Astronomy Seminar: Revealing the Gamma Cygni Supernova Remnant: Which are the gamma-rays and which cosmic rays?
Date/Time: | Friday, 16 Oct 2020 from 4:25 pm to 5:25 pm |
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Location: | Online |
Cost: | 0.00 |
URL: | https://iastate.zoom.us/j/91847300455?pw...k5anJ3Zz09 |
Contact: | Curt Struck |
Phone: | 515-294-3666 |
Channel: | College of Liberal Arts and Sciences |
Actions: | Download iCal/vCal | Email Reminder |
Gamma-Cygni (SNR G78.2+2.1) is a middle aged shell-like supernova remnant 1 degree across, located in Cygnus. As a Sedov-phase remnant, gamma-Cygni's shockwaves play an integral role in accelerating the observed local abundance of cosmic rays. The production of cosmic rays with energy greater than 1GeV is a question under investigation by the high energy astrophysics community. Supernova remnants are hypothesized to be responsible for a significant portion of the highest energy galactic-produced cosmic rays. Observations by gamma-ray telescopes can reveal the production mechanism and species of produced cosmic-rays. Combined studies of gamma-Cygni across multiple gamma-ray instruments reveal surprising complexity. This talk will pull together the most recent results, including the speaker's own research, to paint a picture of emission processes across the gamma-Cygni supernova remnant.