Physical Processes Shaping Gamma‐Ray Burst X‐Ray Afterglow Light Curves: Theoretical Implications from the Swift X‐Ray Telescope Observations
University of Nevada, Las Vegas · Chinese Academy of Sciences · +6 more institutions
Abstract
(Abridged) The Swift X-Ray Telescope (XRT) reveals some interesting features of early X-ray afterglows, including a distinct rapidly decaying component preceding the conventional afterglow component in many sources, a shallow decay component before the more ``normal'' decay component observed in a good fraction of GRBs (e.g. GRB 050128, GRB 050315, GRB 050319, and GRB 050401), and X-ray flares in nearly half of the afterglows (e.g. GRB 050406, GRB 050502B, GRB 050607, and GRB 050724). In this paper, we systematically analyze the possible physical processes that shape the properties of the early X-ray afterglow lightcurves, and use the data to constrain various models. We suggest that the steep decay component…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 57.29
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 170
Authors
8- BZBing ZhangCorresponding
University of Nevada, Las Vegas
- YFYi-Zhong Fan
University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Purple Mountain Observatory, National Astronomical Observatories
- JDJ. Dyks
University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Nicolaus Copernicus Astronomical Center
- SKS. Kobayashi
Pennsylvania State University, Liverpool John Moores University
- PMP. Mészáros
Pennsylvania State University
Topics & keywords
- Afterglow
- Gamma-ray burst
- Physics
- Astrophysics
- Light curve
- Telescope
- Flux (metallurgy)
- Astronomy
- Life below water