180 research outputs found
Correlative studies of astrophysical sources of very high and ultra high energy gamma-rays
During the period of this contract, June 1, 1991 to November 14, 1992, the major results of our research effort have come from the Whipple air shower experiment in Tucson, AZ. The most notable development has been the discovery of TeV photons from the BL Lac object, Markarian 421. This result depended critically on the identification of Mrk 421 by the EGRET team as a source of GeV gamma rays
An Estimation of the Gamma-Ray Burst Afterglow Apparent Optical Brightness Distribution Function
By using recent publicly available observational data obtained in conjunction
with the NASA Swift gamma-ray burst mission and a novel data analysis
technique, we have been able to make some rough estimates of the GRB afterglow
apparent optical brightness distribution function. The results suggest that 71%
of all burst afterglows have optical magnitudes with mR < 22.1 at 1000 seconds
after the burst onset, the dimmest detected object in the data sample. There is
a strong indication that the apparent optical magnitude distribution function
peaks at mR ~ 19.5. Such estimates may prove useful in guiding future plans to
improve GRB counterpart observation programs. The employed numerical techniques
might find application in a variety of other data analysis problems in which
the intrinsic distributions must be inferred from a heterogeneous sample.Comment: 15 pages including 2 tables and 7 figures, accepted for publication
in Ap
On the Rates of Type Ia Supernovae in Dwarf and Giant Hosts with ROTSE-IIIb
We present a sample of 23 spectroscopically confirmed Type Ia supernovae that
were discovered in the background of galaxy clusters targeted by ROTSE-IIIb and
use up to 18 of these to determine the local (z = 0.05) volumetric rate. Since
our survey is flux limited and thus biased against fainter objects, the
pseudo-absolute magnitude distribution (pAMD) of SNeIa in a given volume is an
important concern, especially the relative frequency of high to low-luminosity
SNeIa. We find that the pAMD derived from the volume limited Lick Observatory
Supernova Search (LOSS) sample is incompatible with the distribution of SNeIa
in a volume limited (z<0.12) sub sample of the SDSS-II. The LOSS sample
requires far more low-luminosity SNeIa than the SDSS-II can accommodate. Even
though LOSS and SDSS-II have sampled different SNeIa populations, their
volumetric rates are surprisingly similar. Using the same model pAMD adopted in
the SDSS-II SNeIa rate calculation and excluding two high-luminosity SNeIa from
our sample, we derive a rate that is marginally higher than previous
low-redshift determinations. With our full sample and the LOSS pAMD our rate is
more than double the canonical value. We also find that 5 of our 18 SNeIa are
hosted by very low-luminosity (M_B > -16) galaxies, whereas only 1 out 79
nearby SDSS-II SNeIa have such faint hosts. It is possible that previous works
have under-counted either low luminosity SNeIa, SNeIa in low luminosity hosts,
or peculiar SNeIa (sometimes explicitly), and the total SNeIa rate may be
higher than the canonical value.Comment: 18 pages; accepted for publication in The Astronomical Journa
Faint high-energy gamma-ray photon emission of GRB 081006A from Fermi observations
Since the launch of the Fermi gamma - ray Space Telescope on June 11, 2008,
the LAT instrument has solidly detected more than 20 GRBs with high energy
photon emission above 100 MeV. Using the matched filter technique, 3 more GRBs
have also shown evidence of correlation with high energy photon emission as
demonstrated by Akerlof et al. In this paper, we present another GRB
unambiguously detected by the matched filter technique, GRB 081006A. This event
is associated with more than 13 high energy photons above 100 MeV. The
likelihood analysis code provided by the Science Support Center (FSSC)
generated an independent verification of this detection by comparison of the
Test Statistics (TS) value with similar calculations for random LAT data
fields. We have performed detailed temporal and spectral analysis of photons
from 8 keV up to 0.8 GeV from the GBM and the LAT. The properties of GRB
081006A can be compared to the other two long duration GRBs detected at similar
significance, GRB 080825C and GRB 090217A. We find that GRB 081006A is more
similar to GRB 080825C with comparable appearances of late high energy photon
emission. As demonstrated previously, there appears to be a surprising dearth
of faint LAT GRBs, with only one additional GRB identified in a sample of 74
GRBs. In this unique period when both and are operational,
there is some urgency to explore this aspect of GRBs as fully as possible.Comment: ApJ, 745, 7
Limits to the fraction of high-energy photon emitting gamma-ray bursts
After almost 4 years of operation, the two instruments onboard the Fermi
Gamma-ray Space Telescope have shown that the number of gamma-ray bursts with
high energy photon emission above 100 MeV cannot exceed roughly 9% of the total
number of all such events, at least at the present detection limits. In a
recent paper (Zheng et al. 2012c), we found that GRBs with photons detected in
the Large Area Telescope (LAT) have a surprisingly broad distribution with
respect to the photon number above background. Extrapolation of our empirical
fit to numbers of photons below our quoted detection limit suggests that the
overall rate of such events could be determined by standard image co-adding
techniques. In this case, we have taken advantage of the excellent angular
resolution of the Swift mission to provide accurate reference points for 79 GRB
events which have eluded any previous correlations with high energy photons. We
find a small but significant signal. Guided by the power law fit obtained
previously for the number distribution of GRBs, the data suggests that only a
small fraction of GRBs are sources of high energy photons.Comment: 16 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in Ap
GRB 110709A, 111117A and 120107A: Faint high-energy gamma-ray photon emission from Fermi/LAT observations and demographic implications
Launched on June 11, 2008, the LAT instrument onboard the Gamma-ray
Space Telescope has provided a rare opportunity to study high energy photon
emission from gamma-ray bursts. Although the majority of such events (27) have
been iden tified by the Fermi LAT Collaboration, four were uncovered by using
more sensiti ve statistical techniques (Akerlof et al 2010, Akerlof et al 2011,
Zheng et al 2 012). In this paper, we continue our earlier work by finding
three more GRBs ass ociated with high energy photon emission, GRB 110709A,
111117A and 120107A. To s ystematize our matched filter approach, a pipeline
has been developed to identif y these objects in near real time. GRB 120107A is
the first product of this anal ysis procedure. Despite the reduced threshold
for identification, the number of GRB events has not increased significantly.
This relative dearth of events with low photon number prompted a study of the
apparent photon number distribution. W e find an extremely good fit to a simple
power-law with an exponent of -1.8 0.3 for the differential
distribution. As might be expected, there is a substa ntial correlation between
the number of lower energy photons detected by the GBM and the number observed
by the LAT. Thus, high energy photon emission is associ ated with some but not
all of the brighter GBM events. Deeper studies of the pro perties of the small
population of high energy emitting bursts may eventually yi eld a better
understanding of these entire phenomena.Comment: accepted to Ap
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