1,071 research outputs found
GRB 050911: a black hole - neutron star merger or a naked GRB
GRB 050911, discovered by the Swift Burst Alert Telescope, was not seen 4.6
hr later by the Swift X-ray Telescope, making it one of the very few X-ray
non-detections of a Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) afterglow at early times. The
gamma-ray light-curve shows at least three peaks, the first two of which (~T_0
- 0.8 and T_0 + 0.2 s, where T_0 is the trigger time) were short, each lasting
0.5 s. This was followed by later emission 10-20 s post-burst. The upper limit
on the unabsorbed X-ray flux was 1.7 x 10^-14 erg cm^-2 s^-1 (integrating 46 ks
of data taken between 11 and 18 September), indicating that the decay must have
been rapid. All but one of the long bursts detected by Swift were above this
limit at ~4.6 hr, whereas the afterglows of short bursts became undetectable
more rapidly. Deep observations with Gemini also revealed no optical afterglow
12 hr after the burst, down to r=24.0 (5-sigma limit). We speculate that GRB
050911 may have been formed through a compact object (black hole-neutron star)
merger, with the later outbursts due to a longer disc lifetime linked to a
large mass ratio between the merging objects. Alternatively, the burst may have
occured in a low density environment, leading to a weak, or non-existent,
forward shock - the so-called 'naked GRB' model.Comment: 4 pages using emulateapj; 2 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
Letter
The first Swift X-ray Flash: The faint afterglow of XRF 050215B
We present the discovery of XRF 050215B and its afterglow. The burst was
detected by the Swift BAT during the check-out phase and observations with the
X-ray telescope began approximately 30 minutes after the burst. These
observations found a faint, slowly fading X-ray afterglow near the centre of
the error box as reported by the BAT. Infrared data, obtained at UKIRT after 10
hours also revealed a very faint K-band afterglow. The afterglow appear unusual
since it is very faint, especially in the infrared with K>20 only 9 hours post
burst. The X-ray and infrared lightcurves exhibit a slow, monotonic decay with
alpha=0.8 and no evidence for steepening associated with the jet break to 10
days post burst. We discuss possible explanations for the faintness and slow
decay in the context of present models for the production of X-ray Flashes.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Accurate early positions for Swift GRBS: enhancing X-ray positions with UVOT astrometry
Here we describe an autonomous way of producing more accurate prompt XRT
positions for Swift-detected GRBs and their afterglows, based on UVOT
astrometry and a detailed mapping between the XRT and UVOT detectors. The
latter significantly reduces the dominant systematic error -- the star-tracker
solution to the World Coordinate System. This technique, which is limited to
times when there is significant overlap between UVOT and XRT PC-mode data,
provides a factor of 2 improvement in the localisation of XRT refined positions
on timescales of less than a few hours. Furthermore, the accuracy achieved is
superior to astrometrically corrected XRT PC mode images at early times (for up
to 24 hours), for the majority of bursts, and is comparable to the accuracy
achieved by astrometrically corrected X-ray positions based on deep XRT PC-mode
imaging at later times (abridged).Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, 1 table, submitted to Astronomy and
Astrophysics, August 7th 200
Testing the standard fireball model of GRBs using late X-ray afterglows measured by Swift
We show that all X-ray decay curves of GRBs measured by Swift can be fitted
using one or two components both of which have exactly the same functional form
comprised of an early falling exponential phase followed by a power law decay.
The 1st component contains the prompt gamma-ray emission and the initial X-ray
decay. The 2nd component appears later, has a much longer duration and is
present for ~80% of GRBs. It most likely arises from the external shock which
eventually develops into the X-ray afterglow. In the remaining ~20% of GRBs the
initial X-ray decay of the 1st component fades more slowly than the 2nd and
dominates at late times to form an afterglow but it is not clear what the
origin of this emission is.
The temporal decay parameters and gamma/X-ray spectral indices derived for
107 GRBs are compared to the expectations of the standard fireball model
including a search for possible "jet breaks". For ~50% of GRBs the observed
afterglow is in accord with the model but for the rest the temporal and
spectral indices do not conform to the expected closure relations and are
suggestive of continued, late, energy injection. We identify a few possible jet
breaks but there are many examples where such breaks are predicted but are
absent.
