Diagnosing the outflow from the SGR 1806-20 giant flare with radio observations

被引:74
作者
Granot, J
Ramirez-Ruiz, E
Taylor, GB
Eichler, D
Lyubarsky, YE
Wijers, RAMJ
Gaensler, BM
Gelfand, JD
Kouveliotou, C
机构
[1] Stanford Univ, KIPAC, Stanford, CA 94309 USA
[2] Inst Adv Study, Princeton, NJ 08540 USA
[3] Natl Radio Astron Observ, Socorro, NM 87801 USA
[4] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Dept Phys, IL-84105 Beer Sheva, Israel
[5] Univ Amsterdam, Astron Inst Anton Pannekoek, NL-1098 SJ Amsterdam, Netherlands
[6] Harvard Smithsonian Ctr Astrophys, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
[7] NASA, George C Marshall Space Flight Ctr, NSSTC, Huntsville, AL 35805 USA
关键词
hydrodynamics; ISM : bubbles; pulsars : individual (SGR 1806-20); stars : flare; stars : neutron; stars; winds; outflows;
D O I
10.1086/497680
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
On 2004 December 27, the soft gamma repeater (SGR) 1806-20 emitted the brightest giant flare (GF) ever detected from an SGR. This burst of energy, which resulted in an ( isotropic) energy release similar to 100 times greater than the only two other known SGR GFs, was followed by a very bright, fading radio afterglow. Extensive follow-up radio observations provided a wealth of information with unprecedented astrometric precision, revealing the temporal evolution of the source size, along with densely sampled light curves and spectra. Here we expand on our previous work on this source, by explaining these observations within one self-consistent dynamical model. In this scenario, the early radio emission is due to the outflow ejected during the GF energizing a thin shell surrounding a preexisting cavity, where the observed steep temporal decay of the radio emission seen beginning on day 9 is attributed to the adiabatic cooling of the shocked shell. The shocked ejecta and external shell move outward together, driving a forward shock into the ambient medium, and are eventually decelerated by a reverse shock. As we show in a separate work by Gelfand and coworkers, the radio emission from the shocked external medium naturally peaks when significant deceleration occurs and then decays relatively slowly. The dynamical modeling of the collision between the ejecta and the external shell, together with the observed evolution of the source size ( which is nicely reproduced in our model), suggests that most of the energy in the outflow was in mildly relativistic material, with an initial expansion velocity v/c <= d(15)(1 + d(15)(2))(-1/2) similar to 0.7, for a distance of 15d(15) kpc to SGR 1806-20. An initially highly relativistic outflow would not have produced a long coasting phase at a mildly relativistic expansion velocity, as was observed.
引用
收藏
页码:391 / 396
页数:6
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