It's fun how, even as a pretty senior person, you end up in research projects with PhD candidates or postdocs who assume you an expert while you panicky try to read up on what you are working on and at least understand the basics enough to be able to follow and usefully contribute.

In other news: X-ray polarization is weird.

#AcademicChatter #astrodon #XraysAreTheBestRays

@vicgrinberg I feel you!

Especially the scattering at anything resembleing a crystal.

@littledetritus believe me, crystals are likely simple (or at least: measurable and testable in a lab) compared to the accretion environment of a black hole :D

@vicgrinberg

Still not black holes in labs?

What is experimental physics up to these days?

You get "polarisation flips" because of elastic scattering with quasi particles?

@littledetritus I don't know the context of the quasi particles, so can't say, but we do get vacuum birefringence in high magnetic fields: https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.19446

(careful, not yet through peer review, but this is usually a super careful bunch of authors.)

Evidence of magnetospheric vacuum birefringence in the polarized X-rays of a radio magnetar

The quantum electrodynamics (QED) theory predicts that the quantum vacuum becomes birefringent in the presence of ultra-strong magnetic fields -- a fundamental effect yet to be directly observed. Magnetars, isolated neutron stars with surface fields exceeding $10^{14}$ G, provide unique astrophysical laboratories to probe this elusive prediction. Here, we report phase- and energy-resolved X-ray polarization measurements of the radio-emitting magnetar 1E 1547.0--5408 obtained with the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE), in coordination with the Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER) and Parkes/Murriyang radio observations. We detect a high phase-averaged polarization degree of 65% at 2 keV, where the surface thermal emission is dominant, rising to nearly 80% at certain rotational phases, and remaining at $\gtrsim40\%$ throughout the radio beam crossing. We also observe a strong decrease in polarization from 2 keV to 4 keV. Detailed atmospheric radiative transfer modeling, coupled with geometrical constraints from radio polarization, demonstrate that the observed polarization behavior cannot be consistently explained without invoking magnetospheric vacuum birefringence (VB) influences. These observational findings combined with theoretical simulations provide evidence for quantum VB naturally occurring in magnetar magnetospheres. This work marks a significant advance toward confirming this hallmark prediction of QED and lays the foundation for future tests of strong-field quantum physics using next-generation X-ray polarimeters.

arXiv.org

@vicgrinberg
I’m giving a seminar on the #impostersyndrom in about 2 weeks, just in case you want to join. 😉

(Ironically, I’m also totally panicking and feeling stressed about it, because maybe I don’t know enough about the imposter syndrome to give a seminar about it…? 🙈)

@KorinnaAllhoff awww, good luck with that! Such an important topic!

This one truly isn't the impostor syndrome speaking, it's me going into a territory that I never worked in before and have very limited knowledge in (I'm mainly bringing the understanding of the of the geometry and dynamics of the objects we want to study, the polarization techniques and processes are all new to me!).

@vicgrinberg
Psssst... 🤫 They are not supposed to know that. They will find out when they have their own students. That's early enough. 😀
@vicgrinberg - as you may guess I do know that feeling for some more years. 🙂 Even worse though when you find you’re out of your depth in something you once mastered rather well but now struggle for not being active in this for too many years … 😬
@pkretsch you mean you did not know everything when I was a PhD student and asking you things? 😁🤣
@vicgrinberg in truth - you knew that already back then. 🙂But this now brings up a formative memory: my own thesis advisor, a full generation older, grey-haired, tall and very upright in any sense of the word - in brief the embodiment of Authority Figure - reacting to a question during his lecture by sitting down on the table, looking pensive for a short while and then answering: “I honestly don’t know, I will read up on this and try to give an answer next week.”.
@vicgrinberg
I'm pretty sure that a chunk of what makes you senior is the skill buildup to do exactly that.

@hypostase oh, absolutely!

And to me it's also the main reason to talk about it, to show the younger folks in the field what some of the skillset truly means (and also that it's Ok to fail sometimes and to be wrong, but that's another story).

@vicgrinberg
Absolutely. I'm no academic, but I learned early that the sharing of skills really makes a difference.