Gamma-Ray Bursts in Circumstellar Shells: A Possible Explanation for Flares
Robert A. Mesler, Daniel J. Whalen, Nicole M. Lloyd-Ronning, Chris L., Fryer, and Ylva M. Pihlstr\"om

TL;DR
This paper investigates how complex circumstellar environments, especially shells around massive stars, influence gamma-ray burst light curves, offering explanations for observed X-ray flares and methods to analyze diverse environments.
Contribution
The authors develop an analytical approach to model GRB light curves in complex environments, highlighting the impact of shells and winds on observable features, advancing understanding of progenitor surroundings.
Findings
Massive shells produce distinctive signatures in GRB light curves.
Interactions with shells can explain observed X-ray flares.
Method applicable to diverse environments like high-redshift halos.
Abstract
It is now generally accepted that long-duration gamma ray bursts (GRBs) are due to the collapse of massive rotating stars. The precise collapse process itself, however, is not yet fully understood. Strong winds, outbursts, and intense ionizing UV radiation from single stars or strongly interacting binaries are expected to destroy the molecular cloud cores that give birth to them and create highly complex circumburst environments for the explosion. Such environments might imprint features on GRB light curves that uniquely identify the nature of the progenitor and its collapse. We have performed numerical simulations of realistic environments for a variety of long-duration GRB progenitors with ZEUS-MP, and have developed an analytical method for calculating GRB light curves in these profiles. Though a full, three-dimensional, relativistic magnetohydrodynamical computational model is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astro and Planetary Science · Planetary Science and Exploration
