Thermal Radiation from Isolated Neutron Stars: Spectra and Polarizations
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Recent observations of surface emission from isolated neutron stars (NSs) provide unique challenges to theoretical modeling of thermal radiative processes. We construct models of thermal emission from strongly magnetized NSs in which the outermost layer of the NS is in a condensed liquid or solid form, or is an ionized H or He atmosphere.
We calculate the emission properties (spectrum and polarization) of NSs with condensed Fe and H surfaces using a generalized form of Kirchhoff's Law, in the regimes where condensation may be possible. For smooth condensed surfaces, the overall emission is reduced from blackbody by less than a factor of two. The spectrum exhibits modest deviation from blackbody across a wide energy range, and shows mild absorption features associated with the electron plasma and ion cyclotron frequencies in the condensed matter. The roughness of the solid Fe condensate decreases the reflectivity of the surface, making the emission spectrum even closer to blackbody.
We provide an accurate treatment of vacuum polarization effects in magnetized NS atmosphere models. We treat the conversion of photon modes (due to ``vacuum resonance'' between plasma and vacuum polarizations), employing both the modal radiative transfer equations (coupled with an accurate mode conversion probability at the vacuum resonance) and the full radiative transfer equations for the photon Stokes parameters. We are able to quantitatively calculate the atmosphere structure, emission spectra, beam patterns, and polarizations for the range of magnetic field strengths
We investigate the propagation of photon polarization in NS magnetospheres, and show that vacuum polarization induces a unique energy-dependent linear polarization signature, and can generate circular polarization in the magnetospheres of rapidly rotating NSs. We discuss the implications of our results for observations of thermally emitting isolated NSs and magnetars, and the prospects for future spectral and polarization studies.