Gamma-ray emission from internal shocks in novae
Pierrick Martin, Guillaume Dubus, Pierre Jean, Vincent Tatischeff,, Cyril Dosne

TL;DR
This paper models gamma-ray emission from internal shocks in novae, showing that particle acceleration at these shocks can explain observed high-energy gamma-ray signals, providing insights into nova mass ejection mechanisms.
Contribution
It introduces a one-dimensional model of internal shocks in novae and demonstrates that particle acceleration at these shocks accounts for Fermi-LAT gamma-ray observations.
Findings
Internal shocks accelerate particles up to ~100 GeV.
Gamma-ray emission is mainly from hadronic interactions downstream.
Model successfully explains observed gamma-ray features in multiple novae.
Abstract
Gamma-ray emission at energies >100MeV has been detected from nine novae using the Fermi-LAT, and it can be explained by particle acceleration at shocks in these systems. Eight out of these nine objects are classical novae in which interaction of the ejecta with a tenuous circumbinary material is not expected to generate detectable gamma-ray emission. We examine whether particle acceleration at internal shocks can account for the gamma-ray emission from these novae. The shocks result from the interaction of a fast wind radiatively-driven by nuclear burning on the white dwarf with material ejected in the initial runaway stage of the nova outburst. We present a one-dimensional model for the dynamics of a forward and reverse shock system in a nova ejecta, and for the associated time-dependent particle acceleration and high-energy gamma-ray emission. Non-thermal proton and electron spectra…
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