The Dynamics and Afterglow Radiation of Gamma-Ray Bursts. I. Constant Density Medium
Weiqun Zhang (NYU), Andrew MacFadyen (NYU)

TL;DR
This study uses advanced 2D relativistic hydrodynamic simulations to analyze gamma-ray burst afterglows, revealing slow jet expansion, sharper jet breaks, and late-time flux features, challenging some previous analytic assumptions.
Contribution
It provides detailed numerical insights into GRB afterglow dynamics, especially the slow sideways expansion and the late-time counter jet emission, improving upon prior analytic models.
Findings
Jet sideways expansion is slower than previously estimated.
Jet break in lightcurves is mainly due to missing flux at the jet edge.
Late-time bump in lightcurves may be caused by counter jet radiation.
Abstract
Direct multi-dimensional numerical simulation is the most reliable approach for calculating the fluid dynamics and observational signatures of relativistic jets in gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). We present a two-dimensional relativistic hydrodynamic simulation of a GRB outflow during the afterglow phase, which uses the fifth-order weighted essentially non-oscillatory scheme and adaptive mesh refinement. Initially, the jet has a Lorentz factor of 20. We have followed its evolution up to 150 years. Using the hydrodynamic data, we calculate synchrotron radiation based upon standard afterglow models and compare our results with previous analytic work. We find that the sideways expansion of a relativistic GRB jet is a very slow process and previous analytic works have overestimated its rate. In our computed lightcurves, a very sharp jet break is seen and the post-break lightcurves are steeper than…
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