1. Introduction
Electromagnetic (EM) counterparts to gravitational wave (GW) detected events (GW-EM) are amongst the most promising multi-messenger astronomy sources. Where GWs are detected from neutron star mergers, the potential EM counterparts include macro/kilo/ mergernova, Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs), and GRB afterglows [
1]. For a GW detection of a neutron star merger, the EM afterglows that are typically associated with GRBs offer a unique opportunity to probe these systems via a new trigger, the GW signal. As GRBs are highly beamed, they are typically seen at very small system inclinations to the line-of-sight; however, a GW triggered GRB producing system will likely be seen at a much higher inclination. In such cases, the prompt GRB will likely be absent, or faint, and the afterglow will appear unique when compared to the cosmological population. GRB afterglows as GW-EMs will probe the structure of the outflows and jets that produce a fraction of the cosmological population of GRBs [
2,
3,
4,
5].
GW-EM counterparts can be used to maximise the science returns from GW astronomy, and amongst their possible uses, the EM counterparts can help put constraints on various cosmological parameters measurable via GW astronomy. For GRB afterglow GW-EM counterparts, the rise index of the afterglow can give information about the lateral structure of the jet, and by assuming a fixed jet profile or structure, this rise index can be used to put tighter constraints on the inclination angle to the line-of-sight,
, for an observed afterglow (e.g., [
6]). By improving the constraints on
, the luminosity distance as measured by GWs, and a redshift from a host galaxy can be used to give tighter constraints on the Hubble parameter,
(e.g., [
7,
8]). Here we ask the question, how does the inclusion or omission of lateral spreading within the GRB afterglow calculation affect the inferred inclination angle of an observed system?
The lateral spreading of the blastwave that produces a GRB afterglow has been described via hydrodynamic simulations (e.g., [
9]) and analytically (e.g., [
10]), however, lateral spreading is often neglected in simple afterglow modelling. The effects of lateral spreading on radio images of GW-EM afterglows has been investigated by [
11], and here we show how lateral spreading affects the shape of the afterglow lightcurve with inclination. For each case, we show results without lateral spreading, and with lateral spreading at the sound-speed (e.g., [
12,
13]), which can be considered a physical maximum on the effects of spreading.
In
Section 2, we describe our methods for generating afterglows and fitting these models to data. In
Section 3 we show the results of our models and fits, and in
Section 4 we discuss our results and interpret these in terms of GW-EM observations. Our conclusions are presented in
Section 5.
2. Method
We generate afterglow lightcurves for a variety of fiducial jet structure models defined by unique energy and Lorentz factor profiles with polar angle of the outflow, or jet. The synchrotron emission from the shocked electrons within the forward shock of a relativistic blastwave and the effects of synchrotron self absorption, which is particularly important at very low frequencies, is calculated and the emission from the equal arrival time surface is summed to give the total flux with observer time. We use the method developed and utilised for the prediction of structured jet counterparts to gravitational wave detected neutron star mergers and the modelling of the afterglow to GRB 170817A (see [
2,
13,
14,
15,
16,
17,
18,
19], for details), both with and without the inclusion of lateral spreading. Generally jet structures are divided by on-axis core emission described by a core energy and Lorentz factor along the jet axis, and lower energy off-axis emission at angles greater than a core angle
.
The jet structure profiles are described as:
- TH
Top-hat: a uniform in isotropic-equivalent kinetic energy, E, and Lorentz factor, , with angle until a sharp edge at the jet opening angle, , where the energy goes to zero.
- G
Gaussian: a jet profile described by a Gaussian function with , and .
- 2C
Two-component: a top-hat jet surrounded by a wider uniform region of lower energy with , and .
- PL
Powerlaw: a top-hat jet surrounded by a region where the energy and Lorentz factor declines with increasing angle as a powerlaw, , and .
All jets have a maximum opening angle where energy goes to zero at except the top-hat profile, which goes to zero at .
The lateral spreading prescription we use assumes a sideways expansion, that is, perpendicular to the radial direction of the jet, at the local sound-speed,
. The sound-speed is found at each step in the solution for the radial dynamics of the blastwave (for details see [
13,
15]), and used to calculated the change in the solid angle of the jet as it spreads. Where lateral spreading is not included, the jet is assumed to maintain the same solid angle throughout its lifetime, that is, it expands radially within a conic volume described by the opening angle of the jet,
. These two limits represent the physical extremes of the possible lateral spreading for a relativistic jet; no lateral spread, or sound-speed lateral spreading.
