Non-thermal emission from standing relativistic shocks: an application to red giant winds interacting with AGN jets
V. Bosch-Ramon

TL;DR
This paper models non-thermal gamma-ray emission resulting from the interaction of red giant winds with relativistic AGN jets, highlighting the significance of shock surface area and Doppler boosting in emission predictions.
Contribution
It introduces relativistic hydrodynamical simulations of jet-obstacle interactions and quantifies the enhanced non-thermal emission considering the entire shock surface and flow effects.
Findings
Non-thermal energy can be amplified by a factor of ~100.
Gamma-ray luminosity can be ~300(g/10)^2 times higher with flow effects.
Interactions may produce detectable persistent gamma-ray emission.
Abstract
Galactic and extragalactic relativistic jets have rich environments that are full of moving objects, such as stars and dense clumps. These objects can enter into the jets and generate shocks and non-thermal emission. We characterize the emitting properties of the downstream region of a standing shock formed due to the interaction of a relativistic jet with an obstacle. We focus on the case of red giants interacting with an extragalactic jet. We perform relativistic axisymmetric hydrodynamical simulations of a relativistic jet meeting an obstacle of very large inertia. The results are interpreted in the framework of a red giant whose dense and slow wind interacts with the jet of an active galactic nucleus. Assuming that particles are accelerated in the standing shock generated in the jet as it impacts the red giant wind, we compute the non-thermal particle distribution, the Doppler…
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