Reconciling observed GRB prompt spectra with synchrotron radiation ?
F. Daigne (1), Z. Bosnjak (2, 1), Guillaume Dubus (3, 1) ((1), Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris, UMR 7095 Universit\'e Pierre et Marie, Curie - CNRS, (2) AIM (UMR 7158 CEA/DSM-CNRS-Universit\'e Paris Diderot), Irfu/Service d'Astrophysique

TL;DR
This study explores how inverse Compton and adiabatic cooling influence GRB prompt spectra, demonstrating that synchrotron radiation can explain observed spectral slopes under specific physical conditions.
Contribution
It provides a detailed time-dependent model showing how cooling processes affect spectral slopes, reconciling synchrotron emission with observations.
Findings
Synchrotron cooling predicts alpha=-3/2, but observations show alpha≈-1.
Inverse Compton cooling in Klein-Nishina regime can produce slopes between -3/2 and -1.
Marginally fast cooling with adiabatic effects can yield slopes up to -2/3.
Abstract
(abridged)Prompt GRB emission is often interpreted as synchrotron radiation from high-energy electrons accelerated in internal shocks. Fast synchrotron cooling predicts that the photon index below the spectral peak is alpha=-3/2. This differs significantly from the observed median value alpha \approx -1. We quantify the influence of inverse Compton and adiabatic cooling on alpha to understand whether these processes can reconcile the observations with a synchrotron origin. We use a time-dependent code that follows both the shock dynamics and electron energy losses. We investigate the dependence of alpha on the parameters of the model. Slopes between -3/2 and -1 are reached when electrons suffer IC losses in the Klein-Nishina regime. This does not necessarily imply a strong IC component in the Fermi/LAT range because scatterings are only moderately efficient. Steep slopes require that a…
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