Exploring Particle Acceleration in Gamma-Ray Binaries
Abstract
Binary systems can be powerful sources of non-thermal emission from radio to gamma rays. When the latter are detected, then these objects are known as gamma ray binaries. In this work, we explore, in the context of gamma ray binaries, different acceleration processes to estimate their efficiency: Fermi I, Fermi II, shear acceleration, the converter mechanism, and magnetic reconnection. We find that Fermi I acceleration in a mildly relativistic shock can provide, although marginally, the multi-10 TeV particles required to explain observations. Shear acceleration may be a complementary mechanism, giving particles the final boost to reach such a high energies. Fermi II acceleration may be too slow to account for the observed very high energy photons, but may be suitable to explain extended low-energy emission. The converter mechanism seems to require rather high Lorentz factors but cannot be discarded a priori. Standard relativistic shock acceleration requires a highly turbulent, weakly magnetized downstream medium; magnetic reconnection, by itself possibly insufficient to reach very high energies, could perhaps facilitate such a conditions. Further theoretical developments, and a better source characterization, are needed to pinpoint the dominant acceleration mechanism, which need not be one and the same in all sources.
- Publication:
-
Astroparticle
- Pub Date:
- August 2012
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1110.1534
- Bibcode:
- 2012apsp.conf..219B
- Keywords:
-
- binary systems;
- non-thermal;
- gamma rays;
- Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
- E-Print:
- 7 pages, 1 figure, proceedings of the 13th ICATPP Conference on Astroparticle, Particle, Space Physics and Detectors for Physics Applications (Villa Olmo, Como 3-7 October 2011)