A Comprehensive Study of Gamma-Ray Burst Optical Emission: II. Afterglow Onset and Late Re-Brightening Components
En-Wei Liang (GXU), Liang Li (GXU), He Gao (UNLV), Bing Zhang (UNLV),, Yun-Feng Liang (GXU), Xue-Feng Wu (PMO), Shuang-Xi Yi (NJU), Zi-Gao Dai, (NJU), Qing-Wen Tang (GXU), Jie-Min Chen (GXU), L. Hou-Jun (GXU), Jin Zhang, (NAOC), Rui-Jing Lu (GXU), L.V. Lian-Zhong (GXU)

TL;DR
This study systematically analyzes optical lightcurves of gamma-ray bursts, decomposing early and late bumps, revealing their properties, correlations, and implications for the fireball environment and jet components.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive statistical analysis of both onset and re-brightening bumps in GRB optical afterglows, linking their properties to physical models.
Findings
Onset and re-brightening bumps are observed in 38 and 26 GRBs, respectively.
Peak luminosity is anti-correlated with peak time for both bumps.
The medium density profile follows n∝r^{-1}, supporting synchrotron shock models.
Abstract
We continue our systematic statistical study of various components in gamma-ray burst (GRB) optical lightcurves. We decompose the early onset bump and the late re-brightening bump with empirical fits and analyze their statistical properties. Among the 146 GRBs that have well-sampled optical lightcurves, the onset and re-brightening bumps are observed in 38 and 26 GRBs, respectively. It is found that the typical rising and decaying slopes for both the onset and re-brightening bumps are ~1.5 and -1.15, respectively. No early onset bumps in the X-ray band are detected to be associated with the optical onset bumps, while an X-ray re-brightening bump is detected for half of the re-brightening optical bumps. The peak luminosity is anti-correlated with the peak time, L_p\propto t_{p}^{-1.81+/-0.32} and L_p\propto t_{p}^{-0.83+/-0.17} for the onset and re-brightening bumps, respectively. Both…
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