399 research outputs found
The late-time afterglow of the extremely energetic short burst GRB 090510 revisited
The discovery of the short GRB 090510 has raised considerable attention
mainly because it had a bright optical afterglow and it is among the most
energetic events detected so far within the entire GRB population. The
afterglow was observed with swift/UVOT and swift/XRT and evidence of a jet
break around 1.5 ks after the burst has been reported in the literature,
implying that after this break the optical and X-ray light curve should fade
with the same decay slope. As noted by several authors, the post-break decay
slope seen in the UVOT data is much shallower than the steep decay in the X-ray
band, pointing to an excess of optical flux at late times. We reduced and
analyzed new afterglow light-curve data obtained with the multichannel imager
GROND. Based on the densely sampled data set obtained with GROND, we find that
the optical afterglow of GRB 090510 did indeed enter a steep decay phase
starting around 22 ks after the burst. During this time the GROND optical light
curve is achromatic, and its slope is identical to the slope of the X-ray data.
In combination with the UVOT data this implies that a second break must have
occurred in the optical light curve around 22 ks post burst, which, however,
has no obvious counterpart in the X-ray band, contradicting the interpretation
that this could be another jet break. The GROND data provide the missing piece
of evidence that the optical afterglow of GRB 090510 did follow a post-jet
break evolution at late times.Comment: submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics, accepted for publication on
Dec 24, 201
The bright optical/NIR afterglow of the faint GRB 080710 - Evidence for a jet viewed off axis
We investigate the optical/near-infrared light curve of the afterglow of GRB
080710 in the context of rising afterglows. Optical and near-infrared
photometry was performed using the seven channel imager GROND and the
Tautenburg Schmidt telescope. X-ray data were provided by the X-ray Telescope
onboard the Swift satellite. The optical/NIR light curve of the afterglow of
GRB 080710 is dominated by an initial increase in brightness, which smoothly
turns over into a shallow power law decay. The initially rising achromatic
light curve of the afterglow of GRB 080710 can be accounted for with a model of
a burst viewed off-axis or a single jet in its pre deceleration phase and in an
on-axis geometry. An unified picture of the afterglow light curve and prompt
emission properties can be obtained with an off-axis geometry, suggesting that
late and shallow rising optical light curves of GRB afterglows might be
produced by geometric effects.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A and
Super-solar Metal Abundances in Two Galaxies at z ~ 3.57 revealed by the GRB 090323 Afterglow Spectrum
We report on the surprisingly high metallicity measured in two absorption systems at high redshift, detected in the Very Large Telescope spectrum of the afterglow of the gamma-ray burst GRB090323. The two systems, at redshift z =3.5673 and z =3.5774 (separation ∆v ≈ 660 km s−1), are dominated by the neutral gas in the interstellar medium of the parent galaxies. From the singly ionized zinc and sulfur, we estimate oversolar metallicities of [Zn/H] = +0.29± 0.10 and [S/H] = +0.67± 0.34, in the blue and red absorber, respectively. These are the highest metallicities ever measured in galaxies at z\u3e 3. We propose that the two systems trace two galaxies in the process of merging, whose star formation and metallicity are heightened by the interaction. This enhanced star formation might also have triggered the birth of the GRB progenitor. As typically seen in star-forming galaxies, the fine-structure absorption Siii∗ is detected, both in G0 and G1. From the rest-frame UV emission in the GRB location, we derive arelatively high, not corrected for dust extinction, star-formation rate SFR ≈ 6M yr−1. These properties suggest a possible connection between some high-redshift GRB host galaxies and high-z massive sub-millimeter galaxies, which are characterized by disturbed morphologies and high metallicities. Our result provides additional evidence that the dispersion in the chemical enrichment of the Universe at high redshift is substantial, with the existence of very metal rich galaxies less than two billion years after the Big Bang
Germline Maintenance Through the Multifaceted Activities of GLH/Vasa in
