101 research outputs found
On the jet structure and magnetic field configuration of GRB 020813
The polarization curve of GRB 020813 is discussed and compared to different
models for the structure, evolution and magnetisation properties of the jet and
the interstellar medium onto which the fireball impacts. GRB 020813 is best
suited for this kind of analysis for the smoothness of its afterglow light
curve, ensuring the applicability of current models. The polarization dataset
allows us to rule out the standard GRB jet, in which the energy and Lorentz
factor have a well defined value inside the jet opening angle and the magnetic
field is generated at the shock front. We explore alternative models finding
that a structured jet or a jet with a toroidal component of the magnetic field
can fit equally well the polarization curve. Stronger conclusions cannot be
drawn due to the incomplete sampling of the polarization curve. A more dense
sampling, especially at early times, is required to pin down the structure of
the jet and the geometry of its magnetic field.Comment: 7 pages, 5 postscript figures, minor revisions according to the
referee comments. A&A in pres
GRB 020813: polarization in the case of a smooth optical decay
We present the results of a VLT polarimetric monitoring campaign of the GRB
020813 optical afterglow carried out in three nights, from 0.88 to 4.20 days
after the gamma-ray event. The mean values of the degree of linear polarization
(P) and its position angle (Theta) resulting from our campaign are
=1.18+/-0.10% and Theta = 148.7+/-2.3 deg after correcting for Galactic
interstellar polarization. Our VLT data set is most naturally described by a
constant degree of linear polarization and position angle, nonetheless a slow
Theta evolution cannot be entirely ruled out by our data. The VLT monitoring
campaign did not reveal either a significant Theta rotation respect to the Keck
spectropolarimetric observations performed ~0.25 days after the GRB (Barth et
al. 2003). However, is a factor of two lower than the polarization degree
measured from Keck. Additionally, the VLT polarization data allowed us to
construct an accurate V-band light curve. The V-band photometric data revealed
a smooth light curve with a break located between the last Keck and our first
VLT polarimetric measurement, 0.33 < t_(break, V) < 0.88 days after the GRB.
The typical magnitude fluctuations of the VLT V-band lightcurve are 0.003 mag,
0.010 mag and 0.016 mag for our three observing nights, respectively. We
speculate that the stability of Theta might be related to the smoothness of the
light curve.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in A&A. Minor changes
included with respect to the previously posted versio
The dark GRB080207 in an extremely red host and the implications for GRBs in highly obscured environments
[Abridged] We present comprehensive X-ray, optical, near- and mid-infrared,
and sub-mm observations of GRB 080207 and its host galaxy. The afterglow was
undetected in the optical and near-IR, implying an optical to X-ray index <0.3,
identifying GRB 080207 as a dark burst. Swift X-ray observations show extreme
absorption in the host, which is confirmed by the unusually large optical
extinction found by modelling the X-ray to nIR afterglow spectral energy
distribution. Our Chandra observations obtained 8 days post-burst allow us to
place the afterglow on the sky to sub-arcsec accuracy, enabling us to pinpoint
an extremely red galaxy (ERO). Follow-up host observations with HST, Spitzer,
Gemini, Keck and the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) provide a photometric
redshift solution of z ~1.74 (+0.05,-0.06) (1 sigma), 1.56 < z < 2.08 at 2
sigma) for the ERO host, and suggest that it is a massive and morphologically
disturbed ultra-luminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG) system, with L_FIR ~ 2.4 x
10^12 L_solar. These results add to the growing evidence that GRBs originating
in very red hosts always show some evidence of dust extinction in their
afterglows (though the converse is not true -- some extinguished afterglows are
found in blue hosts). This indicates that a poorly constrained fraction of GRBs
occur in very dusty environments. By comparing the inferred stellar masses, and
estimates of the gas phase metallicity in both GRB hosts and sub-mm galaxies we
suggest that many GRB hosts, even at z>2 are at lower metallicity than the
sub-mm galaxy population, offering a likely explanation for the dearth of
sub-mm detected GRB hosts. However, we also show that the dark GRB hosts are
systematically more massive than those hosting optically bright events, perhaps
implying that previous host samples are severely biased by the exclusion of
dark events.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
A deep search for the host galaxies of GRBs with no detected optical afterglow
Gamma-Ray Bursts can provide information about star formation at high
redshifts. Even in the absence of a optical/near-infrared/radio afterglow, the
high detection rate of X-ray afterglows by swift/XRT and its localization
precision of 2-3 arcsec facilitates the identification and study of GRB host
galaxies. We focus on the search for the host galaxies of a sample of 17 bursts
with XRT error circles but no detected long-wavelength afterglow. Three of
these events can also be classified as truly dark bursts: the observed upper
limit on the optical flux of the afterglow was less than expected based on the
X-ray flux. Our study is based on deep R and K-band observations performed with
ESO/VLT instruments, supported by GROND and NEWFIRM. To be conservative, we
searched for host galaxies in an area with a radius twice the 90% swift/XRT
error circle. For 15 of the 17 bursts we find at least one galaxy inside the
doubled XRT error circle. In seven cases we discover extremely red objects in
the error circles. The most remarkable case is the host of GRB 080207 which as
a colour of R-K~4.7 mag (AB), one of the reddest galaxies ever associated with
a GRB. As a by-product of our study we identify the optical afterglow of GRB
070517A. Optically dim afterglows result from cosmological Lyman drop out and
dust extinction, but the former process is only equired for a minority of cases
(<1/3). Extinction by dust in the host galaxies might explain all other events.
