# On the spectrum and polarization of magnetar flare emission

**Authors:** Roberto Taverna, Roberto Turolla

arXiv: 1705.01130 · 2017-06-21

## TL;DR

This paper presents a radiative transfer model for magnetar flare emission, predicting thermal spectra and high polarization degrees, which align with observations and can be tested with upcoming X-ray polarimeters.

## Contribution

The study introduces a simplified yet effective model for magnetar flare emission that includes polarization predictions, advancing understanding of magnetar radiative processes.

## Key findings

- Spectra are thermal, described by two blackbodies.
- Predicted polarization degree exceeds 80%.
- Model results agree broadly with observations.

## Abstract

Bursts and flares are among the distinctive observational manifestations of magnetars, isolated neutron stars endowed with an ultra-strong magnetic field ($B \approx 10^{14}$--$10^{15}$ G). It is believed that these events arise in a hot electron-positron plasma which remains trapped within the closed magnetic field lines. We developed a simple radiative transfer model to simulate magnetar flare emission in the case of a steady trapped fireball. After dividing the fireball surface in a number of plane-parallel slabs, the local spectral and polarization properties are obtained integrating the radiative transfer equations for the two normal modes. We assume that magnetic Thomson scattering is the dominant source of opacity, and neglect contributions from second-order radiative processes, although double-Compton scattering is accounted for in establishing local thermal equilibrium in the fireball atmospheric layers. The observed spectral and polarization properties as measured by a distant observer are obtained summing the contributions from the patches which are visible for a given viewing geometry by means of a ray-tracing code. The spectra we obtained in the 1-100 keV energy range are thermal and can be described in terms of the superposition of two blackbodies. The blackbody temperature and the emitting area ratio are in broad agreement with the available observations. The predicted linear polarization degree is in general greater than 80% over the entire energy range and should be easily detectable by new-generation X-ray polarimeters, like IXPE, XIPE and eXTP.

## Full text

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## Figures

14 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.01130/full.md

## References

53 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.01130/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.01130