1201.0664 (Andrei M. Beloborodov)
Andrei M. Beloborodov
Persistent activity of magnetars is associated with electric discharge that
continually injects relativistic particles in the magnetosphere. Large active
magnetic loops around magnetars must be filled with outflowing particles that
interact with radiation via resonant scattering and spawn electron-positron
pairs. The outflow energy is processed into copious e+/e- pairs until the
plasma enters the outer parts of the loop where the magnetic field is reduced
below 10^13 G. In the outer zone, the photons scattered by the outflow do not
convert to pairs and the outflow radiates its energy away. The escaping
radiation forms a distinct hard X-ray peak in the magnetar spectrum. It has the
following features: (1) Its luminosity L=10^35-10^36 erg/s easily exceeds the
thermal luminosity from the magnetar surface. (2) Its spectrum extends from 10
keV to the MeV band with a hard spectral slope, which depends on the object
inclination to the line of sight. (3) The anisotropic hard X-ray emission
exhibits strong pulsations as the magnetar spins. (4) The emission typically
peaks around 1 MeV, but the peak position significantly oscillates with the
spin period. (5) The emission is dominated by the extraordinary polarization
mode at photon energies below 1 MeV. (6) The decelerated pairs accumulate and
annihilate at the top of the magnetic loop, and emit the 511-keV line with
luminosity L_ann=0.1L. Features (1)-(3) agree with available data; (4)-(6) can
be tested by future observations.
View original:
http://arxiv.org/abs/1201.0664
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