Afterglow emission from naked gamma-ray bursts

Jun, 2000
5 pages
Published in:
  • Astrophys.J.Lett. 541 (2000) L51
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Abstract: (arXiv)
We calculate the {\it afterglow} emission for Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) going off in an extremely low density medium, referred to as {\it naked bursts}. Our results also apply to the case where the external medium density falls off sharply at some distance from the burst. The observed afterglow flux in this case originates at high latitudes, i.e. where the angle between the fluid velocity and the observer line of sight is greater than Γ1\Gamma^{-1}. The observed peak frequency of the spectrum for naked bursts decreases with observer time as t1t^{-1}, and the flux at the peak of the spectrum falls off as t2t^{-2}. The 2--10 keV XX-ray flux from a naked burst of average fluence should be observable by the SWIFT satellite for time duration of about 10310^3 longer than the burst variability timescale. The high latitude emission contributes to the early XX-ray afterglow flux for any GRB, not just naked bursts, and can be separated from the shocked inter-stellar medium (ISM) emission by their different spectral and temporal properties. Measurements of the high latitude emission could be used to map the angular structure of GRB producing shells.
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