4.7 Article

MULTIWAVELENGTH ANALYSIS OF THE INTRIGUING GRB 061126: THE REVERSE SHOCK SCENARIO AND MAGNETIZATION

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 687, Issue 1, Pages 443-455

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/592062

Keywords

cosmology: observations; gamma rays: bursts

Funding

  1. Slovenian Research Agency
  2. Slovenian Ministry for Higher Education, Science, and Technology
  3. ASI [1/011/07/0]
  4. Royal Society and Research Councils UK
  5. RoboNet-1.0
  6. PPARC
  7. STFC
  8. STFC, in Italy by ASI
  9. US by NASA
  10. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [GR/T27969/01] Funding Source: researchfish
  11. Science and Technology Facilities Council [PP/E001149/1, PP/E001173/1, PP/E003303/1, ST/F002599/1, PP/E002064/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  12. STFC [ST/F002599/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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We present a detailed study of the prompt and afterglow emission from Swift GRB 061126 using BAT, XRT, UVOT data and multicolor optical imaging from 10 ground-based telescopes. GRB 061126 was a long burst (T-90 = 191 s) with four overlapping peaks in its gamma-ray light curve. The X-ray afterglow, observed from 26 minutes to 20 days after the burst, shows a simple power-law decay with alpha(x) 1: 290 +/- 0:008. Optical observations presented here cover the time range from 258 s (Faulkes Telescope North) to 15 days ( Gemini North) after the burst; the decay rate of the optical afterglow shows a steep-to-shallow transition (from alpha(1) - 1.48 +/- 0:06 to alpha(2) - 0:88 +/- 0:03) approximately 13 minutes after the burst. We suggest the early, steep component is due to a reverse shock and show that the magnetic energy density in the ejecta, expressed as a fraction of the equipartition value, is a few 10 times larger than in the forward shock in the early afterglow phase. The ejecta might be endowed with primordial magnetic fields at the central engine. The optical light curve implies a late-time break at about 1.5 days after the burst, while there is no evidence of the simultaneous break in the X-ray light curve. We model the broadband emission and show that some afterglow characteristics (the steeper decay in X-ray and the shallow spectral index from optical to X-ray) are difficult to explain in the framework of the standard fireball model. This might imply that the X-ray afterglow is due to an additional emission process, such as late-time central engine activity rather than blast-wave shock emission. The possible chromatic break at 1.5 days after the burst would give support to the additional emission scenario.

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