From Clark Lake to Chandra: Closing in on the Low End of the Relativistic Electron Spectra in Extragalactic Sources
arXiv:astro-ph/0410485
Abstract
The limited angular resolutions and sensitivities historically available below 300 MHz have made it difficult to define the low end of the electron energy distribution, N(gamma). We extrapolate down from the well observed segments of radio spectra with almost complete ignorance of what N(gamma) is actually doing. We do not know if there is a low energy cutoff or if there are other deviations from extrapolated power laws. The result is that we really do not have a good estimate of the total energy density and pressure of the relativistic plasmas we study. The situation is even worse for Inverse Compton (IC) X-ray emission, several flavors of which rely on electrons of Lorentz factors, gamma, of 1000, 300, or in some cases of order 50. If our assumed extrapolations are wrong, some IC emission models may have to be abandoned. We present several examples and demonstrate that the Long Wave Array (LWA) should have sufficient sensitivity and resolution to obtain meaningful constraints on N(gamma) at low energies.
10 pages with 6 embedded figures. To be published in the proceedings of the workshop: "Science with Wavelengths on Human Scales" (Santa Fe, NM; 8-11 Sep. 2004). The probable title is "From Clark Lake to the Long Wavelength Array: Bill Erickson's Radio Science"; ASP Conference Series (spring of 2005), Kassim, Perez, Junor, and Henning eds