Statistical Properties of Multiple Optical Emission Components in Gamma-Ray Bursts and Implications
En-Wei Liang (GXU, NAOC, UNLV), Liang Li (GXU), Qing-Wen Tang (GXU),, Jie-Min Chen (GXU), Bing Zhang (UNLV)

TL;DR
This study analyzes optical lightcurves of 146 gamma-ray bursts to understand their emission components, revealing correlations and implications for models of GRB afterglows and jet behavior.
Contribution
It provides a systematic statistical analysis of multiple optical emission components in GRBs and explores their relations to prompt gamma-ray and X-ray afterglow emissions.
Findings
Peak luminosity in prompt and late flares are correlated.
The onset peak luminosity correlates with Eiso and is dimmer when peaking later.
Optical re-brightening shares properties with the onset bump but shows no clear luminosity-Eiso correlation.
Abstract
Well-sampled optical lightcurves of 146 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are complied from the literature. Multiple optical emission components are extracted with power-law function fits to these lightcurves. We present a systematical analysis for statistical properties and their relations to prompt gamma-ray emission and X-ray afterglow for each component. We show that peak luminosity in the prompt and late flares are correlated and the evolution of the peak luminosity may signal the evolution of the accretion rate. No tight correlation between the shallow decay phase/plateau and prompt gamma-ray emission is found. Assuming that they are due to a long-lasting wind injected by a compact object, we show that the injected behavior favors the scenarios of a long-lasting wind after the main burst episode. The peak luminosity of the afterglow onset is tightly correlated with Eiso, and it is dimmer as…
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