A Comprehensive Analysis of Swift/XRT Data: III. Jet Break Candidates in X-ray and Optical Afterglow Lightcurves
En-Wei Liang, Judith L. Racusin, Bing Zhang, Bin-Bin Zhang, and David, N. Burrows

TL;DR
This study systematically investigates jet break candidates in Swift/XRT and optical afterglow lightcurves of GRBs, revealing challenges in confirming jet breaks and implications for GRB energetics and jet opening angles.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of jet break candidates, highlighting the difficulty in definitively identifying jet breaks and assessing their impact on GRB energetics.
Findings
No burst meets all criteria for a definitive jet break.
Many candidates show decay slopes >1.5 but lack achromaticity.
Derived jet energies show larger scatter than pre-Swift samples.
Abstract
The Swift/XRT data of 179 GRBs (from 050124 to 070129) and the optical afterglow data of 57 pre- and post-Swift GRBs are analyzed, in order to systematically investigate the jet-like breaks in the X-ray and optical afterglow lightcurves. We find that not a single burst can be included in the ``Platinum'' sample, in which the data satisfy all the criteria of a jet break. By releasing one or more requirements to define a jet break, some candidates of various degrees could be identified. In the X-ray band, 42 out of the 103 well-sampled X-ray lightcurves have a decay slope of the post-break segment >1.5 (``Bronze'' sample), and 27 of them also satisfy the closure relations of the forward models (``Silver'' sample). The numbers of the ``Bronze'' and ``Silver'' candidates in the optical lightcurves are 27 and 23, respectively. Thirteen bursts have well-sampled optical and X-ray lightcurves,…
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