Universal scaling law in long gamma-ray bursts
Ryo Tsutsui, Toshikazu Shigeyama

TL;DR
This paper identifies a new universal scaling law in the light curves of Type II long gamma-ray bursts, revealing four distinct phases and potential for these events to serve as standard candles in cosmology.
Contribution
It uncovers a novel scaling law in LGRB II light curves and links it to their hydrodynamical phases, enhancing classification and potential standard candle use.
Findings
Discovered a four-phase universal scaling law in LGRB II light curves
Linked the phases to hydrodynamical evolution of relativistic fireballs
Proposed LGRBs II could serve as standard candles for cosmology
Abstract
Overwhelming diversity of long gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs), discovered after the launch of {\it Swift} satellite, is a major obstacle to LGRB studies. Recently, it is shown that the prompt emission of LGRBs is classified into three subclasses: Type I, Type II LGRBs populating separate fundamental planes in a 3D space defined by the peak luminosity, the duration, and the spectral peak energy, and outliers not belonging to either of the planes. Here we show that Type I LGRBs (LGRBs I) exhibit different shapes of light curves from Type II LGRBs (LGRBs II). Furthermore, we demonstrate that this classification has uncovered a new scaling law in the light curves of LGRBs II spanning 8 orders of magnitude from the prompt to late X-ray afterglow emission. The scaled light curve has four distinct phases. The first phase has a characteristic time scale while the subsequent three phases exhibit power…
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