Late-time HST and JWST Observations of GRB 221009A: Evidence for a Break in the Light Curve at 50 days
/ Authors
H. Sears, R. Chornock, P. Blanchard, R. Margutti, V. Villar, J. Pierel, P. Vallely, K. Alexander, E. Berger, T. Eftekhari
and 5 more authors
W. Jacobson-Galán, T. Laskar, N. LeBaron, B. Metzger, D. Milisavljevic
/ Abstract
GRB 221009A is one of the brightest transients ever observed, with the highest peak gamma-ray flux for a gamma-ray burst (GRB). A Type Ic-BL supernova (SN), SN 2022xiw, was definitively detected in late-time JWST spectroscopy (t = 195 days, observer frame). However, photometric studies have found SN 2022xiw to be less luminous (10%−70%) than the canonical GRB-SN, SN 1998bw. We present late-time Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/WFC3 and JWST/NIRCam imaging of the afterglow and host galaxy of GRB 221009A at t ∼185, 277, and 345 days post-trigger. Our joint archival ground, HST, and JWST light-curve fits show strong support for a break in the light-curve decay slope at t = 50 ± 10 days (observer frame) and a SN at <1.5× the optical/near-IR flux of SN 1998bw. This break is consistent with an interpretation as a jet break when requiring slow-cooling electrons in a wind medium with an electron energy spectral index p > 2 and νm < νc. Our light curves and joint HST/JWST spectral energy distribution (SED) also show evidence for the late-time emergence of a bluer component in addition to the fading afterglow and SN. We find consistency with the interpretations that this source is either a young, massive, low-metallicity star cluster or a scattered-light echo of the afterglow with a SED shape of fν ∝ ν2.0±1.0.
Journal: The Astrophysical Journal