Dynamical properties of mildly relativistic ejecta produced by the mass-loading of gamma-ray burst jets in dense ambient media
Akihiro Suzuki, Christopher M. Irwin, Keiichi Maeda

TL;DR
This study uses 3D relativistic hydrodynamic simulations to explore how gamma-ray burst jets interact with dense circumstellar media, producing mildly relativistic ejecta with universal density profiles and potential observable signatures.
Contribution
It demonstrates the universal density structure of mildly relativistic ejecta from jet-CSM interactions and links these findings to observable phenomena like early supernova spectra and optical transients.
Findings
Ejecta velocities range from 0.1c to 10c with typical mass of 0.1 solar masses.
Density profile follows a power-law with index -5, consistent with previous studies.
Ejecta produce bright UV-optical emission within about 1 day after expansion.
Abstract
We present the results of a series of 3D special relativistic hydrodynamic simulations of a gamma-ray burst (GRB) jet in a massive circumstellar medium (CSM) surrounding the progenitor star. Our simulations reproduce the jet morphology transitioning from a well-collimated state to a thermal pressure-driven state for a range of CSM masses and outer radii. The jet-CSM interaction redistributes the jet energy to materials expanding into a wide solid angle and results in a quasi-spherical ejecta with 4-velocities from to . The mass and kinetic energy of the ejecta with velocities faster than are typically of the order of and with only a weak dependence on the CSM mass and radius for the explored CSM parameter ranges. We find that the numerically obtained density structure of the mildly relativistic ejecta is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
