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Light Curves of GRB Optical Flashes

2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

2 Pith papers citing it
abstract

The standard model of GRB afterglows assumes that relativistically expanding material is decelerating due to interaction with the surrounding medium. The afterglows are well described by the synchrotron radiation from a forward shock, while the strong optical flash associated with GRB 990123 can be attributed to the emission from a reverse shock. We give a detailed study on the reverse shock emission. The full light curves are calculated for a long and a short GRB cases. We discuss the lack of the prompt optical detections by ROTSE for GRB 981121 and GRB 981223.

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astro-ph.HE 2

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2026 2

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UNVERDICTED 2

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Systematic Error in Approximate Models of the GRB Early Afterglow

astro-ph.HE · 2026-06-01 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

High-resolution simulations demonstrate that two-zone models for GRB early afterglows fail to match hydrodynamic evolution in the Newtonian reverse shock regime before Blandford-McKee self-similarity, causing systematic overpredictions of emission depending on the transition prescription.

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Showing 2 of 2 citing papers after filters.

  • Systematic Error in Approximate Models of the GRB Early Afterglow astro-ph.HE · 2026-06-01 · unverdicted · none · ref 11 · internal anchor

    High-resolution simulations demonstrate that two-zone models for GRB early afterglows fail to match hydrodynamic evolution in the Newtonian reverse shock regime before Blandford-McKee self-similarity, causing systematic overpredictions of emission depending on the transition prescription.

  • Early Optical Follow-up of Gamma-Ray Bursts: The Critical Role of Robotic Telescopes astro-ph.HE · 2026-06-26 · unverdicted · none · ref 120 · internal anchor

    A review of early optical GRB features including prompt emission, reverse shocks, and afterglow onset, highlighting robotic telescopes' role in constraining jet Lorentz factors and magnetization.