A Late-Time Flattening of Light Curves in Gamma-Ray Burst Afterglows
Lorenzo Sironi, Dimitrios Giannios

TL;DR
This paper studies the late-time behavior of gamma-ray burst afterglows, revealing a phase where the shock becomes non-relativistic and the radio emission decays more slowly than previously thought, aiding in GRB energy estimates.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of a deep Newtonian phase in GRB afterglows and derives the associated radio flux decay, refining previous models and improving calorimetry methods.
Findings
Deep Newtonian phase begins ~ 0.5 to several years after GRB.
Radio flux decays as t^{-3(p+1)/10} in this phase.
Decay slopes are between -0.9 and -1.2 for typical parameters.
Abstract
The afterglow emission from Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) is usually interpreted as synchrotron radiation from relativistic electrons accelerated at the GRB external shock, that decelerates from ultra-relativistic to non-relativistic speeds as it sweeps up the surrounding medium. We investigate the temporal decay of the emission from GRB afterglows at late times, when the bulk of the shock-accelerated electrons are non-relativistic. For a uniform circumburst medium, we show that such "deep Newtonian phase" begins at t_{DN} ~ 3 epsilon_{e,-1}^{5/6} t_{ST}, where t_{ST} marks the transition of the blast wave to the non-relativistic spherically-symmetric Sedov-Taylor solution, and epsilon_e = 0.1 epsilon_{e,-1} quantifies the amount of shock energy transferred to the post-shock electrons. For typical parameters, the deep Newtonian stage starts ~ 0.5-several years after the GRB. The radio flux in…
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