS Radii
A NS with homogeneous surface
temperature and local blackbody emission
L 4 R T
L
2
4
F
R / D T
2
4 D
2
4
From X-ray
spectroscopy
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
From dispersion
measure
NS Radii - II
Real life is a trifle more complicated…
Because of the strong B field
Photon propagation different
Surface temperature is not homogeneous
Local emission may be not exactly planckian
Gravity effects are important
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Photons in a Magnetized Medium
Magnetized plasma is anisotropic and
birefringent, radiative processes sensitive
to polarization state
Two normal, elliptically polarized modes in
the magnetized “vacuum+cold plasma”
The extraordinary (X) and ordinary (O) modes
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
NS Thermal Maps
Electrons move much more easily along B
than across B
Thermal conduction is highly anisotropic
inside a NS: Kpar >> Kperp until EF >> hνB
or ρ >> 104(B/1012 G)3/2 g/cm3
Envelope scaleheight L ≈ 10 m << R, B ~
const and heat transport locally 1D
Greenstein & Hartke (1983)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
TS cos K perp / K par sin
2
2
1/ 4
Tpole
K perp / K par 1
TS cos
1/ 2
Tpole
Core centered dipole
Core centered quadrupole
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Local Surface Emission
Much like normal stars NSs are covered by
an atmosphere
Because of enormous surface gravity, g ≈
1014 cm/s2, Hatm ≈ 1-10 cm
Spectra depend on g, chemical
composition and magnetic field
Plane-parallel approximation (locally)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Free-free absorption dominates
3 , h kT
High energy photons decouple deeper in the atmosphere
where T is higher
Zavlin & Pavlov (2002)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Gravity Effects
Redshift
Ray bending
L 4 R T
2
4
2
2
1
0
0
0
4 T d d du
4
2
E , 2
E ,1
dE I ( E, B, cos , Ts , )
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
STEP 1
Specify viewing geometry
and B-field topology;
compute the surface
temperature distribution
STEP 2
Compute emission from
every surface patch
STEP 4
Predict lightcurve and
phase-resolved spectrum
Compare with observations
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
STEP 3
GR ray-tracing to obtain
the spectrum at infinity
Further Readings
Page, D., Reddy, S. 2006, Ann. Rev. Nucl. Part. Sci., 56, 327
(astro-ph/0608360)
Page, D. Geppert, U., Weber, F. 2006, Nucl. Phys. A, 777,
497 (astro-ph/0508056)
Weber, F. 2005, Progr. Part. Nucl. Phys., 54, 193 (astroph/0407155)
Lattimer, J.M., Prakash, M. 2004, Science, 304, 536 (astroph/0405262)
Yakovlev, D.G., Pethick, C.J. 2004, Ann. Rev. Astron.
Astrophys., 42, 169 (astro-ph/0402143)
Zavlin, V.E., Pavlov, G.G. 2002, Proceedings of the 270 WEHeraeus Seminar on Neutron Stars, Pulsars, and Supernova
Remnants. MPE Report 278, p.26 (astro-ph/0206025)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
The Seven X-ray Dim Isolated
Neutron stars (XDINSs)
Soft thermal spectrum (kT 50-100 eV)
No hard, non-thermal tail
Radio-quiet, no association with SNRs
Low column density (NH 1020 cm-2)
X-ray pulsations in 6 sources (P 3-10 s)
Very faint optical counterparts
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
The Magnificent Seven
Source
kT (eV)
P (s)
Amplitude/2
Optical
RX J1856.5-3754
60
7.06
1.5%
V = 25.6
RX J0720.4-3125 (*)
85
8.39
11%
B = 26.6
RX J0806.4-4123
96
11.37
6%
-
RX J0420.0-5022
45
3.45
13%
B = 26.6 ?
RX J1308.6+2127
(RBS 1223)
86
10.31
18%
m50CCD = 28.6
RX J1605.3+3249
(RBS 1556)
96
-
-
m50CCD = 26.8
1RXS J214303.7+065419
(RBS 1774)
104
9.43
4%
-
(*) variable source
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Featureless ? No Thanks !
