On thermalization in gamma-ray burst jets and the peak energies of photospheric spectra
Indrek Vurm, Yuri Lyubarsky, Tsvi Piran

TL;DR
This paper investigates the conditions under which thermalization occurs in gamma-ray burst jets, affecting the spectral peak energies, by analyzing photon production mechanisms and flow dynamics within the photosphere.
Contribution
It systematically studies photon production processes and flow conditions necessary for thermalization in GRB jets, providing constraints on Lorentz factors and dissipation radii.
Findings
Thermalization likely occurs at intermediate radii (~10^{10}-10^{11} cm).
Flow Lorentz factors should generally be below 20 for thermalization.
Synchrotron emission can enable thermalization if non-thermal acceleration is efficient.
Abstract
The low energy spectral slopes of the prompt emission of most gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are difficult to reconcile with radiatively efficient optically thin emission models irrespective of the radiation mechanism. An alternative is to ascribe the radiation around the spectral peak to a thermalization process occurring well inside the Thomson photosphere. This quasi-thermal spectrum can evolve into the observed non-thermal shape by additional energy release at moderate to small Thomson optical depths, which can readily give rise to the hard spectral tail. The position of the spectral peak is determined by the temperature and Lorentz factor of the flow in the termalization zone, where the total number of photons carried by the jet is established. To reach thermalization, dissipation alone is not sufficient and photon generation requires an efficient emission/absorption process in addition…
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