The sharpness of gamma-ray burst prompt emission spectra
Hoi-Fung Yu, Hendrik J. van Eerten, Jochen Greiner, Re'em Sari, P., Narayana Bhat, Andreas von Kienlin, William S. Paciesas, Robert D. Preece

TL;DR
This study measures the spectral sharpness of gamma-ray burst prompt emissions to test synchrotron models, finding most spectra inconsistent with simple synchrotron functions and suggesting alternative emission mechanisms are needed.
Contribution
It introduces a method to quantify spectral sharpness and compares observed spectra to various synchrotron models, revealing their inadequacy in explaining GRB prompt emission features.
Findings
35% of spectra inconsistent with single-electron synchrotron
91% inconsistent with Maxwellian synchrotron
Blackbody spectra are sharper than observed spectra
Abstract
We aim to obtain a measure of the curvature of time-resolved spectra that can be compared directly to theory. This tests the ability of models such as synchrotron emission to explain the peaks or breaks of GBM prompt emission spectra. We take the burst sample from the official Fermi GBM GRB time-resolved spectral catalog. We re-fit all spectra with a measured peak or break energy in the catalog best-fit models in various energy ranges, which cover the curvature around the spectral peak or break, resulting in a total of 1,113 spectra being analysed. We compute the sharpness angles under the peak or break of the triangle constructed under the model fit curves and compare to the values obtained from various representative emission models: blackbody, single-electron synchrotron, synchrotron emission from a Maxwellian or power-law electron distribution. We find that 35% of the time-resolved…
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