RX J1865.5-3754 is convincingly featureless
RX J0720.4-3125 (Haberl et al 2004)
(Chandra 500 ks DDT; Drake et al 2002; Burwitz et al 2003)
A broad absorption feature detected in all
other XDINSs (Haberl et al 2003, 2004, 2004a; Van Kerkwijk
et al 2004; Zane et al 2005)
Eline ~ 300-700 eV; evidence for two lines with
E1 ~ 2E2 in RBS 1223 (Schwope et al 2006)
Proton cyclotron lines ? H/He transitions at
high B ?
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Period Evolution
.
RX J0720.4-3125: bounds on P derived by Zane
et al. (2002) and Kaplan et al (2002)
Timing solution by Cropper et al (2004), further
improved
by Kaplan & Van Kerkwijk (2005):
.
P = 7x10-14B s/s,
B =13
2x1013 14
G
~ 10 -10 G
RX J1308.6+2127: timing
. solution by Kaplan &
Van Kerkwijk (2005a), P = 10-13 s/s, B = 3x1013 G
Spin-down values of B in agreement with
absorption features being proton cyclotron lines
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Source
Energy
(eV)
EW
(eV)
Bline
(Bsd)
(1013 G)
Notes
RX J1856.5-3754
no
no
?
-
RX J0720.4-3125
270
40
5 (2)
Variable line
RX J0806.4-4123
460
33
9
-
RX J0420.0-5022
330
43
7
-
RX J1308.6+2127
300
150
6 (3)
-
RX J1605.3+3249
450
36
9
-
1RXS J214303.7+065419
700
50
14
-
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
XDINSs: The Perfect Neutron Stars
XDINSs are key in neutron star astrophysics:
these are the only sources for which we have
a “clean view” of the star surface
Information on the thermal and
magnetic surface distributions
Estimate of the star radius (and mass ?)
Direct constraints on the EOS
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
XDINSs: What Are They ?
XDINSs are neutron stars
Powered by ISM accretion, ṀBondi ~ nISM/v3
if v < 40 km/s and D < 500 pc (e.g. Treves et
al 2000)
Measured proper motions imply v > 100
km/s
Just cooling NSs
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Simple Thermal Emitters ?
Recent detailed observations of XDINSs allow direct
testing of surface emission models
“STANDARD MODEL” thermal emission from the
surface of a neutron star with a dipolar magnetic
field and covered by an atmosphere
The optical excess
XDINS lightcurves
The puzzle of RX J1856.5-3754
Spectral evolution of RX J0720.4-3125
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
The Optical Excess
In the four sources with a
confirmed optical counterpart
Fopt 5-10 x B(TBB,X)
Fopt 2 ?
Deviations from a RayleighJeans continuum in RX J0720
(Kaplan et al 2003) and RX J1605
(Motch et al 2005). A non-thermal
power law ?
RX J1605 multiwavelength SED (Motch et al 2005)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Pulsating XDINSs - I
Quite large pulsed
fractions
Skewed lightcurves
Harder spectrum at pulse
minimum
Phase-dependent
absorption features
RX J0420.0-5022 (Haberl et al 2004)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Pulsating XDINSs - II
Too
Too small
small
pulsed
pulsed fractions
fractions
Core-centred
Core-centred
Atmosphere
Blackbody ==
++
Symmetrical
Symmetrical
dipole
dipole field
field
emission
emission
pulse
pulse profiles
profiles
(Page
(Zane1995)
& Turolla 2006)
+
=
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Pulsating XDINSs - III
Pure dipole-induced
thermal maps do not
match XDINS pulse
profiles
Observed
Synthetic
Principal component representation of dipolar lightcurves
More complex thermal
and/or magnetic
surface distributions
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Beyond the Dipole
Addition of quadrupolar components (even assuming
BB emission) results in larger pulsed fractions and
non-symmetric pulse shapes (Page & Sarmiento 1996)
Star-centred
dipolar+quadrupolar
fields can reproduce
observed lightcurves
(Zane & Turolla 2006)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Crustal Magnetic Fields
Star centred dipole +
poloidal/toroidal field
in the envelope
(Geppert, Küker & Page 2005;
2006)
Purely poloidal crustal
fields produce a
steeper meridional
temperature gradient
Addition of a toroidal
component introduces
a N-S asymmetry
Geppert, Küker & Page 2006
Gepper, Küker & Page 2006
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Schwope et al. 2005
RBS 1223 (Zane & Turolla 2006)
Indications for non-antipodal
caps (Schwope et al 2005)
Need for a non-axsymmetric
treatment of heat transport
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
RX J1856.5-3754 - I
Blackbody featureless
spectrum in the 0.1-2 keV
band (Chandra 500 ks DDT, Drake et al
2002); possible broadband
deviations in the XMM 60 ks
observation (Burwitz et al 2003)
RX J1856 multiwavelength SED (Braje & Romani 2002)
Thermal emission from NSs is not expected to be a featureless
BB ! H, He spectra are featureless but only blackbody-like
(harder). Heavy elements spectra are closer to BB but with a
variety of features
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
RX J1856.5-3754 - II
A quark star (Drake et al 2002; Xu 2002;
2003) What spectrum ?
