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Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik
Garching, Germany October 16th, 2003 Neutron Stars as Cannonballs Hans-Thomas Janka, Konstantinos Kifonidis, Ewald Müller, Leonhard Scheck, Tomek Plewa Scientists at the Max-Planck-Institute for Astrophysics in Garching and the University of Chicago have substantiated an explanation for the high space velocities of observed pulsars. Their computer models confirm the likely connection with asymmetries during supernova explosions. Stars with more than ten times the mass of our Sun end their lives in spectacularly powerful supernova explosions. While the major part of the stellar gas is violently ejected, the core of the star collapses by its own gravity to form a neutron star. The latter has a mass of roughly 1.5 times the Sun, but its diameter is only about 20 kilometers. The matter in its interior is therefore more dense than in atomic nuclei. Some of the known neutron stars are found inside the gaseous remnants of past supernova explosions. The most famous example is the 'pulsar' within the Crab Nebula (Fig.1). Because it spins around its axis about 33 times per second, we receive on Earth characteristic, regular pulses. Such rotating neutron stars were therefore named pulsars. Other neutron stars, however, move away from the site of their formation with very high speed (Fig.2). Typical velocities are several hundred kilometers per second, but some pulsars propagate through interstellar space with more than 1000 kilometers per second (Fig.3). This is much faster than the motion of ordinary stars in our Galaxy. Therefore many neutron stars can escape from the gravitational pull of the Milky Way. The orgin of the pulsar motions has long been a mystery. There is, however, no lack of ideas, partly invoking very speculative or exotic physics phenomena. A connection with observed anisotropies of supernova explosions had so far not been demonstrated convincingly. A team of scientists at the Max-Planck-Institute for Astrophysics in Garching and the ASCI Flash Center of the University of Chicago has now discovered a simple and natural cause for such a connection. In computer simulations the team found that stochastic, little perturbations in the star can amplify to huge anisotropies by the rapid growth of fluid instablities during the launch of the explosion (Fig.4, movies). The explosion shock wave and the ejected matter therefore develop global deformation and the neutron star can be kicked to very high velocities of several hundred kilometers per second within just a second (Fig.5). For the first time the computer models allow one to understand the measured pulsar motions without making use of additional assumptions. Interestingly, the results seem to support a theory which has been favored for a long time to explain the beginning of the supernova explosion (see "How do Massive Stars Explode?", http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/HIGHL...ght0102_e.html) but which could so far not be confirmed by detailed numerical simulations (see "Supernova Simulations Still Defy Explosions", http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/HIGHL...ght0306_e.html): The explosion is caused by the action of neutrinos. These neutral, weakly interacting elementary particles are radiated by the hot neutron star in huge numbers. They heat the gas in the stellar interior and create the pressure by which the explosion is started. This heating leads to violent buoyancy (see movies) until the expansion of the stellar gas occurs in a generically anisotropic manner. The mechanism of the explosion, the observed asymmetries of supernovae, and the pulsar proper motions are therefore all linked to one effect. Publication: L. Scheck, T. Plewa, H.-Th. Janka, K. Kifonidis, and E. Müller: "Pulsar Recoil by Large-Scale Anisotropies in Supernova Explosions", astro-ph/0307352, Phys. Rev. Lett., submitted [NOTE: Images and movies supporting this release are available at http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/mpa/r...003-10-en.html ] |
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I prefer to think of them as billiard balls:
************************************************** *************************** From: Robert Clark ) Subject: Neutron star kicks, a proposal. Newsgroups: sci.astro, sci.physics, sci.physics.relativity Date: 2000/07/25 .... So the proposal for the origin of neutron star kicks: since I had been considering the possibility that the origin of pulsar radio pulses may be due to orbiting planets, I thought they may also be the origin of the high speeds seen in some neutron stars after their supernova explosions: Forum: sci.astro Subject: How neutron stars get their kicks: Cornell researcher poses rocket theory (Forwarded) Date: 06/08/2000 Author: Andrew Yee http://x59.deja.com/getdoc.xp?AN=632820756 The speeds observed are quite high in some cases, in the range of hundreds of kilometers per second. Since we know that pulsars have planets, perhaps the high speeds are due to collisions of the planets with the neutron star. In the example cited by Lazio these were Earth- sized planets. However, I'm imagining the Jovian sized planets frequently observed about Sun-like stars. Indeed in many of these cases they turn out to be 'Hot Jupiters', Jovian-sized planets orbiting quite close in to their stars: Stars May Be Eating 'Hot