# Electromagnetic Counterparts to Structured Jets from Gravitational Wave   Detected Mergers

**Authors:** Gavin P Lamb, Shiho Kobayashi

arXiv: 1706.03000 · 2017-10-18

## TL;DR

This paper investigates how the jet structure and opening angle in gravitational wave detected mergers influence the brightness and detectability of electromagnetic counterparts, especially orphan afterglows, using Monte Carlo simulations.

## Contribution

It introduces a detailed analysis of various jet structures and their impact on EM counterpart brightness, highlighting the potential to identify jet features through lightcurve analysis.

## Key findings

- Homogeneous jets produce ~13.6% detectable counterparts at m_r ≤ 21.
- Structured jets with extended angles increase detection probability to ~37%.
- Lightcurve features can reveal jet structure and energy distribution.

## Abstract

We show the peak magnitude for orphan afterglows from the jets of gravitational wave (GW) detected black-hole/neutron star - neutron star (BH/NS-NS) mergers highly depends on the jet half-opening angle $\theta_j$. Short $\gamma$-ray bursts (GRB) with a homogeneous jet structure and $\theta_j>10^\circ$, the orphan afterglow viewed at the typical inclination for a GW detected event, 38$^\circ$, is brighter at optical frequencies than the comparable macronova emission. Structured jets, where the energetics and Lorentz factor $\Gamma$ vary with angle from the central axis, may have low-$\Gamma$ components where the prompt emission is suppressed; GW electromagnetic (EM) counterparts may reveal a population of failed-GRB orphan afterglows. Using a Monte Carlo method assuming a NS-NS detection limit we show the fraction of GW-EM counterparts from homogeneous, two-component, power-law structured, and Gaussian jets where the variable structure models include a wide low energy and $\Gamma$ component: for homogeneous jets, with a {$\theta_j=6^\circ$ and typical short GRB parameters, we find {\it r}-band magnitude $m_r\leq21$ counterparts for $\sim 13.6\%$ of GW detected mergers; where jet structure extends to a half-opening angle of $25^\circ$, two-component jets produce $m_r\leq21$ counterparts in $\sim30\%$ of GW detected mergers; power-law structured jets result in $\sim37\%$; and Gaussian jets with our parameters $\sim13\%$.} We show the features in the lightcurves from orphan afterglows can be used to indicate the presence of extended structure.

## Full text

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## Figures

5 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.03000/full.md

## References

118 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.03000/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.03000