1,637 research outputs found
High-Energy Gamma-Rays from GRB X-ray Flares
The recent detection of X-ray flares during the afterglow phase of gamma-ray
bursts (GRBs) suggests an inner-engine origin, at radii inside the forward
shock. There must be inverse Compton (IC) emission arising from such flare
photons scattered by forward shock afterglow electrons when they are passing
through the forward shock. We find that this IC emission produces high energy
gamma-ray flares, which may be detected by AGILE, GLAST and ground-based TeV
telescopes. The anisotropic IC scattering between flare photons and forward
shock electrons does not affect the total IC component intensity, but cause a
time delay of the IC component peak relative to the flare peak. The anisotropic
scattering effect may also weaken, to some extent, the suppression effect of
the afterglow intensity induced by the enhanced electron cooling due to flare
photons. We speculate that this IC component may already have been detected by
EGRET from a very strong burst--GRB940217. Future observations by GLAST may
help to distinguish whether X-ray flares originate from late central engine
activity or from external shocks.Comment: 4 pages, Contributed talk presented at "The First GLAST Symposium",
Feb.5-8 2007, Stanford Universit
On the magnetization of gamma-ray burst blast waves
The origin of magnetic fields that permeate the blast waves of gamma-ray
bursts (GRBs) is a long-standing problem. The present paper argues that in four
GRBs revealing extended emission at >100 MeV, with follow-up in the radio,
optical and X-ray domains at later times, this magnetization can be described
as the partial decay of the micro-turbulence that is generated in the shock
precursor. Assuming that the bulk of the extended emission >100 MeV can be
interpreted as synchrotron emission of shock accelerated electrons, we model
the multi-wavelength light curves of GRB 090902B, GRB 090323, GRB 090328 and
GRB 110731A, using a simplified then a full synchrotron calculation with
power-law-decaying microturbulence \epsilon_B \propto t^{\alpha_t} (t denotes
the time since injection through the shock, in the comoving blast frame). We
find that these models point to a consistent value of the decay exponent -0.5 <
\alpha_t < -0.4.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures - discussion added, conclusions unchanged -
version to appear in MNRA
GeV-TeV and X-ray flares from gamma-ray bursts
The recent detection of delayed X-ray flares during the afterglow phase of
gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) suggests an inner-engine origin, at radii inside the
deceleration radius characterizing the beginning of the forward shock afterglow
emission. Given the observed temporal overlapping between the flares and
afterglows, there must be inverse Compton (IC) emission arising from such flare
photons scattered by forward shock afterglow electrons. We find that this IC
emission produces GeV-TeV flares, which may be detected by GLAST and
ground-based TeV telescopes. We speculate that this kind of emission may
already have been detected by EGRET from a very strong burst--GRB940217. The
enhanced cooling of the forward shock electrons by the X-ray flare photons may
suppress the synchrotron emission of the afterglows during the flare period.
The detection of GeV-TeV flares combined with low energy observations may help
to constrain the poorly known magnetic field in afterglow shocks. We also
consider the self-IC emission in the context of internal-shock and
external-shock models for X-ray flares. The emission above GeV from internal
shocks is low, while the external shock model can also produce GeV-TeV flares,
but with a different temporal behavior from that caused by IC scattering of
flare photons by afterglow electrons. This suggests a useful approach for
distinguishing whether X-ray flares originate from late central engine activity
or from external shocks.Comment: slightly shortened version, accepted for publication in ApJ Letters,
4 emulateapj pages, no figure
Jet-cloud/star interaction as an interpretation of neutrino outburst from the blazar TXS 0506+056
Recently, a high-energy neutrino event IceCube-170922A in the spatial and
temporal coincidence with the flaring gamma-ray blazar TXS 0506+056 was
reported. A neutrino outburst between September 2014 and March 2015 was
discovered in the same direction by a further investigation of years of
IceCube data, while the blazar is in a quiescent state during the outburst with
a gamma-ray flux only about one-fifth of the neutrino flux. In this letter, we
propose the neutrino outburst originates from the interaction between a
relativistic jet and a dense gas cloud which may be formed via the tidally
disrupted envelope of a red giant being blown by the impact of the jet.
Gamma-ray photons and electron/positron pairs that are produced correspondingly
will induce electromagnetic cascades. Comptonization of the cascade emission
inside the cloud forms an X-ray photon field with Wien distribution. GeV flux
is suppressed due to the absorption by the Comptonized photon field and, as a
result, a hard spectrum above 10 GeV is formed. The gamma-ray spectrum
predicted in our model is consistent with the Fermi-LAT data of TXS 0506+056.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figure
The standard cohomology of regular Courant algebroids
For any regular Courant algebroid over a smooth manifold with
characteristic distribution and ample Lie algebroid , we prove that
there exists a canonical homological vector field on the graded manifold
such that the associated dg manifold
, which we call the minimal model of the Courant algebroid ,
encodes all cohomological data of . Thereby, the standard cohomology
of can be identified with the cohomology
of the function space on . To compute
it, we find a natural transgression map [d_T] \colon
H^{\bullet}_{\operatorname{CE}}\big(A_E; S^{\diamond}(TM/F[-2])\big) \to
H^{\bullet+3}_{\CE}\big(A_E; S^{\diamond-1}(TM/F[-2])\big) from which we
construct a spectral sequence which converges to
. Moreover, we give applications to
generalized exact Courant algebroids and those arising from regular Lie
algebroids .Comment: 41 pages; the main body is rewritten; typos remove
The geometric constraints on Filippov algebroids
Filippov n-algebroids are introduced by Grabowski and Marmo as a natural
generalization of Lie algebroids. In this note, we characterize Filippov
n-algebroid structures by considering certain multi-input connections, which we
call Filippov connections, on the underlying vector bundle. Through this
approach, we are able to express the n-ary bracket of any Filippov n-algebroid
using a torsion-free type formula. Additionally, we transform the generalized
Jacobi identity of the Filippov n-algebroid into the Bianchi-Filippov identity.
Furthermore, in the case of rank n vector bundles, we provide a
characterization of linear Nambu-Poisson structures using Filippov connections
Spinal Microglial Motility is Independent of Neuronal Activity and Plasticity in Adult Mice
Microglia are the resident macrophages in the central nervous system. In the spinal cord dorsal horn, microglia stay in resting condition during physiological sensory processing, and are activated under pathological conditions such as peripheral nerve injury. In cases such as this, the nearby resting microglia increase their motility and accumulate at the site of injury. However, direct evidence to support that nerve activity can enhance the motility of microglia has not yet to be reported. In this study we investigated whether the activation of spinal microglia under in vivo nerve injury may be mimicked by neuronal activity in the spinal cord slice preparation. We found that local application of spinal excitatory neurotransmitters, such as glutamate and substance P did not cause any change in the motility of microglial cells in the spinal cord dorsal horn. The motility of microglial cells is unlikely modulated by other transmitters, neuromodulators and chemokines, because similar applications such as GABA, serotonin, noradrenaline, carbachol, fractalkine or interleukin did not produce any obvious effect. Furthermore, low or high frequency stimulation of spinal dorsal root fibers at noxious intensities failed to cause any enhanced extension or retraction of the microglia processes. By contrast, focal application of ATP triggered rapid and robust activation of microglial cells in the spinal dorsal horn. Our results provide the first evidence that the activation of microglia in the spinal cord after nerve injury is unlikely due solely to neuronal activity, non-neuronal factors are likely responsible for the activation of nerve injury-related microglial cells in the spinal dorsal horn
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