GRB Energetics in the Swift Era
Daniel Kocevski, Nathaniel Butler

TL;DR
This study analyzes the energetics of 76 Swift-detected gamma-ray bursts, revealing that X-ray light curve breaks suggest a wider energy distribution than previously thought, challenging the standard energy model.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of X-ray light curves for Swift GRBs, highlighting differences from optical observations and implications for jet break interpretations.
Findings
Most GRBs have high enough redshift/low fluence for late jet breaks
X-ray breaks are shallower and occur earlier than optical breaks
The energy distribution post-Swift is broader than pre-Swift estimates
Abstract
We examine the rest frame energetics of 76 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) with known redshift that were detected by the Swift spacecraft and monitored by the satellite's X-ray Telescope (XRT). Using the bolometric fluence values estimated in Butler et al. 2007b and the last XRT observation for each event, we set a lower limit the their collimation corrected energy Eg and find that a 68% of our sample are at high enough redshift and/or low enough fluence to accommodate a jet break occurring beyond the last XRT observation and still be consistent with the pre-Swift Eg distribution for long GRBs. We find that relatively few of the X-ray light curves for the remaining events show evidence for late-time decay slopes that are consistent with that expected from post jet break emission. The breaks in the X-ray light curves that do exist tend to be shallower and occur earlier than the breaks previously…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astro and Planetary Science
