The supercritical pile gamma-ray burst model: The GRB afterglow steep-decline-and-plateau phase

Abstract

We present a process that accounts for the steep-decline-and-plateau phase of the Swift-XRT light curves, vexing features of GRB phenomenology. This process is an integral part of the "supercritical pile" GRB model, proposed a few years ago to provide an account for the conversion of the GRB kinetic energy into radiation with a spectral peak at E pk mec2. We compute the evolution of the relativistic blast wave (RBW) Lorentz factor to show that the radiation--reaction force due to the GRB emission can produce an abrupt, small ( 25%) decrease in at a radius which is smaller (depending on conditions) than the deceleration radius RD. Because of this reduction, the kinematic criticality criterion of the "supercritical pile" is no longer fulfilled. Transfer of the proton energy into electrons ceases, and the GRB enters abruptly the afterglow phase at a luminosity smaller by mp/me than that of the prompt emission. If the radius at which this slow-down occurs is significantly smaller than RD, the RBW internal energy continues to drive the RBW expansion at a constant (new) , and its X-ray luminosity remains constant until RD is reached, at which point it resumes its more conventional decay, thereby completing the "unexpected" XRT light curve phase. If this transition occurs at R RD, the steep decline is followed by a flux decrease instead of a "plateau", consistent with the conventional afterglow declines. Besides providing an account of these peculiarities, the model suggests that the afterglow phase may in fact begin before the RBW reaches R RD, thus introducing novel insights into the GRB phenomenology.

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