A
The optical
excess
? and cooler
NS with
hotter
caps
equatorial region (Pons et al 2002; Braje
& Romani 2002; Trűmper et al 2005)
A bare NS
(Burwitz
A perfect
BB ? et al 2003; Turolla, Zane
& Drake 2004; Van Adelsberg et al 2005;
Perez-Azorin, Miralles & Pons 2005)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Bare Neutron Stars
At B >> B0 ~ 2.35 x 109 G atoms
attain a cylindrical shape
Turolla, Zane & Drake 2004
Formation of molecular chains by
covalent bonding along the field
direction
RX J0720.4-3125
Interactions between molecular
chains can RX
lead
to the formation
J1856.5-3754
of a 3D condensate
Fe condensation
H temperature
Critical
depends on B and chemical
composition (Lai & Salpeter 1997; Lai 2001)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Spectra from Bare NSs - I
The cold electron gas approximation. Reduced
emissivity expected below p (Lenzen & Trümper
1978; Brinkmann 1980)
Spectra are very close
to BB in shape in the
0.1 - 2 keV range, but
depressed wrt the BB at
Teff. Reduction factor
~ 2 - 3.
Turolla, Zane & Drake (2004)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Spectra from Bare NS - II
Proper account for damping of free electrons
by lattice interactions (e-phonon scattering; Yakovlev
& Urpin 1980; Potekhin 1999)
Spectra deviate more
from BB. Fit in the
0.1 – 2 keV band still
acceptable. Features
may be present.
Reduction factors
higher.
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Turolla, Zane & Drake (2004)
Is RX J1856.5-3754 Bare ?
Fit of X-ray data in the 0.152 keV band acceptable
Radiation radius problem
eased
Optical excess may be
produced by reprocessing of
surface radiation in a very
rarefied atmosphere (Motch,
Does the atmosphere
keep the star surface
temperature ?
Zavlin & Haberl 2003; Zane, Turolla &
Drake 2004; Ho et al. 2006)
Details of spectral shape
(features, low-energy
behaviour) still uncertain
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
What is the ion
contribution to the
dielectric tensor ?
(Van Adelsberg et al.
2005; Perez-Azorin,
Miralles & Pons 2005)
Long Term Variations in
RX J0720.4-3125
A gradual, long term
change in the shape of
the X-ray spectrum AND
the pulse profile (De Vries
et al 2004; Vink et al 2004)
Steady increase of TBB
and of the absorption
feature EW (faster
during 2003)
Evidence for a reversal
of the evolution in 2005
De Vries et al. 2004
Obs. Date
kTBB (eV)
EW (eV)
13-05-2000
86.6±0.4
-5.0
21/22-11-2001
86.5±0.5
+8.7
06/09-11-2002
88.3±0.3
-21.5
27/28-10-2003
91.3±0.6
-73.7
22/23-05-2004
93.8±0.4
-72.4
28-04-2005
93.5±0.4
-68.3
23-09-2005
93.2±0.4
-67.4
12/13-11-2005
92.6±0.4
-67.5
(Vink et al 2005)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
A Precessing Neutron Star ?
