GRB 250706B/C exhibits temporal features consistent with fallback-regulated accretion operating on a high-luminosity branch in a collapsar.
Pair-dominated GeV-optical flash in GRB 130427A
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
We show that the light curve of the double GeV+optical flash in GRB 130427A is consistent with radiation from the blast wave in a wind-type medium with density parameter $A=\rho r^2\sim 5\times 10^{10}$ g cm$^{-1}$. The peak of the flash is emitted by copious $e^\pm$ pairs created and heated in the blast wave; our first-principle calculation determines the pair-loading factor and temperature of the shocked plasma. Using detailed radiative transfer simulations we reconstruct the observed double flash. The optical flash is dominated by synchrotron emission from the thermal plasma behind the forward shock, and the GeV flash is produced via inverse Compton (IC) scattering by the same plasma. The seed photons for IC scattering are dominated by the prompt MeV radiation during the first tens of seconds, and by the optical to X-ray afterglow thereafter. IC cooling of the thermal plasma behind the forward shock reproduces all GeV data from a few seconds to $\sim 1$ day. We find that the blast wave Lorentz factor at the peak of the flash is $\Gamma\approx 200$, and the forward shock magnetization is $\epsilon_B\sim 2\times 10^{-4}$. An additional source is required by the data in the optical and X-ray bands at times $>10^2$ s; we speculate that this additional source may be a long-lived reverse shock in the explosion ejecta.
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
fields
astro-ph.HE 2years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2roles
background 1polarities
background 1representative citing papers
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.
citing papers explorer
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GRB 250706B/C: Insight-HXMT Discovery of a High-Luminosity Burst as a Candidate for Fallback-Regulated Accretion in the Prompt Emission
GRB 250706B/C exhibits temporal features consistent with fallback-regulated accretion operating on a high-luminosity branch in a collapsar.
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Early Optical Follow-up of Gamma-Ray Bursts: The Critical Role of Robotic Telescopes
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.