Synchrotron Self-inverse Compton Radiation From Reverse-shock on GRB120326A
Yuji Urata (NCU), Kuiyun Huang (ASIAA/NTNU), Satoko Takahashi, (JAO/NAOJ/ASIAA), Myungshin Im (CEOU, SNU), Kazutaka Yamaoka (STE, Nagoya U),, Makoto Tashiro (Saitama U), Jae-Woo Kim (CEOU, SNU), Minsung Jang (CEOU,, SNU), and Soojong Pak (Kyung Hee U)

TL;DR
This paper presents multi-wavelength observations of GRB120326A, highlighting the potential role of synchrotron self-inverse Compton radiation from reverse shocks in explaining its afterglow properties, supported by rapid submillimeter detection.
Contribution
It introduces the first rapid submillimeter detection of this GRB and proposes a model involving reverse shock synchrotron self-inverse Compton radiation to explain its afterglow.
Findings
Fastest submillimeter detection at 230 GHz among seven GRBs
X-ray and optical emissions suggest different radiation processes
Reverse shock synchrotron self-inverse Compton radiation is a plausible explanation
Abstract
We present multi-wavelength observations of a typical long duration GRB 120326A at , including rapid observations using a submillimeter array (SMA), and a comprehensive monitoring in X-ray and optical. The SMA observation provided the fastest detection to date among seven submillimeter afterglows at 230 GHz. The prompt spectral analysis, using Swift and Suzaku yielded a spectral peak energy of keV and equivalent isotropic energy of as erg. The temporal evolution and spectral properties in the optical were consistent with the standard forward shock synchrotron with jet collimation (). The forward shock modeling using a 2D relativistic hydrodynamic jet simulation also determined the reasonable burst explosion and the synchrotron radiation parameters for…
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