Vasa homologs are ATP-dependent DEAD-box helicases, multipotency factors, and critical components that specify and protect the germline. They regulate translation, amplify piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs), and act as RNA solvents; however, the limited availability of mutagenesis-derived alleles and their wide range of phenotypes have complicated their analysis. Now, with clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (CRISPR/Cas9), these limitations can be mitigated to determine why protein domains have been lost or retained throughout evolution. Here, we define the functional motifs of GLH-1/Vasa i
BL Lacertae objects beyond redshift 1.3 - UV-to-NIR photometry and photometric redshift for Fermi/LAT blazars
Observations of the gamma-ray sky with Fermi led to significant advances
towards understanding blazars, the most extreme class of Active Galactic
Nuclei. A large fraction of the population detected by Fermi is formed by BL
Lacertae (BL Lac) objects, whose sample has always suffered from a severe
redshift incompleteness due to the quasi-featureless optical spectra. Our goal
is to provide a significant increase of the number of confirmed high-redshift
BL Lac objects contained in the 2 LAC Fermi/LAT catalog. For 103 Fermi/LAT
blazars, photometric redshifts using spectral energy distribution fitting have
been obtained. The photometry includes 13 broad-band filters from the far
ultraviolet to the near-IR observed with Swift/UVOT and the multi-channel
imager GROND at the MPG/ESO 2.2m telescope. Data have been taken
quasi-simultaneously and the remaining source-intrinsic variability has been
corrected for. We release the UV-to-near-IR 13-band photometry for all 103
sources and provide redshift constraints for 75 sources without previously
known redshift. Out of those, eight have reliable photometric redshifts at
z>1.3, while for the other 67 sources we provide upper limits. Six of the
former eight are BL Lac objects, which quadruples the sample of confirmed
high-redshift BL Lac. This includes three sources with redshifts higher than
the previous record for BL Lac, including CRATES J0402-2615 with the best-fit
solution at z~1.9.Comment: Uploaded correct Fig 4. Changed counterpart name for 2FGLJ0537.7-5716
from PKS 0541-834 (different source) to SUMSS J053748-57182
ILLUMINATING THE DARKEST GAMMA-RAY BURSTS WITH RADIO OBSERVATIONS
We present X-ray, optical, near-infrared (IR), and radio observations of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) 110709B and 111215A, as well as optical and near-IR observations of their host galaxies. The combination of X-ray detections and deep optical/near-IR limits establish both bursts as "dark." Sub-arcsecond positions enabled by radio detections lead to robust host galaxy associations, with optical detections that indicate z ≾ 4 (110709B) and z ≈ 1.8-2.9 (111215A). We therefore conclude that both bursts are dark due to substantial rest-frame extinction. Using the radio and X-ray data for each burst we find that GRB 110709B requires A_V^(host) ≳ 5.3 mag and GRB 111215A requires A_V^(host) ≳ 8.5 mag (assuming z = 2). These are among the largest extinction values inferred for dark bursts to date. The two bursts also exhibit large neutral hydrogen column densities of N H, int ≳ 10^(22) cm^(–2) (z = 2) as inferred from their X-ray spectra, in agreement with the trend for dark GRBs. Moreover, the inferred values are in agreement with the Galactic A_V -N_H relation, unlike the bulk of the GRB population. Finally, we find that for both bursts the afterglow emission is best explained by a collimated outflow with a total beaming-corrected energy of E_γ + E_K ≈ (7-9) × 10^(51) erg (z = 2) expanding into a wind medium with a high density, Ṁ ≈ (6-20) x 10^(-5) M_☉ yr^(–1) (n ≈ 100-350 cm^(–3) at ≈ 10^(17) cm). While the energy release is typical of long GRBs, the inferred density may be indicative of larger mass-loss rates for GRB progenitors in dusty (and hence metal rich) environments. This study establishes the critical role of radio observations in demonstrating the origin and properties of dark GRBs. Observations with the JVLA and ALMA will provide a sample with sub-arcsecond positions and robust host associations that will help to shed light on obscured star formation and the role of metallicity in GRB progenitors
Evidence for Supernova-Synthesised Dust from the Rising Afterglow of GRB 071025 at z~5
We present observations and analysis of the broadband afterglow of Swift GRB
071025. Using optical and infrared (RIYJHK) photometry, we derive a photometric
redshift of 4.4 < z < 5.2; at this redshift our simultaneous multicolour
observations begin at ~30 s after the GRB trigger in the host frame and during
the initial rising phase of the afterglow. We associate the light curve peak at
580 s in the observer frame with the formation of the forward shock, giving an
estimate of the initial Lorentz factor Gamma_0 ~ 200. The red spectral energy