For our fiducial jet models we set identical afterglow parameters so as to better highlight the effects of including lateral spreading on the lightcurves. Our fixed parameters are: isotropic-equivalent kinetic energy along the jet central axis, erg, initial Lorentz factor along the jet central axis, , ambient particle number density, cm, microphysical parameters, , and the shocked electron index, , and we fix the core angle, rad.
The afterglows for the four jet structure models, each with and without lateral spreading are calculated at a radio frequency of 3 GHz. We find the temporal index,
, with observer time using,
where
F is the flux density, and
t is the observed time. We use Richardson’s extrapolation to find the first derivative of the
lightcurve with
[
20].
The rise index pre-afterglow peak flux is of particular interest, as this has been used to put constraints on the line-of-sight inclination,
, [
6]. For each jet structure model we show how the
changes with inclination at
, where
is the observed peak flux time. We find
and
for all four models both with and without lateral spreading.
A real test of the effects of lateral spreading on the parameter estimation for GW-EM, GRB afterglows is demonstrated by fitting, via Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC), the four jet structure models with/without spreading to the data from GRB 170817A—we use the latest radio through X-ray frequency data as listed in [
21,
22,
23,
24]. For the fits to GRB 170817A, we fix
(e.g., [
17,
25]) and allow all other parameters to vary using a flat prior in each case as defined in
Table 1. We use
emcee for our MCMC [
26].
3. Results
Figure 1 shows the afterglow lightcurves at 3 GHz for jets with our fiducial parameters and viewed at inclination angles
rad, or with our fixed
equivalent to 0–5
. Each of the four panels shows the lightcurve,
(top half) and
(bottom half) at one of six inclinations. The observer time is normalised in each case to the afterglow peak time,
, and a vertical dotted line indicates
.
Figure 2 shows how
changes with inclination for each of the four jet structures, blue lines, both with (thick solid line) and without (thin solid line) lateral spreading. The afterglow observed peak time for our parameters with inclination is shown with an orange dashed line. For all inclination angles
, the lightcurve from the sound-speed lateral spreading case rises with a larger index than the case without lateral spreading. Similarly, we note that where the parameters of the jet are identical, the inclusion of maximal lateral spreading acts to reduce the observed peak flux time in each case by a factor ∼2. In the case of the two-component model, the afterglow can exhibit multiple peaks and, at our reference time where lateral spreading is not included, is declining for
. The equivalent lightcurves, which include lateral spreading, show a plateau or very shallow rise index for some off-axis observers at
. The change in rise index for the more smooth edged jet structure profiles, that is, Gaussian and powerlaw, are less extreme at
with
when compared to the classic, top-hat profile, with a rapid rise to peak of
6–8.
Each of these jet structure models can be fit to data from a GW-EM GRB afterglow counterpart to see how these effects alter the inferred parameters. We fit, via MCMC, the four jet structure profiles with and without lateral spreading. One hundred random posterior sample lightcurve draws of the fits to the broadband afterglow data of GRB 170817A are shown in
Figure 3. The dotted lines show the cases with lateral spreading, whereas the solid lines show the case without spreading. From this figure, it is clear that, generally, it is the very late post-peak lightcurve that is most sensitive to the inclusion of lateral spreading, as noted in [
15,
25]. We additionally note that the top-hat jet profile does not satisfactorily describe the early radio and X-ray data, however, this may be due to the omission of a non-zero shell thickness in the afterglow model or a more realistic early relaxation of the jet structure due to lateral spreading (see [
27]) although, the leading explanation for the early afterglow data is the contribution from the wider components of a structured, relativistic jet or the fastest components of an accompanying cocoon surrounding the jet ([
14,
16,
25,
28,
29,
30], etc.), alternatively, energy injection into the jetted blast wave can account for the observed afterglow and the system inclination for a top-hat jet model [
19].
The prior range and the central values for each parameter in the posterior distributions for these lightcurves are listed in
Table 1. The jet structure (the angular energy and Lorentz factor profile) in each case is kept fixed, and results for minimal (without) lateral spreading are compared to the results with maximum lateral spreading.
