A Revised Analysis of Gamma Ray Bursts' prompt efficiencies
Paz Beniamini, Lara Nava, Tsvi Piran

TL;DR
This paper reevaluates the efficiency of gamma-ray bursts' prompt emission by incorporating inverse Compton cooling effects, revealing that the true efficiency may be much lower than earlier estimates, especially with weaker magnetic fields.
Contribution
It introduces a revised analysis of GRB efficiencies considering low magnetic field equipartition fractions and inverse Compton cooling, challenging previous high-efficiency estimates.
Findings
Prompt efficiency is around 15% for low magnetic fields.
Inverse Compton cooling can explain observed correlations.
Previous estimates overstate efficiency by neglecting IC losses.
Abstract
The prompt Gamma-Ray Bursts' (GRBs) efficiency is an important clue on the emission mechanism producing the -rays. Previous estimates of the kinetic energy of the blast waves, based on the X-ray afterglow luminosity , suggested that this efficiency is large, with values above 90\% in some cases. This poses a problem to emission mechanisms and in particular to the internal shocks model. These estimates are based, however, on the assumption that the X-ray emitting electrons are fast cooling and that their Inverse Compton (IC) losses are negligible. The observed correlations between (and hence the blast wave energy) and , the isotropic equivalent energy in the prompt emission, has been considered as observational evidence supporting this analysis. It is reasonable that the prompt gamma-ray energy and the blast wave kinetic energy are correlated and…
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