49 research outputs found
Ultraviolet, Optical, and X-Ray Observations of the Type Ia Supernova 2005am with Swift
We present ultraviolet and optical light curves in six broadband filters and
grism spectra obtained by Swift's Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope for the Type Ia
supernova SN2005am. The data were collected beginning about four days before
the B-band maximum, with excellent coverage of the rapid decline phase and
later observations extending out to 69 days after the peak. The optical and
near UV light curve match well those of SN1992A. The other UV observations
constitute the first set of light curves shorter than 2500 Angstroms and allow
us to compare the light curve evolution in three UV bands. The UV behavior of
this and other low redshift supernovae can be used to constrain theories of
progenitor evolution or to interpret optical light curves of high redshift
supernovae. Using Swift's X-Ray Telescope, we also report the upper limit to
SN2005am's X-ray luminosity to be 1.77 x 10^40 erg s^-1 in the 0.3--10 keV
range from 58,117 s of exposure time.Comment: 15 pages, including 3 figures and 2 tables, submitted to
Astrophysical Journa
Swift-UVOT detection of GRB 050318
We present observations of GRB 050318 by the Ultra-Violet and Optical
Telescope (UVOT) on-board the Swift observatory. The data are the first
detections of a Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) afterglow decay by the UVOT instrument,
launched specifically to open a new window on these transient sources. We
showcase UVOTs ability to provide multi-color photometry and the advantages of
combining UVOT data with simultaneous and contemporaneous observations from the
high-energy detectors on the Swift spacecraft. Multiple filters covering
1,800-6,000 Angstroms reveal a red source with spectral slope steeper than the
simultaneous X-ray continuum. Spectral fits indicate that the UVOT colors are
consistent with dust extinction by systems at z = 1.2037 and z = 1.4436,
redshifts where absorption systems have been pre-identified. However, the data
can be most-easily reproduced with models containing a foreground system of
neutral gas redshifted by z = 2.8 +/- 0.3. For both of the above scenarios,
spectral and decay slopes are, for the most part, consistent with fireball
expansion into a uniform medium, provided a cooling break occurs between the
energy ranges of the UVOT and Swifts X-ray instrumentation.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, ApJ Letters, in pres
Paper II: Calibration of the Swift ultraviolet/optical telescope
The Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope (UVOT) is one of three instruments onboard
the Swift observatory. The photometric calibration has been published, and this
paper follows up with details on other aspects of the calibration including a
measurement of the point spread function with an assessment of the orbital
variation and the effect on photometry. A correction for large scale variations
in sensitivity over the field of view is described, as well as a model of the
coincidence loss which is used to assess the coincidence correction in extended
regions. We have provided a correction for the detector distortion and measured
the resulting internal astrometric accuracy of the UVOT, also giving the
absolute accuracy with respect to the International Celestial Reference System.
We have compiled statistics on the background count rates, and discuss the
sources of the background, including instrumental scattered light. In each case
we describe any impact on UVOT measurements, whether any correction is applied
in the standard pipeline data processing or whether further steps are
recommended.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 15 pages, 21 figures, 4 table
Photometric Calibration of the Swift Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope
We present the photometric calibration of the Swift UltraViolet/Optical
Telescope (UVOT) which includes: optimum photometric and background apertures,
effective area curves, colour transformations, conversion factors for count
rates to flux, and the photometric zero points (which are accurate to better
than 4 per cent) for each of the seven UVOT broadband filters. The calibration
was performed with observations of standard stars and standard star fields that
represent a wide range of spectral star types. The calibration results include
the position dependent uniformity, and instrument response over the 1600-8000A
operational range. Because the UVOT is a photon counting instrument, we also
discuss the effect of coincidence loss on the calibration results. We provide
practical guidelines for using the calibration in UVOT data analysis. The
results presented here supersede previous calibration results.Comment: Minor improvements after referees report. Accepted for publication in
MNRA
Gamma-Ray Burst at the extreme: "the naked-eye burst" GRB 080319B
On 19 March 2008, the northern sky was the stage of a spectacular optical
transient that for a few seconds remained visible to the naked eye. The
transient was associated with GRB 080319B, a gamma-ray burst at a luminosity
distance of about 6 Gpc (standard cosmology), making it the most luminous
