The structure of hydrodynamic $ \gamma $-ray burst jets
Ore Gottlieb, Ehud Nakar, Omer Bromberg

TL;DR
This study uses 3D hydrodynamic simulations to analyze the post-breakout structure of gamma-ray burst jets, revealing universal angular distributions influenced by jet-medium mixing, with implications for observed GRB emissions.
Contribution
The paper systematically explores the physics of jet-medium interaction post-breakout, introducing the jet-cocoon interface and characterizing jet structure with universal power-law distributions.
Findings
Jet-medium mixing leads to a distinct jet-cocoon interface (JCI).
Long GRBs exhibit strong mixing, transferring most energy to the JCI.
Jet structure can be described by simple power-law angular distributions.
Abstract
After being launched, GRB jets propagate through dense media prior to their breakout. The jet-medium interaction results in the formation of a complex structured outflow, often referred to as a "structured jet". The underlying physics of the jet-medium interaction that sets the post-breakout jet morphology has never been explored systematically. Here we use a suite of 3D simulations to follow the evolution of hydrodynamic long and short gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) jets after breakout to study the post-breakout structure induced by the interaction. Our simulations feature Rayleigh-Taylor fingers that grow from the cocoon into the jet, mix cocoon with jet material and destabilize the jet. The mixing gives rise to a previously unidentified region sheathing the jet from the cocoon, which we denote the jet-cocoon interface (JCI). long GRBs undergo strong mixing, resulting in most of the jet…
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