Inverse Compton cooling in Klein-Nishina regime and GRB prompt spectrum
Abstract
Synchrotron radiation mechanism, when electrons are accelerated in a relativistic shock, is known to have serious problems to explain the observed gamma-ray spectrum below the peak for most Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs); the synchrotron spectrum below the peak is much softer than observed spectra. Recently, the possibility that electrons responsible for the radiation cool via Inverse Compton, but in the Klein-Nishina regime, has been proposed as a solution to this problem. We provide an analytical study of this effect and show that it leads to a hardening of the low energy spectrum but not by enough to make it consistent with the observed spectra for most GRBs (this is assuming that electrons are injected continuously over a time scale comparable to the dynamical time scale, as is expected for internal shocks of GRBs). In particular, we find that it is not possible to obtain a spectrum with α>-0.1 (f α) whereas the typical observed value is α0. Moreover, extreme values for a number of parameters are required in order that α-0.1: the energy fraction in magnetic field needs to be less than about 10-4, the thermal Lorentz factor of electrons should be larger than 106, and the radius where gamma-rays are produced should be not too far away from the deceleration radius. These difficulties suggest that the synchrotron radiation mechanism in internal shocks does not provide a self-consistent solution when α>-0.2.
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