physical applications for astro-tomography
The applications of
Astro-tomography to accretion problems are widespread. To date,
however, Astro-tomography has been employed mostly to map the spatial
and velocity structure of accretion flows. Although with the aid of
Astro-tomography the modes of stellar accretion are well-understood,
the detailed physics is still missing. What are the physical
conditions in accretion disk atmospheres? How is energy transported
in disks? What mechanism provokes the onset of disk outbursts? By
unlocking the spatial information in integrated accretion disk
spectra, tomography has provided us with the opportunity to address
these questions from an observational perspective. This is the topic
of my current research.
We are attempting to map
the physical properties of accretion disks using sophisticated
atmosphere codes, ground- and space-based observations and indirect
imaging methods. We are concerned with the two fundamental regimes:
1. Irradiated disks whose structures are governed by the energy from
hot central objects absorbed by the disk atmospheres, and 2.
Quiescent disks whose structures are governed by the energy released
by viscous stresses between shearing layers within the atmospheres.
The experiments are to measure atmospheric conditions (size, shape,
temperature, density, microturbulence) from spatially-resolved
spectra, and our incentives are to determine the effects of
irradiation on accretion disk structure and yield direct observational
constraints relevant to the fundamental long-term problems of
accretion disk research -- the mechanisms behind viscous dissipation,
angular momentum transport and outbursts.
A central irradiating
source heats an accretion disk atmosphere and structural instabilities
rapidly result in irradiation-driven warping and precession (Wijers
& Pringle 1998). Warps have been found in both AGN and planetary
disks but the most classic example is the eclipsing X-ray binary star
Her X-1. The precessing disk in this object provides an occulting
body for the central X-ray source on a quasi-period of 20 orbital
cycles and a shadow over the X-ray heated face of the companion star
which varies on the same timescale. Disk models recreate these
observations easily, but the problem of fitting three-dimensional
disks to one-dimensional X-ray and optical light curves is poorly
constrained. In order to put useful constraints on the disk shape we
require a more robust diagnostic than standard photometry. We have
developed ``Echo tomography'' to solve this
problem.
This technique employs the
X-ray pulses from the central object as it spins on a 1.2-s period.
Some regions of the disk are shielded from the central source because
of its warped shape. The X-rays reprocess off exposed regions of the
disk atmosphere but there is a time delay due to the light-travel time
between the X-ray source and the reprocessing site. The range of time
delays between X-ray and UV/optical pulsations is a transfer function
which defines a set of iso-delay curves over the surface of the disk.
A sample of transfer functions measured over a full precession cycle
allow a spatial map of the irradiated regions of the disk to be
constructed, as Fig. 6 illustrates.
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The UV/optical pulsation
amplitude as a function of wavelength yields a temperature map of the
disk. Furthermore gas reprocessing times provide a time-independent
component to the time delay transfer functions which yields the gas
density of the disk. Consequently echo tomography provides maps of
both spatial structure and the physical properties of the disk
atmosphere.
The physical process of
viscous dissipation is poorly understood. Accretion results from the
transfer of angular momentum outwards by an unknown viscous action
between shearing material. Progress in accretion theory has been made
largely by packing viscosity physics inside a dimensionless parameter.
More sophisticated approaches which regard viscosity to be the result
of magnetic stresses, hydrodynamic turbulence and/or tidal action have
been encouraging but theorists have enormous freedom to maneuver in an
area which has been poorly constrained by
observation.
From an observational
perspective, spectra contain potentially the information to determine
fundamental atmospheric properties of quiescent atmospheres. However
a broad range of physical conditions occur within the atmosphere of
any accretion disk where the cool outer disk is a very different
environment to the hot inner region. Consequently the characteristics
of emergent disk spectra are strong functions of spatial location.
Astrophysical disks cannot be resolved in general because of their
size and distance, and therefore our problem is that classical
observations provide only a global picture of accretion disk
behaviour.
Our solution to this
problem combines sophisticated atmosphere models with indirect imaging
techniques and applies these to spectroscopic observations of
quiescent disks to determine the local physical properties of their
atmospheres, and resolve their spatial
dependence.
This research combines
three diskiplines:
i) Ground- and
space-based observation: Quiescent accretion disks are hosted by
white dwarf accretors in cataclysmic variables and black hole
accretors in X-ray transients. We will acquire spectroscopic data of
accretion disks with high time- and velocity-resolution over several
energy bands, employing HST to detect the inner disk regions in
the UV, and ground-based optical and IR instruments to detect the
outer disk.
ii) Indirect accretion
disk imaging: The accretion disk targets are too small to resolve
directly, therefore we intend to use maximum entropy tomography
techniques to spatially resolve disk spectra. We will construct maps
of disks in velocity coordinates from orbital line profile variations
and transform these to spatial coordinates by assuming a velocity
field. Disk eclipses by the companion star will provide
spectrally-resolved spatial maps more directly. The advantage of the
resolution provided by these techniques is that we can diskriminate
between contributions from the disk, stellar components and localized
shocked material forming spots or waves. This fulfills one of the
original scientific goals of disk tomography.
iii) Disk atmosphere
models: The diskipline of disk atmosphere building has now reached
a sophistication with which the physical state of disks can be
realistically modelled. Our models can include the effects of
external irradiation, vertical gravity gradients, finite optical
depths, energy dissipation, turbulence and supersonic velocity
gradients. Our current code has been used with notable success in
probing the structure of absorption curtains in accretion disks and to
investigate optically thick, steady-state atmospheres. A successful
fit to synthetic data is provided in Fig. 7.

Martin Still
(Martin.Still@gsfc.nasa.gov)