Figure 4 shows the logarithm of the ratio of central parameter values for each parameter in our models, where individual radial spokes correspond to the labelled parameter ratio. The radial scale indicates the value for the log ratio of the central parameter without spreading to the value with lateral spreading at the sound-speed; a ratio of 1 is indicated in the figure as a black dotted line. In nearly all cases, the inclusion of lateral spreading changes the value of the parameter distribution central value. We note that, for this dataset, the top-hat jet structure profile shows the most consistency between central parameter values, with only the ambient density,
n, requiring a value a factor ∼3 larger when spreading is neglected. With the exception of the top-hat profile, the inferred inclination of each system and the core opening angle, is typically larger when lateral spreading is included. For the top-hat jet, we see equal or consistent opening angles and all other parameters, with a marginally smaller inclination angle when lateral spreading is included. In terms of pre-peak temporal index, a smaller inclination angle for a given
is what is seen in
Figure 2 for all jet structure models when lateral spreading is included for a fixed parameter system. For structured jet systems, when fit to a real dataset, the variation in the other parameters, particularly the microphysical parameters
and
, plus ambient density,
n, which are required to fix the peak time and flux density, can absorb some of the expected change in inclination. However, we note that when the ratio of inclination to core size is considered,
, a typically smaller value is seen for all jet structure models when lateral spreading is included, compared to without, see
Figure 5.
4. Discussion
We have made a comparison of the afterglows from identical parameter set structured jet models with and without the inclusion of lateral spreading in the calculation of the flux and the observation time. We have shown that, where everything else is the same, an afterglow model that includes lateral spreading will peak earlier and, for observers viewing the system from outside of the core opening angle, , will have a rising lightcurve index that is higher, in all cases, than the comparable inclination and pre-peak time for an afterglow without lateral spreading. This is a particularly important consideration when using afterglow modelling of the rise-index for a GW-EM counterpart to infer the systems inclination angle. Further, we have demonstrated how the inclusion, or omission, of lateral spreading in afterglow models can result in different preferred values for model free-parameters when fitting to observed datasets. This is in addition to the differences in parameters seen as a result of the jet structure choice.
Our lightcurves are calculated at an observed frequency of 3 GHz; at this frequency, the emission can be sensitive to synchrotron self-absorption (SSA). For SSA flux post jet-break, the temporal behaviour of the lightcurve for an on-beam observer, that is, within the jet/core opening angle,
, or at the peak time and beyond for an initially off-axis observer, depends sensitively on the order of the synchrotron self-absorption frequency,
, the characteristic frequency,
, and the observer frequency,
. Analytically, the pre jet-break afterglow lightcurve, where
, the flux will evolve with time as,
, for
, and
where
. Whereas, post jet break, these two conditions become
and
for
and
, respectively. As
, and post jet-break, the flux is described with
and
for
and
respectively—thus the SSA flux post jet-break may result in a flaring flux that will increase as
until the passage of the characteristic frequency and/or the self-absorption frequency
. Thus, variability at, or about the jet-break time for an on-axis observer, particularly at radio frequencies can be expected. Whilst
, the self-absorption frequency will remain constant with observer time,
t, while
. When
, then
will begin to decline with time [
32,
33]. For an observer at a few
, and where the afterglow is SSA at the jet-break time (in the on-axis frame), the peak of the afterglow (when
) will be followed by a shallow decline phase before a break as
crosses the observation band—for very narrow or energetic jets, a flare or brief increase in flux before the final break may still be observed in SSA cases. The exact SSA frequency depends sensitively on how it is estimated, a full discussion of SSA is beyond the scope of this current work—our SSA follows that described in [
18]; for an alternative estimate, see [
34].
In
Figure 2 we show that for an observer at
, the peak flux for the afterglow occurs at an earlier time where lateral spreading is included. With our maximal spreading prescription, the peak time is a factor ∼2 earlier than the case without lateral spreading—this factor represents the uncertainty where the degree of lateral spreading is unknown. Whereas this difference in the peak time for jets with identical parameters, note that the peak flux level,
, is unaffected by the inclusion or not of spreading, will result in different parameter sets for identical jet models dependent on whether spreading is considered or not.
Figure 2 also shows the rise index at a fraction, 0.3, of the peak time. The same rise index is achieved at smaller inclinations where spreading is included. Naively, this would imply that the inclusion of spreading in a model would result in smaller inferred inclination angles from the same dataset when compared to a non-spreading model, however, by considering the difference in the peak time, then we can see that the other free parameters will come into play as
and
.
