Affiliation:
1. Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology, Trivandrum, India
2. Chennai Mathematical Institute, Chennai, India
3. Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy, Amdsterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract
Abstract
Electromagnetic observations of the first binary Neutron Star (BNS) merger detected in gravitational waves, GW170817, has established that relativistic jets can be successfully launched in BNS mergers. Typically, such jets produce emission in two phases: γ-ray prompt emission and multi-wavelength afterglow. Due to relativistic beaming and the jet’s angular structure, the detectability of both these counterparts are dependent on the angle (θv) between the observer’s line of sight and the jet axis. We compare the detectability of prompt and afterglow emission from off-axis jets, assuming standard detector thresholds such as that of FERMI GBM, Chandra, and Jansky VLA. We find that for top-hat jets, afterglow is a more likely counterpart than the prompt emission even with unfavourable afterglow parameters. For structured jets with a Gaussian profile, prompt emission is more promising than the afterglows at extreme viewing angles, under the assumption that the total energy emitted in the prompt phase equals the kinetic energy of the outflow. Assuming a Gaussian jet profile, we forecast the population of γ-ray detections and find that extreme viewing angle events like GRB170817A will be rare. In our simulated sample, the observed isotropic equivalent energy in γ-rays is moderately correlated with the viewing angle, such that a low Eiso, γ is almost always associated with a high off-axis viewing angle.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
1 articles.
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