Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 13 The contents of the Universe – the grand design
- 14 Aspects of stellar evolution relevant to high energy astrophysics
- 15 Dead stars
- 16 Accretion power in astrophysics
- 17 Interstellar gas and magnetic field
- 18 Synchrotron radiation and the radio emission of the Galaxy
- 19 The origin of the electron energy spectrum in our Galaxy
- 20 The origin of high energy protons and nuclei
- 21 The acceleration of high energy particles
- Appendices – astronomical nomenclature
- Further reading and references
- Index
18 - Synchrotron radiation and the radio emission of the Galaxy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- 13 The contents of the Universe – the grand design
- 14 Aspects of stellar evolution relevant to high energy astrophysics
- 15 Dead stars
- 16 Accretion power in astrophysics
- 17 Interstellar gas and magnetic field
- 18 Synchrotron radiation and the radio emission of the Galaxy
- 19 The origin of the electron energy spectrum in our Galaxy
- 20 The origin of high energy protons and nuclei
- 21 The acceleration of high energy particles
- Appendices – astronomical nomenclature
- Further reading and references
- Index
Summary
Synchrotron radiation
The synchrotron radiation of relativistic and ultrarelativistic electrons is the process which dominates high energy astrophysics. It is the radiation emitted by very high energy electrons gyrating in a magnetic field. It was originally observed in early betatron experiments, in which electrons were first accelerated to ultrarelativistic energies. This same mechanism is responsible for the radio emission from the Galaxy, from supernova remnants and extragalactic radio sources. It is also responsible for the non-thermal optical emission observed in the Crab Nebula and possibly for the optical and X-ray continuum emission of quasars. The reasons for these assertions will become apparent in the course of this chapter.
The word non-thermal is used frequently in high energy astrophysics to describe the emission of high energy particles. I find this an unfortunate terminology, since all emission mechanisms are ‘thermal’ in some sense. The word is conventionally taken to mean ‘continuum radiation from particles, the energy spectrum of which is not Maxwellian’. In practice, continuum emission is often referred to as ‘nonthermal’ if it cannot be accounted for by the spectrum of thermal bremsstrahlung or black-body radiation.
It is a very major undertaking to work out properly all the properties of synchrotron radiation, and that is beyond the scope of this book. For details, I refer the enthusiast to the books by Bekefi (1966), Pacholczyk (1970) and Rybicki and Lightman (1979) and the three review articles by Ginzburg and his colleagues (see the References section for this chapter).
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- High Energy Astrophysics , pp. 229 - 273Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1994
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