Modeling X-ray Emission due to Charge Exchange
POSTER
Abstract
Since the advent of Cravens' [1] proposal that the observed X-ray emission from comet Hyakutake was due to charge exchange (CX) of highly-charged solar wind ions with cometary neutrals, the CX-mechanism has been identified as a possible dominant contributor to the X-ray emission observed in the heliosphere, planetary exospheres, the geocorona, supernova remnants, starburst galaxies, and molecular cooling flows in galaxy clusters. To provide reliable CX-induced X-ray spectra models to simulate these and other astrophysical environments, we have undertaken a project to compute quantum-state-resolved CX cross sections of highly-charged ions colliding with H and He. Here we summarize current results for C$^{(5-6)+}$, N$^{6+}$, and O$^{(6-8)+}$ obtained with the molecular-orbital close-coupling (CC), atomic-orbital CC, and classical trajectory Monte Carlo methods. Utilizing the theoretical CX cross sections, cascade models are computed to generate X-ray spectra and compared to available measurements and observations. Comparison is also made to models assuming excitation by thermal electrons to identify diagnostics to distinguish CX-induced and electron-impact-induced X-ray emission.\\[4pt] [1] T. E. Cravens, {\it Geophys. Res. Lett.} {\bf 25}, 105 (1997).
*This work was partially supported by NASA grant NNX09AV46G.