Dec 24, 2007
Mysterious Cosmic Powerhouses Explored 


By working in synergy with a ground-based telescope array, the joint Japanese 
Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)/NASA Suzaku X-ray observatory is shedding 
new light on some of the most energetic objects in our galaxy, but objects that 
remain shrouded in mystery.




These cosmic powerhouses pour out vast amounts of energy, and they accelerate 
particles to almost the speed of light. But very little is known about these 
sources because they were discovered only recently. "Understanding these 
objects is one of the most intriguing problems in astrophysics," says Takayasu 
Anada of the Institute for Space and Astronautical Science in Kanagawa, Japan. 
Anada is lead author of a paper presented last week at a Suzaku science 
conference in San Diego, Calif.



These mysterious objects have been discovered in just the last few years by an 
array of four European-built telescopes named the High Energy Stereoscopic 
System (H.E.S.S.), located in the African nation of Namibia. H.E.S.S. 
indirectly detects very-high-energy gamma rays from outer space. These gamma 
rays are the highest-energy form of light ever detected from beyond Earth, so 
H.E.S.S. and other similar arrays have opened up a new branch of astronomy.



The gamma rays themselves are absorbed by gases high up in Earth's atmosphere. 
But as the gamma rays interact with air molecules, they produce subatomic 
particles that radiate a blue-colored light known as Cherenkov radiation. 
H.E.S.S. detects this blue light, whose intensity and direction reveals the 
energy and position of the gamma-ray source.



The H.E.S.S. observations were groundbreaking, but the array's images aren't 
sharp enough to reveal the exact location where particles are being accelerated 
or how the particles are being accelerated. To solve this problem, several 
teams aimed Suzaku in the direction of some of these H.E.S.S. sources. Any 
object capable of emitting high-energy gamma rays will also produce X-rays, and 
Suzaku is particularly sensitive to high-energy (hard) X-rays.



When Anada and his colleagues pointed Suzaku at a source known as HESS 
J1837-069 (the numerals express the object's sky coordinates), the X-ray 
spectrum closely resembled X-ray spectra of pulsar wind nebulae - gaseous 
clouds that are sculpted by winds blown off by collapsed stars known as 
pulsars. Pulsar wind nebulae emit hard X-rays, and their X-ray output remains 
relatively constant over long timescales. "The origin of the gamma-ray emission 
from HESS J1837-069 remains unclear, but we suspect that this source is a 
pulsar wind nebula from the Suzaku observation," says Anada.



NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton 
X-ray Observatory have revealed that other H.E.S.S. sources are also pulsar 
wind nebulae. These combined gamma-ray and X-ray observations are revealing 
that pulsar wind nebulae are more common and more energetic than astronomers 
had expected.



Another group, led by Hironori Matsumoto of the University of Kyoto in Japan, 
targeted Suzaku on HESS J1614-518. This source belongs to a class of objects 
known as "dark particle accelerators" because their ultrahigh energies suggest 
they are accelerating particles to near-light speed, turning them into cosmic 
rays. But what are these objects, and what kinds of particles are being 
accelerated?



Although the nature of these objects remains a mystery, Suzaku's observations 
do reveal the identity of the particles. When electrons are accelerated to high 
speeds, they spiral around magnetic field lines that permeate space, generating 
copious X-rays. But since protons are 2,000 times more massive than electrons, 
they emit few X-rays. Matsumoto and his colleagues reported at the conference 
that HESS J1614-518 is a very weak X-ray emitter. "This result strongly 
suggests that high-energy protons are being produced in this object," says 
Matsumoto.
Suzaku also observed two other H.E.S.S. dark particle accelerators, but found 
no obvious X-ray counterparts at the H.E.S.S. positions. These sources must 
also be weak X-ray emitters, indicating they are accelerating mostly protons. 
As Matsumoto says, "Using the high sensitivity of the Suzaku satellite, we can 
find strong candidates for the origin of cosmic rays."



Launched in 2005, Suzaku is the fifth in a series of Japanese satellites 
devoted to studying celestial X-ray sources. Managed by JAXA, this mission is a 
collaborative effort between Japanese universities and institutions and NASA 
Goddard.
at 6:50 PM   

Labels: Space and Planets 

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