Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
1999-12-18
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
22 pages LaTeX, one eps figure, to be published in the Proceedings of the 10th Maryland Conference on Astrophysics, eds, S. Ho
Scientific paper
10.1063/1.1291748
This meeting covered the range of cosmic explosions from solar flares to gamma-ray bursts. A common theme is the role of rotation and magnetic fields. A rigorous examination is underway to characterize systematic effects that might alter the Type Ia supernova results suggesting an accelerating Universe. The discovery of the central point of X-ray emission in Cas A by CXO should give new insight into the core collapse problem in general and the nature of the still undetected compact remnant in SN 1987A in particular. Jets were described from protostars to microquasars to blazars to gamma-ray bursts. Polarization studies of core-collapse supernovae lead to the conclusion that core collapse is not merely asymmetric, but strongly bi-polar. To account for normal core-collapse supernovae, the explosion must be jet-like in routine circumstances, that is, in the formation of neutron stars, not only for black holes. Given the observed asymmetries, estimates of explosion energies based on spherically-symmetric models must be regarded with caution. The strong possibility that at least some gamma-ray bursts arise from massive stars means that it is no longer possible to decouple models of the gamma-ray burst and afterglow from considerations of the "machine." The implied correlation of gamma-ray bursts with star formation and massive stars and evidence for jets does not distinguish a black hole collapsar model from models based on the birth of a magnetar. Calorimetry of at least one afterglow suggests that gamma-ray bursts cannot involve highly inefficient internal shock models. Essentally all gamma-ray burst models involve the "Blandford Anxiety," the origin of nearly equipartition magnetic fields in the associated relativistic shocks.
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