Jupiters' http://www.space.com/scienceastronom...ts_991022.html Death stars It looks as if most suns make a meal of their planets New Scientist, 23 October, 1999 http://www.newscientist.com/ns/19991...wsstory12.html So we need a mechanism to explain why these planets rush into their parent stars after the supernova. Doug Lin of the University of California, Santa Cruz suggests that most planets this close in have unstable orbits due to the surrounding gas and dust of the star: Exploring New Worlds Scientists puzzle over extrasolar planets Science News, August 8, 1998 http://sciencenews.org/sn_arc98/8_8_98/bob1.htm However, this is a case that takes place over millions of years. In the case of the supernovae we would want this to take place over a much shorter time period (hours? days?) After the supernova explosion there is an expanding shell of gas from the stars outer layers. This would be moving at high speed. It should be moving radially out from the star. A satellite can be made to decay in its orbit by giving it a velocity push against its direction of motion in orbit. But if the planet has a circular orbit, the gas shell would tend to move it radially outward. However, one feature of the Jovian size planets so far discovered is that they usually have very eccentric orbits. In such a case a radially expanding shell would have a velocity component along the direction of motion of the satellite in its orbit at most points of the orbit. But at some points this would tend to speed up the planet and at other points to slow it down. It is possible that if the planet passed through the gas cloud several times the result would be to slow it down. For an expanding supernova gas shell does some remnant of the gas remain around the star after the explosion? If so then the planet continuing to orbit around the star through this surrounding gas would tend to cause the orbital decay of the planet. However, I'm considering another underlying cause of the decay of the orbiting planet. That is that the collapse of the star itself causes the rapid spiraling-in of near orbiting planets into the star. In Newtonian physics the gravitational effects on an orbiting planet when the star collapsed from a 1 million kilometer diameter to a 10 kilometer diameter would be the same since the gravitational force is concentrated at the center. However, this is no longer the case in general relativity with extremely strong fields such as with a neutron star. This is an effect in general relativity called "frame dragging". It has been verified with Earth satellites and with some black hole systems: Earth drags space-time as it rotates http://exosci.com/news/50.html RXTE Observes Space-Time Distortion! http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/xt...over_1197.html In the descriptions I've seen so far, only the precession of the orbit of a satellite is described. However, from the mathematical similarity of the equations of general relativity to those of motion through a material medium we might also expect there to be a force produced that drags the satellite in toward the parent body. This is an effect in fluid dynamics known as the "Magnus effect": The Magnus Effect http://www.b-bop.com/mak/magnus.html Physics of Sports Lecture 18: Reynolds Number, Drag Coefficient, and Turbulence http://courses.washington.edu/phys208/notes/lect18.html Some papers describing the analogy between general relativity and motion through a medium a "The optical-mechanical analogy in general relativity: New methods for the paths of light and of the planets" American Journal of Physics, November 1996, V. 64, no. 11, p. 1404-1415 "On the gravitational field acting as an optical medium" General Relativity and Gravitation, v. 2, p. 347-357, 1971. Exploiting this analogy fully, we might also expect there would be a force tending to drag the satellite downwards due to the large mass of the star rapidly contracting down as it collapsed into a neutron star. A pulsar recently observed by Chandra may support the planetary impact model for the neutron star kicks: Chandra Catches Shooting Neutron Star http://www.space.com/scienceastronom...la_000607.html It shows twin jets shooting out from the pulsar forward and rearward aligned with the direction of motion of the pulsar. This could be due to the explosive energy released on impact for the rearward jet. For the forward jet, it is known that solar eruptions on one side of the Sun are accompanied by magnetic disruptions on the opposite side, which can also cause flares. Also, it has been observed that large lunar impact areas are accompanied by magnetic anomalies on the opposite side of the Moon from the impact area (such a similarity supports the idea that at least some solar eruptions are due to cometary or asteroidal impacts.) How to distinguish between the impact model and the asymmetric supernova model? If the velocity imparted to the star is due to the outer layers exploding outward asymmetrically then the velocity kick should occur immediately with the supernova explosion. If it is due to a planetary impact however then it should take some time for the planets orbit to degrade fully. I don't know if the time scale for this is hours, days or years. Perhaps in a case such as supernova SN1987A where the neutrino emission was observed first it could be determined the time between the explosion and the time of the velocity kick. Also when the planet is quite