Evidence for a periodic modulation in the spectral
parameters (Tbb, Rbb) but no complete cycle yet
Phase residuals (coherent timing solution by Kaplan & Van Kerkwijk
2005) show periodic
behavior over a much longer
Haberl et al. 2006
timescale (> 10 yrs)
Periods consistent within the errors, Pprec ~ 7.1-7.7 yr
(Haberl et al. 2006)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
A Simple Model
Precessing neutron star
Blackbody emission from two “hot spots”
of different size and temperature
A nearly aligned rotator seen almost
equator-on
Non-antipodal spots, rather large
precession angle (~ 10o)
Haberl et al. 2006
A bare NS with a crustal field ?
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
(Perez-Azorin et al 2006)
RRATs - I
11 sources detected in the Parkes
Multibeam survey (McLaughlin et al 2006)
Burst duration 2-30 ms, interval 4 min-3 hr
Periods in the range 0.4-7 s
Period derivative measured in 3 sources:
B ~ 1012-1014 G, age ~ 0.1-3 Myr
RRAT J1819-1458 detected in the X-rays,
spectrum soft and thermal, kT ~ 120 eV
(Reynolds et al 2006)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
RRATs - II
P, B, ages and X-ray properties of RRATs
very similar to those of XDINSs
Estimated number of RRATs ~ 3-5 times
that of PSRs
If τRRAT ≈ τPSR, βRRAT ≈ 3-5 βPSR
βXDINS > 3 βPSR (Popov et al 2006)
Are RRATs far away XDINSs ?
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Conclusions
Rather complex thermal maps required to explain XDINS
observations
Progresses on the theoretical side but no self-consistent
model yet
– crustal fields (outside axial symmetry)
– phase transition and emission properties of condensed surface
– radiative transfer in the B > BQED regime
Find more sources
– is RX J1856.5-3754 unique ?
– Relationship with other NS populations:
Pulsating XDINSs are quite likely strongly magnetized objects, B >
1013 G. A XDINS-magnetar connection ?
XDINSs = RRATs ? Search for RRAT-like radio-emission from XDINSs
under way
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
X-ray Spectra from
Magnetar Candidates
A Twist in the Field
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Soft Gamma Repeaters - I
Rare class of sources, 4 confirmed (+ 1): SGR
1900+14, SGR 1806-20, SGR 1627-41 in the
Galaxy and SGR 0526-66 in the LMC
Strong bursts of soft γ-/hard X-rays: L ~ 1041
erg/s, duration < 1 s
Bursts from SGR 1806-20 (INTEGRAL/IBIS,,Gőtz et al 2004)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Soft Gamma Repeaters - II
Much more energetic “Giant Flares” (GFs, L ≈
1045-1047 erg/s) detected from 3 sources
No evidence for a binary companion, association
with a SNR in one case
Persistent X-ray emitters, L ≈ 1035 erg/s
Pulsations discovered both in GFs tails and
persistent emission, P ≈ 5 -10 s
Huge spindown rates, Ṗ/P ≈ 10-10 ss-1 (Kouveliotou et
al. 1998; 1999)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Anomalous X-ray Pulsars - I
Eight sources known (+ 1 transient):
1E 1048.1-5937, 1E 2259+586, 4U 0142+614,
1 RXS J170849-4009, 1E 1841-045, CXOU
010043-721134, AX J1845-0258, CXOU
J164710-455216 (+ XTE J1810-197)
Persistent X-ray emitters, L ≈ 1034 -1035 erg/s
Pulsations with P ≈ 5 -10 s
Large spindown rates, Ṗ/P ≈ 10-11 ss-1
No evidence for a binary companion,
association with a SNR in three cases
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Anomalous X-ray Pulsars - II
Bursts of soft γ-/hard X-rays
quite similar to those of
SGRs (AXPs much less active
though, bursts from two
sources only)
Woods &
Thompson
(2005)
Time (sec)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
A Tale of Two Populations ?
