659 research outputs found
Implications of a "Fast Radio Burst" from a Galactic Magnetar
A luminous radio burst was recently detected in temporal coincidence with a
hard X-ray flare from the Galactic magnetar SGR 1935+2154 with a time and
frequency structure consistent with cosmological fast radio bursts (FRB) and a
fluence within a factor of of the least energetic extragalactic
FRB previously detected. Although active magnetars are commonly invoked FRB
sources, several distinct mechanisms have been proposed for generating the
radio emission which make different predictions for the accompanying higher
frequency radiation. We show that the properties of the coincident radio and
X-ray flares from SGR 1935+2154, including their approximate simultaneity and
relative fluence , as well as the
duration and spectrum of the X-ray emission, are consistent with extant
predictions for the synchrotron maser shock model. Rather than arising from the
inner magnetosphere, the X-rays are generated by (incoherent) synchrotron
radiation from thermal electrons heated at the same shocks which produce the
coherent maser emission. Although the rate of SGR 1935+2154-like bursts in the
local universe is not sufficient to contribute appreciably to the extragalactic
FRB rate, the inclusion of an additional population of more active magnetars
with stronger magnetic fields than the Galactic population can explain both the
FRB rate as well as the repeating fraction, however only if the population of
active magnetars are born at a rate that is at least two-orders of magnitude
lower than that of SGR 1935+2154-like magnetars. This may imply that the more
active magnetar sources are not younger magnetars formed in a similar way to
the Milky Way population (e.g. via ordinary supernovae), but instead through
more exotic channels such as superluminous supernovae, accretion-induced
collapse or neutron star mergers.Comment: 21 pages, 9 figures; submitted to ApJL; comments welcome
The GRB-SLSN Connection: mis-aligned magnetars, weak jet emergence, and observational signatures
Multiple observational lines of evidence support a connection between
hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae (SLSNe) and long duration gamma-ray
bursts (GRBs). Both events require a powerful central energy source, usually
attributed to a millisecond magnetar or an accreting black hole. The GRB-SLSN
link raises several theoretical questions: What distinguishes the engines
responsible for these different phenomena? Can a single engine power both a GRB
and a luminous SN in the same event? We propose a new unifying model for
magnetar thermalization and jet formation: misalignment between the rotation
() and magnetic dipole () axes thermalizes a fraction
of the spindown power by reconnection in the striped equatorial wind, providing
a guaranteed source of "thermal" emission to power the supernova. The remaining
un-thermalized power energizes a relativistic jet. In this picture, the
GRB-SLSN dichotomy is directly linked to . We extend
earlier work to show that even weak relativistic jets of luminosity
erg s can escape the expanding SN ejecta hours after the
explosion, implying that escaping relativistic jets may accompany many SLSNe.
We calculate the observational signature of these jets. We show that they may
produce transient UV cocoon emission lasting a few hours when the jet breaks
out of the ejecta surface. A longer-lived optical/UV signal may originate from
a mildly-relativistic wind driven from the interface between the jet and the
ejecta walls. This provides a new explanation for the secondary early-time
maximum observed in some SLSNe light curves, such as LSQ14bdq. This scenario
also predicts a population of GRB from on-axis jets with extremely long
durations, potentially similar to the population of "jetted tidal disruption
events", in coincidence with a small subset of SLSNe.Comment: 17 pages, 7 figures, submitted to MNRA
Unveiling the Engines of Fast Radio Bursts, Super-Luminous Supernovae, and Gamma-Ray Bursts
Young, rapidly spinning magnetars are invoked as central engines behind a
diverse set of transient astrophysical phenomena, including gamma-ray bursts
(GRB), super-luminous supernovae (SLSNe), fast radio bursts (FRB), and binary
neutron star (NS) mergers. However, a barrier to direct confirmation of the
magnetar hypothesis is the challenge of directly observing non-thermal emission
from the central engine at early times (when it is most powerful and thus
detectable) due to the dense surrounding ejecta. We present CLOUDY calculations
of the time-dependent evolution of the temperature and ionization structure of
expanding supernova or merger ejecta due to photo-ionization by a magnetar
engine, in order to study the escape of X-rays (absorbed by neutral gas) and
radio waves (absorbed by ionized gas), as well as to assess the evolution of
the local dispersion measure due to photo-ionization. We find that ionization
breakout does not occur if the engine's ionizing luminosity decays rapidly, and
that X-rays typically escape the oxygen-rich ejecta of SLSNe only on timescales, consistent with current X-ray non-detections. We apply
these results to constrain engine-driven models for the binary NS merger
GW170817 and the luminous transient ASASSN-15lh. In terms of radio transparency
and dispersion measure constraints, the repeating FRB 121102 is consistent with
originating from a young, , magnetar similar to
those inferred to power SLSNe. We further show that its high rotation measure
can be produced within the same nebula that is proposed to power the quiescent
radio source observed co-located with FRB 121102. Our results strengthen
previous work suggesting that at least some FRBs may be produced by young
magnetars, and motivate further study of engine powered transients.Comment: submitted to MNRAS; comments welcom
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