Can an Off-axis Gamma-Ray Burst Jet in GW170817 Explain All the Electromagnetic Counterparts?
Abstract
Gravitational waves from a merger of two neutron stars (NSs) were discovered for the first time in GW170817, together with diverse electromagnetic (EM) counterparts. To make constraints on a relativistic jet from the NS merger, we calculate the EM signals in (1) the short gamma-ray burst sGRB 170817A from an off-axis jet, (2) the optical-infrared macronova (or kilonova), especially the blue macronova, from a jet-powered cocoon, and (3) the X-ray and radio afterglows from the interaction between the jet and interstellar medium. We find that a typical sGRB jet is consistent with these observations, and there is a parameter space to explain all the observations in a unified fashion with an isotropic energy 1051-1052 erg, opening angle 20, and viewing angle 30. The off-axis emission is less de-beamed than the point-source case because the viewing angle is comparable to the opening angle. We also analytically show that the jet energy accelerates a fair fraction of the merger ejecta to a sub-relativistic velocity 0.3-0.4c as a cocoon in a wide parameter range. The ambient density might be low 10-3-10-6 cm-3, which can be tested by future observations of radio flares and X-ray remnants.
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