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Knowledge of the bulk Lorentz factor $Gamma_{0}$ of GRBs allows us to compute their comoving frame properties shedding light on their physics. Upon collisions with the circumburst matter, the fireball of a GRB starts to decelerate, producing a peak or a break (depending on the circumburst density profile) in the light curve of the afterglow. Considering all bursts with known redshift and with an early coverage of their emission, we find 67 GRBs with a peak in their optical or GeV light curves at a time $t_{rm p}$. For another 106 GRBs we set an upper limit $t_{rm p}^{rm UL}$. We show that $t_{rm p}$ is due to the dynamics of the fireball deceleration and not to the passage of a characteristic frequency of the synchrotron spectrum across the optical band. Considering the $t_{rm p}$ of 66 long GRBs and the 85 most constraining upper limits, using censored data analysis methods, we reconstruct the most likely distribution of $t_{rm p}$. All $t_{rm p}$ are larger than the time $t_{rm p,g}$ when the prompt emission peaks, and are much larger than the time $t_{rm ph}$ when the fireball becomes transparent. The reconstructed distribution of $Gamma_0$ has median value $sim$300 (150) for a uniform (wind) circumburst density profile. In the comoving frame, long GRBs have typical isotropic energy, luminosity, and peak energy $langle E_{rm iso}rangle=3(8)times 10^{50}$ erg, $langle L_{rm iso}rangle=3(15) times 10^{47}$ erg s$^{-1}$ , and $langle E_{rm peak}rangle =1(2)$ keV in the homogeneous (wind) case. We confirm that the significant correlations between $Gamma$ and the rest frame isotropic energy ($E_{rm iso}$), luminosity ($L_{rm iso}$) and peak energy ($E_{rm peak}$) are not due to selection effects. Assuming a typical opening angle of 5 degrees, we derive the distribution of the jet baryon loading which is centered around a few $10^{-6} {rm M_{odot}}$.
For a sample of Swift and Fermi GRBs, we show that the minimum variability timescale and the spectral lag of the prompt emission is related to the bulk Lorentz factor in a complex manner: For small $Gamma$s, the variability timescale exhibits a shall
The peak time of optical afterglow may be used as a proxy to constrain the Lorentz factor Gamma of the gamma-ray burst (GRB) ejecta. We revisit this method by including bursts with optical observations that started when the afterglow flux was already
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We recently found that Gamma Ray Burst energies and luminosities, in their comoving frame, are remarkably similar. This, coupled with the clustering of energetics once corrected for the collimation factor, suggests the possibility that all bursts, in