Gamma-rays and positrons from Colliding Wind Binaries
Matteo Balbo, Roland Walter

TL;DR
This paper discusses gamma-ray and positron emissions from the Eta Carinae binary system, highlighting particle acceleration mechanisms, observational evidence, and the potential for future CTA observations to reveal detailed physical properties.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of gamma-ray emissions from a non-compact colliding wind binary and predicts how CTA observations can uncover system geometry and acceleration processes.
Findings
Detection of gamma-rays confirms particle acceleration in Eta Carinae.
Hydrodynamic simulations match observed gamma-ray spectra.
CTA can detect flux variability on a few days timescale.
Abstract
The Carinae binary system is the first -ray binary ever observed which does not contain a compact object. The dense wind of the primary star shocks against the fast light wind coming from the companion star, creating the conditions to accelerate particles up to relativistic energies via Fermi mechanisms. These relativistic particles subsequently dissipates non-thermal radiation. Fermi-LAT and H.E.S.S. detection of Carinae confirm such hypotheses. Hydrodynamic simulations provide a convincing match to the observations if a few percent of the wind mechanical energy dissipated in the shock goes into particle acceleration. The intrinsic decay spectrum is a complex convolution of the maximum energy, luminosity, particle drift and obscuration. Accelerated particles cool down mainly via inverse-Compton, synchrotron radiation, and photo-pion production. High-energy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
