17 research outputs found

    The Gamma Ray Bursts GRB970228 and GRB970508: What Have We Learnt?

    Get PDF
    We examine what we regard as key observational results on GRB 970228 and GRB 970508 and show that the accumulated evidence strongly suggests that gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are cosmological fireballs. We further show that the observations suggest that GRBs are not associated with the nuclear activity of active galactic nuclei, and that late-type galaxies are more prolific producers of GRBs. We suggest that GRBs can be used to trace the cosmic history of the star-formation rate. Finally, we show that the GRB locations with respect to the star-forming regions in their host galaxies and the total burst energies can be used to distinguish between different theoretical models for GRBs.Comment: 7 pages (with 2 embedded figures), to be published in the Proceedings of the Fourth Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium, held Sep 15-20, 1997, Huntsville, Alabam

    HST/STIS Observations of the Optical Counterpart to GRB 970228

    Get PDF
    We report on observations of the fading optical counterpart of the gamma-ray burst GRB 970228, made on 4~September~1997 using the STIS CCD on the Hubble Space Telescope. The unresolved counterpart is detected at V=28 +/- 0.25, consistent with a continued power-law decline with exponent -1.14 +/- 0.05. No proper motion is detected, in contradiction of some earlier claims. The counterpart is located within, but near the edge of, a faint extended source with diameter ~0."8 and integrated magnitude 25.7 +/- 0.25. Comparison with WFPC2 data taken one month after the initial burst and NTT data taken on March 13 shows no evidence for fading of the extended emission. After adjusting for the probable Galactic extinction in the direction of GRB 970228 of A_v=0.7, we find that the observed nebula is consistent with the sizes of galaxies of comparable magnitude found in the Hubble Deep Field and other deep HST images, and that only 2% of the sky is covered by galaxies of similar or greater surface brightness. Therefore, the extended source observed about GRB 970228 is most likely a galaxy at moderate redshift, and is almost certainly the host of the gamma-ray burst
    corecore