Physics of radiation mediated shocks and its applications to GRBs, supernovae, and neutron star mergers
Amir Levinson, Ehud Nakar

TL;DR
This paper reviews the theory and applications of radiation mediated shocks in cosmic explosions, emphasizing their role in early electromagnetic signals from supernovae, GRBs, and neutron star mergers, and discusses observational diagnostics and recent developments.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of radiation mediated shock theory, classification, solution methods, and their applications to various astrophysical phenomena, integrating recent advances and observational prospects.
Findings
Classification of shock solutions based on environmental conditions
Methods for solving shock equations in different regimes
Implications for early electromagnetic emission diagnostics
Abstract
The first electromagnetic signal observed in different types of cosmic explosions is released upon emergence of a shock created in the explosion from the opaque envelope enshrouding the central source. Notable examples are the early emission from various types of supernovae and low luminosity GRBs, the prompt photospheric emission in long GRBs, and the gamma-ray emission that accompanied the gravitational wave signal in neutron star mergers. In all of these examples, the shock driven by the explosion is mediated by the radiation trapped inside it, and its velocity and structure, that depend on environmental conditions, dictate the characteristics of the observed electromagnetic emission at early times, and potentially also their neutrino emission. Much efforts have been devoted in recent years to develop a detailed theory of radiation mediated shocks in an attempt to predict the…
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