The Two-Component Afterglow of Swift GRB 050802
S. R. Oates, M. De Pasquale, M.J. Page, A.J. Blustin, S. Zane, K., McGowan, K.O. Mason, T.S. Poole, P. Schady, P.W.A. Roming, K.L. Page, A., Falcone, N. Gehrels

TL;DR
This study analyzes the complex afterglow behavior of Swift GRB 050802, revealing a two-component jet model with energy injection and a jet break, challenging the typical achromatic break expectations.
Contribution
It introduces a two-component jet model with energy injection to explain the afterglow features of GRB 050802, providing insights into jet structure and break phenomena.
Findings
X-ray lightcurve shows three segments with a break at 5000s.
Optical afterglow decays as a single power-law, inconsistent with a single component.
Two-component jet model with energy injection best explains observations.
Abstract
This paper investigates GRB 050802, one of the best examples of a it Swift gamma-ray burst afterglow that shows a break in the X-ray lightcurve, while the optical counterpart decays as a single power-law. This burst has an optically bright afterglow of 16.5 magnitude, detected throughout the 170-650nm spectral range of the UVOT on-board Swift. Observations began with the XRT and UVOT telescopes 286s after the initial trigger and continued for 1.2 x 10^6s. The X-ray lightcurve consists of three power-law segments: a rise until 420s, followed by a slow decay with alpha_2 = 0.63 +/- 0.03 until 5000s, after which, the lightcurve decays faster with a slope of alpha_3 = 1.59 +/- 0.03. The optical lightcurve decays as a single power-law with alpha_O = 0.82 +/- 0.03 throughout the observation. The X-ray data on their own are consistent with the break at 5000s being due to the end of energy…
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