In fitting four different jet structure models, each with and without spreading, to the afterglow dataset for GRB 170817A via an MCMC we get distributions for the model free parameters, see
Figure 3 for a sample of the posterior distribution lightcurves. The central and 16th and 84th percentile ranges for the parameters are listed in
Table 1. Other than through the post-peak decline, the difference in spreading or non-spreading models is not immediately evident from these lightcurves. The difference in late-time decline is noted in [
25] and [
14] in reference to breaking the model degeneracy in relation to a relativistic core dominated jet, or a quasi-spherical stratified cocoon as the origin for the slow rising afterglow lightcurve of GW170817 pre-peak at ∼150 days. Here, we show that, besides the choice of jet structure (e.g., [
35]), the inclusion or omission of lateral spreading will also affect the parameter values.
Figure 4 shows the log ratio of the central parameter values for each model. The parameters with the biggest difference for the same structure profile are the microphysical parameters,
and
. Of our fiducial jet structures, the powerlaw structure has the largest difference in parameter values, and the top-hat structure has the smallest difference with only the ambient density showing a reasonable difference at a factor ∼3.
In terms of the inclination, which is the parameter of main interest in this study, we note that all structures, except the top-hat, have larger preferred inclination angles
when spreading is included. For our sets, this should be considered in ratio with the preferred core angle,
. For GW170817, limits on the core size and the relativistic motion of the jet core was constrained via Very Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI) [
36,
37]. The VLBI measurements can be used to constrain the ratio of inclination to the core size, with a preferred
[
31]. For values of
, [
11] showed that synthetic image modelling can determine the true inclination angle with an uncertainty ≲
on
.
In
Figure 5, we show the posterior distributions for
for each model fit to the data, both with and without lateral spreading. We note that, although there can be significant overlap, where lateral spreading is included the central value for the ratio
is typically smaller than the same model without lateral spreading. Of all our models fit to the data
1, only the Gaussian structure jet without lateral spreading has the central and 16th–84th percentile limits for
within the expected 4–6. Inspection of the lightcurve for this model in
Figure 3 shows good agreement with the data, including the early and late-time X-ray data as presented in [
21], where we use the late data binned so that a general declining trend is supported (and consistent with the expectation from a GRB-like afterglow). With this non-spreading Gaussian jet structure, there is no evidence of any excess in late-time radio or X-ray data, with an inclination of
rad, or ∼
degrees. By considering the
ratios, both of the two-component models, with and without spreading, have a significant overlap with the VLBI constraints. Similar to the non-spreading Gaussian model, both of the two-component models give good agreement with the observed late-time radio and X-ray decline, and an inclination of
rad (
degrees) without spreading and
rad (
degrees) with lateral spreading.
The future detection of GW-EM afterglows from core dominated relativistic jets could be used to help constrain the degree of lateral spreading in GRB afterglows; however, the effects of jet structure choice would need to be better understood or the physically expected jet structure for short GRB jets found (e.g., [
6,
38,
39] and Nativi et al. in prep).
5. Conclusions
We have made comparisons of GRB and GW-EM afterglows modelled with and without lateral spreading as seen by observers at various inclinations. We find that the inclusion of lateral spread in the afterglow lightcurve estimation can affect the rise index pre-peak and the peak time, where all other parameters are fixed. When fitting observed datasets with an afterglow model, the inferred parameters depend sensitively on the choice of jet structure but additionally on whether lateral spreading is included or not. For all jet structure profiles tested, we find that the ratio, , is typically smaller where lateral spreading is included in the afterglow model. Although the ratio is smaller where lateral spreading is included, the individual values of the inclination and core angle may be larger in either the spreading or the non-spreading cases. We find that, for structured jets other than a top-hat structure, and are typically larger where spreading is included. The peak flux and peak time can depend sensitively on other free parameters in the afterglow model, and there is no clear trend for larger or smaller values for any of these in all structure profiles. The ratio of the parameter values with and without spreading depends more sensitively on the choice of jet structure.
We caution that, where estimates of the inclination,
, are made using afterglow rise index fitting for a given jet structure profile (useful for adding additional constraints to the Hubble parameter [
8]), then these results should consider complimentary fitting of radio images of superluminal motion, if available (e.g., [
11]), or fold in the uncertainty of inclination from the inclusion or not of a spreading prescription (which can be unique to the structure model used). We find a factor ≲2 on the inclination angle,
, from data fits with the same jet structure profiles, dependent on whether spreading is included or not.