Off-axis afterglow light curves and images from 2D hydrodynamic simulations of double-sided GRB jets in a stratified external medium
Jonathan Granot, Fabio De Colle, Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz

TL;DR
This paper models off-axis gamma-ray burst afterglows using 2D hydrodynamic simulations across various external media, predicting observable light curves and images to aid future detections and identification of misaligned jets.
Contribution
It provides detailed simulations of off-axis GRB afterglows in stratified media, including light curves and image evolution, enhancing understanding of orphan afterglows and their observational signatures.
Findings
Predicted radio, optical, and X-ray light curves for off-axis GRB jets.
Analyzed image size, shape, and flux centroid evolution over time.
Identified signatures distinguishing off-axis jets from other transients.
Abstract
Gamma-ray burst (GRB) jets are narrow, and thus typically point away from us. They are initially ultra-relativistic, causing their prompt -ray and early afterglow emission to be beamed away from us. However, as the jet gradually decelerates its beaming cone widens and eventually reaches our line of sight and the afterglow emission may be detected. Such orphan afterglows were not clearly detected so far. Nevertheless, they should be detected in upcoming optical or radio surveys, and it would be challenging to clearly distinguish between them and other types of transients. Therefore, we perform detailed, realistic calculations of the expected afterglow emission from GRB jets viewed at different angles from the jet's symmetry axis. The dynamics are calculated using 2D relativistic hydrodynamics simulations of jets propagating into different power-law external density profiles,…
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