Abstract
On December 27, 2004, a giant flare from SGR 1806$-$20 was detected on earth. Its thermal spectrum and temperature suggest that the flare resulted from an energy release of about $10^{47}$ erg/sec close to the surface of a neutron star in the form of radiation and/or pairs. This plasma expanded under its own pressure producing a fireball and the observed gamma-rays escaped once the fireball became optically thin. The giant flare was followed by a bright radio afterglow, with an observable extended size, implying an energetic relativistic outflow. We revisit here the evolution of relativistic fireballs and we calculate the Lorentz factor and energy remaining in relativistic outflow once the radiation escapes. We show that pairs that arise naturally in a pure pairs-radiation fireball do not carry enough energy to account for the observed afterglow. We consider various alternatives and we show that if the relativistic outflow that causes the afterglow is related directly to the prompt flare, then the initial fireball must be loaded by baryons or Poynting flux. While we focus on parameters applicable to the giant flare and the radio afterglow of SGR 1806$-$20 the calculations presented here might be also applicable to GRBs.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Nakar, E., Piran, T., & Sari, R. (2005). Pure and Loaded Fireballs in Soft Gamma‐Ray Repeater Giant Flares. The Astrophysical Journal, 635(1), 516–521. https://doi.org/10.1086/497296
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.