4.7 Article

POLARIZED SYNCHROTRON EMISSIVITIES AND ABSORPTIVITIES FOR RELATIVISTIC THERMAL, POWER-LAW, AND KAPPA DISTRIBUTION FUNCTIONS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 822, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/0004-637X/822/1/34

Keywords

plasmas; polarization; radiation mechanisms: general; radiative transfer; relativistic processes

Funding

  1. NSF [AST-1333612]
  2. Lorella M. Jones undergraduate Summer Research Award
  3. Simons Fellow in Theoretical Physics award
  4. All Souls College, Oxford Visiting Fellowship
  5. Illinois Distinguished Fellowship
  6. University of California, Berkeley
  7. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1333682] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  8. Division Of Astronomical Sciences [1333682] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. Division Of Astronomical Sciences
  10. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [1333091, 1333612] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Synchrotron emission and absorption determine the observational appearances of many astronomical systems. In this paper, we describe a numerical scheme for calculating synchrotron emissivities and absorptivities in all four Stokes parameters for arbitrary gyrotropic electron distribution functions, building on earlier work by Leung, Gammie, and Noble. We use this technique to evaluate the emissivities and the absorptivities for a thermal (Maxwell-Jutttner), isotropic power-law, and an isotropic kappa distribution function. The latter contains a power-law tail at high particle energies that smoothly merges with a thermal core at low energies, as is characteristic of observed particle spectra in collisionless plasmas. We provide fitting formulae and error bounds on the fitting formulae for use in codes that solve the radiative transfer equation. The numerical method and the fitting formulae are implemented in a compact C library called symphony. We find that the kappa distribution has a source function that is indistinguishable from a thermal spectrum at low frequency and transitions to the characteristic self-absorbed synchrotron spectrum, proportional to nu(5/2) 2, at high frequency; the linear polarization fraction for a thermal spectrum is near unity at high frequency; and all distributions produce O(10%) circular polarization at low frequency for lines of sight sufficiently close to the magnetic field vector.

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