Investigating the Nature of Late-time High-energy GRB Emission through Joint Fermi/Swift Observations
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American Astronomical Society
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We use joint observations by the Swift X-ray Telescope (XRT) and the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) of
gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglows to investigate the nature of the long-lived high-energy emission observed by
Fermi LAT. Joint broadband spectral modeling of XRT and LAT data reveals that LAT nondetections of bright
X-ray afterglows are consistent with a cooling break in the inferred electron synchrotron spectrum below the LAT
and/or XRT energy ranges. Such a break is sufficient to suppress the high-energy emission so as to be below the
LAT detection threshold. By contrast, LAT-detected bursts are best fit by a synchrotron spectrum with a cooling
break that lies either between or above the XRT and LAT energy ranges. We speculate that the primary difference
between GRBs with LAT afterglow detections and the nondetected population may be in the type of circumstellar
environment in which these bursts occur, with late-time LAT detections preferentially selecting GRBs that occur in
low wind-like circumburst density profiles. Furthermore, we find no evidence of high-energy emission in the LATdetected population significantly in excess of the flux expected from the electron synchrotron spectrum fit to the
observed X-ray emission. The lack of excess emission at high energies could be due to a shocked external medium
in which the energy density in the magnetic field is stronger than or comparable to that of the relativistic electrons
behind the shock, precluding the production of a dominant synchrotron self-Compton (SSC) component in the
LAT energy range. Alternatively, the peak of the SSC emission could be beyond the 0.1–100 GeV energy range
considered for this analysis.
Lýsing
Publisher's version (útgefin grein).
Efnisorð
Gamma-ray burst, Gammageislar, Sjónaukar
Citation
The Fermi Lat Collaboration, 2018. Investigating the Nature of Late-Time High-Energy GRB Emission Through Joint Fermi\Swift Observations. arXiv.org, pp.arXiv.org, Aug 7, 2018.