5,640 research outputs found
The Ulysses Supplement to the BATSE 3B Catalog of Cosmic Gamma-Ray Bursts
We present Interplanetary Network localization information for 218 gamma-ray
bursts in the 3rd BATSE catalog, obtained by analyzing the arrival times of
these bursts at the Ulysses and Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory (CGRO)
spacecraft. For any given burst observed by these two spacecraft, arrival time
analysis (or "triangulation") results in an annulus of possible arrival
directions whose half-width varies between 7 arcseconds and 32 arcminutes,
depending on the intensity and time history of the burst, and the distance of
the Ulysses spacecraft from Earth. This annulus generally intersects the BATSE
error circle, resulting in an average reduction of the error box area of a
factor of 30.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Supplemen
The Ulysses Supplement to the BATSE 4Br Catalog of Cosmic Gamma-Ray Bursts
We present Interplanetary Network localization information for 147 gamma-ray
bursts observed by the Burst and Transient Source Experiment between the end of
the 3rd BATSE catalog and the end of the 4th BATSE catalog, obtained by
analyzing the arrival times of these bursts at the Ulysses and Compton
Gamma-Ray Observatory (CGRO) spacecraft. For any given burst observed by these
two spacecraft, arrival time analysis (or "triangulation") results in an
annulus of possible arrival directions whose half-width varies between 7
arcseconds and 2.3 degrees, depending on the intensity and time history of the
burst, and the distance of the Ulysses spacecraft from Earth. This annulus
generally intersects the BATSE error circle, resulting in an average reduction
of the error box area of a factor of 25.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal Supplemen
No Evidence for Gamma-Ray Burst/Abell Cluster or Gamma- Ray Burst/Radio-Quiet Quasar Correlations
We examine the recent claims that cosmic gamma-ray bursts are associated with
either radio-quiet quasars or Abell clusters. These associations were based on
positional coincidences between cataloged quasars or Abell clusters, and
selected events from the BATSE 3B catalog of gamma-ray bursts. We use a larger
sample of gamma-ray bursts with more accurate positions, obtained by the 3rd
Interplanetary Network, to re-evaluate these possible associations. We find no
evidence for either.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
The Interplanetary Network Supplement to the BeppoSAX Gamma-Ray Burst Catalogs
Between 1996 July and 2002 April, one or more spacecraft of the
interplanetary network detected 787 cosmic gamma-ray bursts that were also
detected by the Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor and/or Wide-Field X-Ray Camera
experiments aboard the BeppoSAX spacecraft. During this period, the network
consisted of up to six spacecraft, and using triangulation, the localizations
of 475 bursts were obtained. We present the localization data for these events.Comment: 89 pages, 3 figures. Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal
Supplement Serie
The mass of the black hole in GRS 1915+105: new constraints from IR spectroscopy
GRS 1915+105 has the largest mass function of any Galactic black hole system,
although the error is relatively large. Here we present spectroscopic analysis
of medium-resolution IR VLT archival data of GRS 1915+105 in the K-band. We
find an updated ephemeris, and report on attempts to improve the mass function
by a refinement of the radial velocity estimate. We show that the spectra are
significantly affected by the presence of phase-dependent CO bandhead emission,
possibly originating from the accretion disc: we discuss the impact this has on
efforts to better constrain the black hole mass. We report on a possible way to
measure the radial velocity utilising apparent H-band atomic absorption
features and also discuss the general uncertainty of the system parameters of
this well-studied objectComment: 7 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of
the Royal Astronomical Society Main Journa
TeV Burst of Gamma-Ray Bursts and Ultra High Energy Cosmic Rays
Some recent experiments detecting very high energy (VHE) gamma-rays above
10-20 TeV independently reported VHE bursts for some of bright gamma-ray bursts
(GRBs). If these signals are truly from GRBs, these GRBs must emit a much
larger amount of energy as VHE gamma-rays than in the ordinary photon energy
range of GRBs (keV-MeV). We show that such extreme phenomena can be reasonably
explained by synchrotron radiation of protons accelerated to \sim 10^{20-21}
eV, which has been predicted by Totani (1998a). Protons seem to carry about
(m_p/m_e) times larger energy than electrons, and hence the total energy
liberated by one GRB becomes as large as \sim 10^{56} (\Delta \Omega / 4 \pi)
ergs. Therefore a strong beaming of GRB emission is highly likely. Extension of
the VHE spectrum beyond 20 TeV gives a nearly model-independent lower limit of
the Lorentz factor of GRBs, as \gamma \gtilde 500. Furthermore, our model
gives the correct energy range and time variability of ordinary keV-MeV
gamma-rays of GRBs by synchrotron radiation of electrons. Therefore the VHE
bursts of GRBs strongly support the hypothesis that ultra high energy cosmic
rays observed on the Earth are produced by GRBs.Comment: Final version to appear in ApJ Lett. Emphasizing that the extremely
large energy required in this model is not theoretically impossible if GRB
emission is strongly beamed. References update
Are Abell Clusters Correlated with Gamma-Ray Bursts?