optical object ever recorded by human kind. We present comprehensive sky
monitoring and multi-color optical follow-up observations of GRB 080319B
collected by the RAPTOR telescope network covering the development of the
explosion and the afterglow before, during, and after the burst. The extremely
bright prompt optical emission revealed features that are normally not
detectable. The optical and gamma-ray variability during the explosion are
correlated, but the optical flux is much greater than can be reconciled with
single emission mechanism and a flat gamma-ray spectrum. This extreme optical
behavior is best understood as synchrotron self-Compton model (SSC). After a
gradual onset of the gamma-ray emission, there is an abrupt rise of the prompt
optical flux suggesting that variable self-absorption dominates the early
optical light curve. Our simultaneous multi-color optical light curves
following the flash show spectral evolution consistent with a rapidly decaying
red component due to large angle emission and the emergence of a blue forward
shock component from interaction with the surrounding environment. While
providing little support for the reverse shock that dominates the early
afterglow, these observations strengthen the case for the universal role of the
SSC mechanism in generating gamma-ray bursts.Comment: accepted for publication in Ap
Swift detection of all previously undetected blazars in a micro-wave flux-limited sample of WMAP foreground sources
Almost the totality of the bright foreground sources in the WMAP CMB maps are
blazars, a class of sources that show usually also X-ray emission. However, 23
objects in a flux-limited sample of 140 blazars of the WMAP catalog (first
year) were never reported before as X-ray sources. We present here the results
of 41 Swift observations which led to the detection of all these 23 blazars in
the 0.3-10 keV band. We conclude that all micro-wave selected blazars are X-ray
emitters and that the distribution of the micro-wave to X-ray spectral slope
of LBL blazars is very narrow, confirming that the X-ray flux
of most blazars is a very good estimator of their micro-wave emission. The
X-ray spectral shape of all the objects that were observed long enough to allow
spectral analysis is flat and consistent with inverse Compton emission within
the commonly accepted view where the radiation from blazars is emitted in a
Sychrotron-Inverse-Compton scenario. We predict that all blazars and most radio
galaxies above the sensitivity limit of the WMAP and of the Planck CMB missions
are X-ray sources detectable by the present generation of X-ray satellites. An
hypothetical all-sky soft X-ray survey with sensitivity of approximately
erg/s would be crucial to locate and remove over 100,000 blazars
from CMB temperature and polarization maps and therefore accurately clean the
primordial CMB signal from the largest population of extragalactic foreground
contaminants.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, 5 tables, A&A in pres
The XMM-SSC survey of hard-spectrum XMM-Newton sources 1: optically bright sources
We present optical and X-ray data for a sample of serendipitous XMM-Newton
sources that are selected to have 0.5-2 keV vs 2-4.5 keV X-ray hardness ratios
which are harder than the X-ray background. The sources have 2-4.5 keV X-ray
flux >= 10^-14 cgs, and in this paper we examine a subsample of 42 optically
bright (r < 21) sources; this subsample is 100 per cent spectroscopically
identified. All but one of the optical counterparts are extragalactic, and we
argue that the single exception, a Galactic M star, is probably a coincidental
association. The X-ray spectra are consistent with heavily absorbed power laws
(21.8 < log NH < 23.4), and all of them appear to be absorbed AGN. The majority
of the sources show only narrow emission lines in their optical spectra,
implying that they are type-2 AGN. Only a small fraction of the sources (7/42)
show broad optical emission lines, and all of these have NH < 10^23 cm^-2. This
implies that ratios of X-ray absorption to optical/UV extinction equivalent to
> 100 times the Galactic gas-to-dust ratio are rare in AGN absorbers (at most a
few percent of the population), and may be restricted to broad absorption-line
QSOs. Seven objects appear to have an additional soft X-ray component in
addition to the heavily absorbed power law. We consider the implications of our
results in the light of the AGN unified scheme. We find that the soft
components in narrow-line objects are consistent with the unified scheme
provided that > 4 per cent of broad-line AGN have ionised absorbers that
attenuate their soft X-ray flux by >50 per cent. In at least one of the X-ray
absorbed, broad-line AGN in our sample the X-ray spectrum requires an ionised
absorber, consistent with this picture.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRA
Swift panchromatic observations of the bright gamma-ray burst GRB050525a
The bright gamma-ray burst GRB050525a has been detected with the Swift
observatory, providing unique multiwavelength coverage from the very earliest
phases of the burst. The X-ray and optical/UV afterglow decay light curves both
exhibit a steeper slope ~0.15 days after the burst, indicative of a jet break.
