Temporal Evolution of Prompt GRB Polarization
Ramandeep Gill, Jonathan Granot

TL;DR
This paper investigates how the polarization of prompt gamma-ray burst emissions evolves over time, considering various emission mechanisms, magnetic field configurations, and outflow dynamics to better understand the radiation process.
Contribution
It provides a detailed theoretical model of polarization evolution in GRB prompt emission for different magnetic fields and outflow geometries, enhancing interpretation of polarization observations.
Findings
Distinct polarization evolution patterns for different magnetic field configurations.
Double 90-degree polarization angle changes for toroidal magnetic fields.
Polarization behavior varies with outflow acceleration and jet structure.
Abstract
The dominant radiation mechanism that produces the prompt emission in gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) remains a major open question. Spectral information alone has proven insufficient in elucidating its nature. Time-resolved linear polarization has the potential to distinguish between popular emission mechanisms, e.g., synchrotron radiation from electrons with a power-law energy distribution or inverse Compton scattering of soft seed thermal photons, which can yield the typical GRB spectrum but produce different levels of polarization. Furthermore, it can be used to learn about the outflow's composition (i.e. whether it is kinetic-energy-dominated or Poynting-flux-dominated) and angular structure. For synchrotron emission it is a powerful probe of the magnetic field geometry. Here we consider synchrotron emission from a thin ultrarelativistic outflow, with bulk Lorentz factor…
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