Orphan Afterglows (OA) are slow transients produced by Gamma Ray Bursts seen off-axis that become visible on timescales of days/years at optical/NIR and radio frequencies, when the prompt emission at high energies (X and γ rays) has already ceased. Given the typically estimated jet opening angle of GRBs θjet ~ 3°, for each burst pointing to the Earth there should be a factor ~ 700 more GRBs pointing in other directions. Despite this, no secure OAs have been detected so far. Through a population synthesis code we study the emission properties of the population of OA at radio frequencies. OAs reach their emission peak on year-timescales and they last for a comparable amount of time. The typical peak fluxes (which depend on the observing frequency) are of few μJy in the radio band with only a few OA reaching the mJy level. These values are consistent with the upper limits on the radio flux of SN Ib/c observed at late times. We find that the OA radio number count distribution has a typical slope-1.7 at high fluxes and a flatter (-0.4) slope at low fluxes with a break at a frequency-dependent flux. Our predictions of the OA rates are consistent with the (upper) limits of recent radio surveys and archive searches for radio transients. Future radio surveys like VAST/ASKAP at 1.4 GHz should detect ~ 3 × 10-3 OA deg-2 yr-1, MeerKAT and EVLA at 8.4 GHz should see ~ 3 × 10-1 OA deg-2 yr-1. The SKA, reaching the μJy flux limit, could see up to ~ 0.2-1.5 OA deg-2 yr-1. These rates also depend on the duration of the OA above a certain flux limit and we discuss this effect with respect to the survey cadence. © 2014 Astronomical Society of Australia.
CITATION STYLE
Ghirlanda, G., Burlon, D., Ghisellini, G., Salvaterra, R., Bernardini, M. G., Campana, S., … Tagliaferri, G. (2014). GRB orphan afterglows in present and future radio transient surveys. Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia. CSIRO. https://doi.org/10.1017/pasa.2014.14
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