When GRB afterglows get softer, hard components come into play
A. Moretti (1), R. Margutti (1,2), F. Pasotti (1,2), A.P. Beardmore, (3), S. Campana (1), G. Chincarini (2,1), S. Covino (1), O. Godet (3), C., Guidorzi (2,1) J.P. Osborne (3), P. Romano (2,1), G. Tagliaferri (1) ((1), INAF-OAB; (2) U. Bicocca; (3) U. Leicester)

TL;DR
This study analyzes early GRB afterglow spectra, revealing that simple models often fail and that additional components like blackbody or extra power laws are needed to explain high-energy excesses.
Contribution
It demonstrates that common spectral models are insufficient for some GRB afterglows, highlighting the need for additional components to accurately describe the spectra.
Findings
High-energy excesses are present in some GRB spectra.
Adding blackbody or second power law components improves spectral fits.
Simple models are inadequate for describing early afterglow emission.
Abstract
We aim to investigate the ability of simple spectral models to describe the GRB early afterglow emission. We performed a time resolved spectral analysis of a bright GRB sample detected by the Swift Burst Alert Telescope and promptly observed by the Swift X-ray Telescope,with spectroscopically measured redshift in the period April 2005 -- January 2007. The sample consists of 22 GRBs and a total of 214 spectra. We restricted our analysis to the softest spectra sub--sample which consists of 13 spectra with photon index > 3. In this sample we found that four spectra, belonging to GRB060502A, GRB060729, GRB060904B, GRB061110A prompt--afterglow transition phase, cannot be modeled neither by a single power law nor by the Band model. Instead we find that the data present high energy (> 3 keV, in the observer frame) excesses with respect to these models. We estimated the joint statistical…
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