GRB 241030A: a bright afterglow challenging forward shock emission
J.-G. Ducoin, C. Pellouin, V. Aivazyan, D. Akl, F. Alvarez, C. Andrade, C. Angulo, S. Antier, J.-L. Atteia, S. Basa, R.L. Becerra, Z. Benkhaldoun, E. Bissaldi, A. Breeveld, E. de. Bruin, E. Burns, N.R. Butler, M.W. Coughlin, F. Daigne, T. Dietrich, D. Dornic, C. Douzet

TL;DR
This study analyzes the bright afterglow of GRB 241030A, revealing extreme jet energies and low efficiencies that challenge standard forward shock models, suggesting alternative mechanisms may be involved.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multi-wavelength analysis of GRB 241030A's afterglow, highlighting inconsistencies with standard models and proposing the need for alternative explanations.
Findings
Jets have large opening angles and high kinetic energies.
The afterglow shows significant SSC emission due to low electron and magnetic energy fractions.
Standard forward shock models cannot fully explain the observed data.
Abstract
Gamma-Ray Burst GRB 241030A (z = 1.411) exhibited a bright afterglow (similar to GRB 221009A), detected across gamma-ray, X-ray, UV, and optical bands, providing a probe of GRB afterglow physics. We compiled multi-wavelength observations spanning from a minute to a week after the prompt emission, processing the data through a unified photometry pipeline. We analysed the observations both analytically and using Bayesian inference with two independent models. Our models assume that the afterglow emission arises from the strong forward shock of a laterally structured jet, with possible contributions from synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) scatterings. Our models reproduce X-ray to optical data, favouring a jet propagating into a constant-density interstellar medium, with a viewing angle within the jet core. However, both analyses require parameter values that are extreme compared to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors · Viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
