Litcius/Paper detail

Fast Radio Burst Breakouts from Magnetar Burst Fireballs

Kunihito Ioka

2020The Astrophysical Journal Letters46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The recent discovery of a Mega-Jansky radio burst occurring simultaneously with short X-ray bursts from the Galactic magnetar (strongly magnetized neutron star (NS)) SGR 1935+2154 is a smoking gun for the hypothesis that some cosmological fast radio bursts (FRBs) arise from magnetar bursts. We argue that the X-ray bursts with high temperature T ≳ 30 keV entail an electron–positron ( e ± ) outflow from a trapped–expanding fireball, polluting the NS magnetosphere before the FRB emission. The e ± outflow is opaque to induced Compton scatterings of FRB photons, and is strongly Compton-dragged by the X-ray bursts. Nevertheless, the FRB photons can break out of the e ± outflow with radiation forces if the FRB emission radius is larger than a few tens of NS radii. A FRB is choked if the FRB is weaker or the X-ray bursts are stronger, possibly explaining why there are no FRBs with giant flares and no detectable X-ray bursts with weak FRBs. We also speculate that the e ± outflow may be inevitable for FRBs, solving the problem of why the FRBs occur only with high- T X-ray bursts. The breakout physics is important for constraining the emission mechanism and electromagnetic counterparts to future FRBs.

Topics & Concepts

MagnetarPhysicsFast radio burstAstrophysicsOutflowNeutron starRADIUSGamma-ray burstOpacityPhotonPulsarAstronomyComputer scienceComputer securityQuantum mechanicsOpticsMeteorologyPulsars and Gravitational Waves ResearchGamma-ray bursts and supernovaeAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations