English

Gamma-radiation sky maps from compact binaries

High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena 2022-02-18 v2 General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology

Abstract

We study sky maps and light curves of gamma-ray emission from neutron stars in compact binaries, and in isolation. We briefly review some gamma-ray emission models, and reproduce sky maps from a standard isolated pulsar in the Separatrix Layer model. We consider isolated pulsars with several variations of a dipole magnetic field, including superpositions, and predict their gamma-ray emission. Our results provide new heuristics on what can and cannot be inferred about the magnetic field configuration of pulsars from high-energy observations. We find that typical double-peak light curves can be produced by pulsars with significant multipole structure beyond a single dipole. For binary systems, we also present a simple approximation that is useful for rapid explorations of binary magnetic field structure. Finally, we predict the gamma-ray emission pattern from a compact black hole-neutron star binary moments before merger by applying the Separatrix Layer model to data simulated in full general relativity; we find that face-on observers receive little emission, equatorial observers see one broad peak, and more generic observers typically see two peaks.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2107.07020,
  title  = {Gamma-radiation sky maps from compact binaries},
  author = {Néstor Ortiz and Federico Carrasco and Stephen R. Green and Luis Lehner and Steven L. Liebling and John Ryan Westernacher-Schneider},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2107.07020},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

29 pages, 19 figures. Matches published version

R2 v1 2026-06-24T04:12:39.071Z