Relativistic Doppler-boosted emission in gamma-ray binaries
G. Dubus, B. Cerutti, G. Henri

TL;DR
This paper investigates how relativistic Doppler boosting affects X-ray and gamma-ray emissions in gamma-ray binaries, explaining observed orbital modulations and phase shifts through detailed emission modeling.
Contribution
It introduces a model for Doppler boosting effects on synchrotron and inverse Compton emissions in gamma-ray binaries, linking orbital geometry to observed flux modulations.
Findings
Doppler boosting explains X-ray modulation in LS 5039.
Flow velocities of 0.15-0.33c match observations.
Model reproduces phase of VHE and X-ray peaks in LS I +61 303.
Abstract
Gamma-ray binaries could be compact pulsar wind nebulae formed when a young pulsar orbits a massive star. The pulsar wind is contained by the stellar wind of the O or Be companion, creating a relativistic comet-like structure accompanying the pulsar along its orbit. The X-ray and the very high energy (>100 GeV, VHE) gamma-ray emissions from the binary LS 5039 are modulated on the orbital period of the system. Maximum and minimum flux occur at the conjunctions of the orbit, suggesting that the explanation is linked to the orbital geometry. The VHE modulation has been proposed to be due to the combined effect of Compton scattering and pair production on stellar photons, both of which depend on orbital phase. The X-ray modulation could be due to relativistic Doppler boosting in the comet tail where both the X-ray and VHE photons would be emitted. Relativistic aberrations change the seed…
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