GRB 110213A: A Study of Afterglow Electromagnetic Cascade Radiation

Author:

Wang Xiang-GaoORCID,Chen Yuan-Zhuo,Huang Xiao-Li,Chen Liang-Jun,Zheng WeiKangORCID,D’Elia ValerioORCID,Pasquale Massimiliano De,Pozanenko Alexei S.,Xin Li-Ping,Stratta Giulia,Ukwatta TilanORCID,Akerlof Carl,Geng Jin-JunORCID,Han Xu-HuiORCID,Hentunen Veli-Pekka,Klunko E. V.,M. Kuin N. PaulORCID,Nissinen Markku,Rujopakarn W.,Rumyantsev V. V.,Rykoff E. S.,Salmi Tuomo,Schaefer B. E.ORCID,Volnova A. A.,Wu Xue-FengORCID,Wei Jian-Yan,Liang En-WeiORCID,Zhang BingORCID,Filippenko Alexei V.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract We obtained well-sampled optical photometry of GRB 110213A, including Swift/UVOT and XRT. Combining our data from those of other ground-based telescopes, we present 15 optical multicolor light curves showing similar shapes with two peaks. In contrast, in the X-ray band, only a single peak is observed between the two optical peaks. Temporal and spectral analysis of GRB 110213A shows that the X-rays differ from the optical for Phases I–III (before the second peak of the optical band at ∼5.6 ks). Moreover, they have the same spectral behavior at late times (Phases IV–VI). These data indicate that the optical and X-ray emission are dominated by different components. The synchrotron-supported pair cascade emission is included in the standard external forward-shock model, which is dominated by synchrotron radiation and synchrotron self-Compton (SSC). We find that the optical bands of GRB 110213A are dominated by the cascade emission from synchrotron radiation + SSC at the early stage, while the primary synchrotron + SSC radiation dominates the X-ray band. At late stages, both the X-ray and optical bands are dominated by emission from primary synchrotron + SSC radiation. The cascade component can reasonably explain the first optical peak. In contrast, the primary synchrotron + SSC emission mainly contributes to the second peak.

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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