Thereby, a seemingly non-negligible fraction of these hosts are globally
dust-enshrouded, extremely red galaxies. This suggests that bursts with
optically dim afterglows trace a subpopulation of massive starburst galaxies,
which are markedly different from the main body of the GRB host galaxy
population, namely the blue, subluminous, compact galaxies.Comment: 29 pages, 31 figures, accepted for publication in A&
GRB 090417B and its Host Galaxy: A Step Towards an Understanding of Optically-Dark Gamma-Ray Bursts
GRB 090417B was an unusually long burst with a T_90 duration of at least 2130
s and a multi-peaked light curve at energies of 15-150 keV. It was optically
dark and has been associated with a bright star-forming galaxy at a redshift of
0.345 that is broadly similar to the Milky Way. This is one of the few cases
where a host galaxy has been clearly identified for a dark gamma-ray burst and
thus an ideal candidate for studying the origin of dark bursts. We find that
the dark nature of GRB 090417B cannot be explained by high redshift, incomplete
observations, or unusual physics in the production of the afterglow. Assuming
the standard relativistic fireball model for the afterglow we find that the
optical flux is at least 2.5 mag fainter than predicted by the X-ray flux. The
Swift/XRT X -ray data are consistent with the afterglow being obscured by a
dense, localized sheet of dust approximately 30-80 pc from the burst along the
line of sight. Our results suggest that this dust sheet imparts an extinction
of A_V >~ 12 mag, which is sufficient to explain the missing optical flux. GRB
090417B is an example of a gamma-ray burst that is dark due to the localized
dust structure in its host galaxy.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap
Testing the E_p,i - L_p,iso - T_0.45 correlation on a BeppoSAX and Swift sample of gamma-ray bursts
Using a sample of 14 BeppoSAX and 74 Swift GRBs with measured redshift we
tested the correlation between the intrinsic peak energy of the time-integrated
spectrum, E_p,i, the isotropic-equivalent peak luminosity, L_p,iso, and the
duration of the most intense parts of the GRB computed as T_0.45 ("Firmani
correlation"). For 41 out of 88 GRBs we could estimate all of the three
required properties. Apart from 980425, which appears to be a definite outlier
and notoriously peculiar in many respects, we used 40 GRBs to fit the
correlation with the maximum likelihood method discussed by D'Agostini,
suitable to account for the extrinsic scatter in addition to the intrinsic
uncertainties affecting every single GRB. We confirm the correlation. However,
unlike the results by Firmani et al., we found that the correlation does have a
logarithmic scatter comparable with that of the E_p,i-E_iso ("Amati")
correlation. We also find that the slope of the product L_p,iso T_0.45 is equal
to ~0.5, which is consistent with the hypothesis that the E_p,i-L_p,iso-T_0.45
correlation is equivalent to the E_p,i-E_iso correlation (slope ~0.5). We
conclude that, based on presently available data, there is no clear evidence
that the E_p,i-L_p,iso-T_0.45 correlation is different (both in terms of slope
and dispersion) from the E_p,i-E_iso correlation.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, revised version submitted to MNRA
The submm properties of GRB host galaxies
Long duration gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) accompany the deaths of some massive
stars and hence, since massive stars are short lived, are a tracer of star
formation activity. Given that GRBs are bright enough to be seen to very high
redshifts, and detected even in dusty environments, they should therefore
provide a powerful probe of the global star formation history of the universe.
