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We present results for a large number of gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglow light curve calculations, done by combining high resolution two-dimensional relativistic hydrodynamics simulations using RAM with a synchrotron radiation code. Results were obta ined for jet energies, circumburst medium densities and jet angles typical for short and underluminous GRBs, different observer angles and observer frequencies from low radio (75 MHz) to X-ray (1.5 keV). We summarize the light curves through smooth power law fits with up to three breaks, covering jet breaks for small observer angles, the rising phase for large observer angles and the rise and decay of the counterjet. All light curve data are publicly available via http://cosmo.nyu.edu/afterglowlibrary . The data can be used for model fits to observational data and as an aid for predicting observations by future telescopes such as LOFAR or SKA and will benefit the study of neutron star mergers using different channels, such as gravitational wave observations with LIGO or Virgo. For small observer angles, we find jet break times that vary significantly between frequencies, with the break time in the radio substantially postponed. Increasing the observer angle also postpones the measured jet break time. The rising phase of the light curve for large observer angle has a complex shape that can not always be summarized by a simple power law. Except for very large observer angles, the counter jet is a distinct feature in the light curve, although in practice the signal will be exceedingly difficult to observe by then.
We present a study of the intermediate regime between ultra-relativistic and nonrelativistic flow for gamma-ray burst afterglows. The hydrodynamics of spherically symmetric blast waves is numerically calculated using the AMRVAC adaptive mesh refineme nt code. Spectra and light curves are calculated using a separate radiation code that, for the first time, links a parametrisation of the microphysics of shock acceleration, synchrotron self-absorption and electron cooling to a high-performance hydrodynamics simulation.
Gamma-ray burst (GRB) afterglows are well described by synchrotron emission originating from the interaction between a relativistic blast wave and the external medium surrounding the GRB progenitor. We introduce a code to reconstruct spectra and ligh t curves from arbitrary fluid configurations, making it especially suited to study the effects of fluid flows beyond those that can be described using analytical approximations. As a check and first application of our code we use it to fit the scaling coefficients of theoretical models of afterglow spectra. We extend earlier results of other authors to general circumburst density profiles. We rederive the physical parameters of GRB 970508 and compare with other authors
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