First Detection of Faraday Rotation in a Gamma-Ray Burst Afterglow: Low Polarization and High Rotation Measure in GRB 260310A Reveal Jet Magnetic Structure and Environment
Collin T. Christy, Tanmoy Laskar, Kate D. Alexander, Noah Franz, Jonathan Granot, Ryan Chornock, Raffaella Margutti, Ramandeep Gill, Jeniveve Pearson, Edo Berger, Wen-fai Fong, Coleman Rohde, Patricia Schady

TL;DR
This paper reports the first detection of linear polarization and Faraday rotation in a gamma-ray burst afterglow, revealing insights into jet magnetic structure and the surrounding environment.
Contribution
It presents the first centimeter-wavelength polarization detection and Faraday rotation measurement in a GRB afterglow, providing new constraints on jet magnetic fields and environment.
Findings
Detected polarization decreasing from 3.18% at 25 GHz to 0.69% at 11 GHz.
Measured a rotation measure of -8300 rad/m^2 at the GRB redshift.
Indicates a dense, magnetized environment around the GRB progenitor.
Abstract
We report the detection of linear polarization in the radio afterglow of GRB 260310A, representing the first centimeter-wavelength polarization detection of a gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglow and the first measurement of Faraday rotation in a GRB environment. We detect linearly polarized emission across GHz, with a polarization fraction decreasing monotonically from at 25 GHz to at 11 GHz. Interpreting the radio data as emission from a reverse shock in a structured, relativistic jet, the observed depolarization toward lower frequencies is consistent with suppression by synchrotron self-absorption, while the low observed polarization at high frequencies relative to the theoretical maximum suggests a patchy magnetic field in the jet with a coherence scale, rad. We identify a frequency-dependent rotation of the…
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