The potential of this approach can be investigated via submm photometry of GRB
host galaxies. Submm luminosity also correlates with star formation rate, so
the distribution of host galaxy submm fluxes should allow us to test the two
methods for consistency. Here, we report new JCMT/SCUBA 850 micron measurements
for 15 GRB hosts. Combining these data with results from previous studies we
construct a sample of 21 hosts with <1.4 mJy errors. We show that the
distribution of apparent 850 micron flux densities of this sample is reasonably
consistent with model predictions, but there is tentative evidence of a dearth
of submm bright (>4 mJy) galaxies. Furthermore, the optical/infrared properties
of the submm brightest GRB hosts are not typical of the galaxy population
selected in submm surveys, although the sample size is still small. Possible
selection effects and physical mechanisms which may explain these discrepancies
are discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure, MNRAS in pres
The Host Galaxies of Swift Dark Gamma-Ray Bursts: Observational Constraints on Highly Obscured and Very High-Redshift GRBs
In this work we present the first results of our imaging campaign at Keck
Observatory to identify the host galaxies of "dark" gamma-ray bursts (GRBs),
events with no detected optical afterglow or with detected optical flux
significantly fainter than expected from the observed X-ray afterglow. We find
that out of a uniform sample of 29 Swift bursts rapidly observed by the Palomar
60-inch telescope through March 2008 (14 of which we classify as dark), all
events have either a detected optical afterglow, a probable optical host-galaxy
detection, or both. Our results constrain the fraction of Swift GRBs coming
from very high redshift (z > 7), such as the recent GRB 090423, to between
0.2-7 percent at 80% confidence. In contrast, a significant fraction of the
sample requires large extinction columns (host-frame A_V > 1 mag, with several
events showing A_V > 2-6 mag), identifying dust extinction as the dominant
cause of the dark GRB phenomenon. We infer that a significant fraction of GRBs
(and, by association, of high-mass star formation) occurs in highly obscured
regions. However, the host galaxies of dark GRBs seem to have normal optical
colors, suggesting that the source of obscuring dust is local to the vicinity
of the GRB progenitor or highly unevenly distributed within the host galaxy.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures. Published in A
The blue host galaxy of the red GRB 000418
We report on multi-band (UBVRIZJsKs) observations of the host galaxy of the
April 18, 2000 gamma-ray burst. The Spectral Energy Distribution (SED) is
analysed by fitting empirical and synthetic spectral templates. We find that:
(i) the best SED fit is obtained with a starburst template, (ii) the
photometric redshift is consistent with the spectroscopic redshift, (iii) the
colours of the host are inconsistent with an old stellar population, and (iv)
the global extinction is constrained to be in the range Av=0.12-0.61 mag. The
derived global extinction agrees with the one reported for the afterglow
(Av=0.4-0.9 mag), suggesting a homogeneous distribution of the interstellar
medium (ISM) in the host galaxy. These findings are supplemented by
morphological information from Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging: the
surface brightness profile is smooth, symmetric and compact with no underlying
structures (like dust lanes, spiral arms or disks). A natural scenario which
accounts of all the above results is a nuclear starburst that harbours a young
population of stars from which the GRB originated.Comment: 12 pages with 6 encapsulated PostScript figures. Definitive version
published in Astronomy & Astrophysic
A short gamma-ray burst apparently asssociated with an elliptical galaxy at redshift z=0.225
Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) are bright, brief flashes of high energy photons that
have fascinated scientists for 30 years. They come in two classes: long (>2 s),
softspectrum bursts and short, hard events. The major progress to date on
understanding GRBs has been for long bursts which are typically at high
redshift (z ~ 1) and are in sub-luminous star-forming host galaxies. They are
likely produced in core-collapse explosions of massive stars. Until the present
observation, no short GRB had been accurately (<10") and rapidly (minutes)
located. Here we report the detection of X-ray afterglow from and the
localization of short burst GRB050509b. Its position on the sky is near a
luminous, non-starforming elliptical galaxy at a redshift of 0.225, exactly the
type of location one would expect if the origin of this GRB is the
long-proposed fiery merger of neutron star (NS) or black hole (BH) binaries.
The X-ray afterglow is found to be weak and fading below detection within a few
hours and no optical afterglow is detected to stringent limits, explaining the
past difficulty in localizing short GRBs.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures updated figure
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