1,158 research outputs found
Annihilation radiation from a hot e(+)-e(-) plasma
Pair annihilation in hot e(+)-e(-) plasmas is studied. The annihilation rate, luminosity and spectrum of optically thin plasmas of temperatures above 10 to the 8th power K are calculated by means of a Monte Carlo simulation. For a given temperature, the spectrum is peaked at an energy equal to 0.511 MeV plus a positive definite quantity of order kT. In high temperature sources, such as gamma ray bursts, this blue shift can amount to a significant fraction of 0.511 MeV. The annihilation line is also temperature broadened. The width varies as T to the 1/2 power for kT much less than 0.511 MeV, and as T for kT much greater than 0.511 MeV. The widths of the 400 to 460 keV emission lines observed from several gamma ray bursts set limits on the temperatures of the pair annihilation region in burst sources. The burst emission is either nonthermal or the pair annihilation region is spatially distinct from the site of the outburst itself
Effects of cold dark matter decoupling and pair annihilation on cosmological perturbations
Weakly interacting massive particles are part of the lepton-photon plasma in
the early universe until kinetic decoupling, after which time the particles
behave like a collisionless gas with nonzero temperature. The Boltzmann
equation for WIMP-lepton collisions is reduced to a Fokker-Planck equation for
the evolution of the WIMP distribution including scalar density perturbations.
This equation and the Einstein and fluid equations for the plasma are solved
numerically including the acoustic oscillations of the plasma before and during
kinetic decoupling, the frictional damping occurring during kinetic decoupling,
and the free-streaming damping occurring afterwards and throughout the
radiation-dominated era. An excellent approximation reduces the solution to
quadratures for the cold dark matter density and velocity perturbations. The
subsequent evolution is followed through electron pair annihilation and the
radiation-matter transition; analytic solutions are provided for both large and
small scales. For a 100 GeV WIMP with bino-type interactions, kinetic
decoupling occurs at a temperature MeV. The transfer function in the
matter-dominated era leads to an abundance of small cold dark matter halos;
with a smooth window function the Press-Schechter mass distribution is for 10 MeV) M.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures; corrected error in bino decoupling temperature,
figures update
Steep Slopes and Preferred Breaks in GRB Spectra: the Role of Photospheres and Comptonization
The role of a photospheric component and of pair breakdown is examined in the
internal shock model of gamma-ray bursts. We discuss some of the mechanisms by
which they would produce anomalously steep low energy slopes, X-ray excesses
and preferred energy breaks. Sub-relativistic comptonization should dominate in
high comoving luminosity bursts with high baryon load, while synchrotron
radiation dominates the power law component in bursts which have lower comoving
luminosity or have moderate to low baryon loads. A photosphere leading to steep
low energy spectral slopes should be prominent in the lowest baryon loadComment: ApJ'00, in press; minor revs. 10/5/99; (uses aaspp4.sty), 15 pages, 3
figure
Iron K Lines from Gamma Ray Bursts
We present models for reprocessing of an intense flux of X-rays and gamma
rays expected in the vicinity of gamma ray burst sources. We consider the
transfer and reprocessing of the energetic photons into observable features in
the X-ray band, notably the K lines of iron. Our models are based on the
assumption that the gas is sufficiently dense to allow the microphysical
processes to be in a steady state, thus allowing efficient line emission with
modest reprocessing mass and elemental abundances ranging from solar to
moderately enriched. We show that the reprocessing is enhanced by
down-Comptonization of photons whose energy would otherwise be too high to
absorb on iron, and that pair production can have an effect on enhancing the
line production. Both "distant" reprocessors such as supernova or wind remnants
and "nearby" reprocessors such as outer stellar envelopes can reproduce the
observed line fluxes with Fe abundances 30-100 times above solar, depending on
the incidence angle. The high incidence angles required arise naturally only in
nearby models, which for plausible values can reach Fe line to continuum ratios
close to the reported values.Comment: 37 pages, 10 figures. Ap. J in pres
On the origin of the March 5, 1979 gamma ray transient: A vibrating neutron star in the Large Magellanic Cloud
It is proposed that a vibrating neutron star in the Large Magellanic Cloud is the source of the March 5 transient. Neutron star vibrations transport energy rapidly to the surface, heat the atmosphere by wave dissipation, and decay by gravitational radiation reaction. The electromagnetic emission arises from e(+)-e(-) pairs which cool and annihilate in the strong magnetic field of the neutron star. The field also confines the pairs, and this allows the production of the redshifted annihilation feature observed in the data. The redshift implies a gravitational radiation damping time which agrees with the 0.15 second duration of the impulsive phase of the event. Thus, the March 5 transient may be both the first detection of a vibrating neutron star and indirect evidence for gravitational radiation
Analysis of Temporal Features of Gamma Ray Bursts in the Internal Shock Model
In a recent paper we have calculated the power density spectrum of Gamma-Ray
Bursts arising from multiple shocks in a relativistic wind. The wind optical
thickness is one of the factors to which the power spectrum is most sensitive,
therefore we have further developed our model by taking into account the photon
down-scattering on the cold electrons in the wind. For an almost optically
thick wind we identify a combination of ejection features and wind parameters
that yield bursts with an average power spectrum in agreement with the
observations, and with an efficiency of converting the wind kinetic energy in
50-300 keV emission of order 1%. For the same set of model features the
interval time between peaks and pulse fluences have distributions consistent
with the log-normal distribution observed in real bursts.Comment: ApJ in press, 2000; with slight revisions; 12 pag, 6 fi
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