...
- 22.02., Alexander van der Horst (George Washington U.): Radio View on Gamma-Ray Burst Extremes
Abstract: Many high-energy astrophysical sources accelerate electrons to extreme velocities, resulting in multi-wavelength emission from synchrotron and other radiation processes. Gamma-ray bursts represent some of the most extreme electron accelerators, in the collimated outflows, or jets, of massive stellar explosions and the mergers of compact objects. Observations of gamma-ray bursts across the electromagnetic spectrum, from GHz radio frequencies to TeV gamma-ray energies, provide a unique probe of electron acceleration due to the relativistic nature of their jets. I will discuss recent developments in this area, both observationally and in modeling the observations, focusing on gamma-ray burst extremes from a radio perspective. - 15.03., Egor Podlesnyi (IFY, NTNU): Modelling the persistent low-state γ-ray emission of the PKS 1510-089 blazar
Abstract: Blazars may accelerate protons and/or nuclei as well as electrons. The hadronic component of accelerated particles in blazars may constitute the bulk of their high-energy budget; nevertheless, this component is elusive due to a high value of the energy threshold of proton interaction with photon fields inside the source. However, broad line regions (BLRs) of some flat spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs) may contain a sufficient amount of matter to render primary protons "visible" in γ rays via hadronuclear interactions. In the present work, we study the persistent γ-ray emission of the FSRQ PKS 1510-089 in its low state utilizing the publicly-available Fermi-LAT data and the spectrum measured with the MAGIC imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes. We find an indication for an excess of γ rays at the energy range ≳20 GeV with respect to a simple baseline log-parabolic intrinsic spectral model. This excess could be explained in a scenario invoking hadronuclear interactions of primary protons on the BLR material with the subsequent development of electromagnetic cascades in photon fields. We present a Monte Carlo calculation of the spectrum of this cascade component, taking as input the BLR photon field spectrum calculated with the Cloudy code.
slides
27.03., Tor Nordam (SINTEF and IFY NTNU): ??
Abstract: D. Transport modelling with stochastic differential equations
Abstract: Stochastic transport models have existed at least the early 1900s, when Einstein (1905) and Langevin (1908) published two papers with mathematical models for Brownian motion. Einstein described this as a random displacement process, where a particle moves a distance at during each time interval. Langevin, on the other hand, described a random acceleration process, where a particle changes its velocity by a random amount during each time interval. In this talk, I will give a short historical introduction, and then discuss differences and similarities between the two models.
- 29.03. Jordan Simpson (IFY, NTNU): ??
Abstract: On
...