The X-ray afterglow of GRB 081109A: clue to the wind bubble structure
Abstract
We present the prompt BAT and afterglow XRT data of Swift-discovered GRB081109A up to ~ 5× 105 sec after the trigger, and the early ground-based optical follow-ups. The temporal and spectral indices of the X-ray afterglow emission change remarkably. We interpret this as the GRB jet first traversing the freely expanding supersonic stellar wind of the progenitor with density varying as r-2. Then after approximately 300 sec the jet traverses into a region of apparent constant density similar to that expected in the stalled-wind region of a stellar wind bubble or the interstellar medium (ISM). The optical afterglow data are generally consistent with such a scenario. Our best numerical model has a wind density parameter A* 0.02, a density of the stalled wind n 0.12 cm-3, and a transition radius 4.5 × 1017 cm. Such a transition radius is smaller than that predicted by numerical simulations of the stellar wind bubbles and may be due to a rapidly evolving wind of the progenitor close to the time of its core-collapse.