A Beaming-Independent Estimate of the Energy Distribution of Long Gamma-Ray Bursts: Initial Results and Future Prospects
Isaac Shivvers, Edo Berger (Harvard)

TL;DR
This study uses late-time radio observations of long gamma-ray bursts to estimate their kinetic energy distribution independently of jet beaming effects, suggesting a robust method with minimal telescope time.
Contribution
It introduces a beaming-independent approach to determine GRB energy distribution using single-epoch radio data at late times, expanding the tools for GRB energetics analysis.
Findings
Median kinetic energy ~7x10^51 erg
Distribution wider than previous estimates
Single-epoch observations can reliably estimate energies
Abstract
We present single-epoch radio afterglow observations of 24 long-duration gamma-ray burst (GRB) on a timescale of >100 d after the burst. These observations trace the afterglow evolution when the blastwave has decelerated to mildly- or non-relativistic velocities and has roughly isotropized. We infer beaming-independent kinetic energies using the Sedov-Taylor self-similar solution, and find a median value for the sample of detected bursts of about 7x10^51 erg, with a 90% confidence range of 1.1x10^50-3.3x10^53 erg. Both the median and 90% confidence range are somewhat larger than the results of multi-wavelength, multi-epoch afterglow modeling (including large beaming corrections), and the distribution of beaming-corrected gamma-ray energies. This is due to bursts in our sample with only a single-frequency observation for which we can only determine an upper bound on the peak of the…
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