304 research outputs found

    Gamma-ray Burst Remnants: How can we find them?

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    By now there is substantial evidence that Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) originate at cosmological distances from very powerful explosions. The interaction between a GRB and its surrounding environment has dramatic consequences on the environment itself. At early times, the strong X-ray UV afterglow flux photoionizes the medium on distance scales on the order of 100 pc or more. Here I discuss the long-term effects resulting from the interaction between a GRB and its environment, and in particular the signatures of the emission spectrum produced while the heated and ionized gas slowly cools and recombines. Besides photoionizing the medium with its afterglow, a GRB explosion drives a blast wave which is expected to have a very long lifetime. I discuss possible candidates for such GRB remnants in our own and in nearby galaxies, and ways to distinguish them from remnants due to other phenomena, such as multiple supernova (SN) explosions.Comment: 3 pages, to appear in the proceedings of the 2nd Workshop "Gamma-Ray Bursts in the Afterglow Era",Rome,Oct.17-20,200

    Accretion flows in early-type galaxies and CMB experiments

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    We investigate the possible contribution from the emission of accretion flows around supermassive black holes in early type galaxies to current measurements of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) at radio frequencies. We consider a range of luminosities suggested by targeted radio observations and accretion models and compute the residual contribution of these sources to the spectrum and bispectrum of the observed CMB maps. As for high-resolution CMB experiments, we find that the unresolved component of these sources could make up to ~40-50% of the observed CBI and BIMA power spectrum at l > 2000. As a consequence, the inferred sigma_8^{SZ} value could be biased high by up to 6-7%. As for all sky experiments, we find that the contribution of accretion-flow sources to the WMAP bispectrum is at the 2-3 per cent level at most. At the flux limit that Planck will achieve, however, these sources may contribute up to 15 per cent of the bispectrum in the 60-100 GHz frequency range. Moreover, Planck should detect hundreds of these sources in the 30-300 GHz frequency window. These detections, possibly coupled with galaxy type confirmation from optical surveys, will allow number counts to put tighter constraints on early-type galaxies radio luminosity and accretion flows properties. These sources may also contribute up to the 30 per cent level to the residual radio sources power spectrum in future high-resolution SZ surveys (like ACT or APEX) reaching mJy flux limits.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted to MNRA

    Broadband Modeling of GRB 021004

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    We present a broadband modeling of the afterglow of GRB 021004. The optical transient of this burst has been detected very early and densely sampled in several bands. Its light curve shows significant deviations from a simple power law. We use the data from the X-ray to the II-band gathered in the first month of observations, and examine three models. Two involve variations in the energy of the shock. The first (energy injection) allows only increases to the shock energy, while the second (patchy shell) allows the energy to increase or decrease. In the final model (clumpy medium) the energy of the shock is constant while the density varies. While all three models reproduce well the optical bands, the variable density model can best account for the X-ray data, and the energy-injection model has the poorest fit. None of the models can account for the modest color variations observed during the first few days of the burst.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted to Astrophys. J. Letters, added analysis of X-ray lightcurv

    Constraints on the Emission and Viewing Geometry of the Transient Anomalous X-ray Pulsar XTE J1810-197

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    The temporal decay of the flux components of Transient Anomalous X-ray Pulsar XTE J1810-197 following its 2002 outburst presents a unique opportunity to probe the emission geometry of a magnetar. Toward this goal, we model the magnitude of the pulsar's modulation in narrow spectral bands over time. Following previous work, we assume that the post-outburst flux is produced in two distinct thermal components arising from a hot spot and a warm concentric ring. We include general relativistic effects on the blackbody spectra due to gravitational redshift and light bending near the stellar surface, which strongly depend on radius. This affects the model fits for the temperature and size of the emission regions. For the hot spot, the observed temporal and energy-dependent pulse modulation is found to require an anisotropic, pencil-beamed radiation pattern. We are able to constrain an allowed range for the angles that the line-of-sight (psi) and the hot spot pole (xi) make with respect to the spin-axis. Within errors, this is defined by the locus of points in the xi-psi plane that lie along the line (xi+beta(R))(psi+beta(R)) ~ constant, where beta(R) is a function of the radius R of the star. For a canonical value of R=12 km, the viewing parameters range from psi=xi=37 deg to (psi,xi)=(85 deg,15 deg). We discuss our results in the context of magnetar emission models.Comment: 8 pages, accepted to Ap

    The luminosity and stellar mass functions of GRB host galaxies: Insight into the metallicity bias

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    Long-Duration Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) are powerful probes of the Universe star formation history, but correlation between the two depends on the highly debated presence/strength of a metallicity bias. To investigate this correlation, we use a phenomenological model that successfully describes star formation rates, luminosities and stellar masses of star forming galaxies, applying it to GRB production. We predict luminosities, stellar masses, and metallicities of host galaxies depending on the metallicity bias. Our best-fitting model includes a moderate metallicity bias, broadly consistent with the large majority of long-duration GRBs in metal-poor environments originating from collapsars (probability ~83%), but with a secondary contribution (~17%) from metal-independent production channels, such as binary evolution. Because of the mass-metallicity relation of galaxies, the maximum likelihood model predicts that the metal-independent channel becomes dominant at z<2, where hosts have higher metallicities and collapsars are suppressed. This possibly explains why some studies find no clear evidence of a metal-bias based on low-z samples. However, while metallicity predictions match observations well at high redshift, there is tension with low redshift observations, since a significant fraction of GRB hosts are predicted to have (near-)solar metallicity. This is in contrast to observations, unless obscured, metal-rich hosts are preferentially missed in current datasets, and suggests that lower efficiencies of the metal-independent GRB channel might be preferred following a comprehensive fit from complete samples. Overall, we are able to establish the presence of a metallicity bias for GRB production, but continued characterization of GRB host galaxies is needed to quantify its strength.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables, ApJ accepted, revision includes new predictions for GRB host metallicity. Model data publicly available at: http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~trenti/release_modeldata_20150119.tar.g
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