# Generalized compactness limit from an arbitrary viewing angle

**Authors:** Tatsuya Matsumoto, Ehud Nakar, and Tsvi Piran

arXiv: 1903.06712 · 2020-01-08

## TL;DR

This paper generalizes the compactness limit for gamma-ray sources to include arbitrary viewing angles, constraining the observer's angle and Lorentz factor, and applies it to various GRBs to assess their viewing geometry.

## Contribution

It extends the compactness formalism to off-axis viewing angles, providing new constraints on GRB observations and their geometries.

## Key findings

- On-axis viewing minimizes the Lorentz factor needed.
- Maximum viewing angle is approximately 1/2 of the minimal Lorentz factor.
- Regular GRBs are unlikely observed off-axis due to small allowed viewing angles.

## Abstract

A $\gamma$-ray source must have a limited optical depth to pair production. This simple condition, called compactness, implies that gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) must involve a highly relativistic motion ($\Gamma \gtrsim 100$) giving the first and most important clue on their nature. So far, this condition has been discussed under the assumption that the $\gamma$-ray sources are viewed on-axis, that is, by an observer within the beaming cone of the relativistic source. Recently, following the detection of the weak short GRB 170817A, an extensive interest arose in the possibility that some $\gamma$-ray sources are viewed off-axis. We generalize here the compactness formalism for an arbitrary viewing angle taking several possible opacity processes and $\gamma$-ray spectra into account. We find that for a given observables (peak luminosity, temporal variability, and spectra) the minimal Lorentz factor, $\Gamma_{\rm min}$, is obtained, as expected, for an on-axis observer. More remarkably we find that compactness dictates also a maximal viewing angle, $\theta_{\rm max} \simeq 1/2\Gamma_{\rm min}$. Our limit implies for regular GRBs a very small allowed viewing angle ($\lesssim10^{-2}\,\rm rad$), making it extremely unlikely that they are viewed off-axis. For GRB 170817A we confirm earlier results that rule out the possibility that the observed $\gamma$-rays were seen by an on-axis observer as a regular short GRB. The short GRB 150101B was also suggested to be an off-axis event. We show that its maximal viewing angle $\lesssim0.05\,\rm rad$, which is inconsistent with the off-axis model. Finally we show that for low luminosity GRBs, compactness does not exclude by itself an off-axis model, but when combined with other consideration this option is strongly disfavored.

## Full text

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## Figures

8 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.06712/full.md

## References

54 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.06712/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1903.06712