Relativistic shock breakouts - a variety of gamma-ray flares: from low luminosity gamma-ray bursts to type Ia supernovae
Ehud Nakar, Re'em Sari

TL;DR
This paper models relativistic shock breakouts across various stellar explosions, predicting gamma-ray signals that explain observed phenomena and suggest new detection opportunities.
Contribution
It improves an analytic model of relativistic radiation mediated shocks and applies it to diverse explosions, linking shock breakout physics to observable gamma-ray signals.
Findings
Relativistic shock breakouts produce gamma-ray flashes with specific energy, temperature, and duration relations.
All studied explosions generate detectable gamma-ray signals, some possibly already observed.
Relativistic shock breakout explains features of low luminosity GRBs and predicts signals from nearby supernovae.
Abstract
A large variety of explosions result in mildly or ultra relativistic shock breakouts. Here we calculate the luminosity and spectrum that these breakouts produce. In order to do so we improve an analytic description of relativistic radiation mediated shocks and follow the system from the breakout itself, through the planar phase and into the spherical phase. We limit our calculation to cases where the post breakout acceleration of the gas ends during the planar phase. (i.e., the final gas Lorentz factor <~30). We find that spherical relativistic breakouts produce a flash of gamma-rays with energy, temperature, and duration that always satisfy a specific relation between them as well as providing the breakout radius and Lorentz factor. The breakout flare is typically followed, on longer time scales, by X-rays that carry a comparable energy. We apply our model to a variety of explosions,…
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