SGRs: bursting
X/γ-ray sources
AXPs: peculiar class
A Magnetar
of steady X-ray
sources
Single class of
objects
R < ctrise ≈ 300 km: a compact object
Pulsed X-ray emission: a neutron star
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Magnetars
Strong convection in a rapidly rotating (P
~ 1 ms) newborn neutron star generates a
very strong magnetic field via dynamo
action
Magnetars: neutron stars with surface
field B > 10 BQED ~ 4 x1014 G (Duncan &
Thomson 1992; Thomson & Duncan 1993)
Rapid spin-down due to magneto-dipolar
losses, P 1011 ( B / 1014 G) 2 P 1 ss 1
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Why magnetars ?
.LX E rot I
SGRs+AXPs
SGRs + AXPs
No evidence for a companion star
High-field PSRs
Spin down to present periods in ≈ 104
yrs requires B > 1014 G
PSRs
Large measured spin-down rates
SPIN - DOWN ENERGY LOSS
Quite natural explanation for the bursts
X-RAY LUMINOSITY
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
SGRs and AXPs X-ray Spectra - I
0.5 – 10 keV emission well represented by
a blackbody plus a power law
AXP 1048-5937 (Lyutikov & Gavriil 2005)
SGR 1806-20 (Mereghetti et al 2005)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
SGRs and AXPs X-ray Spectra - II
kTBB ~ 0.5 keV, does not change much in
different sources
Photon index Г ≈ 1 – 4, AXPs tend to be
softer
SGRs and AXPs persistent emission is
variable (months/years)
Variability mostly associated with the nonthermal component
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Hard X-ray Emission
INTEGRAL revealed
substantial emission in
the 20 -100 keV band
from SGRs and APXs
Mereghetti et al 2006
Hard power law tails
with Г ≈ 1-3, hardening
wrt soft X-ray emission
required in AXPs
Hard emission pulsed
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Hardness vs Spin-down Rate
Correlation between
spectral hardness
and spin-down rate
in SGRs and AXPs
(Marsden & White 2001)
Correlation holds
also for different
states within a
single source (SGR
1806-20, Mereghetti et al
2005; 1 RXS J1708494009, Rea et al 2005)
Harder X-ray
spectrum
Larger Spin-down rate
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
SGR 1806-20 - I
SGR 1806-20 displayed a gradual
increase in the level of activity during
2003-2004 (Woods et al 2004; Mereghetti et al
2005)
Bursts / day
(IPN)
enhanced burst rate
increased persistent luminosity
20-60 keV flux (INTEGRAL IBIS)
The 2004 December 27 Event
Spring
2003
Autumn
2003
Spring
2004
Autumn
2004
Mereghetti et al 2005
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
SGR 1806-20 - II
Four XMM-Newton observations (last on
October 5 2004, Mereghetti et al 2005)
Pulsations clearly detected in all observations
Ṗ ~ 5.5x10-10 s/s, higher than the “historical”
value
Blackbody component in addition to an
absorbed power law (kT ~ 0.79 keV)
Harder spectra: Γ ~ 1.5 vs. Γ ~ 2
The 2-10 keV luminosity almost doubled (LX ~
1036 erg/s)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Twisted Magnetospheres – I
The magnetic field inside a magnetar is
“wound up”
The presence of a toroidal component
induces a rotation of the surface layers
The crust tensile strength resists
A gradual (quasi-plastic ?) deformation of
the crust
The external field twists up (Thompson,
Lyutikov & Kulkarni 2002)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Thompson & Duncan 2001
Twisted Magnetospheres - II
TLK02 investigated
force-free magnetic
equilibria ( J B 0)
B ( R, ) B
A sequence of models
labeled by the twist
angle
N S 2 2
0
B d
B sin
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Twisted Magnetospheres - III
Twisted magnetospheres are threaded by
currents
Charged particles provide large optical depth rs
to resonant cyclotron scattering
Because c c ( R, ) and Rcurrent RNS , a powerlaw tail expected instead of an absorption line
Btwist R ( 2 p ,) Bdip R 3 and Ptwist Pdip
Both rs and Ptwist increase with the twist
angle
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
A Growing Twist in SGR 1806-20 ?
