Unraveling the high-energy emission components of gamma-ray binaries
V\'ictor Zabalza, Valent\'i Bosch-Ramon, Felix Aharonian, Dmitry, Khangulyan

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origins of the distinct GeV and TeV gamma-ray emissions in binaries like LS 5039, proposing a model where different wind interaction sites produce the separate high-energy components.
Contribution
It introduces a model explaining the two gamma-ray emission components via wind interactions at different locations, aligning with observations and hydrodynamical simulations.
Findings
The model reproduces the two-component gamma-ray spectrum of LS 5039.
The proposed emission sites are consistent with hydrodynamical simulations.
The scenario explains high-energy emissions in gamma-ray binaries with unknown compact objects.
Abstract
The high and very-high energy spectrum of gamma-ray binaries has become a challenge for all theoretical explanations since the detection of powerful, persistent GeV emission from LS 5039 and LS I +61 303 by Fermi/LAT. The spectral cutoff at a few GeV indicates that the GeV component and the fainter, hard TeV emission above 100 GeV are not directly related. We explore the possible origins of these two emission components in the framework of a young, non-accreting pulsar orbiting the massive star, and initiating the non-thermal emission through the interaction of the stellar and pulsar winds. The pulsar/stellar wind interaction in a compact orbit binary gives rise to two potential locations for particle acceleration: the shocks at the head-on collision of the winds and the termination shock caused by Coriolis forces on scales larger than the binary separation. We explore the suitability…
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