4.7 Article

Hadronic supercriticality as a trigger for γ-ray burst emission

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 444, Issue 3, Pages 2186-2199

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stu1362

Keywords

astroparticle physics; instabilities; radiation mechanisms: non-thermal; gamma-ray burst: general

Funding

  1. NASA through Einstein Postdoctoral Fellowship grant - Chandra X-ray Center [PF 140113]
  2. NASA [NAS8-03060]
  3. Fermi six cycle grant [61122]

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We explore a one-zone hadronic model that may be able to reproduce gamma-ray burst (GRB) prompt emission with a minimum of free parameters. Assuming only that GRBs are efficient high-energy proton accelerators and without the presence of an ab initio photon field, we investigate the conditions under which the system becomes supercritical, i.e. there is a fast, non-linear transfer of energy from protons to secondary particles initiated by the spontaneous quenching of proton-produced gamma-rays. We first show analytically that the transition to supercriticality occurs whenever the proton injection compactness exceeds a critical value, which favours high proton injection luminosities and a wide range of bulk Lorentz factors. The properties of supercriticality are then studied with a time-dependent numerical code that solves concurrently the coupled equations of proton, photon, electron, neutron and neutrino distributions. For conditions that drive the system deep into the supercriticality, we find that the photon spectra obtain a Band-like shape due to Comptonization by cooled pairs and that the energy transfer efficiency from protons to gamma-rays and neutrinos is high reaching similar to 0.3. Although some questions concerning its full adaptability to the GRB prompt emission remain open, supercriticality is found to be a promising process in that regard.

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