posted on 2006-12-19, 14:33authored byMichael R. Goad, Gianpiero Tagliaferri, Kim L. Page, Alberto Moretti, Julian P. Osborne, Shiho Kobayashi, P. Kumar, P. Mészáros, Guido Chincarini, Takanori Sakamoto, B. Zhang, Scott D. Barthelmy, Andrew P. Beardmore, David N. Burrows, Sergio Campana, M. Capalbi, L.R. Cominsky, Giancarlo Cusumano, Neil Gehrels, Paolo Giommi, Olivier Godet, Joanne E. Hill, Jamie A. Kennea, H. Krimm, V. La Parola, V. Mangano, T. Mineo, David C. Morris, K. Mukerjee, John A. Nousek, Paul T. O'Brien, Claudio Pagani, M. Perri, Patrizia Romano, Alan A. Wells
We report on the temporal and spectral characteristics of the early X-ray emission from the Gamma Ray Bursts GRB050126 and GRB050219A as observed by Swift. The X-ray light-curves of these 2 bursts both show remarkably steep early decays (F(t) alpha t−3), breaking to flatter slopes
on timescales of a few hundred seconds. For GRB050126 the burst shows no evidence of spectral evolution in the 20–150 keV band, and the spectral index of the γ-ray and X-ray afterglows are significantly different suggesting a separate origin. By contrast the BAT spectrum of GRB050219A displays significant spectral evolution, becoming softer at later times, with Γ evolving toward the XRT photon index seen in the
early X-ray afterglow phase. For both bursts, the 0.2–10 keV spectral index pre- and post-break in the X-ray decay light-curve are consistent with no spectral evolution. We suggest that the steep early decline in the X-ray decay light-curve is either the curvature tail of the prompt
emission; X-ray flaring activity; or external forward shock emission from a jet with high density regions of small angular size (>Γ−1). The late slope we associate with the forward external shock.