Radio observations point to a moderately relativistic outflow in the fast X-ray transient EP241021a
Muskan Yadav, Eleonora Troja, Roberto Ricci, Yu-Han Yang, Mark H. Wieringa, Brendan O'Connor, Yacheng Kang, Rosa L. Becerra, Geoffrey Ryan, Malte Busmann

TL;DR
This study presents long-term radio observations of a gamma-ray dark fast X-ray transient, revealing a mildly relativistic outflow with implications for understanding diverse stellar explosions and jet orientations.
Contribution
First detailed radio analysis of EP241021a showing a mildly relativistic, collimated outflow, suggesting off-axis jet viewing or a standard relativistic explosion without gamma-ray emission.
Findings
Radio afterglow lasted over 100 days
Outflow Lorentz factor > 4
Consistent with a mildly relativistic, collimated jet
Abstract
Fast X-ray transients (FXRTs) are short-lived X-ray outbursts with diverse progenitor scenarios, including compact object mergers, stellar core-collapses and tidal disruption events. The Einstein Probe (EP) has enabled the rapid discovery and follow-up of dozens of FXRTs, revealing that while some of them overlap with traditional gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), a larger fraction of FXRTs have no associated gamma-ray counterpart down to deep limits. The origin of these gamma-ray dark FXRTs and their connection to the diverse landscape of stellar explosions remains an open question, which can be tackled through the study of their multi-wavelength counterparts and environment. In this paper, we present long-term radio observations of the gamma-ray dark EP241021a, which exhibits sustained radio emission for over 100 days, placing it among the longest-lived radio afterglows. We detect signature…
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