The Optical Two and Three-Dimensional Fundamental Plane Correlations for Nearly 180 Gamma-Ray Burst Afterglows with Swift/UVOT, RATIR, and the SUBARU Telescope
Maria Giovanna Dainotti, Sam Young, L. Li, K. K. Kalinowski, Delina, Levine, D. A. Kann, Brandon Tran, L. Zambrano-Tapia, A. Zambrano-Tapia, B., Cenko, M. Fuentes, E. G. S\'anchez-V\'azquez, S. Oates, N. Fraija, R. L., Becerra, A. M. Watson, N. R. Butler, J. J. Gonz\'alez

TL;DR
This study expands the sample of optical GRB afterglows, discovers a 3D fundamental plane relation among optical plateau parameters, and confirms its intrinsic nature after correcting for biases, enhancing understanding of GRB physics.
Contribution
It presents the largest optical plateau GRB sample to date and identifies a new 3D fundamental plane relation at optical wavelengths, similar to X-ray correlations.
Findings
Discovered a 3D optical fundamental plane relation.
Confirmed the correlation is intrinsic after bias correction.
Found the optical plateau is achromatic only without selection biases.
Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are fascinating events due to their panchromatic nature. We study optical plateaus in GRB afterglows via an extended search into archival data. We comprehensively analyze all published GRBs with known redshifts and optical plateaus observed by many ground-based telescopes (e.g., Subaru Telescope, RATIR) around the world and several space-based observatories such as the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory. We fit 500 optical light curves (LCs), showing the existence of the plateau in 179 cases. This sample is 75% larger than the previous one (arXiv:2105.10717), and it is the largest compilation so far of optical plateaus. We discover the 3D fundamental plane relation at optical wavelengths using this sample. This correlation is between the rest-frame time at the end of the plateau emission, , its optical luminosity, , and the peak in the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
