scholarly journals The cosmic black-body radiation and the inverse compton effect in the radio galaxies: The X-ray background

1968 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 518-518
Author(s):  
R. Bergamini ◽  
P. Londrillo ◽  
G. Setti
1968 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 105-106
Author(s):  
I. D. Johnston ◽  
G. P. Rothman

It was first pointed out by Hoyle et al. that quasars if they are indeed located at cosmological distances, must be characterized by an extraordinarily large radiation density : and therefore, though their optical and near infra-red spectra appear to be dominated by synchrotron radiation, any ultrarelativistic electron present must necessarily lose essentially all its energy by inverse Compton scattering. This would mean that, though quasars are emitting fantastic amounts of energy at optical frequencies, they must also be emitting many orders of magnitude more at X-ray and γ-ray frequencies. This paradox has been evaded by several specially constructed models (e.g. Rees and Sciama, Woltjer and Jukes); but the problem has not been removed in general.


1969 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 521 ◽  
Author(s):  
AD Payne

This paper is an attempt to describe the diffuse X-ray background in terms of Compton radiation from cosmic ray electrons in intergalactic space. Similarities between the X-ray and radio source spectra suggest that fast electrons escape more or less freely from radio galaxies. It is assumed that the time scale of electron injection is small compared with the characteristic time of evolution of the universe. The electrons are considered to lose energy through Compton scattering (due to the presence of the universal black-body radiation at 3�K) and by expansion of the coordinate system.


The paper surveys the hard X-ray measurements obtained from the Ariel-5 CsI crystal scintillator detector, 8 cm 2 area, 4 cm thick, f. w. h. m. 8 0 and energy range 26 keV to 1.2 MeV. Implications arising from the pre-launch laboratory calibration of the instrument in connection with radioactivity corrections to previous satellite results are briefly mentioned. Various post-launch results are then discussed. Upper limits to the Coma cluster flux are given out to 800 keV and, together with radio data, yield a halo field <̃ 10 -12 T (10 -8 G). The hard flux from near the galactic centre is probably 60 % from GCX and 40 % from GX3 + 1. Crab Nebula data is consistent with an E -2.1 differential power law for photon flux. Combined proportional counter and scintillator data on the transient A1118-61 near Cen X-3 and measurements on the very intense transient A0535 + 26 in Taurus are consistent with multi-layer sources with layer temperatures varying from 3 to 13 keV while Her X-1 during its ‘on’ state appears to shine by modified black-body radiation at 13 keV. The Cyg X-1 transition on 9 May, 1975 is examined in detail and although most variation in intensity occurred at <̃ 25 keV, some harder X-ray change in anti-phase with the soft photons appeared to occur. These changes are discussed in terms of an inverse-Compton photon acceleration model. The spectral shape of A0620-00 is considered in relation to the possibility that it is a black hole.


1994 ◽  
Vol 159 ◽  
pp. 5-16 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joel N. Bregman

The general understanding of the continuum emission from AGN has changed from the picture where nonthermal processes were responsible for all of the emission. The current body of observation indicates that there are two types of objects, one being the blazar class (or blazar component), where nearly all of the emission is nonthermal, due primarily to synchrotron and inverse Compton emission. Variability studies indicate that the emitting region decreases with size from the radio through the X-ray region, where the size of the X-ray region is of order a light hour. More than two dozen of these radio-loud AGNs have been detected at GeV energies (one source at TeV energies), for which the radiation mechanism may be inverse Compton mechanism.In the other class, the radio-quiet AGN (component), the emission is almost entirely thermal, with radiation from dust dominating the near infrared to submillimeter region. The optical to soft X-ray emission is often ascribed to black body emission from an opaque accretion disk, but variability studies may not be consistent with expectations. Another attractive model has free-free emission being responsible for the optical to soft X-ray emission. The highest frequencies at which these AGN are detected is the MeV range, and these data should help to determine if this emission is produced in a scattering atmosphere, such as that around an accretion disk, or by another model involving an opaque pair plasma.


Astrophysics ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 293-300
Author(s):  
G. A. Arutyunyan ◽  
R. A. Krikorian ◽  
A. G. Nikogosyan

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