RADIATIVE SIGNATURES OF RELATIVISTIC SHOCKS

Particle-in-cell simulations of relativistic, weakly magnetized collisionless shocks show that particles can gain energy by repeatedly crossing the shock front. This requires scattering off self-generated small length-scale magnetic fluctuations. The radiative signature of this first-order Fermi acc...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kirk, J, Reville, B
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2010
_version_ 1797064234341761024
author Kirk, J
Reville, B
author_facet Kirk, J
Reville, B
author_sort Kirk, J
collection OXFORD
description Particle-in-cell simulations of relativistic, weakly magnetized collisionless shocks show that particles can gain energy by repeatedly crossing the shock front. This requires scattering off self-generated small length-scale magnetic fluctuations. The radiative signature of this first-order Fermi acceleration mechanism is important for models of both the prompt and afterglow emission in gamma-ray bursts and depends on the strength parameter a = λe|δB|/mc 2 of the fluctuations (λ is the length scale and |δB| is the magnitude of the fluctuations). For electrons (and positrons), acceleration saturates when the radiative losses produced by the scattering cannot be compensated by the energy gained on crossing the shock. We show that this sets an upper limit on both the electron Lorentz factor and on the energy of the photons radiated during the scattering process , where n is the number density of the plasma and is the thermal Lorentz factor of the downstream plasma, provided a < a crit 106. This rules out "jitter" radiation on self-excited fluctuations with a < 1 as a source of gamma rays, although high-energy photons might still be produced when the jitter photons are upscattered in an analog of the synchrotron self-Compton process. In fluctuations with a > 1, radiation is generated by the standard synchrotron mechanism, and the maximum photon energy rises linearly with a, until saturating at 70 MeV, when a = a crit. © 2010. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T21:11:20Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:3e481203-5bfc-4688-954f-5eeb6d3a78a4
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T21:11:20Z
publishDate 2010
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:3e481203-5bfc-4688-954f-5eeb6d3a78a42022-03-26T14:24:31ZRADIATIVE SIGNATURES OF RELATIVISTIC SHOCKSJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:3e481203-5bfc-4688-954f-5eeb6d3a78a4EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2010Kirk, JReville, BParticle-in-cell simulations of relativistic, weakly magnetized collisionless shocks show that particles can gain energy by repeatedly crossing the shock front. This requires scattering off self-generated small length-scale magnetic fluctuations. The radiative signature of this first-order Fermi acceleration mechanism is important for models of both the prompt and afterglow emission in gamma-ray bursts and depends on the strength parameter a = λe|δB|/mc 2 of the fluctuations (λ is the length scale and |δB| is the magnitude of the fluctuations). For electrons (and positrons), acceleration saturates when the radiative losses produced by the scattering cannot be compensated by the energy gained on crossing the shock. We show that this sets an upper limit on both the electron Lorentz factor and on the energy of the photons radiated during the scattering process , where n is the number density of the plasma and is the thermal Lorentz factor of the downstream plasma, provided a < a crit 106. This rules out "jitter" radiation on self-excited fluctuations with a < 1 as a source of gamma rays, although high-energy photons might still be produced when the jitter photons are upscattered in an analog of the synchrotron self-Compton process. In fluctuations with a > 1, radiation is generated by the standard synchrotron mechanism, and the maximum photon energy rises linearly with a, until saturating at 70 MeV, when a = a crit. © 2010. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
spellingShingle Kirk, J
Reville, B
RADIATIVE SIGNATURES OF RELATIVISTIC SHOCKS
title RADIATIVE SIGNATURES OF RELATIVISTIC SHOCKS
title_full RADIATIVE SIGNATURES OF RELATIVISTIC SHOCKS
title_fullStr RADIATIVE SIGNATURES OF RELATIVISTIC SHOCKS
title_full_unstemmed RADIATIVE SIGNATURES OF RELATIVISTIC SHOCKS
title_short RADIATIVE SIGNATURES OF RELATIVISTIC SHOCKS
title_sort radiative signatures of relativistic shocks
work_keys_str_mv AT kirkj radiativesignaturesofrelativisticshocks
AT revilleb radiativesignaturesofrelativisticshocks