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A unified picture for the γ-ray and prompt optical emissions of GRB 990123
Authors:A Panaitescu  P Kumar
Institution:Space Science and Applications, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM 87545, USA;Department of Astronomy, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78712, USA
Abstract:The prompt optical emission of GRB 990123 was uncorrelated to the γ-ray light curve and exhibited temporal properties similar to those of the steeply decaying, early X-ray emission observed by Swift at the end of many bursts. These facts suggest that the optical counterpart of GRB 990123 was the large-angle emission released during (the second pulse of) the burst. If the optical and γ-ray emissions of GRB 990123 have, indeed, the same origin then their properties require that (i) the optical counterpart was synchrotron emission and γ-rays arose from inverse-Compton scatterings (the 'synchrotron self-Compton model'), (ii) the peak energy of the optical-synchrotron component was at ~20 eV and (iii) the burst emission was produced by a relativistic outflow moving at Lorentz factor  ?450  and at a radius  ?1015  cm, which is comparable to the outflow deceleration radius. Because the spectrum of GRB 990123 was optically thin above 2 keV, the magnetic field behind the shock must have decayed on a length-scale of  ?1  per cent  of the thickness of the shocked gas, which corresponds to  106–107  plasma skin depths. Consistency of the optical counterpart decay rate and its spectral slope (or that of the burst, if they represent different spectral components) with the expectations for the large-angle burst emission represents the most direct test of the unifying picture proposed here for GRB 990123.
Keywords:radiation mechanisms: non-thermal  shock waves  gamma-rays: bursts
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