Gamma-ray bursts from synchrotron self-Compton emission

ABSTRACT The emission mechanism of gamma‐ray bursts (GRBs) is still a matter of debate. The standard synchrotron energy spectrum of cooling electrons FE∝E−1/2 is much too soft to account for the majority of the observed spectral slopes. An alternative in the form of quasi‐thermal Comptonization in a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 2004-08, Vol.352 (3), p.L35-L39
Hauptverfasser: Stern, Boris E., Poutanen, Juri
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description ABSTRACT The emission mechanism of gamma‐ray bursts (GRBs) is still a matter of debate. The standard synchrotron energy spectrum of cooling electrons FE∝E−1/2 is much too soft to account for the majority of the observed spectral slopes. An alternative in the form of quasi‐thermal Comptonization in a high‐compactness source has difficulties in reproducing the peak of the observed photon distribution below a few hundred keV. We show here that for typical parameters expected in the GRB ejecta the observed spectra in the 20–1000 keV energy range can be produced by inverse Compton scattering of the synchrotron radiation in a partially self‐absorbed regime. If the particles are continuously accelerated/heated over the lifetime of a source rather than being instantly injected, a prominent peak develops in their distribution at a Lorentz factor γ∼ 30–100, where synchrotron and inverse‐Compton losses are balanced by acceleration and heating due to synchrotron self‐absorption. The synchrotron peak should be observed at 10–100 eV, whereas the self‐absorbed low‐energy tail with FE∝E2 can produce the prompt optical emission (as in the case of GRB 990123). The first Compton scattering radiation by nearly monoenergetic electrons can then be as hard as FE∝E1, reproducing the hardness of most of the observed GRB spectra. The second Compton peak should be observed in the high‐energy gamma‐ray band, possibly being responsible for the 10–100 MeV emission detected in GRB 941017. A significant electron–positron pair production reduces the available energy per particle, moving the spectral peaks to lower energies as the burst progresses. The regime is very robust, operates in a broad range of parameter space and can explain most of the observed GRB spectra and their temporal evolution.
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The standard synchrotron energy spectrum of cooling electrons FE∝E−1/2 is much too soft to account for the majority of the observed spectral slopes. An alternative in the form of quasi‐thermal Comptonization in a high‐compactness source has difficulties in reproducing the peak of the observed photon distribution below a few hundred keV. We show here that for typical parameters expected in the GRB ejecta the observed spectra in the 20–1000 keV energy range can be produced by inverse Compton scattering of the synchrotron radiation in a partially self‐absorbed regime. If the particles are continuously accelerated/heated over the lifetime of a source rather than being instantly injected, a prominent peak develops in their distribution at a Lorentz factor γ∼ 30–100, where synchrotron and inverse‐Compton losses are balanced by acceleration and heating due to synchrotron self‐absorption. 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subjects gamma-rays: bursts
gamma-rays: theory
methods: numerical
radiation mechanisms: non-thermal
scattering
title Gamma-ray bursts from synchrotron self-Compton emission
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