2,225 research outputs found

    Modeling high-energy pulsar lightcurves from first principles

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    Current models of gamma-ray lightcurves in pulsars suffer from large uncertainties on the precise location of particle acceleration and radiation. Here, we present an attempt to alleviate these difficulties by solving for the electromagnetic structure of the oblique magnetosphere, particle acceleration, and the emission of radiation self-consistently, using 3D spherical particle-in-cell simulations. We find that the low-energy radiation is synchro-curvature radiation from the polar-cap regions within the light cylinder. In contrast, the high-energy emission is synchrotron radiation that originates exclusively from the Y-point and the equatorial current sheet where relativistic magnetic reconnection accelerates particles. In most cases, synthetic high-energy lightcurves contain two peaks that form when the current sheet sweeps across the observer's line of sight. We find clear evidence of caustics in the emission pattern from the current sheet. High-obliquity solutions can present up to two additional secondary peaks from energetic particles in the wind region accelerated by the reconnection-induced flow near the current sheet. The high-energy radiative efficiency depends sensitively on the viewing angle, and decreases with increasing pulsar inclination. The high-energy emission is concentrated in the equatorial regions where most of the pulsar spindown is released and dissipated. These results have important implications for the interpretation of gamma-ray pulsar data.Comment: 14 pages, 11 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA

    Ab-initio pulsar magnetosphere: the role of general relativity

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    It has recently been demonstrated that self-consistent particle-in-cell simulations of low-obliquity pulsar magnetospheres in flat spacetime show weak particle acceleration and no pair production near the poles. We investigate the validity of this conclusion in a more realistic spacetime geometry via general-relativistic particle-in-cell simulations of the aligned pulsar magnetospheres with pair formation. We find that the addition of frame-dragging effect makes local current density along the magnetic field larger than the Goldreich-Julian value, which leads to unscreened parallel electric fields and the ignition of a pair cascade. When pair production is active, we observe field oscillations in the open field bundle which could be related to pulsar radio emission. We conclude that general relativistic effects are essential for the existence of pulsar mechanism in low obliquity rotators.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure, submitted to ApJLetter

    Electromagnetic precursors to black hole - neutron star gravitational wave events: Flares and reconnection-powered fast-radio transients from the late inspiral

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    The presence of magnetic fields in the late inspiral of black hole -- neutron star binaries could lead to potentially detectable electromagnetic precursor transients. Using general-relativistic force-free electrodynamics simulations, we investigate pre-merger interactions of the common magnetosphere of black hole -- neutron star systems. We demonstrate that these systems can feature copious electromagnetic flaring activity, which we find depends on the magnetic field orientation but not on black hole spin. Due to interactions with the surrounding magnetosphere, these flares could lead to Fast Radio Burst-like transients and X-ray emission, with LEM≲1041(B∗/1012 G)2 erg/s\mathcal{L}_{\rm EM} \lesssim 10^{41} \left( B_\ast/ 10^{12}\, \rm G \right)^2\, \rm erg/ s as an upper bound for the luminosity, where B∗B_\ast is the magnetic field strength on the surface of the neutron star.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures; accepted version, to appear in ApJ

    Reconnection-powered fast radio transients from coalescing neutron star binaries

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    It is an open question whether and how gravitational wave events involving neutron stars can be preceded by electromagnetic counterparts. This work shows that the collision of two neutron stars with magnetic fields well below magnetar-level strengths can produce millisecond Fast-Radio-Burst-like transients. Using global force-free electrodynamics simulations, we demonstrate that electromagnetic flares, produced by overtwisted common flux tubes in the binary magnetosphere, collide with the orbital current sheet and compress it, resulting in enhanced magnetic reconnection. As a result, the current sheet fragments into a sequence of plasmoids, which collide with each other leading to the emission of coherent electromagnetic waves. The resulting millisecond-long burst of radiation should have frequencies in the range of 10−20 GHz10-20\,\rm GHz for magnetic fields of B∗=1011 GB^{\ast}=10^{11}\, \rm G at the stellar surfaces.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, version accepted by PR

    Electromagnetic precursor flares from the late inspiral of neutron star binaries

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    The coalescence of two neutron stars is accompanied by the emission of gravitational waves, and can also feature electromagnetic counterparts powered by mass ejecta and the formation of a relativistic jet after the merger. Since neutron stars can feature strong magnetic fields, the non-trivial interaction of the neutron star magnetospheres might fuel potentially powerful electromagnetic transients prior to merger. A key process powering those precursor transients is relativistic reconnection in strong current sheets formed between the two stars. In this work, we provide a detailed analysis of how the twisting of the common magnetosphere of the binary leads to an emission of electromagnetic flares, akin to those produced in the solar corona. By means of relativistic force-free electrodynamics simulations, we clarify the role of different magnetic field topologies in the process. We conclude that flaring will always occur for suitable magnetic field alignments, unless one of the neutron stars has a magnetic field significantly weaker than the other.Comment: 19 pages, 10 figure
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