4.7 Article

A fully kinetic model for orphan gamma-ray flares in blazars

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 503, Issue 1, Pages 688-693

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab562

Keywords

plasmas; radiation mechanisms: non-thermal; turbulence; galaxies: jets; gamma-rays: galaxies

Funding

  1. Sloan Fellowship
  2. Cottrell Scholar Award
  3. NASA ATP [80NSSC18K1104]
  4. NSF [PHY-1903412]
  5. [DoEDE-SC0021254]

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Blazars emit highly variable non-thermal spectrum and it is assumed that the same non-thermal electrons are responsible for different wavelengths of radiation, but recent studies show that orphan gamma-ray flares may be a by-product of particle energization in pair plasmas. The anisotropy of the non-thermal particle population is key to modeling the blazar emission.
Blazars emit a highly variable non-thermal spectrum. It is usually assumed that the same non-thermal electrons are responsible for the IR-optical-UV emission (via synchrotron) and the gamma-ray emission (via inverse Compton). Hence, the light curves in the two bands should be correlated. Orphan gamma-ray flares (i.e. lacking a luminous low-frequency counterpart) challenge our theoretical understanding of blazars. By means of large-scale two-dimensional radiative particle-in-cell simulations, we show that orphan gamma-ray flares may be a self-consistent by-product of particle energization in turbulent magnetically dominated pair plasmas. The energized particles produce the gamma-ray flare by inverse Compton scattering an external radiation field, while the synchrotron luminosity is heavily suppressed since the particles are accelerated nearly along the direction of the local magnetic field. The ratio of inverse Compton to synchrotron luminosity is sensitive to the initial strength of turbulent fluctuations (a larger degree of turbulent fluctuations weakens the anisotropy of the energized particles, thus increasing the synchrotron luminosity). Our results show that the anisotropy of the non-thermal particle population is key to modelling the blazar emission.

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