high-energy emission from young and massive stellar objects

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High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects Gustavo E. Romero IAR-CONICET [email protected] Felix Aharonian’s Workshop November 7 th , 2012

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High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects. Gustavo E. Romero IAR-CONICET [email protected]. Felix Aharonian’s Workshop November 7 th , 2012. What are the contents of star-forming regions ?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Gustavo E. RomeroIAR-CONICET

[email protected]

Felix Aharonian’s Workshop November 7th, 2012

Page 2: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

What are the contents of star-forming regions?

Gas (Hayakawa 1952, Morrison 1958, Aharonian & Atoyan 1996). Young, massive stars with winds collective effects

(Bykov & Fleishman 1992, Romero & Torres 2003, Torres et al. 2004, Parizot et al. 2004, Bykov: yesterday, etc).

Young pulsars. SNRs (yesterday’s talks). Colliding wind binaries (Eichler & Usov 1993, Benaglia &

Romero 2003, Pittard & Daugherty 2006). Accreting sources (Paredes, Mirabel, Bosch-Ramon – this

workshop). FORMING MASSIVE STARS. RUNAWAY MASSIVE STARS.

Page 3: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Massive stars are formed in massive and dense cores of giant molecular clouds. The cores are the result of the gravitational fragmentation of the cloud

The mechanism of massive star formation is still matter of debate. There are two main different scenarios: accretion and coalescence .

Page 4: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Herbig-Haro objects

HH49-50

Page 5: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects
Page 6: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

HH 80-81: a partially embedded massive protostellar system

Martí, Rodriguez & Reipurth (1993)

Page 7: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

B = 0.2 mG,

Carrasco-González, Rodríguez et al. 2010

Polarization in the jets

Page 8: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Interaction with the ISM

The whole source (protostar + jets) is embedded in the molecular cloudAraudo, Romero, Bosch-Ramon & Paredes 2007, A&A 476, 1289

Page 9: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

SED for HH 80-81

a=100Bosch Ramon et al. (2010), ncloud = 103/cm3.

Page 10: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

The massive protostar IRAS 16547-4247

VLA Rodríguez et al. (2005)

Southern lobe:

S=cte na,a~ -0.6

d=2.9 kpc

B~10-3 G

Vs~1000 km/s

Clear non-thermal emission

Page 11: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

SEDs of non-thermal region at the end of the jet

Araudo, Romero, Bosch-Ramon & Paredes 2007, A&A 476, 1289

Page 12: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Case dominated by protons

Araudo et al. (2007)

Page 13: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

3.6 microns (blue), 4.5 microns (green), 5.8 microns (orange) and 8 microns (red)

Westerlund 2/ RCW 49

Page 14: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Aharonian, F.A., et al., 2006

Westerlund 2/ RCW 49

Page 15: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

HESS Collaboration

Page 16: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Westerlund 2/ RCW 49

PSR J1022-5746

Page 17: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Westerlund 2/ RCW 49

Expected size of the PWN

Size of HESS J1023-575

Additional contributions?

HESS Coll.

K&C 1984

Page 18: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

RCW 49 / Westerlund 2Be

nagl

ia e

t al.

2012

Page 19: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Stellar bow shocks

• Arc-shaped features of piled-up material• Same direction as stellar velocity• Winds confined by ISM ram pressure • Distance to star by momentum balance• Radiation from shocked gas heats swept dust• Dust re-radiates as MIR and FIR excess

Page 20: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

E-BOSS v.128 cands (out of 283 OB runaway stars known)

Peri,

Ben

aglia

, et a

l. 20

12, A

&A

Page 21: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Modeling bow-schocks and their emission

Relativistic particles are accelerated at the reverse adiabatic shock in the stellar wind

Page 22: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Modeling bow-schocks and their emission

Page 23: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Most of the protons escape

del Valle & RomeroIn prep.

These p can power the extended source

Page 24: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

del Valle & Romero 2012, A&A

Spectral energy distributions for O4I and O9I stars

Page 25: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Another case: Westerlund 1

HESS Coll.