close to the neutron star it should be moving at relativistic speeds. Such a Jovian size body spiraling into the intense magnetic field of the neutron star at a significant fraction of the speed of light should be an intense source of synchrotron radiation. There are continuous observations of synchrotron radiation from pusars. But this should be for the brief time when the planet is quite close in to the star then should be accompanied by great release of radiation on impact. Since one of the hypothesized explanations of the mysterious gamma ray bursts is a collision of two neutron stars it is conceivable that some of these are due to these planetary impacts, especially for planets on the order of 10 to 100 Jovian masses, about 1/100th to 1/10th solar mass. A rough estimate for the speed of the planet on impact can be obtained from the equation mV^2/2 = GMm/R, so V = sqrt(2GM/R), M the star mass, m the planet mass, R the radial distance, G the gravitational constant, G = 6.67 x 10^(-11) m^3/s^2 x kg. If the planet maintained its size until impact at about the radial size of Jupiter, then the distance R would be about 1.4x10^8 meters. With a neutron star mass of one solar mass, M = 2x10^30 kg, V = 1400 km/sec. However, it is likely that the planet will pass through the Roche limit of the star, where the planet will begin to break up. Then the radial distance could be on the order of the size of the neutron star 10 to 30 km. Using a radial distance of 20 km, V = 110,000 km/sec. For a planet at 10 Jovian masses, 1/100th of a solar mass, this could result in a velocity imparted to the star of 1100 km/sec, within the order of magnitude of the velocities observed for the neutron star kicks. -- _______________________________________________ "In order for a scientific revolution to occur, most scientists have to be wrong." -- Bob Clark _______________________________________________ ************************************************** ************************** Andrew Yee wrote in message m... Max-Planck-Institut für Astrophysik Garching, Germany October 16th, 2003 Neutron Stars as Cannonballs Hans-Thomas Janka, Konstantinos Kifonidis, Ewald Müller, Leonhard Scheck, Tomek Plewa Scientists at the Max-Planck-Institute for Astrophysics in Garching and the University of Chicago have substantiated an explanation for the high space velocities of observed pulsars. Their computer models confirm the likely connection with asymmetries during supernova explosions. Stars with more than ten times the mass of our Sun end their lives in spectacularly powerful supernova explosions. While the major part of the stellar gas is violently ejected, the core of the star collapses by its own gravity to form a neutron star. The latter has a mass of roughly 1.5 times the Sun, but its diameter is only about 20 kilometers. The matter in its interior is therefore more dense than in atomic nuclei. Some of the known neutron stars are found inside the gaseous remnants of past supernova explosions. The most famous example is the 'pulsar' within the Crab Nebula (Fig.1). Because it spins around its axis about 33 times per second, we receive on Earth characteristic, regular pulses. Such rotating neutron stars were therefore named pulsars. Other neutron stars, however, move away from the site of their formation with very high speed (Fig.2). Typical velocities are several hundred kilometers per second, but some pulsars propagate through interstellar space with more than 1000 kilometers per second (Fig.3). This is much faster than the motion of ordinary stars in our Galaxy. Therefore many neutron stars can escape from the gravitational pull of the Milky Way. The orgin of the pulsar motions has long been a mystery. There is, however, no lack of ideas, partly invoking very speculative or exotic physics phenomena. A connection with observed anisotropies of supernova explosions had so far not been demonstrated convincingly. A team of scientists at the Max-Planck-Institute for Astrophysics in Garching and the ASCI Flash Center of the University of Chicago has now discovered a simple and natural cause for such a connection. In computer simulations the team found that stochastic, little perturbations in the star can amplify to huge anisotropies by the rapid growth of fluid instablities during the launch of the explosion (Fig.4, movies). The explosion shock wave and the ejected matter therefore develop global deformation and the neutron star can be kicked to very high velocities of several hundred kilometers per second within just a second (Fig.5). For the first time the computer models allow one to understand the measured pulsar motions without making use of additional assumptions. Interestingly, the results seem to support a theory which has been favored for a long time to explain the beginning of the supernova explosion (see "How do Massive Stars Explode?", http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/HIGHL...ght0102_e.html) but which could so far not be confirmed by detailed numerical simulations (see "Supernova Simulations Still Defy Explosions", http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/HIGHL...ght0306_e.html): The explosion is caused by the action of neutrinos. These neutral, weakly interacting elementary particles are radiated by the hot neutron star in huge numbers. They heat the gas in the stellar interior and create the pressure by which the explosion is started. This heating leads to violent buoyancy (see movies) until the expansion of the stellar gas occurs in a generically anisotropic manner. The mechanism of the explosion, the observed asymmetries of supernovae, and the pulsar proper motions are therefore all linked to one effect. Publication: L. Scheck, T. Plewa, H.-Th. Janka, K. Kifonidis, and E. Müller: "Pulsar Recoil by Large-Scale Anisotropies in Supernova Explosions", astro-ph/0307352, Phys. Rev. Lett., submitted [NOTE: Images and movies supporting this release are available at http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/mpa/r...003-10-en.html ] |
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On Fri, 14 Nov 2003 14:47:25 -0500, Andrew Yee
