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Research activities of the GAPHE and status of the AHEAD project. Gregor Rauw on behalf of the Groupe d’Astrophysique des Hautes Energies (GAPHE). High-energy astrophysics. Study of the X-ray and γ-ray emission of astrophysical sources.
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Research activities of the GAPHE and status of the AHEAD project Gregor Rauw on behalf of the Groupe d’Astrophysique des Hautes Energies (GAPHE)
High-energy astrophysics... • Study of the X-ray and γ-ray emission of astrophysical sources. • These radiations are produced by violent processes involving either very high temperatures or relativistic particles and liberating huge amounts of energy. • Sometimes these processes cannot be studied at other wavelengths. • This offers a complementary view of the Universe.
The high-energy astrophysics team • GAPHE: Groupe d’AstroPhysique des Hautes Energies • In alphabetic order: Michaël De Becker, Yassine Damerdji (until 11/2008, now AEOS), Eric Gosset, Anthony Hervé, Jean-Christophe Leyder, Natacha Linder (until 12/2008), Laurent Mahy, Jean Manfroid, Thierry Morel, Yaël Nazé, Gregor Rauw, Jean-Pierre Swings, Jean-Marie Vreux • Research topics mainly deal with multi-λ studies of massive stars (O, B and Wolf-Rayet). • Massive stars are rare objects but, due to their extreme properties, they are the engines of many processes in the Universe.
Massive stars: some general properties • Spectral types O and Wolf-Rayet (WR) • Massive, hot and luminous objects : • They have short lifetimes and are the progenitors of core-collapse supernovae.
Massive stars: some general properties • Powerful stellar winds driven by momentum transfer through scattering in UV resonance lines • huge mass-loss rates: • and large wind velocities:
Massive stars: some general properties • Massive stars usually do not form in isolation. They appear in open clusters or OB associations. NGC6231 Pismis 24
The research topics • Studies of binary systems: determination of their fundamental properties, studies of wind interactions in binary systems (including the acceleration of relativistic particles, see Michaël De Becker’s talk)...
The research topics • Studies of the surroundings of massive stars (circumstellar nebulae, low-mass PMS stars in young open clusters...)
The research topics • Studies of the variability of single O, B and Wolf-Rayet stars • Preparation of the GAIA mission (software for the data processing + preparatory observations). • Soon: studies of WR and LBV circumstellar nebulae with Herschel in the far-IR.
The tools... • Multi-λ studies require a broad expertise and access to a number of space-borne and ground-based facilities. • Observations in X-rays (XMM-Newton, Chandra...) and soft γ-rays (INTEGRAL): ARC-related activities (AHEAD, Simbol-X, Anthony Hervé’s thesis work,...)
The tools... • Complementary observations in the optical (spectroscopy, photometry, interferometry) and radio domain (the latter in collaboration with other teams): ARC related activities (interferometry of massive stars, see Michaël De Becker’s talk)
The AHEAD project • AHEAD = Integrated Activities for the High-Energy Astrophysics Domain • Initial goal: foster collaboration among European institutes/groups working in the field of high-energy astrophysics. • Preparation of a proposal for funding under the FP7 “integrated activities” programme under the leadership of the ISDC (Geneva). • G. Rauw appointed as a member of the AHEAD steering committee in January 2008. • Coordinated Belgian proposal involving the CSL, Hololab, GAPHE and ASPECT (UMH) teams submitted in August 2008.
The AHEAD project • Joint Research Activities with a proposed participation of the Belgian team: • JRA1 (detectors): further development of the surface plasmon resonance technology for the design of X-ray detectors. • JRA2 (optics): development of ion-beam polishing + metrology tools. • JRA3 (laboratory astrophysics): computation of atomic data for K-shell transitions (ASPECT team) • JRA4 (data software and analysis): development of codes for the modelling of X-ray spectra (see Anthony Hervé’s talk)
The AHEAD project • Networking Activities with a proposed participation of the Belgian team: • NA4 (coordination of ground-based observations): take advantage of our multi-wavelength expertise. • NA6 (meetings and conferences): organise scientific meetings related to high-energy astrophysics themes in the tradition of the Liège astrophysical colloquia. • NA7 (outreach activities): take part in the EPO activities to promote the work done within the project.
The AHEAD project • Outcome of the Rome meeting (9 & 10 February 2009): • Due to a change in EU policy, it is not granted that the AHEAD FP7 proposal can actually be submitted in 2009. • The contribution from the ASPECT team to JRA3 was selected. • The coordinators of JRA1 and JRA2 identified priorities that do not include the projects proposed by Liège. • JRA4 and NA4 were more or less dropped. • NA6 no longer includes scientific meetings, but will focus on meetings related to activities of the different JRAs. • We are still welcome (but not very enthusiastic) to take care of the outreach activities. • Is it worth remaining in the project????
39th Liège International Astrophysical Colloquium: The multi-wavelength view of Hot, Massive Stars(July 2010 – Liège, Belgium) With the advent of new, high-performance, ground-based and space-borne facilities, the multi-wavelength investigation of massive stars has been boosted over the last decade. It is nowadays possible to study these objects from the radio domain up to the soft gamma-ray energies. The aim of this 4-days meeting, which will be organized in the well-known series of Liège astrophysical colloquia, is to bring astrophysicists from different wavelength ranges together to discuss how this multi-wavelength approach has revolutionized our view of massive stars and their surroundings in our Galaxy and beyond. Contacts: Michaël De Becker, Eric Gosset, Yaël Nazé & Gregor Rauw, liac2010@misc.ulg.ac.be