GRB 091127: The cooling break race on magnetic fuel
Robert Filgas, Jochen Greiner, Patricia Schady, Thomas Kruehler, Adria, C. Updike, Sylvio Klose, Marco Nardini, David Alexander Kann, Andrea Rossi,, Vladimir Sudilovsky, Paulo M. J. Afonso, Christian Clemens, Jonny Elliott,, Ana Nicuesa Guelbenzu, Felipe Olivares Estay, Arne Rau

TL;DR
This study uses comprehensive multi-wavelength data of GRB 091127 to test the synchrotron fireball model, revealing that the observed cooling break evolution challenges standard predictions and suggests evolving microphysical parameters.
Contribution
It provides the first accurate measurements of the cooling break sharpness and its evolution, highlighting the need for time-dependent microphysical parameters in GRB models.
Findings
Cooling break moves from high to lower energies over time.
Observed break evolution (nu_c ∝ t^-1.2) contradicts standard model predictions.
Time-dependent microphysical parameters may be necessary for accurate modeling.
Abstract
Using high-quality, broad-band afterglow data for GRB 091127, we investigate the validity of the synchrotron fireball model for gamma-ray bursts, and infer physical parameters of the ultra-relativistic outflow. We used multi-wavelength follow-up observations obtained with GROND and the XRT onboard the Swift satellite. The resulting afterglow light curve is of excellent accuracy, and the spectral energy distribution is well-sampled over 5 decades in energy. These data present one of the most comprehensive observing campaigns for a single GRB afterglow and allow us to test several proposed emission models and outflow characteristics in unprecedented detail. Both the multi-color light curve and the broad-band SED of the afterglow of GRB 091127 show evidence of a cooling break moving from high to lower energies. The early light curve is well described by a broken power-law, where the…
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