Multi-wavelength data on GRB 260310A support an off-axis jet model explaining weak prompt emission and bright delayed afterglow, including reverse-shock signatures and late X-ray rebrightening.
Title resolution pending
3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
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2026 3verdicts
CONDITIONAL 3representative citing papers
Magnetic fields remain aligned with projected gravity throughout the DR21 ridge and sub-filaments, indicating guided accretion at rates that can build the ridge in about one million years.
VLA L-band polarization observations of SNR G7.7-3.7 show cocoon morphology from interaction with pre-existing circumstellar shells, with magnetic fields compressed along filaments and RM variations tracing massive progenitor winds.
citing papers explorer
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An extremely bright slow-rising afterglow from an off-axis jet in GRB 260310A
Multi-wavelength data on GRB 260310A support an off-axis jet model explaining weak prompt emission and bright delayed afterglow, including reverse-shock signatures and late X-ray rebrightening.
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SIMPLIFI -- Study of Interstellar Magnetic Polarization: a Legacy Investigation of Filaments. I. Magnetically-Guided Accretion onto the DR21 Ridge
Magnetic fields remain aligned with projected gravity throughout the DR21 ridge and sub-filaments, indicating guided accretion at rates that can build the ridge in about one million years.
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The Cocoon from a Massive Star's Death: VLA Radio Polarization Study of Possible Historical Supernova Remnant G7.7$-$3.7
VLA L-band polarization observations of SNR G7.7-3.7 show cocoon morphology from interaction with pre-existing circumstellar shells, with magnetic fields compressed along filaments and RM variations tracing massive progenitor winds.