The possible ubiquity of energy injection in Gamma-Ray Burst afterglows
A. Panaitescu, W. T. Vestrand

TL;DR
This paper analyzes Swift X-ray afterglow data from Gamma-Ray Bursts, finding that energy injection likely explains many observed light-curve breaks, with implications for understanding jet dynamics and afterglow physics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of X-ray afterglow breaks, demonstrating that energy injection is a common mechanism behind these features and deriving related analytical models.
Findings
Approximately 30% of afterglows have jet-breaks consistent with collimated outflows.
An additional 56% of breaks can be explained by steady energy injection.
Some breaks are due to sudden changes in energy injection rate, not jets.
Abstract
Since its launch in 2004, the Swift satellite has monitored the X-ray afterglows of several hundred Gamma-Ray Bursts, and revealed that their X-ray light-curves are more complex than previously thought, exhibiting up to three power-law segments. Energy injection into the relativistic blast-wave energizing the burst ambient medium has been proposed most often to be the reason for the X-ray afterglow complexity. We examine 117 light-curve breaks of 98 Swift X-ray afterglows, selected for their high-quality monitoring and well-constrained flux decay rates. Thirty percent of afterglows have a break that can be an adiabatic jet-break, in the sense that there is one variant of the forward-shock emission from a collimated outflow model that can account for both the pre- and post-break flux power-law decay indices, given the measured X-ray spectral slope. If allowance is made for a steady…
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