A Late‐Time Flattening of Afterglow Light Curves
- 10 January 2004
- journal article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 600 (2) , 828-833
- https://doi.org/10.1086/380108
Abstract
We present a sample of radio afterglow light curves with measured decay slopes which show evidence for a flattening at late times compared to optical and X-ray decay indices. The simplest origin for this behavior is that the change in slope is due to a jet-like outflow making a transition to sub-relativistic expansion. This can explain the late-time radio light curves for many but not all of the bursts in the sample. We investigate several possible modifications to the standard fireball model which can flatten late-time light curves. Changes to the shock microphysics which govern particle acceleration, or energy injection to the shock (either radially or azimuthally) can reproduce the observed behavior. Distinguishing between these different possibilities will require simultaneous optical/radio monitoring of afterglows at late times.Comment: ApJ, submitteKeywords
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