High-Energy Photon Opacity in the Twisted Magnetospheres of Magnetars
Kun Hu, Matthew G. Baring, Alice K. Harding, Zorawar Wadiasingh

TL;DR
This paper calculates how high-energy photons are attenuated in magnetar magnetospheres with twisted magnetic fields, affecting observable emissions and constraining emission regions.
Contribution
It provides detailed models of photon opacity due to splitting and pair creation in twisted magnetar magnetic fields within curved spacetime, a novel approach.
Findings
Twist angle influences photon transparency and opacity.
Photon splitting constrains emission regions and magnetospheric twist.
Curved spacetime effects modify maximum photon energies for escape.
Abstract
Magnetars are neutron stars characterized by strong surface magnetic fields generally exceeding the quantum critical value of 44.1 TeraGauss. High-energy photons propagating in their magnetospheres can be attenuated by QED processes like photon splitting and magnetic pair creation. In this paper, we compute the opacities due to photon splitting and pair creation by photons emitted anywhere in the magnetosphere of a magnetar. Axisymmetric, twisted dipole field configurations embedded in the Schwarzschild metric are treated. The paper computes the maximum energies for photon transparency that permit propagation to infinity in curved spacetime. Special emphasis is given to cases where photons are generated along magnetic field loops and/or in polar regions; these cases directly relate to resonant inverse Compton scattering models for the hard X-ray emission from magnetars and Comptonized…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · High-pressure geophysics and materials
