Radiative cooling in relativistic collisionless shocks. Can simulations and experiments probe relevant GRB physics?
Mikhail V. Medvedev (KU), Anatoly Spitkovsky (Princeton)

TL;DR
This paper investigates whether current PIC simulations and laser experiments can model realistic GRB shocks by analyzing electron cooling times and their implications for shock structure and emission spectra.
Contribution
It provides a detailed comparison of electron cooling times with plasma timescales, linking simulation capabilities to observable GRB shock properties and laboratory plasma conditions.
Findings
PIC simulations can resolve shocks with efficient electron cooling.
Spectral predictions suggest emission peaks in the multi-MeV range.
Laboratory plasmas can mimic GRB internal shock conditions.
Abstract
We address the question of whether numerical particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations and laboratory laser-plasma experiments can (or will be able to, in the near future) model realistic gamma-ray burst (GRB) shocks. For this, we compare the radiative cooling time, t_cool, of relativistic electrons in the shock magnetic fields to the microscopic dynamical time of collisionless relativistic shocks -- the inverse plasma frequency of protons, omega_pp^{-1}. We obtain that for t_cool*omega_pp^{-1}\lesssim ~few hundred, the electrons cool efficiently at or near the shock jump and are capable of emitiing away a large fraction of the shock energy. Such shocks are well-resolved in existing PIC simulations; therefore, the microscopic structure can be studied in detail. Since most of the emission in such shocks would be coming from the vicinity of the shock, the spectral power of the emitted radiation…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Space Satellite Systems and Control · Astro and Planetary Science
