4.3 Article

Magnetar corona

Journal

ASTROPHYSICS AND SPACE SCIENCE
Volume 308, Issue 1-4, Pages 631-639

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10509-007-9318-x

Keywords

plasmas; stars : coronae; magnetic fields; neutron; X-rays : stars

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Persistent high-energy emission of magnetars is produced by a plasma corona around the neutron star, with total energy output of similar to 10(36) erg/s. The corona forms as a result of sporadic starquakes that twist the external magnetic field of the star and induce electric currents in the closed magnetosphere. Once twisted, the magnetosphere cannot untwist immediately because of its self-induction. The self-induction electric field lifts particles from the stellar surface, accelerates them, and initiates avalanches of pair creation in the magnetosphere. The created plasma corona maintains the electric current demanded by curl B and regulates the self-induction e.m.f. by screening. This corona persists in dynamic equilibrium: it is continually lost to the stellar surface on the light-crossing time similar to 10(-4) s and replenished with new particles. In essence, the twisted magnetosphere acts as an accelerator that converts the toroidal field energy to particle kinetic energy. The voltage along the magnetic field lines is maintained near threshold for ignition of pair production, in the regime of self-organized criticality. The voltage is found to be about similar to 1 GeV which is in agreement with the observed dissipation rate similar to 10(36) erg/s. The coronal particles impact the solid crust, knock out protons, and regulate the column density of the hydrostatic atmosphere of the star. The transition layer between the atmosphere and the corona is the likely source of the observed 100 keV emission. The corona also emits curvature radiation up to 10(14) Hz and can supply the observed IR-optical luminosity.

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