wrote: The explosion is caused by the action of neutrinos. These neutral, weakly interacting elementary particles are radiated by the hot neutron star in huge numbers. They heat the gas in the stellar interior and create the pressure by which the explosion is started. One thing I don't understand: Supposedly neutrinos are sufficiently weakly interacting that they could pass through a light-year's thickness of lead unhindered; how are even 0.01% of them able to be stopped by a few hundred kilometers of even very dense plasma? -- "Sore wa himitsu desu." To reply by email, remove the small snack from address. http://www.esatclear.ie/~rwallace |
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In message , Robert
Clark writes I prefer to think of them as billiard balls: Can't you snip text? Or better still, not post at all? -- Rabbit arithmetic - 1 plus 1 equals 10 Remove spam and invalid from address to reply. |
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Russell Wallace wrote:
On Fri, 14 Nov 2003 14:47:25 -0500, Andrew Yee wrote: The explosion is caused by the action of neutrinos. These neutral, weakly interacting elementary particles are radiated by the hot neutron star in huge numbers. They heat the gas in the stellar interior and create the pressure by which the explosion is started. One thing I don't understand: Supposedly neutrinos are sufficiently weakly interacting that they could pass through a light-year's thickness of lead unhindered; how are even 0.01% of them able to be stopped by a few hundred kilometers of even very dense plasma? Because it's *very* dense plasma. |
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"RW" == Russell Wallace writes:
The explosion is caused by the action of neutrinos. These neutral, weakly interacting elementary particles are radiated by the hot neutron star in huge numbers. They heat the gas in the stellar interior and create the pressure by which the explosion is started. RW One thing I don't understand: Supposedly neutrinos are RW sufficiently weakly interacting that they could pass through a RW light-year's thickness of lead unhindered; how are even 0.01% of RW them able to be stopped by a few hundred kilometers of even very RW dense plasma? As has already been pointed out, the densities within a collapsing star can become large. To be more specific, Shapiro & Teukolsky provide estimates of the densities at which neutrinos become "trapped" or at which the opacity to neutrinos becomes large. It is of the order of 3E11 g/cm^3. -- Lt. Lazio, HTML police | e-mail: No means no, stop rape. | http://patriot.net/%7Ejlazio/ sci.astro FAQ at http://sciastro.astronomy.net/sci.astro.html |
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On 17 Nov 2003 07:16:31 -0500, Joseph Lazio
wrote: As has already been pointed out, the densities within a collapsing star can become large. To be more specific, Shapiro & Teukolsky provide estimates of the densities at which neutrinos become "trapped" or at which the opacity to neutrinos becomes large. It is of the order of 3E11 g/cm^3. Ah, okay, thanks. Is there a layman-understandable explanation of why the neutrino opacity jumps abruptly once that density is reached? -- "Sore wa himitsu desu." To reply by email, remove the small snack from address. http://www.esatclear.ie/~rwallace |
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"RW" == Russell Wallace writes:
RW On 17 Nov 2003 07:16:31 -0500, Joseph Lazio RW wrote: As has already been pointed out, the densities within a collapsing star can become large. To be more specific, Shapiro & Teukolsky provide estimates of the densities at which neutrinos become "trapped" or at which the opacity to neutrinos becomes large. It is of the order of 3E11 g/cm^3. RW Ah, okay, thanks. RW Is there a layman-understandable explanation of why the neutrino RW opacity jumps abruptly once that density is reached? I am not where I can check that easily, but I don't think the opacity "jumps" at that density. Think of looking through a cloud at the Sun. How dense does the cloud have to be before you cannot see the Sun? As the cloud becomes more and more opaque, it becomes tougher and tougher to see the Sun. There's no discrete point, though, at which one could say the cloud is opaque. Thus, one typically quotes a characteristic opacity. A common measure is when about 63% of the light (or neutrinos) are absorbed, corresponding to an optical depth of unity (equivalent to e^{-1}). -- Lt. Lazio, HTML police | e-mail: No means no, stop rape. | http://patriot.net/%7Ejlazio/ sci.astro FAQ at http://sciastro.astronomy.net/sci.astro.html |
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There is a problem with the unstable orbits argument.
