Can Gamma Rays Reveal Their Source?

AI Thread Summary
Gamma rays do not bend in magnetic or electric fields, allowing for the determination of their direction and potential source location in space. While Chandra has improved angular resolution for identifying X-ray sources, a single gamma photon lacks sufficient information to definitively prove its source, particularly for cosmological origins. The energy of gamma rays can provide clues about their origins, but further analysis is typically required. Understanding the phenomena that produce gamma rays, such as X-ray bursts, is essential for source identification. Overall, while direction and energy are key indicators, definitive source proof remains complex.
wolram
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Does a gamma ray ray carry enough information to prove its source?
 
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depends, it can't bend in magnetic nor electric fields, so the you can extrapolate its direction. i.e you can know from what postition in space it come from.
 
Before Chandra most X ray telescopes had pretty poor angular resolution so you had to do something like "there's an X ray source in the same bit of the sky as the Crab Nebula, X ray sources have to be pretty energetic so therefore the Crab must be the source of the X rays"
chandra has about the same resolution as the best optical ground based telescopes.
 
wolram said:
Does a gamma ray ray carry enough information to prove its source?
If one is referring to cosmological origins, for a single gamma photon, not necessarily. One usually relies upon the direction from which the gamma ray is received in order to determine is source, as indicated by mgb_phys.
 
Apart from the direction i guess its energy is clue as to its origins, if so do we have an idea of what phenomenon produces an gamma ray of X energy?
 
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