269 research outputs found
Extension of an Exponential Light Curve GRB Pulse Model Across Energy Bands
A simple mathematical model of GRB pulses in time, suggested in Norris et al.
(2005), is extended across energy. For a class of isolated pulses, two of those
parameters appear effectively independent of energy. Specifically, statistical
fits indicate that pulse amplitude and pulse width are energy
dependent, while pulse start time and pulse shape are effectively energy
independent. These results bolster the Pulse Start and Pulse Scale conjectures
of Nemiroff (2000) and add a new Pulse Shape conjecture which states that a
class of pulses all have the same shape. The simple resulting pulse counts
model is , where is the
time since the start of the pulse. This pulse model is found to be an
acceptable statistical fit to many of the fluent separable BATSE pulses listed
in Norris et al. (2005). Even without theoretical interpretation, this
cross-energy extension may be immediately useful for fitting prompt emission
from GRB pulses across energy channels with a minimal number of free
parameters.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures. Accepted by MNRA
Testing the Gamma-Ray Burst Pulse Start Conjecture
We test the hypothesis that prompt gamma-ray burst pulse emission starts
simultaneously at all energies (the Pulse Start Conjecture). Our analysis,
using a sample of BATSE bursts observed with four channel, 64-ms data and
performed using a pulse fit model, generally supports this hypothesis for the
Long GRB class, although a few discrepant pulses belong to bursts observed
during times characterized by low signal-to-noise, hidden pulses, and/or
significant pulse overlap. The typical uncertainty in making this statement is
< 0.4 s for pulses in Long GRBs (and < 0.2 s for 40% of the pulses) and perhaps
< 0.1 s for pulses in Short GRBs. When considered along with the Epk decline
found in GRB pulse evolution, this result implies that energy is injected at
the beginning of each and every GRB pulse, and the subsequent spectral
evolution, including the pulse peak intensity, represents radiated energy
losses from this initial injection.Comment: 34 pages, 17 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
The largest structure of the Universe, defined by Gamma-Ray Bursts
Research over the past three decades has revolutionized the field of
cosmology while supporting the standard cosmological model. However, the
cosmological principle of Universal homogeneity and isotropy has always been in
question, since structures as large as the survey size have always been found
as the survey size has increased. Until now, the largest known structure in our
Universe is the Sloan Great Wall (SGW), which is more than 400 Mpc long and
located approximately one billion light-years away. Here we report the
discovery of a structure at least six times larger than the Sloan Great Wall
that is suggested by the distribution of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs). Gamma-ray
bursts are the most energetic explosions in the Universe. They are associated
with the stellar endpoints of massive stars and are found in and near distant
galaxies. Therefore, they are very good indicators of the dense part of the
Universe containing normal matter. As of July 2012, 283 GRB redshifts have been
measured. If one subdivides this GRB sample into nine radial parts and compares
the sky distributions of these subsamples (each containing 31 GRBs), one can
observe that the fourth subsample (1.6 < z < 2.1) differs significantly from
the others in that many of the GRBs are concentrated in the same angular area
of the sky. Using the two-dimensional Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, the significance
of this observation is found to be less than 0.05 per cent. Fourteen out of the
31 Gamma-Ray Bursts in this redshift band are concentrated in approximately 1/8
of the sky. The binomial probability to find such a deviation is p=0.0000055.
This huge structure lies ten times farther away than the Sloan Great Wall, at a
distance of approximately ten billion light-years. The size of the structure
defined by these GRBs is about 2000-3000 Mpc, or more than six times the size
of the largest known object (SGW) in the Universe.Comment: 7th Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium, GRB 2013: paper 33 in eConf
Proceedings C130414
Properties of Gamma-Ray Burst Classes
The three gamma-ray burst (GRB) classes identified by statistical clustering
analysis (Mukherjee et al. 1998) are examined using the pattern recognition
algorithm C4.5 (Quinlan 1986). Although the statistical existence of Class 3
(intermediate duration, intermediate fluence, soft) is supported, the
properties of this class do not need to arise from a distinct source
population. Class 3 properties can easily be produced from Class 1 (long, high
fluence, intermediate hardness) by a combination of measurement error,
hardness/intensity correlation, and a newly-identified BATSE bias (the fluence
duration bias). Class 2 (short, low fluence, hard) does not appear to be
related to Class 1.Comment: 5 pages, 4 imbedded figures, presented at the 5th Huntsville
Gamma-Ray Burst Symposiu
A giant ring-like structure at 0.78<z<0.86 displayed by GRBs
According to the cosmological principle, Universal large-scale structure is
homogeneous and isotropic. The observable Universe, however, shows complex
structures even on very large scales. The recent discoveries of structures
significantly exceeding the transition scale of 370 Mpc pose a challenge to the
cosmological principle.
We report here the discovery of the largest regular formation in the
observable Universe; a ring with a diameter of 1720 Mpc, displayed by 9 gamma
ray bursts (GRBs), exceeding by a factor of five the transition scale to the
homogeneous and isotropic distribution. The ring has a major diameter of
and a minor diameter of at a distance of 2770 Mpc in the 0.78<z<0.86
redshift range, with a probability of of being the result of
a random fluctuation in the GRB count rate.
Evidence suggests that this feature is the projection of a shell onto the
plane of the sky. Voids and string-like formations are common outcomes of
large-scale structure. However, these structures have maximum sizes of 150 Mpc,
which are an order of magnitude smaller than the observed GRB ring diameter.
Evidence in support of the shell interpretation requires that temporal
information of the transient GRBs be included in the analysis.
This ring-shaped feature is large enough to contradict the cosmological
principle. The physical mechanism responsible for causing it is unknown.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS, 13 pages, 8 figures and 4 table
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