The slope of the low energy spectrum of Gamma-Ray Burst prompt emission
M. Toffano, G. Ghirlanda, L. Nava, G. Ghisellini, M. E. Ravasio, G., Oganesyan

TL;DR
This study investigates the low energy spectral breaks in Gamma-Ray Burst prompt emissions, finding that many long GRBs exhibit a spectral break around 80-280 keV, which influences the observed low energy spectral slope.
Contribution
The paper provides evidence for common low energy spectral breaks in long GRBs and demonstrates how their position affects the measured spectral slopes, offering insights into GRB emission mechanisms.
Findings
12 out of 27 long GRBs show a low energy break between 80-280 keV.
Short GRBs have a harder average slope, suggesting the break is near the peak energy.
Instrumental limitations hinder detection of the break in some GRBs, but future missions could improve this.
Abstract
Gamma-ray Bursts (GRBs) prompt emission spectra are often fitted with the empirical ''Band" function, namely two power laws smoothly connected. The typical slope of the low energy (sub-MeV) power law is . In a small fraction of long GRBs this power law splits into two components such that the spectrum presents, in addition to the typical MeV peak, a break at the order of a few keV or hundreds keV. The typical power law slopes below and above the break are -0.6 and -1.5 respectively. If the break is a common feature, the value of could be an ''average'' of the spectral slopes below and above the break in GRBs fitted with Band function. We analyze the spectra of 27 (9) bright long (short) GRBs detected by the Fermi satellite finding a low energy break between 80 keV and 280 keV in 12 long GRBs, but in none of the short events. Through…
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