Relativistic MHD Turbulence with Synchrotron and Inverse-Compton Radiation Cooling
ORAL
Abstract
This work investigates the energetic aspects and observational appearance of driven relativistic MHD turbulence in an optically thin, relativistically hot plasma subject to strong synchrotron and synchrotron-self-Compton (SSC) radiative cooling. Steady-state balance between turbulent heating and radiative cooling is shown to lead, essentially independent of turbulent driving's strength, to a characteristic electron temperature of $T_e/m_e c^2 \sim \tau_T^{-1/2}$, where $\tau_T \ll 1$ is the system’s Thomson optical depth. Furthermore, the SSC cooling power becomes automatically comparable to the synchrotron power. Under certain conditions, a few higher-order inverse-Compton components also become comparable to the synchrotron and SSC losses, and so the broad-band radiation spectrum of the system consists of several distinct peaks with gradually decreasing luminosity, separated by a factor of $\tau_T^{-1} \gg 1$ from each other. The number of these spectral components is governed by synchrotron self-absorption and Klein-Nishina effects. These findings have important implications for several classes of high-energy astrophysical systems including pulsar wind nebulae and black-hole-driven accretion flows, jets, and radio-lobes.
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Authors
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Dmitri Uzdensky
University of Colorado, University of Colorado Boulder and IAS, Center for Integrated Plasma Studies, Physics Department, University of Colorado, Center for Integrated Plasma Studies, University of Colorado, Boulder