A recent study has presented marginal statistical evidence that gamma-ray
burst sources are correlated with Abell clusters, based on analyses of bursts
in the BATSE 3B catalog. Using precise localization information from the 3rd
Interplanetary Network, we have reanalyzed this possible correlation. We find
that most of the Abell clusters which are in the relatively large 3B error
circles are not in the much smaller IPN/BATSE error regions. We believe that
this argues strongly against an Abell cluster-gamma-ray burst correlation.Comment: accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal Letter
Lognormal Properties of SGR 1806-20 and Implications for Other SGR Sources
The time interval between successive bursts from SGR 1806-20 and the
intensity of these bursts are both consistent with lognormal distributions.
Monte Carlo simulations of lognormal burst models with a range of distribution
parameters have been investigated. The main conclusions are that while most
sources like SGR 1806-20 should be detected in a time interval of 25 years,
sources with means about 100 times longer have a probability of about 5\% of
being detected in the same interval. A new breed of experiments that operate
for long periods are required to search for sources with mean recurrence
intervals much longer than SGR 1806-20.Comment: 4 pages, latex with seperate file containing 2 uuencoded, gzip'ed,
tarred, .eps figures. Replaced with file that does not use kluwer.sty to
allow automatic postscript generation. To appear in proceedings of ESLAB 2
X-Ray Light Curves of Gamma-ray Bursts Detected with the All-Sky Monitor on RXTE
We present X-ray light curves (1.5-12 keV) for fifteen gamma-ray bursts
(GRBs) detected by the All-Sky Monitor on the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. We
compare these soft X-ray light curves with count rate histories obtained by the
high-energy (>12 keV) experiments BATSE, Konus-Wind, the BeppoSAX Gamma-Ray
Burst Monitor, and the burst monitor on Ulysses. We discuss these light curves
within the context of a simple relativistic fireball and synchrotron shock
paradigm, and we address the possibility of having observed the transition
between a GRB and its afterglow. The light curves show diverse morphologies,
with striking differences between energy bands. In several bursts, intervals of
significant emission are evident in the ASM energy range with little or no
corresponding emission apparent in the high-energy light curves. For example,
the final peak of GRB 970815 as recorded by the ASM is only detected in the
softest BATSE energy bands. We also study the duration of bursts as a function
of energy. Simple, singly-peaked bursts seem consistent with the E^{-0.5} power
law expected from an origin in synchrotron radiation, but durations of bursts
that exhibit complex temporal structure are not consistent with this
prediction. Bursts such as GRB 970828 that show many short spikes of emission
at high energies last significantly longer at low energies than the synchrotron
cooling law would predict.Comment: 15 pages with 20 figures and 2 tables. In emulateapj format. Accepted
by ApJ
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