Theoretical Motivation for Submm-VLBI of Sgr A* - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Theoretical Motivation for Submm-VLBI of Sgr A*

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Dark matter particles: weakly interacting bosons and scalar fields may ... Can one form a central dark ... no solid surface ('boson sponge') and no horizon ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Theoretical Motivation for Submm-VLBI of Sgr A*


1
Theoretical Motivation for Submm-VLBI of Sgr A
  • Heino Falcke
  • ASTRON, Dwingeloo
  • University of Nijmegen

2
Why bother?Boson Star Instead of Black Hole?
  • Dark matter particles weakly interacting bosons
    and scalar fields may contribute to the
    astrophysical mass budget Higgs scalar, Axions,
    etc.
  • Can one form a central dark mass concentration
    out of bosons?
  • prevented from collapse (pressure) by uncertainty
    principle
  • particles are mildly relativistic
  • no solid surface (boson sponge) and no horizon
  • wide mass range of particles can be accommodated
  • Mimics black hole outside some 10 Rs
  • Requires high-resolution observations to rule out

Torres et al. (2000)
3
Black Hole plus Dark MatterDark Matter Spike at
the GC
Immediate vicinity of the black hole.
  • If dark matter is weakly interacting, there will
    be slow accretion towards the center.
  • This process can grow black holes (see also
    Ostriker 2000 or Munyaneza Biermann 2003)
  • A spike in the dark matter distribution is
    expected.
  • If the spike is steep any products from dark
    matter interactions will be dominated by the GC.
  • Radio and gamma-rays

Gondolo Silk (1999)
4
Radio Emission from Neutralino Annihilation near
Sgr A
?no spike or no neutralino
Gondolo (2000)
5
Correlation between Size and Spectrum of Sgr A
submm-bump
cut-off
The spectrum cuts off at the size scale of the
event horizon!
6
Optical Depth
  • The submm bump has an optical depth t1, because
  • High-frequency spectrum turns over
  • is highly variable
  • Suggested by SSC models for the X-ray emission
    (implying equipartition B-fields)

7
Predictions for submm-interferometryThe Shadow
of a Black Hole
?0.6mm VLBI
?1.3mm VLBI
GR Model
a0.998 Ir-2
a0 Iconst
(Falcke, Melia, Agol 2000)
8
Varying the Models
Jeta0.998i90ºIhollow
Infalla0.998i90ºIr-2
Whatever the model looks likethe shadow is
always visible! If there is a black hole, we
aregoing to see it.
Infalla0i90ºIr-2
Jeta0i45ºIhollow
9
Simulate mm-VLBI imaging of Sgr A
decreasing wavelength (mm)
  • 3D General Relativistic Ray-Tracing of a 2.6 106
    M? black hole at the Galactic Center.
  • Include interstellar scattering and instrumental
    resolution.
  • The shadow of the event horizon is 35
    ?arcsec resolvable by mm-VLBI!

(Falcke, Melia, Agol 2000)
10
Issues
  • All models must go GR at 1.3 mm.
  • Optimal range for shadow detection is 0.8-0.6 mm
    VLBI, need 1001 dynamic range.
  • Explore closure quantities what can we
    identify?
  • Polarization can probably not be ignored!
  • Minute time scale variability can shift the
    source but also reveal physical properties!
  • Relative location and size of shadow can give
    spin.
  • Dual-frequency experiments to separate
    (achromatic) GR effects from (wavelength-dependent
    ) optical depth effects?
  • The program should be set up and funded like a
    dedicated physics experiment one goal, one
    target.
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