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Evidence for a Canonical GRB Afterglow Light Curve in the Swift/XRT Data

Authors :
A. P. Beardmore
J. P. Osborne
G. Tagliaferri
J. A. Kennea
Sergio Campana
M. R. Goad
A. D. Falcone
Alan A. Wells
Chryssa Kouveliotou
Jonathan Granot
S. K. Patel
P. T. O'Brien
K. L. Page
P. Giommi
Dirk Grupe
E. Ramirez-Ruiz
M. Capalbi
O. Godet
N. Gehrels
V. Mangano
G. Chincarini
G. Cusumano
P. Romano
J. A. Nousek
David N. Burrows
S. D. Barthelmy
Cheryl Hurkett
A. Moretti
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2005.

Abstract

We present new observations of the early X-ray afterglows of the first 27 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) detected with the Swift X-ray Telescope (XRT). The early X-ray afterglows show a canonical behavior, where the light curve broadly consists of three distinct power law segments. These power law segments are separated by two corresponding break times. On top of this canonical behavior of the early X-ray light curve, many events have superimposed X-ray flares, which are most likely caused by internal shocks due to long lasting sporadx activity of the central engine, up to several hours after the GRB. We find that the initial steep decay is consistent with it being the tail of the prompt emission: from photons that are radiated at large angles relative to our line of sight. The first break in the light curve takes place when the forward shock emission becomes dominant, with the intermediate shallow flux decay likely caused by the continuous energy injection into the external shock. When this energy injection stops, a second break is then observed in the light curve. This energy injection increases the energy of the afterglow shock by at least a factor of f greater than or approx. equal to 4, and augments the already severe requirements for the efficiency of the prompt gamma-ray emission.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b93e3edbf3d07c2c11506b0add7cb7b7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2172/878781