• → European Space Agency

    • About Science & Technology

    • For Public

    • For Educators

    • ESA

    • Science & Technology

    • INTEGRAL

    • Missions
    • Show All Missions
    • Mission Home
    • Summary
    • Fact Sheet
    • Objectives
    • Mission Team
    • Orbit View
    • Spacecraft
    • Spacecraft
    • 3D Model
    • Instruments
    • Mission Operations
    • Mission Operations
    • Launch Vehicle
    • Launch Campaign
    • Orbit/Navigation
    • Science Operations
    • ISDC
    • ISOC
    • Data Archive (ESA)
    • Data Archive (ISDC)
    • Resources
    • News Archive
    • Multimedia Gallery
    • Publication Archive
    • Calendar of Events
    • Services
    • Contact Us
    • Subscribe
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Bookmark and Share

    First constraints on the hard X-ray morphology of the Crab nebula

    Date: 09 Dec 2009
    Satellite: INTEGRAL
    Depicts: Centroid of Crab nebula hard X-ray emission
    Copyright: Eckert, D. et al. [2009]

    The Crab nebula is a very efficient particle accelerator, showing evidence for electrons accelerated up to energies of ~ 1015 eV. Throughout the nebula, the maximal energy of the relativistic electrons changes and therefore only an instrument with sufficient resolving power can probe the particle acceleration processes in the different regions of the nebula.

    Thanks to an unprecedented angular resolution in the hard X-ray/soft gamma-ray energy range and to a very accurate calibration, in the case of a very bright source like the Crab nebula the IBIS telescope on-board INTEGRAL can measure the source position with sub-arcsecond accuracy. This has allowed for the first time to give constraints on the morphology of the nebula above 20 keV.

    The figure shows the position of the centroid of the emission from the Crab nebula as measured in 3 energy bands (20-40 keV, 40-100 keV, and 100-200 keV) labelled 1, 2, and 3. The measured positions are indicated in red by their corresponding error circles, superimposed on a Chandra image of the nebula at lower energies. The yellow and black circles show the measurements in respectively the on-pulse and off-pulse phases, corresponding to time bins where the emission from the Crab pulsar at the heart of the nebula is maximal, respectively minimal.

    Thanks to these measurements, it is now possible to show that the size of the nebula is decreasing with increasing energy and to calculate the maximal energy of electrons in the outer regions of the X-ray nebula, which is found to be slightly below 1014 eV.

    Reference publication
    "INTEGRAL probes the morphology of the Crab nebula in hard X-rays/soft gamma-rays", Eckert, D., Savchenko, V., Produit, N., & Ferrigno, C., 2009, Astronomy & Astrophysics, in press


    Last Update: 09 Dec 2009

    • Shortcut URL
    • http://sci.esa.int/jump.cfm?oid=46062
    • Latest selection
    • High-mass X-ray binary systems in the Milky Way
    • Distribution of high-mass X-ray binary stars and star-forming complexes
    • Artist's impression of a highly obscured HMXB
    • Image Hi-Res Versions
    • Hi-Res [jpg]
      309.39 kb.
    • Related Publications
    • Eckert et al. preprint

    Connect with us

    • RSS
    • Youtube
    • Twitter
    • Flickr
    • Google Buzz
    • Livestream
    • Subscribe
    • App Store
    • ESA Science Twitter

    Follow ESA science

    • Copyright 2000 - 2013 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.

    • Terms and Conditions