Evidence for spectral
hardening AND
enhanced spin-down
and L
P
correlations
Growth of bursting
activity
Possible presence of
proton cyclotron line
only during bursts
All these features are
consistent with an
increasingly twisted
magnetosphere
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
A Monte Carlo Approach
Follow individually a large sample of
photons, treating probabilistically their
Preliminary
investigation
(1D)
by Lyutikov
interactions
with
charged
particles
Basic ingredients:
&
Gavriil
(2005)
Can
handle
general
(3D) geometries
Space
andvery
energy
distribution
of the
More detailed modeling by Fernandez &
scattering
Quite
easy toparticles
code, fast
Thompson (2006)
Same
for
the
seed
(primary)
photons
New,
Ideal up-to-dated
for purely scattering
media
code (Nobili,
Turolla,
Scattering cross sections
Zane
Monte
Carlo techniques work well when
2007)
Nscat ≈ 1
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Generate a uniform
deviate 0<R<1
No
Select seed photon
(energy and direction)
No
Select particle from distribution
Transform photon
energyphoton,
and direction to ERF
Advance
ln R ? 2
Escape Compute
?
photoncompute
energy after
depthscattering ' /[1 (1 cos )]
Compute new photon direction
Yes
2
cos '
R ' d '
0
1
d ' d ( , k , k ' ) / d' / d' d ( , k , k ' ) / d'
Transform back to LAB
Compute scattering
Yes
Store data
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
4
Magnetospheric Currents
Charges move along the field lines v B
Spatial distribution
1
p 1 B
n
4e B
-3
B p RNS
14 only cm
10 contribution
Electron
G 10 km
10 Mawellian
1D relativistic
at
Particle motion characterized
Te centred at vbulk
16
cB
r vbulk
by a bulk
velocity, vbulk, and by a velocity spread Δv
(Beloborodov & Thompson 2006)
There may be e± in addition to e-p, but no
detailed model as yet
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Surface Emission
The star surface is
divided into patches
by a cos θ – φ grid
Each patch has its
own temperature to
reproduce different
thermal maps
Blackbody (isotropic)
emission
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Scattering Cross Sections - I
QED cross section available (Herold 1979, Harding &
Daugherty 1991) but unwieldy
Non-relativistic (Thompson) cross section
(ε<mc2/γ ≈ 50 keV, B/BQED < 1)
Completely differenti al cross sections at resonance (ERF)
3r0 c
d
( c ) cos 2 cos 2 '
d' O O
8
3r0 c
d
( c )
d' X X
8
3r0 c
d
( c ) cos 2
d' O X
8
3r0c
d
( c ) cos 2 '
d' X O
8
r0 e 2 / mc2 , c eB / mc, , ' angles between photon direction and particle
velocity before and after scattering
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Scattering Cross Sections - II
Because of charge motion resonance at
res
c
(1 cos )
For a given photon (energy ω, direction k)
(c / ) (c / ) 1
res 1, 2
(c / ) 2 2
2
(1 i )
1
( res )
( i )
c i 1, 2 i i
2
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
2
Model Spectra
Model parameters: ΔΦN-S, Bpole, Te, vbulk
Surface emission geometry, viewing angle
hardness increases
Emission from entire star surface at Tγ=0.5 keV
1014 G
B 1014 G
B
10
B G
10 G
N -S 0.7
14
14
B
100.G
N -S
N -S7
N -S 0.7
14
0.7
1015 G
twist
B 1015 G
increases
N -S 1B.210
15
G
N -S 1.2
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007
Conclusions & Future
Developments
Twisted magnetosphere model, within magnetar
scenario, in general agreement with observations
Resonant scattering of thermal, surface photons
produces spectra with right properties
Many issues need to be investigated further
– Twist of more general external fields
– Detailed models for magnetospheric currents
– More accurate treatment of cross section including QED
effects and electron recoil (in progress)
– 10-100 keV tails: up-scattering by (ultra)relativistic (e±)
particles ?
– Create an archive to fit model spectra to observations
(in progress)
Cagliari 25-26 maggio 2007