Adiabatic expansion, early X-ray data and the central engine in GRBs
نویسندگان
چکیده
The Swift satellite early X-ray data show a very steep decay in most of the gamma-ray bursts light curves. This decay is either produced by the rapidly declining continuation of the central engine activity or by some leftover radiation starting right after the central engine shuts off. The latter scenario consists of the emission from an ‘ember’ that cools via adiabatic expansion and, if the jet angle is larger than the inverse of the source Lorentz factor, the large angle emission. In this work, we calculate the temporal and spectral properties of the emission from such a cooling ember, providing a new treatment for the microphysics of the adiabatic expansion. We use the adiabatic invariance of p⊥/B (p⊥ is the component of the electrons’ momentum normal to the magnetic field, B) to calculate the electrons’ Lorentz factor during the adiabatic expansion; the electron momentum becomes more and more aligned with the local magnetic field as the expansion develops. We compare the theoretical expectations of the adiabatic expansion (and the large angle emission) with the current observations of the early X-ray data and find that only ∼20 per cent of our sample of 107 bursts are potentially consistent with this model. This leads us to believe that, for most bursts, the central engine does not turn off completely during the steep decay of the X-ray light curve; therefore, this phase is produced by the continued rapidly declining activity of the central engine.
منابع مشابه
Prolonged activity of the central engine of Gamma Ray Bursts
We call “prompt" emission of Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) the erratic and violent phase of hard X-ray and soft γ–ray emission, usually lasting for tens of seconds in long GRBs. However, the central engine of GRBs may live much longer. Evidence of it comes from the strange behaviour of the early “afterglow", seen especially in the X–ray band, characterised by a “steep–flat–steep" light–curve, very of...
متن کاملPhysical Processes Shaping Gamma-ray Burst X-ray Afterglow Light Curves: Theoretical Implications from the Swift X-ray Telescope Observations
With the successful launch of the Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Explorer, a rich trove of early X-ray afterglow data has been collected by its onboard X-Ray Telescope (XRT). Some interesting features are emerging, including a distinct rapidly decaying component preceding the conventional afterglow component in many sources, a shallow decay component before the more ‘‘normal’’ decay component observed i...
متن کاملThe early X-ray afterglows of optically bright and dark Gamma-Ray Bursts
A systematical study on the early X-ray afterglows of both optically bright and dark gamma-ray bursts (B-GRBs and D-GRBs) observed by Swift has been presented. Our sample includes 25 GRBs. Among them 13 are B-GRBs and 12 are D-GRBs. Our results show that the distributions of the X-ray afterglow fluxes (FX), the gamma-ray fluxes (Sγ), and the ratio (Rγ,X) for both the D-GRBs and B-GRBs are simil...
متن کاملEarly multi-wavelength emission from Gamma-ray Bursts: from Gamma-ray to X-ray
The study of the early high-energy emission from both long and short Gamma-ray bursts has been revolutionized by the Swift mission. The rapid response of Swift shows that the non-thermal X-ray emission transitions smoothly from the prompt phase into a decaying phase whatever the details of the light curve. The decay is often categorized by a steep-to-shallow transition suggesting that the promp...
متن کاملExternal Shocks, UHECRs, and the Early Afterglow of GRBs
— Highly variable γ-ray pulses and X-ray flares in GRB light curves can result from external shocks rather than central engine activity under the assumption that the GRB blast-wave shell does not spread. Acceleration of cosmic rays to > ∼ 10 eV energies can take place in the external shocks of GRBs. Escape of hadronic energy in the form of UHECRs leads to a rapidly decelerating GRB blast wave, ...
متن کامل