15–20 Oct 2017
Congress Center Garmisch-Partenkirchen
Europe/Berlin timezone
The proceedings of the 7th Fermi Symposium are available at https://pos.sissa.it/312/

AN EXTERNAL SHOCK ORIGIN OF GRB 141028A

Not scheduled
15m
Congress Center Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Congress Center Garmisch-Partenkirchen

Richard-Strauss-Platz 1A, 82467 Garmisch-Partenkirchen Germany
Poster GRBs and Transients Transients and Gamma-Ray Bursts I

Speaker

J. Michael Burgess (Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik)

Description

The prompt emission of the long, smooth, and single-pulsed gamma-ray burst, GRB 141028A, is analyzed under the guise of an external shock model. First, we fit the γ-ray spectrum with a two-component photon model, namely, synchrotron+blackbody, and then fit the recovered evolution of the synchrotron νFν peak to an analytic model derived considering the emission of a relativistic blast wave expanding into an external medium. The prediction of the model for the νFν peak evolution matches well with the observations. We observe the blast wave transitioning into the deceleration phase. Furthermore, we assume the expansion of the blast wave to be nearly adiabatic, motivated by the low magnetic field deduced from the observations. This allows us to recover within an order of magnitude the flux density at the νFν peak. Under this scenario, we argue that the distinction between prompt and afterglow emission is superfluous as both early-time emission and late-time emission emanate from the same source. While the external shock model is clearly not a universal solution, this analysis opens the possibility that at least some fraction of GRBs can be explained by an external shock origin of their prompt phase.

Primary author

J. Michael Burgess (Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik)

Co-author

Damien Begue (Max-Planck Institute for extraterrestrial Physics)

Presentation materials

Peer reviewing

Paper