In looking up the reference for the black hole case, the minimal radius is 1.5 times that of the Schwarzschild radius, which for a solar size black hole is on the order of 10's of kilometers: Centrifugal Forces and Black Holes by John G. Cramer http://www.npl.washington.edu/AV/altvw55.html For a neutron star it should be approximately the same thing. But the "hot Jupiters" would still be orbiting their parent stars at least at the million kilometer range. So the minimal stable orbit argument would not work. Also, I was assuming that GR implies the orbits are stable at quantized distances. But you'll notice the article on the quasi-periodic oscillations in the pulsar pulses only says the x-ray bursts occur at quantized frequency intervals. It does not specifically attribute this to quantized orbital distances; only the highest frequency oscillation is attributed to a minimal stable orbit distance. Bob Clark (Robert Clark) wrote in message . com... I gave a rather speculative argument about why general relativity might suggest close in planets might plunge into the neutron stars but I found an article that states that neutron stars should not have stable orbits close in and in fact the orbits should be quantized: Discovery Of 'Cosmic Chords' May Support Prediction Of Einstein's Theory http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases...0422070245.htm All in the Timing.(neutron star oscillations) Science News, Nov 14, 1998, by Ron Cowen "According to Newton's theory of gravity, gas can orbit a compact star at any distance. But according to general relativity, it a star is massive enough and dense enough, it will warp space-time so strongly that the region just outside the star cannot possess a stable, circular orbit. Gas circling any closer than a certain minimum distance is doomed to crash onto the star's surface. This minimum distance is known as the innermost stable orbit." http://www.findarticles.com/cf_dls/m...le.jhtml?term= If so, then if the orbits of the observed "hot Jupiters" are outside the stability zones for the neutron star we should EXPECT these planets to plunge into their parent stars after they go supernova. c.f.: The Music of the (Neutron) Spheres by John G. Cramer Alternate View Column AV-92 "In the Nov-92 issue of Analog in a column called "Centrifugal Forces and Black Holes", I discussed a newly- realized aspect of general relativity as applied to intense gravity fields. For circular trajectories close enough around a black hole, the centrifugal force works backwards, pointing inward instead of outward, and there are no stable orbits. This black hole situation is an extreme case, but Frederick Lamb and his co-workers at the University of Illinois have applied similar ideas to the intense gravity fields and highly curved space near neutron stars. They find that when the field is strong enough, the space curvature predicted by general relativity reduces the centrifugal force to the point where orbital stability is destroyed. For any neutron star there is a minimum-diameter stable orbit, and no stable orbits exist at smaller orbital diameters. An object with a trajectory within the minimum orbit will spiral into the gravity well and never emerge." http://www.npl.washington.edu/AV/altvw92.html Bob Clark (Robert Clark) wrote in message . com... I prefer to think of them as billiard balls: ************************************************** *************************** From: Robert Clark ) Subject: Neutron star kicks, a proposal. Newsgroups: sci.astro, sci.physics, sci.physics.relativity Date: 2000/07/25 ... So the proposal for the origin of neutron star kicks: since I had been considering the possibility that the origin of pulsar radio pulses may be due to orbiting planets, I thought they may also be the origin of the high speeds seen in some neutron stars after their supernova explosions: Forum: sci.astro Subject: How neutron stars get their kicks: Cornell researcher poses rocket theory (Forwarded) Date: 06/08/2000 Author: Andrew Yee http://x59.deja.com/getdoc.xp?AN=632820756 The speeds observed are quite high in some cases, in the range of hundreds of kilometers per second. Since we know that pulsars have planets, perhaps the high speeds are due to collisions of the planets with the neutron star. In the example cited by Lazio these were Earth- sized planets. However, I'm imagining the Jovian sized planets frequently observed about Sun-like stars. Indeed in many of these cases they turn out to be 'Hot Jupiters', Jovian-sized planets orbiting quite close in to their stars: Stars May Be Eating 'Hot Jupiters' http://www.space.com/scienceastronom...ts_991022.html Death stars It looks as if most suns make a meal of their planets New Scientist, 23 October, 1999 http://www.newscientist.com/ns/19991...wsstory12.html So we need a mechanism to explain why these planets rush into their parent stars after the supernova. Doug Lin of the University of California, Santa Cruz suggests that most planets this close in have unstable orbits due to the surrounding gas and dust of the star: Exploring New Worlds Scientists puzzle over extrasolar planets Science News, August 8, 1998 http://sciencenews.org/sn_arc98/8_8_98/bob1.htm ... |
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