Early Afterglows of Gamma-Ray Bursts in a Stratified Medium with a Power-Law Density Distribution
Abstract
A long-duration gamma-ray burst (GRB) has been widely thought to arise from the collapse of a massive star, and it has been suggested that its ambient medium is a homogenous interstellar medium (ISM) or a stellar wind. There are two shocks when an ultra-relativistic fireball that has been ejected during the prompt gamma-ray emission phase sweeps up the circumburst medium: a reverse shock that propagates into the fireball, and a forward shock that propagates into the ambient medium. In this paper, we investigate the temporal evolution of the dynamics and emission of these two shocks in an environment with a general density distribution of n R-k (where R is the radius) by considering thick-shell and thin-shell cases. A GRB afterglow with one smooth onset peak at early times is understood to result from such external shocks. Thus, we can determine the medium density distribution by fitting the onset peak appearing in the light curve of an early optical afterglow. We apply our model to 19 GRBs, and find that their k values are in the range of 0.4 - 1.4, with a typical value of k1, implying that this environment is neither a homogenous interstellar medium with k=0 nor a typical stellar wind with k=2. This shows that the progenitors of these GRBs might have undergone a new mass-loss evolution.
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