NASA's
Fermi Mission, Namibia's HESS Telescopes Explore a Blazar
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Explore
a Blazar
In
the heart of an active galaxy, matter falling into a
supermassive black hole somehow creates jets of particles
traveling near the speed of light. For active galaxies
classified as blazars, one of these jets beams right toward
Earth.
Credit:
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab
An international team of
astrophysicists using telescopes on the ground and in space have
uncovered surprising changes in radiation emitted by an active
galaxy. The picture that emerges from these first-ever
simultaneous observations with optical, X-ray and new-generation
gamma-ray telescopes is much more complex than scientists
expected and challenges current theories of how the radiation is
generated.
The galaxy in question is PKS 2155-304, a type
of object known as a "blazar." Like many active
galaxies, a blazar emits oppositely directed jets of particles
traveling near the speed of light as matter falls into a central
supermassive black hole; this process is not well understood. In
the case of blazars, the galaxy is oriented such that we're
looking right down the jet.
PKS 2155-304 is located 1.5
billion light-years away in the southern constellation of Piscis
Austrinus and is usually a detectable but faint gamma-ray source.
But when its jet undergoes a major outburst, as it did in 2006,
the galaxy can become the brightest source in the sky at the
highest gamma-ray energies scientists can detect -- up to 50
trillion times the energy of visible light. Even from strong
sources, only about one gamma ray this energetic strikes a square
yard at the top of Earth's atmosphere each month.
Atmospheric
absorption of one of these gamma rays creates a short-lived
shower of subatomic particles. As these fast-moving particles
rush through the atmosphere, they produce a faint flash of blue
light. The High Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S), an array of
telescopes located in Namibia, captured these flashes from PKS
2155-304.
Gamma rays at lower energies were detected
directly by the Large Area Telescope (LAT) aboard NASA's orbiting
Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. "The launch of Fermi gives
us the opportunity to measure this powerful galaxy across as many
wavelengths as possible for the first time," says Werner
Hofmann, spokesperson for the H.E.S.S. team at the Max-Planck
Institute for Nuclear Physics in Heidelberg, Germany.
With
the gamma-ray regime fully covered, the team turned to NASA's
Swift and Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) satellites to
provide data on the galaxy's X-ray emissions. Rounding out the
wavelength coverage was the H.E.S.S. Automatic Telescope for
Optical Monitoring, which recorded the galaxy's activity in
visible light.
Between August 25 and September 6, 2008,
the telescopes monitored PKS 2155-304 in its quiet, non-flaring
state. The results of the 12-day campaign are surprising. During
flaring episodes of this and other blazars, the X- and gamma-ray
emission rise and fall together. But it doesn't happen this way
when PKS 2155-304 is in its quiet state -- and no one knows
why.
What's even stranger is that the galaxy's visible
light rises and falls with its gamma-ray emission. "It's
like watching a blowtorch where the highest temperatures and the
lowest temperatures change in step, but the middle temperatures
do not," says Berrie Giebels, an astrophysicist at France's
École Polytechnique who works with both the H.E.S.S. and
Fermi LAT teams.
"Astronomers are learning that the
various constituents of the jets in blazars interact in fairly
complicated ways to produce the radiation that we observe,"
says Fermi team member Jim Chiang at Stanford University, Calif.
"These observations may contain the first clues to help us
untangle what's really going on deep in the heart of a
blazar."
The findings have been submitted to The
Astrophysical Journal.
The H.E.S.S. team includes
scientists from Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Poland, the
Czech Republic, Ireland, Armenia, South Africa and Namibia. The
Fermi mission is an astrophysics and particle physics
partnership, developed by NASA in collaboration with the U.S.
Department of Energy, along with important contributions from
academic institutions and partners in France, Germany, Italy,
Japan, Sweden, and the United States.
Source:
NASA / Goddard Space Flight Center / Francis Reddy
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