Radiation Front Sweeping the Ambient Medium of Gamma-Ray Bursts

Abstract

Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are emitted by relativistic ejecta from powerful cosmic explosions. Their light curves suggest that the gamma-ray emission occurs at early stages of the ejecta expansion, well before it decelerates in the ambient medium. If so, the launched gamma-ray front must overtake the ejecta and sweep the ambient medium outward. As a result a gap is opened between the ejecta and the medium that surfs the radiation front ahead. Effectively, the ejecta moves in a cavity until it reaches a radius Rgap=1016E541/2 cm where E is the isotropic energy of the GRB. At R=Rgap the gap is closed, a blast wave forms and collects the medium swept by radiation. Further development of the blast wave is strongly affected by the leading radiation front: the front plays the role of a precursor where the medium is loaded with e+- pairs and preaccelerated just ahead of the blast. It impacts the emission from the blast at R < Rload=5Rgap (the early afterglow). A spectacular observational effect results: GRB afterglows should start in optical/UV and evolve fast (< min) to a normal X-ray afterglow. The early optical emission observed in GRB 990123 may be explained in this way. The impact of the front is especially strong if the ambient medium is a wind from a massive progenitor of the GRB. In this case three phenomena are predicted: (1) The ejecta decelerates at R<Rload producing a lot of soft radiation. (2) The light curve of soft emission peaks at tpeak=40(1+z)E541/2(Gammaej/100)-2 s where Gammaej is the Lorentz factor of the ejecta. Given measured redshift z and tpeak, one finds Gammaej. (3) The GRB acquires a spectral break at 5 - 50 MeV because harder photons are absorbed by radiation scattered in the wind.

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