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Multi-messenger astrophysics
Astro-COLIBRI
74 episodes
1 day ago
Discussions around tools and discoveries in the novel domain of multi-messenger and time domain astrophysics. We'll highlight recent publications, discuss tools to faciliate observations and generally talk about the cool science behind the most violent explosions in the universe.
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Astronomy
Science
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All content for Multi-messenger astrophysics is the property of Astro-COLIBRI and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Discussions around tools and discoveries in the novel domain of multi-messenger and time domain astrophysics. We'll highlight recent publications, discuss tools to faciliate observations and generally talk about the cool science behind the most violent explosions in the universe.
Show more...
Astronomy
Science
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The PanRadio Collaboration’s First Results – The 400-Day Afterglow of GRB 230815A
Multi-messenger astrophysics
11 minutes 3 seconds
1 month ago
The PanRadio Collaboration’s First Results – The 400-Day Afterglow of GRB 230815A

This episode dives into the extraordinary 400-day observing campaign of Gamma-ray Burst (GRB) 230815A, the first major result from the Panoptic Radio View of Gamma-ray Bursts (“PanRadio GRB”) program.


**The PanRadio Program**

The PanRadio GRB program is a systematic, multi-year radio survey carried out on the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). Its goal is to provide comprehensive, multi-frequency (1–50 GHz), and high-cadence radio monitoring of all southern *Swift* GRB events, following their afterglow evolution from within an hour to years post-burst. Crucially, this program provides a **more unbiased view** of GRBs, targeting events like GRB 230815A that typically would not receive traditional radio follow-up because they lack known redshifts or comprehensive multi-wavelength coverage due to high line-of-sight extinction ($A_V = 2.3$).


**Key Findings from GRB 230815A**

GRB 230815A was a long-duration GRB, likely originating from a collapsar. The 400-day observing campaign revealed a key conflict in its behavior:


* **The X-ray Afterglow:** An early X-ray jet break was observed at approximately $\sim 0.1$ days post-burst. This implies a very narrow jet opening angle, estimated to be about $2.1^\circ$.

* **The Radio Afterglow:** The radio light curves, traced over an unusually long duration of 400 days, evolved approximately according to the standard self-similar expansion expected for a relativistic blast wave in a homogeneous environment. Critically, the radio evolution was **at odds** with the early X-ray break.

* **The Solution: A Two-Component Jet:** Researchers reconcile this conflict by proposing a **two-component jet structure**. The early X-ray break originated from the **narrow, fast component** ($\sim 2.1^\circ$), while the delayed or absent jet break in the radio light curves stems from a separate, **wider component** with a half-opening angle estimated to be $\gtrsim 35^\circ$.


**Long-Term Impact**

The extensive follow-up confirmed that after 400 days, the blast wave showed no evidence of transitioning to the non-relativistic regime, which constrains the ratio between the blast wave kinetic energy and the circumburst medium (CBM) density. The PanRadio program will build a large, unbiased sample to rigorously inspect the microphysical and dynamical parameters of GRBs, revealing the true diversity of their outflows and environments.


**Article Reference**

These results are published in the draft article: **"First results from the PanRadio GRB Collaboration: the 400-day afterglow of GRB 230815A"**. https://arxiv.org/pdf/2511.07644


Acknowledements: Podcast prepared with Google/NotebookLM. Illustration credits: CSIRO

Multi-messenger astrophysics
Discussions around tools and discoveries in the novel domain of multi-messenger and time domain astrophysics. We'll highlight recent publications, discuss tools to faciliate observations and generally talk about the cool science behind the most violent explosions in the universe.