Electron Acceleration in Pulsar-Wind Termination Shocks: An Application to the Crab Nebula Gamma-Ray Flares
John J Kroon, Peter A Becker, Justin Finke, Charles Dermer

TL;DR
This paper presents a new analytical model for electron acceleration in pulsar-wind termination shocks, successfully explaining the gamma-ray flares observed in the Crab nebula by incorporating multiple acceleration mechanisms and matching observational spectra.
Contribution
It introduces an exact analytical solution for electron distribution including electrostatic, stochastic, and shock acceleration, advancing understanding of particle acceleration during Crab nebula gamma-ray flares.
Findings
Model reproduces observed gamma-ray spectra from Crab flares.
Electrostatic acceleration is the dominant process powering the flares.
Predicted synchrotron afterglow fades over about three weeks.
Abstract
The {\gamma}-ray flares from the Crab nebula observed by AGILE and Fermi-LAT reaching GeV energies and lasting several days challenge the standard models for particle acceleration in pulsar wind nebulae, because the radiating electrons have energies exceeding the classical radiation-reaction limit for synchrotron. Previous modeling has suggested that the synchrotron limit can be exceeded if the electrons experience electrostatic acceleration, but the resulting spectra do not agree very well with the data. As a result, there are still some important unanswered questions about the detailed particle acceleration and emission processes occurring during the flares. We revisit the problem using a new analytical approach based on an electron transport equation that includes terms describing electrostatic acceleration, stochastic wave-particle acceleration, shock acceleration, synchrotron…
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