Jet simulations and gamma-ray burst afterglow jet breaks
- 1Astronomical Institute ‘Anton Pannekoek’, PO Box 94248, 1090 SJ Amsterdam, the Netherlands
- 2Centre for Plasma Astrophysics, K. U. Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200B, 3001 Leuven, Belgium
- 3Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics, Physics Department, New York University, New York, NY 10003, USA
- 4FOM-Institute for Plasma Physics Rijnhuizen, Nieuwegein, the Netherlands
- 5Astronomical Institute, Utrecht University, PO Box 80000, 3508, TA Utrecht, the Netherlands
- ↵E-mail: h.j.vaneerten{at}uva.nl
- In original form 2010 May 21.
- Received 2010 August 18.
- Accepted 2010 August 23.
- First published online January 21, 2011.
Abstract
The conventional derivation of the gamma-ray burst afterglow jet break time uses only the blast wave fluid Lorentz factor and therefore leads to an achromatic break. We show that in general gamma-ray burst afterglow jet breaks are chromatic across the self-absorption break. Depending on circumstances, the radio jet break may be postponed significantly. Using high-accuracy adaptive mesh fluid simulations in one dimension, coupled to a detailed synchrotron radiation code, we demonstrate that this is true even for the standard fireball model and hard-edged jets. We confirm these effects with a simulation in two dimensions. The frequency dependence of the jet break is a result of the angle dependence of the emission, the changing optical depth in the self-absorbed regime and the shape of the synchrotron spectrum in general. In the optically thin case the conventional analysis systematically overestimates the jet break time, leading to inferred opening angles that are underestimated by a factor of ∼1.3 and explosion energies that are underestimated by a factor of ∼1.7, for explosions in a homogeneous environment. The methods presented in this paper can be applied to adaptive mesh simulations of arbitrary relativistic fluid flows. All analysis presented here makes the usual assumption of an on-axis observer.
Key words
- hydrodynamics
- radiation mechanisms: non-thermal
- shock waves
- gamma-ray burst: general
- gamma-ray burst: individual: GRB030329
- X-rays: general
- Journal compilation © 2010 RAS. No claim to original US government works






