AccelerationAcceleration in the News
The acceleration, or speeding up, of charged particles to extremely high energies takes place almost everywhere in the universe, very far away from us and at our front door. Particles are accelerated on the Sun, in interplanetary space, at the edge of the solar system, at the blast waves of supernova remnants, in neutron stars, and probably in black hole systems. The last two are remains from the collapse of large stars, either to the density of atomic nuclei (neutron star), or even further to a point such that even light cannot escape (black hole).
When particles are accelerated by a shock, as in solar events, they are knocked back and forth across the shock by the energy waves it generates. The particles gain energy and scatter more on each trip across the shock. The number of particles and strength of the waves decrease as they travel further away from the shock, to a point where there are not enough particles to produce strong waves. The particles then flow away from the shock. This false color composite picture of the bright supernova remnant SN1006 (so named because it was first seen in the year 1006) was taken by the ASCA satellite. The expanding gas from the star collided into the surrounding material. The collision generated a violent shock, which produced x-ray light. The bright regions in the picture show the locations of this shock along the rim of the remnant. The energy spectrum produced in SN1006 provides the first clear link between particle acceleration at supernova shock fronts and high-energy cosmic rays. Image courtesy of Drs. R. Petre and E. Gotthelf, NASA GSFC. Acceleration in the News
August 10, 2009: Particles
as tracers for the most massive explosions in the Milky Way --
University of Gothenburg
July 8, 2009: Thunderclouds accelerate cosmic electrons -- Physics World June 30, 2009: Thunderhead accelerator -- Physical Review Focus June 25, 2009: Supernovae: Cosmic-ray superfactories -- Sky & Telescope June 23, 2009: Iron-ic twist deepens cosmic ray puzzle -- Science News January 6, 2009: Cassiopeia A comes alive across time and space -- NASA's Chandra mission January 5, 2009: Desktop atom smashers could replace LHC -- New Scientist January 2, 2009: European first as ALICE achieves energy recovery at 11 million volts -- Science Daily December 31, 2008: Top ten physics stories of the year -- includes the Large Hadron Collider, quarks, and GCRs -- American Institute of Physics (AIP) December 27, 2008: Crab pulsar wind nebula -- APOD December 12, 2008: Michigan State will host rare isotope facility -- Physics World December 3, 2008: Speaker sees new collider as a cooperative effort to solve nature's mysteries -- AAAS October 13, 2008: Brookhaven Lab's Satoshi Ozaki awarded the Rober R. Wilson Prize -- Brookhaven National Laboratory October 10, 2008: The day the world didn't end -- Science@NASA September 25, 2008: Powerful nearby supernova caught by web -- NASA September 15, 2008: SN 1006: A supernova ribbon from Hubble -- APOD August 29, 2008: Integral locates origin of high-energy emission from Crab Nebula -- ESA July 11, 2008: The Far 3kpc Arm -- APOD June 13, 2008: At last, GLAST -- APOD May 9, 2008: Colliding with nature's best-kept secrets -- CNN April 3, 2008: South of Orion -- APOD March 6, 2008: Vela Supernova Remnant -- APOD February 25, 2008: Transformer -- HEAPOW February 20, 2008: Integral: Stellar winds colliding at our cosmic doorstep -- ESA February 8, 2008: NASA calls for suggestions to rename future telescope mission -- NASA GSFC January 30, 2008: Galaxy distortions shed light on cosmic acceleration -- Physics World Januray 27, 2008: Giant particle accelerator discovered in the sky -- Science Daily January 10, 2008: Active galaxy Centaurus A -- APOD November 28, 2007: UNH scientists report first findings on key astrophysics problem -- Eurekalert September 2, 2003: Antimatter factory on Sun yields clues to solar explosions -- NASA GSFC September 2, 2003: RHESSI satellite offers clues about how solar explosions act as particle accelerators -- UC Berkeley News November 18, 2002: First 3-D magnetic reconnection measurements -- SpaceDaily November 12, 2002: Satellite finds electrons brought to near-light speed -- Spaceflight Now November 7, 2002: UC Berkeley analysis of satellite data turns up first direct evidence that magnetic processes in space can accelerate electrons to near light speed -- UC Berkeley Click on images above to
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