Optical afterglows of Gamma-Ray Bursts: peaks, plateaus, and possibilities
A. Panaitescu, W.T. Vestrand

TL;DR
This paper analyzes optical afterglow light-curves of gamma-ray bursts, identifying different types, their correlations with burst properties, and proposing models for their origins based on observational data.
Contribution
It classifies optical afterglows into peaks and plateaus, correlates their energies with GRB outputs, and suggests different physical origins for each type based on observational patterns.
Findings
Peaky afterglows are strongly correlated with GRB output.
Plateau afterglows likely originate from long-lived engines.
Optical and X-ray light-curves show both coupled and decoupled behaviors.
Abstract
The optical light-curves of GRB afterglows display either peaks or plateaus. We identify 16 afterglows of the former type, 17 of the latter, and 4 with broad peaks, that could be of either type. The optical energy release of these two classes is similar and is correlated with the GRB output, the correlation being stronger for peaky afterglows, which suggests that the burst and afterglow emissions of peaky afterglows are from the same relativistic ejecta and that the optical emission of afterglows with plateaus arises more often from ejecta that did not produce the burst emission. Consequently, we propose that peaky optical afterglows are from impulsive ejecta releases and that plateau optical afterglows originate from long-lived engines, the break in the optical light-curve (peak or plateau end) marking the onset of the entire outflow deceleration. In the peak luminosity--peak…
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