Relativistic Fireball Reprise: Radio Suppression at the Onset of Short Magnetar Bursts
Shotaro Yamasaki (U. Tokyo), Shota Kisaka (Aoyama Gakuin U.), Toshio, Terasawa (ICRR U. Tokyo & NAOJ), Teruaki Enoto (Kyoto U.)

TL;DR
This paper proposes a model where relativistic plasma outflows during magnetar flares suppress radio emissions for about 100 seconds, linking short bursts to plasma dynamics and suggesting new observational signatures.
Contribution
It introduces a theoretical framework connecting relativistic plasma ejections to radio suppression and short bursts, providing testable predictions for magnetar activity.
Findings
Radio emission is suppressed for ~100 seconds during flares.
Thermal radiation from hot spots may explain short bursts.
Ultra-fast gamma-ray flashes are predicted as signatures.
Abstract
There is growing evidence that a clear distinction between magnetars and radio pulsars may not exist, implying the population of neutron stars that exhibit both radio pulsations and bursting activities could be potentially large. In this situation, new insights into the burst mechanism could be gained by combining the temporal behavior of radio pulsations. We present a general model for radio suppression by relativistic plasma outflows at the onset of magnetar flares. A sudden ejection of magnetic energy into the magnetosphere would generate a fireball plasma, which is promptly driven to expand at relativistic speed. This would make the plasma cutoff frequency significantly higher than the rest frame radio frequency, resulting in the suppression of radio waves. We analytically show that any GHz radio emission arising from the magnetosphere is suppressed for ,…
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