Constraints on the emitting region of the gamma-rays observed in GW170817
Abstract
The gravitational waves from the neutron star merger event GW170817 were accompanied by an unusually weak short GRB 170817A, by an optical/IR macronova/kilonova and by a long lasting radio to X-rays counterpart. While association of short GRBs with mergers was predicted a long time ago, the luminosity of this prompt γ-ray emission was weaker by a few orders of magnitude than all known previous sGRBs and it was softer than typical sGRBs. This raise the question whether the γ-rays that we have seen were a regular sGRB viewed off-axis. We revisit this question following recent refined analyses of the γ-ray signal and the VLBI observations that revealed the angular structure of the relativistic outflow: observing angle of \,20, a narrow jet with core 5 and E iso>1052\, ergs. We show here that: (i) The region emitting the observed γ-rays must have been moving with a Lorentz factor 5; (ii) The observed γ-rays were not "off-axis" emission (viewing angle >1/) emerging from the core of the jet, where a regular sGRB was most likely produced; (iii) The γ-ray emission region was either "on-axis" (at an angle <1/) or if it was "off-axis" then the observing angle must have been small (<5) and the on-axis emission from this region was too faint and too hard to resemble a regular sGRB.
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