Two types of softening detected in X-ray afterglows of Swift bursts: internal and external shock origins?
Y.-P. Qin (1,2), A. C. Gupta (3,1), J. H. Fan (1), R.-J. Lu (2)((1), Center for Astrophysics, Guangzhou University, China (2) Guangxi University,, Nanning, China (3) ARIES, Nainital, India)

TL;DR
This study identifies two distinct softening types in Swift burst X-ray afterglows, linking early softening to internal shocks and late softening to external shocks, based on their timing, behavior, and spectral evolution.
Contribution
It provides evidence for different origins of softening in X-ray afterglows, distinguishing between internal and external shock processes based on observational correlations and spectral analysis.
Findings
Early softening correlates with internal shock origin.
Late softening correlates with external shock origin.
Different spectral and temporal behaviors support distinct origins.
Abstract
The softening process observed in the steep decay phase of early X-ray afterglows of Swift bursts has remained a puzzle since its discovery. The softening process can also be observed in the later phase of the bursts and its cause has also been unknown. Recently, it was suggested that, influenced by the curvature effect, emission from high latitudes would shift the Band function spectrum from higher energy band to lower band, and this would give rise to the observed softening process accompanied by a steep decay of the flux density. The curvature effect scenario predicts that the terminating time of the softening process would be correlated with the duration of the process. In this paper, based on the data from the UNLV GRB group web-site, we found an obvious correlation between the two quantities. In addition, we found that the softening process can be divided into two classes: the…
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