GRB Afterglow Blast Wave Encountering Sudden Circumburst Density Change Produces No Flares
Ilana Gat, Hendrik van Eerten, Andrew MacFadyen

TL;DR
This study models the interaction of gamma-ray burst afterglow blast waves with sudden changes in surrounding medium density, concluding such encounters do not produce observable flares in the light curves.
Contribution
The paper provides the first detailed computational and analytical analysis showing that sudden density changes in the circumburst environment do not generate observable flares in GRB afterglows.
Findings
Flares are not produced by density jumps like wind termination shocks.
Two-dimensional simulations reveal blast wave spreading and edge effects.
Analytical models confirm the absence of flares for various density transitions.
Abstract
Afterglows of gamma-ray bursts are observed to produce light curves with the flux following power law evolution in time. However, recent observations reveal bright flares at times on the order of minutes to days. One proposed explanation for these flares is the interaction of a relativistic blast wave with a circumburst density transition. In this paper, we model this type of interaction computationally in one and two dimensions, using a relativistic hydrodynamics code with adaptive mesh refinement called ram, and analytically in one dimension. We simulate a blast wave traveling in a stellar wind environment that encounters a sudden change in density, followed by a homogeneous medium, and compute the observed radiation using a synchrotron model. We show that flares are not observable for an encounter with a sudden density increase, such as a wind termination shock, nor for an encounter…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astro and Planetary Science
