GRBs from Magnetic Reconnection: Variability and Robustness of Lightcurves
Jonathan Granot

TL;DR
This paper investigates gamma-ray burst emission from magnetic reconnection, demonstrating that lightcurve variability depends on the velocity-direction distribution within the reconnection layer, with implications for understanding GRB variability.
Contribution
It generalizes previous models by showing lightcurve independence from velocity-direction distribution and explores how distribution sharpness affects variability.
Findings
Lightcurves are independent of velocity-direction distribution in a quasi-spherical layer.
Sharper velocity distributions lead to smaller bright regions and increased variability.
The study provides emissivity maps for different velocity distributions.
Abstract
The dissipation mechanism that powers gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) remains uncertain almost half a century after their discovery. The two main competing mechanisms are the extensively studied internal shocks and the less studied magnetic reconnection. Here we consider GRB emission from magnetic reconnection accounting for the relativistic bulk motions that it produces in the jet's bulk rest frame. Far from the source the magnetic field is almost exactly normal to the radial direction, suggesting locally quasi-spherical thin reconnection layers between regions of oppositely directed magnetic field. We show that if the relativistic motions in the jet's frame are confined to such a quasi-spherical uniform layer, then the resulting GRB lightcurves are independent of their direction distribution within this layer. This renders previous results for a delta-function velocity-direction distribution…
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