This jet break time combined with the total gamma-ray energy of the burst
constrains the opening angle of the jet to be 3.2 degrees. We derive an
empirical `time-lag' redshift from the BAT data of z_hat = 0.69 +/- 0.02, in
good agreement with the spectroscopic redshift of 0.61.
Prior to the jet break, the X-ray data can be modelled by a simple power law
with index alpha = -1.2. However after 300 s the X-ray flux brightens by about
30% compared to the power-law fit. The optical/UV data have a more complex
decay, with evidence of a rapidly falling reverse shock component that
dominates in the first minute or so, giving way to a flatter forward shock
component at later times.
The multiwavelength X-ray/UV/Optical spectrum of the afterglow shows evidence
for migration of the electron cooling frequency through the optical range
within 25000 s. The measured temporal decay and spectral indices in the X-ray
and optical/UV regimes compare favourably with the standard fireball model for
Gamma-ray bursts assuming expansion into a constant density interstellar
medium.Comment: 31 pages, 7 figures, referee comments implemented, typo corrected in
author list, accepted by Ap
Swift and infra-red observations of the blazar 3C~454.3 during the giant X-ray flare of May 2005
We present the results of a series of Swift and quasi simultaneous
ground-based infra-red observations of the blazar 3C 454.3 carried out in
April-May 2005 when the source was 10 to 30 times brighter than previously
observed. We found 3C 454.3 to be very bright and variable at all frequencies
covered by our instrumentation. The broad-band Spectral Energy Distribution
(SED) shows the usual two-bump shape (in nu-nu f(nu) space) with the Infra-red,
optical and UV data sampling the declining part of the synchrotron emission
that, even during this extremely large outburst, had its maximum in the
far-infrared. The X-ray spectral data from the XRT and BAT instruments are flat
and due to inverse Compton emission. The remarkable SED observed implies that
at the time of the Swift pointings 3C 454.3 was one of the brightest objects in
the extragalactic sky with a gamma-ray emission similar or brighter than that
of 3C 279 when observed in a high state by EGRET. Time variability in the
optical-UV flux is very different from that in the X-ray data: while the first
component varied by about a factor two within a single exposure, but remained
approximately constant between different observations, the inverse Compton
component did not vary on short time-scales but changed by more than a factor
of 3 between observations separated by a few days. This different dynamical
behaviour illustrates the need to collect simultaneous multi-frequency data
over a wide range of time-scales to fully constrain physical parameters in
blazars.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Taxonomy of GRB optical light-curves: identification of a salient class of early afterglows
The temporal behaviour of the early optical emission from Gamma-Ray Burst
afterglows can be divided in four classes: fast-rising with an early peak,
slow-rising with a late peak, flat plateaus, and rapid decays since first
measurement. The fast-rising optical afterglows display correlations among peak
flux, peak epoch, and post-peak power-law decay index that can be explained
with a structured outflow seen off-axis, but the shock origin (reverse or
forward) of the optical emission cannot be determined. The afterglows with
plateaus and slow-rises may be accommodated by the same model, if observer
location offsets are larger than for the fast-rising afterglows, or could be
due to a long-lived injection of energy and/or ejecta in the blast-wave. If
better calibrated with more afterglows, the peak flux-peak epoch relation
exhibited by the fast and slow-rising optical light-curves could provide a way
to use this type of afterglows as standard candles.Comment: 8 pages, submitted to MNRA