Session Abstract:
The Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE), launched in December 1995, is
a NASA astrophysics satellite designed to study the brightest X-ray
sources in the sky. These range from the most luminous sources in our
own Galaxy, X-ray binaries, to the active galactic nuclei and quasars
that are the most luminous sources known in the Universe. The
enormous X-ray luminosities observed from these systems are due to
energy released within a very small volume by infall of matter through
the intense gravitational field of a ``compact object''---such as a
neutron star or a black hole. Fine temporal resolution (as low as ten
microseconds) over the broad energy range 2-250 keV enables RXTE to
probe temperatures, magnetic fields and other fundamental physical
processes close to the compact objects, as well as the geometry of the
systems and the nature and characteristics of the compact object
itself (e.g. masses, spin periods, and internal structure of neutron
stars). This session will present the highlights of new scientific
results from the first year of the mission. There will also be a
workstation set up with a direct link to RXTE to allow session
participants to see realtime scientific data from the satellite.
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Pulses, Bursts, Flares, and Dips: Understanding the Enigmatic X-ray
Binaries.
ALAN P. SMALE (Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics, Code
660.2, NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD 20771)
X-ray binaries (XRB) are the brightest and most dynamic objects in the
sky, and display a wide and perhaps bewildering variety of phenomena.
XRB consist of a neutron star or black hole accreting matter from a
``normal'' close companion star, generally through an accretion disk,
but this accretion is anything but a gentle process; X-ray light
curves show flares, bright super-Eddington bursts, eclipses, dips and
a wealth of other regular and irregular variability on timescales
ranging from a few milliseconds to several years.
The Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) is ideal for the study of XRB:
it is the only X-ray mission capable of studying the entire crucial
2-200 keV energy range with a large collecting area, high time
resolution, and rapid response to changes in the X-ray sky. I will
briefly summarize the capabilities of RXTE, review the properties and
behavior of the X-ray binaries (concentrating mainly on the powerful
Galactic bulge sources and bursters), and conclude by showing how the
fast timing results of RXTE and previous X-ray missions provide the
key to a unified model of X-ray binary behavior.
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Ultra-fast QPOs: RXTE and the Study of Neutron Stars.
TOD E. STROHMAYER (Universities Space Research Association
and the Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics. Mail Code
662, NASA/GSFC Greenbelt, MD 20771).
Neutron stars are among the most exotic astronomical objects
known. Formed in the supernova explosion of a dying star, they contain
bulk matter at the highest densities known in the universe. When
present with a normal star in a binary system, mass accretion onto the
neutron star can generate a luminosity in X-rays 50,000 times greater
than the total luminosity of the Sun. NASA's Rossi X-ray Timing
Explorer (RXTE), launched in late December, 1995, was specifically
designed to study with unprecedented sensitivity the X-ray emission
from neutron stars. The high density and compact nature of these
objects requires measuring the X-ray emission on very short
timescales. The variability of the X-ray emission from neutron stars
on millisecond timescales conveys information about the physical
properties of neutron stars and their environs. I will discuss recent
observations of neutron star binary systems by RXTE and what they are
telling us about the physics of neutron stars.
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RXTE and the Most Luminous Objects in Our Universe.
RICHARD E. ROTHSCHILD (Center for Astrophysics and Space Sciences, University
of California, San Diego)
Galaxies are aggregates of billions of stars, and the light we see
from any given galaxy contains a contribution from each star. For some
galaxies, the starlight is weak in comparison to a bright source of
light coming from the nucleus of the galaxy. This time-variable extra
component is distinctly different in nature and has been hypothesized
to originate from matter accreting onto a massive black hole. The
power emitted in this process allow us to see the most distant
quasars, which are thought to harbor such objects at their cores, and
to study the environment around massive black holes, as well as the
black holes themselves. As with the center of the Milky Way, gas,
dust, and other obscuring material limits what can be learned from
optical, ultraviolet, and infrared observations. X-ray and gamma-ray
astronomy, on the other hand, can penetrate this barrier to the very
heart of the galactic nucleus, and give us a view of the primary
processes involved. While the spectral and temporal character may
vary radically from object to object, they can be explained by having
different views of the black hole and the matter surrounding it. The
Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer (RXTE) has observed many such active
galaxies and quasars over a broad enrgy range in its first year of
operation. How they support this unified picture and the questions
they raise will be presented.
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ABSTRACT FOR TOPICAL LECTURE FEB 15, 1997, SEATTLE, 1 PM
Milliseconds to Months: X-ray Timing of Neutron Stars and Black
Holes.
HALE BRADT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Room 37-587,
Cambridge MA 02139-4307 USA)
Superman with his X-ray vision would see a sky that consists of many
point-like and extended objects that emit X-rays. The sky he sees
would be very different than the visible sky (at optical wavelengths);
objects faint in the visible would be bright in X-rays and vice versa,
and many of the point-like sources would exhibit extreme variability
of intensity on time scales from milliseconds to months and years. The
X-rays in most cases arise from matter that is extremely hot, of order
10 million degrees or more. Such matter, often in the form of ionized
gases, is found in the deep gravitational potential wells of "compact
objects", neutron stars, stellar black holes, or the massive
black-holes believed to be at the active cores of some galaxies. The
extreme conditions of gravity, temperature, and magnetic field near
these objects lead to the extreme observed variability. Studies of the
temporal variability thus probe the regions and conditions very close
to these objects. Recent timing results from the Rossi X-ray Timing
Explorer are providing new insight into these compact objects, their
environs, their very nature, and even their life histories.
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