Off-Axis Afterglow Emission from Jetted Gamma-Ray Bursts

Abstract

We calculate Gamma-Ray Burst afterglow light-curves from a relativistic jet of initial opening angle theta0, as seen by observers at a wide range of viewing angles, thetaobs, from the jet axis. We describe three increasingly more realistic models and compare the resulting light-curves. An observer at thetaobs < theta0 should see a light curve very similar to that for an on-axis observer. An observer at thetaobs > theta0 should see a rising light curve at early times, the flux peaking when the jet Lorentz factor sim 1/thetaobs. After this time the flux is not very different from that seen by an on-axis observer. A strong linear polarization (<40%) may occur near the peak in the light curve, and slowly decay with time. We show that if GRB jets have a universal energy, then orphan afterglows associated with off-axis jets should be seen up to a constant thetaobs, therefore the detection rate of orphan afterglows would be proportional to the true GRB rate. We also discuss the proposed connection between supernova 1998bw and GRB 980425.

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