Prompt emission spectra from the photosphere of a GRB - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 20
About This Presentation
Title:

Prompt emission spectra from the photosphere of a GRB

Description:

... spectra from the photosphere of a GRB. Dimitrios ... The equilibrium radius lies a factor of 10 below the photosphere ... The flow develops a hot photosphere ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:133
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: fensSaba
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Prompt emission spectra from the photosphere of a GRB


1
Prompt emission spectra from the photosphere of a
GRB
  • Dimitrios Giannios
  • RTN Meeting
  • Antalya 31/03/06

2
Introduction
  • Prompt emission mechanisms are poorly understood
  • CLUES
  • GRB flows are ultrarelativistic (?gt100 e.g.
    Piran 1999)
  • The spectra have non-thermal appearance (Band et
    al. 1993 Preece et al. 1998)
  • Acceleration, emitted spectra need explanation

3
Acceleration
  • Key feature to be explained low baryon loading
    or ?E/mbc2gtgt1
  • Efficient acceleration can lead to ??
  • Two types of models proposed for E
  • Thermal form ? thermal acceleration (fireball
    Paczynski 1986 Goodman 1986 Sari Piran 1991)
  • Magnetic form ? magnetic acceleration (Thompson
    1994 Drenkhahn Spruit 2002 Lyutikon
    Blandford 2003)
  • All models predict (to some extent) photospheric
    emission of the flow

4
Fireballs
  • Go though fast acceleration
  • Most of the energy is in the bulk motion of the
    baryons further out
  • Radiation and matter decouple when t1
  • Photospheric emission takes place
  • Internal shocks are believed responsible for the
    prompt emission (Rees Meszaros 1993 Sari
    Piran 1997)

5
Photosphere of a fireball
  • The photospheric emission is rather strong
  • If thermal, it peaks in the BATSE range and is
    hard to hide (e.g. Daigne Mochkovitch 2002)
  • Shocks at rph lead to non-thermal spectra (Rees
    Meszaros 2000 Peer et al. 2005)

6
Magnetic (Poynting) models
  • Acceleration is more gradual (Drenkhahn Spruit
    2002 (DS02) Vlahakis Koenigl 2003)
  • Field can be axisymmetric (DC flow) or highly
    asymmetric (AC flow)
  • Gradual magnetic dissipation because of
    instabilities (Giannios Spruit 2006) or
    reconnection (DS02) leads to efficient
    acceleration and radiation
  • Here, I focus on the photospheric emission from
    an AC flow

7
AC model
  • Magnetic field changes polarity on small scales
    ?2pc/O
  • Magnetic reconnection proceeds with a fraction
    e0.1 of the Alfvén speed (Lyutikov Uzdenski
    2003 Lyubarky 2005)
  • The dynamics of the flow have been studied by
    Drenkhahn (2002) and DS02 through solving the
    steady, 1-D relativistic MHD equations

8
AC model (continued)
  • Much below rsr , a self-similar solution can
    describe the characteristics of the flow
  • One arrives to the following scaling for various
    physical quantities
  • Parameters of the model L, s0, (eO) with
    reference values 1052erg/s/sterad, 102, 103
    rad/s-1 respectively
  • Notation (L1052 L52 erg/s/sterad)

9
The photospheric radius rph
  • Important quantity rph
  • dt ?(1-ß cos?)ns?ds
  • Integrating from r to infinity
  • Defining rph t(rph)1

10
Radiative transfer analytical estimates
  • Deep in the flow radiation particles are in
    thermal equilibrium
  • The temperature of the flow is (Giannios Spruit
    2005)
  • Characteristic temperatures of a few 100 eV at
    the photospheric region indicate the importance
    of Comptonization there

11
The equilibrium radius req
  • At req radiation and electrons drop out of
    equilibrium
  • Assuming a fraction fe 1 of the dissipated
    energy rate goes to the electrons and balancing
    it with the Compton cooling rate
  • One solves for the electron temperature

12
Equilibrium radius (continued)
  • Equilibrium between radiation and electrons is
    achieved up to the radius where TfTe
  • The Thompson optical depth of the flow is high
  • Comments
  • The equilibrium radius lies a factor of 10 below
    the photosphere
  • The electron temperature increases and reaches
    values 40 keV there
  • ? Inverse Compton scattering can greatly modify
    the emitted spectrum

13
Numerical study
  • But inverse Compton leads to deviations from
    black body distribution for the photons assumed
    in the analytics
  • A detailed calculation asks for self consistent
    determination of the photon distribution and the
    electron temperature at different radii in the
    flow
  • To this end, I implemented a Monte Carlo
    Comptonization code (Pozdniakov et al. 1983)
  • A thermal distribution of photons is injected at
    req (inner boundary)
  • The scattering path of a large number of photons
    is followed in the flow until t0.1 (outer
    boundary)
  • Special relativistic effects related to bulk
    motion and scattering cross section are taken
    into account

14
Numerical study (continued)
  • Procedure of computation
  • The flow is divided into (100) shells
  • The electron temperature is assumed to have a
    power law dependence with radius
  • T0 and the exponent s are iterated until heating
    approximately balances Compton cooling of the
    electrons at every radius of the flow
  • Parametric study of the model

15
Results cooling and heating
  • The initial guess for T0 and s is given by the
    analytical estimate
  • The iteration converges to values close the
    analytical estimates (Giannios 2006)
  • T0Tf(req), s3/2
  • Overall heating balances cooling except the very
    inner region of the flow
  • ?power law modeling of the temperature
    dependence satisfactory

16
The electron temperature
  • In the inner region radiation and matter are in
    thermal equilibrium
  • Triangles electrons depart from equilibrium
  • Stars location of the photosphere
  • Circles saturation radius
  • Note that curves follow parallel tracks!
  • ?similar temperatures at the same optical depths
    indicate similar Comptonization spectra

17
Spectra
  • Characteristic peak at 1 MeV (CE frame)
  • Flat power law high energy tails (unsaturated
    Comptonization)
  • When fitted with the Band model one gets slopes
    and Epeak close to the observed values
  • For high baryon loadings the spectrum is
    quasi-thermal
  • May be relevant for a sub-group of bursts (Ryde
    2004 2005)

18
Energetics
  • How strong is the photospheric component?
  • Defining the radiative efficiency eph
  • It peaks for moderate loadings
  • Overall it ranges from 3 to 20

19
Discussion
  • Is pair creation significant?
  • Not in the photospheric region (maybe further out
    in the flow)
  • What happens in the Thompson thin region?
  • For low baryon loadings dissipation continues in
    the Thomson thin region
  • Thermalization of the electrons is no more
    justified
  • Synchrotron emission may not be ignored (Giannios
    Spruit 2005)
  • Here we focused in the AC reconnection model but
    similar consideration can be applies to other
    dissipative models (internal shocks MHD
    instabilities)

20
Summary-Conclusions
  • GRB models predict a photospheric component to
    some extent
  • Comes from the region that radiation and matter
    decouple
  • If thermal, it typically peaks in the sub-MeV
    energy range
  • Energy dissipation in this region can lead to
    highly non-thermal spectra (Rees Mészaros 2000
    2005 Peer et al. 2006)
  • Here I focus on the photospheric appearance of a
    Poynting flow
  • Analytical and numerical study of the electron
    energy balance is performed
  • The flow develops a hot photosphere
  • Inverse Compton leads to nonthermal spectra close
    to the observed ones
  • The photospheric component is rather strong (10
    of that of the flow)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com