High-energy emission from the pulsar striped wind: a synchrotron model for gamma-ray pulsars
J. P\'etri

TL;DR
This paper presents a synchrotron radiation model from pulsar wind stripes to explain gamma-ray emission, linking luminosity and spectral features to pulsar parameters and magnetic reconnection processes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel synchrotron emission model incorporating magnetic reconnection and re-acceleration, providing new relations for pulsar magnetosphere parameters based on gamma-ray observations.
Findings
Gamma-ray luminosity scales with pulsar spindown and period.
Derived wind Lorentz factor and pair multiplicity relations.
Identified conditions for gamma-ray pulse visibility.
Abstract
(abridged) Gamma-ray pulsars constitute a class of high and very high-energy emitters for which the known population is steadily increasing thanks to the Fermi/Large Area Telescope. In this paper, their gamma-ray luminosity and spectral features are explained in the framework of synchrotron radiation from particles located in the stripe of the pulsar wind. Apart from radiative losses, particles are also subject to a constant re-acceleration and reheating for instance by a magnetic reconnection induced electric field. The high-energy luminosity scales as where is the pulsar spindown luminosity and its period. From this relation, we derive important parameters of pulsar magnetosphere and wind theories. Indeed, we find bulk Lorentz factor of the wind scaling as…
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