ALMA and GMRT constraints on the off-axis gamma-ray burst 170817A from the binary neutron star merger GW170817
Sam Kim, Steve Schulze, Lekshmi Resmi, Jorge Gonz\'alez-L\'opez, Adam., B. Higgins, C. H. Ishwara-Chandra, Franz. E. Bauer, Itziar de, Gregorio-Monsalvo, Massimiliano De Pasquale, Antonio de Ugarte Postigo, David, A. Kann, Sergio Mart\'in, Samantha R. Oates

TL;DR
This study used ALMA and GMRT observations to constrain the afterglow of GW170817, revealing insights into the jet structure and confirming the off-axis gamma-ray burst association with the neutron star merger.
Contribution
First conclusive detection of an off-axis GRB afterglow associated with a binary neutron star merger GW170817, providing detailed jet structure modeling.
Findings
Constraints on afterglow luminosity ruled out brighter emissions.
Jet opening angle estimated at ~20° with a ~41° misalignment.
Consistent with a collimated jet with higher energy and narrower angle.
Abstract
Binary neutron-star mergers (BNSMs) are among the most readily detectable gravitational-wave (GW) sources with LIGO. They are also thought to produce short -ray bursts (SGRBs), and kilonovae that are powered by r-process nuclei. Detecting these phenomena simultaneously would provide an unprecedented view of the physics during and after the merger of two compact objects. Such a Rosetta Stone event was detected by LIGO/Virgo on 17 August 2017 at a distance of Mpc. We monitored the position of the BNSM with ALMA at 338.5 GHz and GMRT at 1.4 GHz, from 1.4 to 44 days after the merger. Our observations rule out any afterglow more luminous than in these bands, probing 2--4 dex fainter than previous SGRB limits. We match these limits, in conjunction with public data announcing the appearance of X-ray and radio emission in…
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