Modeling X-ray emission in radiation-rich magnetar magnetospheres
ORAL
Abstract
Neutron star magnetospheres are a source of abundant X-ray activity. They have transients observed in different bands, like the fast radio burst (FRB) and associated hard X-ray flare from the Galactic magnetar SGR 1935+2154. We present global models for magnetar X-ray emission, including a landmark first-principle radiative particle-in-cell simulation of the twisted magnetar magnetosphere with the GPU-PIC code Entity. In one scenario, plasma particles accelerated by surface-motion-induced discharges interact resonantly with thermal background photons. Our GPU-accelerated particle-in-cell simulations track up-scattered high-energy photons that drive secondary pair production and ignite a magnetospheric circuit that persistently generates X-rays. We divulge the plasma properties of such a magnetospheric circuit, including densities and velocities, and give an outlook on alternative ignition scenarios for persistent magnetar X-ray emission.
*We appreciate the support of the Department of Energy (DoE) Early Career Award DE-SC0023015 (PI: L. Sironi). This work was supported by a grant from the Simons Foundation (MP-SCMPS-00001470, PI: L. Sironi). This research was facilitated by the Multimessenger Plasma Physics Center (MPPC), NSF grant PHY-2206609. We acknowledge the National Science Foundation (NSF) support under grant No. AST-1909458 (PI: A. Philippov). MZ is supported by the Schmidt Futures at the Institute for Advanced Study.
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Presenters
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Jens Florian Mahlmann
- Princeton University