The X-ray band encodes key spectral features that reveal the physics underlying transient and multi-messenger events, identified as a Priority Area by Astro2020.
Goal 3
What Powers the Diversity of Explosive Phenomena Across Time and Multi-Messenger Domains?
Our Universe is adorned with a rich tapestry of explosive and energetic events, producing X-rays as jets form, matter collides, and accreting systems are created or destroyed. Our Galaxy contains sites where magnetic fields accelerate ions to extreme energies, producing high-energy photons as they gyrate in the strong fields and collide with the surrounding material. The high-energy spectra of these time-domain and multi-messenger events reveal the nature and physics of the source (Fig.2-4).
Goal 3 investigates what powers the diversity of extreme time domain and multi-messenger events, identified as a Priority Area by Astro2020. This goal motivates two science objectives.
- Objective 5: reveals the nature of the most extreme accelerators in our Galaxy by measuring high-energy (>40 keV) X-ray emission from a sample of Galactic gamma-ray sources.
- Objective 6: will provide a community resource for exploring the dynamic universe across the X-ray band with an unanticipated target of opportunity observations:
For more information about Goal 3, see Mori et al. (FrASS, submitted; arXiv:2311.04851) and Brightman et al. (FrASS, submitted; arXiv:2311.04856).
Goal 3 Science Team
Sub-groups and their Leads:
Galactic Gamma-Ray Sources — Kaya Mori (Columbia University)
Time Domain / Multi-Messenger Astrophysics (TDAMM) — Murray Brightman (Caltech)
TDAMM: Gravitational Waves — Raffaella Margutti (UC-Berkeley)
TDAMM: AGN — Arne Rau (MPE)
TDAMM: Tidal Disruption Events — Suvi Gezari (STScI)