Coasting external shock in wind medium: an origin for the X-ray plateau decay component in Swift GRB afterglows
Rongfeng Shen, Christopher D. Matzner (University of Toronto)

TL;DR
This study explains about half of Swift GRB X-ray afterglow plateaus through a coasting external shock in a wind medium, providing new insights into GRB progenitors and ejecta dynamics.
Contribution
It introduces a model where the X-ray plateau results from a coasting external shock in a wind medium, without requiring energy injection, and constrains initial Lorentz factors and energies.
Findings
55% of X-ray plateaus explained by coasting shock in wind medium
Upper limit for initial Lorentz factor 0 46 for consistent bursts
Ejecta energy estimated around 10^{53} erg for plateau end times
Abstract
The plateaus observed in about one half of the early X-ray afterglows are the most puzzling feature in gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) detected by Swift. By analyzing the temporal and spectral indices of a large X-ray plateau sample, we find that 55% can be explained by external, forward shock synchrotron emission produced by a relativistic ejecta coasting in a \rho ~ r^{-2}, wind-like medium; no energy injection into the shock is needed. After the ejecta collects enough medium and transitions to the adiabatic, decelerating blastwave phase, it produces the post-plateau decay. For those bursts consistent with this model, we find an upper limit for the initial Lorentz factor of the ejecta, \Gamma_0 \leq 46 (\epsilon_e/0.1)^{-0.24} (\epsilon_B/0.01)^{0.17}; the isotropic equivalent total ejecta energy is E_{iso} ~ 10^{53} (\epsilon_e/0.1)^{-1.3} (\epsilon_B/0.01)^{-0.09} (t_b/10^4 s) erg, where…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
