Testing the Standard Fireball Model of Gamma-ray Bursts Using Late X-ray Afterglows Measured by Swift
نویسندگان
چکیده
We show that all X-ray decay curves of -ray bursts (GRBs) measured by Swift can be fitted using one or two components, both of which have exactly the same functional form comprised of an early falling exponential phase followed by a power-law decay. The first component contains the prompt -ray emission and the initial X-ray decay. The second component appears later, has a much longer duration, and is present for 80% of GRBs. It most likely arises from the external shock that eventually develops into the X-ray afterglow. In the remaining 20% of GRBs the initial X-ray decay of the first component fades more slowly than the second and dominates at late times to form an afterglow. The temporal decay parameters and /X-ray spectral indices derived for 107 GRBs are compared to the expectations of the standard fireball model including a search for possible ‘‘jet breaks.’’ For 50% of GRBs the observed afterglow is in accord with the model, but for the rest the temporal and spectral indices do not conform to the expected closure relations and are suggestive of continued, late, energy injection. We identify a few possible jet breaks, but there are many examples where such breaks are predicted but are absent. The time Ta at which the exponential phase of the second component changes to a final power-lawdecay afterglow is correlatedwith the peak of the -ray spectrum, Epeak. This is analogous to the Ghirlanda relation, indicating that this time is in someway related to optically observed break times measured for pre-Swift bursts. Subject headingg s: gamma rays: bursts — ISM: jets and outflows — radiation mechanisms: nonthermal Online material: color figures
منابع مشابه
Testing the Fireball/blastwave Model by Monitoring Afterglows from Soft Gamma Repeaters
The popular fireball/blastwave model of classical γ-ray bursts is applied to soft γ-ray bursts. It is found that X-ray afterglows from strong events may be above their quiescent levels for 40 − 400 seconds. Optical afterglows may also be detectable. By monitoring the three repeaters, we will have an ideal way to check the fireball/blastwave model.
متن کاملLate-Time X-ray Flares during GRB Afterglows: Extended Internal Engine Activity
Observations of gamma ray bursts (GRBs) with Swift produced the initially surprising result that many bursts have large X-ray flares superimposed on the underlying afterglow. These flares were sometimes intense, rapid, and late relative to the nominal prompt phase. The most intense of these flares was observed by XRT with a flux > 500× the afterglow. This burst then surprised observers by flari...
متن کاملLooking into the Fireball: Rotse-iii and Swift Observations of Early Grb Afterglows
We report on a complete set of early optical afterglows of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) obtained with the ROTSE-III telescope network from March 2005 through June 2007. This set is comprised of 12 afterglows with early optical and Swift/XRT observations, with a median ROTSE-III response time of 45 s after the start of γ-ray emission (8 s after the GCN notice time). These afterglows span four orders ...
متن کاملX-ray Hardness Evolution in GRB Afterglows and Flares: Late Time GRB Activity Without NH Variations
We show that the X-ray and γ-ray spectra of Swift GRBs and their afterglows are consistent with the emission characteristic of an expanding, relativistic fireball. The classical afterglow due to the impact of the fireball on the external medium is often not observed until one to several hours after the GRB. Focusing on GRBs 061121, 060614, and 060124, but generalizing to the full (>50 Msec XRT ...
متن کاملFireball and Cannonball Models of Gamma-Ray Bursts Confront Observations
The two leading contenders for the theory of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and their afterglows, the Fireball and Cannonball models, are compared and their predictions are confronted, within space limitations, with key observations, including recent observations with SWIFT.
متن کامل