Many relativistic plasma environments in high-energy astrophysics, including pulsar wind nebulae (PWN), hot accretion flows on to black holes, relativistic jets in active galactic nuclei and gamma-ray bursts, and giant radio lobes, are naturally turbulent. The plasma in these environments is often so hot that synchrotron and inverse-Compton (IC) radiative cooling becomes important. In this paper, we investigate the general thermodynamic and radiative properties (and hence the observational appearance) of an optically thin relativistically hot plasma stirred by driven magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) turbulence and cooled by radiation. We find that if the system reaches a statistical equilibrium where turbulent heating is balanced by radiative cooling, the effective electron temperature tends to attain a universal value θ = kTe/mec2 ~ 1/ √τ T, where τ T = ne σTL ≪ is the system's Thomson optical depth, essentially independent of the strength of turbulent driving and hence of the magnetic field. This is because both MHD turbulent dissipation and synchrotron cooling are proportional to the magnetic energy density. We also find that synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) cooling and perhaps a few higher order IC components are automatically comparable to synchrotron in this regime. The overall broad-band radiation spectrum then consists of several distinct components (synchrotron, SSC, etc.), well separated in photon energy (by a factor ~τT-1) and roughly equal in power. The number of IC peaks is checked by Klein-Nishina effects and depends logarithmically on τ T and the magnetic field. We also examine the limitations due to synchrotron self-absorption, explore applications to Crab PWN and blazar jets, and discuss links to radiative magnetic reconnection.
CITATION STYLE
Uzdensky, D. A. (2018). Relativistic turbulence with strong synchrotron and synchrotron self-Compton cooling. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 477(3), 2849–2857. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/sty721
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