Wednesday, January 30, 2013

1301.6818 (Z. Chang et al.)

Gamma-ray polarization induced by cold electrons via Compton processes    [PDF]

Z. Chang, Y. Jiang, H. N. Lin
The polarization measurement is an important tool to probe the prompt emission mechanism in gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). The synchrotron photons can be scattered by cold electrons in the outflow via Compton scattering processes. The observed polarization depends on both the photon energy and the viewing angle. With the typical bulk Lorentz factor $\Gamma \sim 200$, photons with energy $E>10$ MeV tend to have smaller polarization than photons with energy $E<1$ MeV. At the right viewing angle, i.e. $\theta \sim \Gamma^{-1}$, the polarization achieves its maximal value, and the polarization angle changes $90^{\circ}$ relative to the initial polarization direction. Thus, the synchrotron radiation plus Compton scattering model can naturally explain the $90^{\circ}$ change of the polarization angle in GRB 100826A.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1301.6818

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