Page 26: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Another case: Westerlund 1

See also poster by Martí et al. on Monoceros

Page 27: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

AE AuriageLópez-Santiago, Miceli, del Valle, Romero, et al. ApJ Lett2012

Absorbed X-ray power law ~ -2.5

Page 28: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

AE AuriageLópez-Santiago, Miceli, del Valle, Romero, et al. ApJ Lett 2012

WISE + 1-8 keV EPIC map Energy map

Page 29: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

VLA + MSX images of

BD+43o 3654

C band

L band

Bena

glia

, Rom

ero,

et a

l 201

0, A

&A

Page 30: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

SEDBe

nagl

ia, R

omer

o, e

t al 2

010,

A&A

Page 31: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

z Oph bow-shock

Computed BS & WISE image

SED and sensitivities

del V

alle

& R

omer

o 2

012,

A&A

Page 32: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Is HD 195592 a Fermi source?del Valle, Romero, & De Becker 2012

Page 33: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Conclusions

* Protostars in SFRs can be gamma-ray sources when embedded in the original molecular core.

* The typical luminosities are ~ 1031-33 erg/s at E>100 MeV.

* Runaway massive stars can produce relativistic particles in their bowshocks, and local (IC) and difusse (pp) gamma-ray emission.

* Some nearby runaway O stars can be detected in gamma-rays by Fermi and in the future by CTA.

Gamma-ray astronomy can open a new window to the study of massive star forming processes.

Page 34: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Thanks!

What a world!

“Relaxed gamma-ray astronomy team”

Page 35: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Gamma rays from massive stars: not a new idea

Page 36: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects
Page 37: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Some basic parameters for HH 80-81

vj ~ 700 km/s n ~ 1000 cm-3

RHH ~ 5 1016 cm D ~ 1.7 kpc LX ~ 4 1031 erg/s Beq ~ 5 mG E max, p ~ 3 1014 eV - E max, e ~ E max, p/12

See Martí et al. (1993) and Pravdo et al. (2004) for details on the source

Page 38: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

HH 80-81: the central source

Martí, Rodriguez & Reipurth (1993)

Page 39: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Distributions

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

10 20 30 50 70 90 130

Number of stars vs. Spatial velocity

Tetzlaff + 2010Km/s

#

Peri,

Ben

aglia

, et a

l. 20

12, A

&A

Page 40: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Distributions

detected BS

GC

Peri, Benaglia, et al. 2012, A&A

Page 41: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Benaglia et al. 2012

Page 42: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects
Page 43: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Absorption

Page 44: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Energy losses and gains tpp ~ 2 1012 s >> tesc ~ 3 109 s

tBremsstr ~ 3 1013 s

tacc ~ η E/qBc, where η =(8/3)(vs/c)2

tesc = tacc 3 1014 eV (for protons)

Page 45: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

The star BD+43o 3654

IRAS bow shock candidates (Noriega-C. et al. 1997)Comerón & Pasquali 2007:

o Bow shock at MSX-D, E bandso Runaway from Cyg OB2, 1.4 kpco O4 If ; 70 Mo ; 1.6 Myr; [vw = 3200 km/s]

Kobulnicky et al. 2010: o v ~ 80km/s, dM/dt ~ 2 x 10-4 Mo/yr

Ambient density: 6 to 100 cm-3 A non-

thermal emitter?

Page 46: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

MSX emission toward BD+430 3654

D-band image (14.65 mm)

Page 47: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

VLA obs

L-band

C-band

Bena

glia

, Rom

ero,

et a

l 201

0, A

&A

Page 48: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Images

Is al

l em

niss

ion

com

ing

from

the

BOW

SH

OCK?

5’ ~ 2pc

Bena

glia

, Rom

ero,

et a

l 201

0, A

&A

Page 49: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

Spectral index mapa

noise

S(n) ~ k na

s/n (cont) ≥ 4

s/n (a) ≥ 10

-0.8 ≤ a ≤ 0.3.

<a> -0.4Bena

glia

, Rom

ero,

et a

l 201

0, A

&A

Page 50: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects
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Page 52: High-Energy Emission from Young and Massive Stellar Objects

AE AuriageLópez-Santiago, Miceli, del Valle, Romero, et al. ApJ Lett 2012

Eemax~1 TeV