Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byWilliam Dillingham Modified over 10 years ago
1
Relativistic Astrophysics: general overview Jean-Pierre Lasota Lecture 1
4
For a neutron star P o = 1.41 (Haensel, Lasota & Zdunik 1999) 2GM/c 2 )
7
black holes cannot form Einstein A, On a stationary system with spherical symmetry consisting of many gravitating masses, 1939 ANNALS OF MATHEMATICS 40: 922-936 – black holes cannot form black holes must form Oppenheimer, J. R. & Snyder, H., On Continued Gravitational Contraction, Physical Review, 1939, vol. 56, Issue 5, pp. 455- 459 – black holes must form
9
Salgado, Bonazzola, Gourgoulhon, Haensel (1994) Maximum masses of neutron stars. Rhoades & Ruffini 1973) (Nauenberg & Chapline 1973; M max(rot) =1.18 M max Lasota, Abramowicz, Haensel (1996)
10
Richard Tolman
12
Quasars: Marteen Schmidt 1963 3C 273: a star-like object with large red-shift. 16%
13
Quasistellar Sources and Gravitational Collapse First Texas Symposium on Relativistic Astrophysics Quasistellar Sources and Gravitational Collapse Austin, December 15-19, 1964
14
The fate of a star and the release of gravitational energy under accretion Doklady Akademii Nauk SSSR 155, 67-69 (1964) An alternative mechanism of energy emission is examined, in the present note, which is associated with an infall of the external mass in the gravitational field of a collapsing star. Ed Salpeter (1964) Ya. B. Zeldovich
15
Rees 1984: “The idea of infall in a powerful gravitational field as a source of the radiated energy of radiosources was advanced in its most general form by I.S. Shklovsky.” On the Nature of Radio Galaxies Astronomicheskii Zhurnal, Vol. 39, p.591 (1962)
16
The discovery of pulsars (1967), rapidly rotating, strongly magnetized neutron stars changed the attitude of astronomerstowards compact relativistic celestial bodies. The discovery of pulsars (1967), rapidly rotating, strongly magnetized neutron stars changed the attitude of astronomers towards compact relativistic celestial bodies. Jocelyn Bell
20
Bohdan Paczyński
23
LISA sensitivity curve LISA sensitivity curve.
26
M 106 “...good science demands that we seek positive evidence in support of the black hole picture, and watch for credible evidence that the standard picture may not be quite right." (Peebles 2002) M M=4 1O 7 M
27
EVIDENCE BY:
29
Galactic Center: Sgr A * (NAOS/Conica-VLT)
30
Schoedel et al. 2003
35
QPOs in BH X-ray binaries
37
red dwarf “hot spot” neutron star or black hole Low-mass X-ray binary (LMXB) ADAF accretion disc
38
Mass function: Minimum mass of the compact object
39
1.43.0 Observed masses of neutron-stars and black-holes
40
t burning > t fall with surface
41
t radiative-cooling > t infall (Advection Dominated Accretion Flows) Quiescent (Low-Mass) X-ray transient
42
Viscous heating: Advective « cooling »: Radiative cooling: F _ = …. (free-free, Compton, synchrotron) Energy conservation: F = F _ + F adv F adv
43
Disc ADAF M quiesc. Log(M). R(P orb )
44
A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN NEUTRON STARS AND BLACK HOLES
45
XMM + Chandra (Lasota 2006)
46
SPIN “PARADIGM” Radio-loudness of AGNs is related to the (high) value of the BH spin. New observational evidence
47
Why two AGN looking the same here have different radio (and high energy) properties?
48
Radio-loudness: Luminosities:
50
FRIIFRI
52
Seyfert LINER
53
Elliptical galaxies
55
At intermediate accretion luminosities, AGNs hosted by giant elliptical galaxies and located in the lower sequence are represented in the sample only by 4 objects. But recently: many radio-quiet galaxies with very massive BH. At intermediate accretion luminosities, AGNs hosted by giant elliptical galaxies and located in the lower sequence are represented in the sample only by 4 objects. But recently: many radio-quiet galaxies with very massive BH. At high accretion luminosities AGN hosted by giant elliptical galaxies are found on both sequences (majority on the lower, “radio-quiet At high accretion luminosities AGN hosted by giant elliptical galaxies are found on both sequences (majority on the lower, “radio-quiet” one) No disc-galaxy hosted AGN on the higher “radio-loud” sequence No disc-galaxy hosted AGN on the higher “radio-loud” sequence
57
Two types of RQ/RL “bimodality”: c - intermittency of narrow jet production (two accretion modes) c - intermittency of narrow jet production (two accretion modes) c – spin (low for disc galaxies, high for elliptical galaxies) Spin-accretion scenario Slope of the radio-loudness sequence: accretion rate Normalisation: spin crit ~ 10 -3
59
It is easy to spin-up a black-hole (in an AGN) but difficult to spin it down. That is the problem…
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.