The time, T_a, at which the exponential phase of the 2nd component changes to
a final powerlaw decay afterglow is correlated with the peak of the gamma-ray
spectrum, E_peak. This is analogous to the Ghirlanda relation, indicating that
this time is in some way related to optically observed break times measured for
pre-Swift bursts.Comment: submitted to Ap
Swift captures the spectrally evolving prompt emission of GRB 070616
The origins of Gamma-ray Burst prompt emission are currently not well
understood and in this context long, well-observed events are particularly
important to study. We present the case of GRB 070616, analysing the
exceptionally long-duration multipeaked prompt emission, and later afterglow,
captured by all the instruments on-board Swift and by Suzaku WAM. The high
energy light curve remained generally flat for several hundred seconds before
going into a steep decline. Spectral evolution from hard to soft is clearly
taking place throughout the prompt emission, beginning at 285 s after the
trigger and extending to 1200 s. We track the movement of the spectral peak
energy, whilst observing a softening of the low energy spectral slope. The
steep decline in flux may be caused by a combination of this strong spectral
evolution and the curvature effect. We investigate origins for the spectral
evolution, ruling out a superposition of two power laws and considering instead
an additional component dominant during the late prompt emission. We also
discuss origins for the early optical emission and the physics of the
afterglow. The case of GRB 070616 clearly demonstrates that both broadband
coverage and good time resolution are crucial to pin down the origins of the
complex prompt emission in GRBs.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures (2 in colour), MNRAS accepte
A refined position catalog of the Swift XRT afterglows
We present a catalogue of refined positions of 68 gamma ray burst (GRB)
afterglows observed by the Swift X-ray Telescope (XRT) from the launch up to
2005 Oct 16. This is a result of the refinement of the XRT boresight
calibration. We tested this correction by means of a systematic study of a
large sample of X-ray sources observed by XRT with well established optical
counterparts. We found that we can reduce the systematic error radius of the
measurements by a factor of two, from 6.5" to 3.2" (90% of confidence). We
corrected all the positions of the afterglows observed by XRT in the first 11
months of the Swift mission. This is particularly important for the 37 X-ray
afterglows without optical counterpart. Optical follow-up of dark GRBs, in
fact, will be more efficient with the use of the more accurate XRT positions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, 1 table ; accepted for publication in A&A
Letters. The revised version contains updated position
The Swift X-Ray Telescope: Status and Performance
We present science highlights and performance from the Swift X-ray Telescope
(XRT), which was launched on November 20, 2004. The XRT covers the 0.2-10 keV
band, and spends most of its time observing gamma-ray burst (GRB)afterglows,
though it has also performed observations of many other objects. By mid-August
2007, the XRT had observed over 220 GRB afterglows, detecting about 96% of
them. The XRT positions enable followup ground-based optical observations, with
roughly 60% of the afterglows detected at optical or near IR wavelengths.
Redshifts are measured for 33% of X-ray afterglows. Science highlights include
the discovery of flaring behavior at quite late times, with implications for
GRB central engines; localization of short GRBs, leading to observational
support for compact merger progenitors for this class of bursts; a mysterious
plateau phase to GRB afterglows; as well as many other interesting observations
such as X-ray emission from comets, novae, galactic transients, and other
objects.Comment: 9 pages, 14 figure
Early multi-wavelength emission from Gamma-ray Bursts: from Gamma-ray to X-ray
The study of the early high-energy emission from both long and short
Gamma-ray bursts has been revolutionized by the Swift mission. The rapid
response of Swift shows that the non-thermal X-ray emission transitions
smoothly from the prompt phase into a decaying phase whatever the details of
the light curve. The decay is often categorized by a steep-to-shallow
transition suggesting that the prompt emission and the afterglow are two
distinct emission components. In those GRBs with an initially steeply-decaying
X-ray light curve we are probably seeing off-axis emission due to termination
of intense central engine activity. This phase is usually followed, within the
first hour, by a shallow decay, giving the appearance of a late emission hump.
The late emission hump can last for up to a day, and hence, although faint, is
energetically very significant. The energy emitted during the late emission
hump is very likely due to the forward shock being constantly refreshed by
either late central engine activity or less relativistic material emitted
during the prompt phase. In other GRBs the early X-ray emission decays
gradually following the prompt emission with no evidence for early temporal
breaks, and in these bursts the emission may be dominated by classical
afterglow emission from the external shock as the relativistic jet is slowed by
interaction with the surrounding circum-burst medium. At least half of the GRBs
observed by Swift also show erratic X-ray flaring behaviour, usually within the
first few hours. The properties of the X-ray flares suggest that they are due
to central engine activity. Overall, the observed wide variety of early
high-energy phenomena pose a major challenge to GRB models.Comment: Accepted for publication in the New Journal of Physics focus issue on
Gamma Ray Burst
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