The Peak Frequency and Luminosity of Synchrotron Emitting Shocks: from Non-Relativistic to Ultra-Relativistic Explosions
Ben Margalit, Eliot Quataert

TL;DR
This paper introduces a revised synchrotron emission framework that incorporates relativistic effects and thermal electrons, significantly improving the accuracy of shock parameter estimates across non-relativistic to ultra-relativistic explosions.
Contribution
The authors develop a new model that accounts for relativistic effects and thermal electrons, extending the canonical framework to high-velocity shocks and providing more accurate shock property inferences.
Findings
Conventional models overestimate shock velocity, ambient density, and energy in high-velocity shocks.
A new upper limit on peak synchrotron luminosity aligns with observations.
The spectral energy distribution changes qualitatively with shock velocity, consistent with observed transients.
Abstract
Synchrotron emission is ubiquitous in explosive astrophysical events -- it is a natural byproduct of shocks formed when matter expelled by the explosion collides with ambient material. This emission is well-observed in various classes of transients, and is often interpreted within a canonical `equipartition' framework that allows physical properties of the shock to be inferred from the frequency and luminosity at which the observed spectral energy distribution (SED) peaks. This framework has been remarkably successful in explaining observations of radio supernovae. It has also been used for trans-relativistic explosions, where the shock velocities approach the speed of light. However, the conventional framework does not incorporate relativistic effects. Neither does it account for thermal electrons, which have been shown to be important for high-velocity shocks. In this paper we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Laser-Plasma Interactions and Diagnostics · Gyrotron and Vacuum Electronics Research
