Synchrotron-Loss Spectral Breaks in Pulsar-Wind Nebulae and Extragalactic Jets
S. P. Reynolds (NC State U.)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how inhomogeneities in astrophysical synchrotron sources like jets and nebulae affect spectral steepening, providing a model that explains observed variations beyond the standard 0.5 index increase.
Contribution
It introduces a simple phenomenological model of inhomogeneous synchrotron sources to explain variable spectral steepening observed in astrophysical jets and nebulae.
Findings
Spectral steepening can exceed 0.5 in inhomogeneous sources.
The model matches full luminosity integrations including spectral bumps.
Source inhomogeneities can diagnose source dynamics or geometry.
Abstract
Flows of synchrotron-emitting material can be found in several astrophysical contexts, including extragalactic jets and pulsar-wind nebulae (PWNe). For X-ray synchrotron emission, flow times are often longer than electron radiative lifetimes, so the effective source size at a given X-ray energy is the distance electrons radiating at that energy can convect before they burn off. Since synchrotron losses vary strongly with electron energy, the source size drops with increasing X-ray energy, resulting in a steepening of the synchrotron spectrum. For homogeneous sources, this burnoff produces the well-known result of a steepening by 0.5 in the source's integrated spectral index. However, for inhomogeneous sources, different amounts of steepening are possible. I exhibit a simple phenomenological picture of an outflow of relativistic electrons with bulk nonrelativistic flow speed, with…
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