distribution (even in regions not affected by the Lyman-alpha break) provides
secure evidence of a large dust column. However, the inferred extinction curve
shows a prominent flat component between 2000-3000 Angstroms in the rest-frame,
inconsistent with any locally observed template but well-fit by models of dust
formed by supernovae. Time-dependent fits to the extinction profile reveal no
evidence of dust destruction and limit the decrease in the extinction column to
Delta A_3000 < 0.54 mag after t = 50 s in the rest frame. Our observations
provide evidence of a transition in dust properties at z~5, in agreement with
studies of high-z quasars, and suggest that SN-formed dust continues to
dominate the opacity of typical galaxies at this redshift.Comment: Resubmitted to MNRAS following referee report. Contains additional
figure and some extra analysis/discussio
Monster in the Dark: The Ultraluminous GRB 080607 and its Dusty Environment
We present early-time optical through infrared photometry of the bright gamma-ray burst GRB 080607, starting only 6 s following the initial trigger in the rest frame. Complemented by our previously published spectroscopy, this high-quality photometric dataset allows us to solve for the extinction properties of the redshift 3.036 sightline, giving perhaps the most detailed information on the ultraviolet continuum absorption properties of any sightline outside our Local Group to date. The extinction properties are not adequately modeled by any ordinary extinction template (including the average Milky Way, Large Magellanic Cloud, and Small Magellanic Cloud curves), partially because the 2175 A feature (while present) is weaker by about a factor of two than when seen under similar cir-cumstances locally. However, the spectral energy distribution is exquisitely fitted by the more general Fitzpatrick & Massa (1990) parameterization of Local-Group extinction, putting it in the same family as some peculiar Milky Way extinction curves. After correcting for this (considerable, AV = 3.3±0.4 mag) extinction, GRB 080607 is revealed to have been among the most optically luminous events ever observed, comparable to the naked-eye burst GRB 080319B. Its early peak time (trest \u3c 6 s) indicates a high initial Lorentz factor (T \u3e 600), while the extreme luminosity may be explained in part by a large circumburst density. Only because of its early high luminosity could the afterglow of GRB 080607 be studied in such detail in spite of the large attenuation and great distance, making this burst an excellent prototype for the understanding of other highly obscured extragalactic objects, and of the class of “dark” GRBs in particular
A Deep Search for Host Galaxies of GRBs with no Detected Optical Afterglow
Context. Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) can provide information about star formation at high redshifts. Even in the absence of a bright optical/near-infrared/radio afterglow, the high detection rate of X-ray afterglows by Swift/XRT and its localization precision of 2–3 arcsec facilitates the identification and the study of GRB host galaxies. Aims. We focus on the search for the host galaxies of 17 bursts with arcsec-sized XRT error circles but no detected long-wavelength afterglow, in spite of their deep and rapid follow-up observations. Three of these events can also be classified as truly dark bursts, i.e., the observed upper limit on the optical flux of the afterglow was less than expected based on the measured X-ray flux. Our goals are to identify the GRB host galaxy candidates and characterize their phenomenological parameters. Methods. Our study is based on deep RC and Ks-band observations performed with FORS1, FORS2, VIMOS, ISAAC, and HAWK-I at the ESO/VLT, partly supported by observations with the seven-channel imager GROND at the 2.2-m telescope on La Silla, and supplemented by observations with NEWFIRM at the 4-m telescope on Kitt Peak. To be conservative, we searched for host galaxy candidates within an area of twice the radius of each associated 90% c.l. Swift/XRT error circle. Results. For 15 of the 17 bursts, we find at least one galaxy within the searching area, and in the remaining two cases only a deep upper limit to RC and Ks can be provided. In seven cases, we discover extremely red objects in the error circles, at least four of which might be dust-enshrouded galaxies. The most remarkable case is the host of GRB 080207, which has a color of (RC −Ks)AB ∼4.7 mag, and is one of the reddest galaxies ever associated with a GRB. As a by-product of our study we identify the optical afterglow of GRB 070517. Conclusions. Only a minority of optically dim afterglows are due to Lyman dropout ( \u3c 1/3). Extinction by dust in the host galaxies might explain all other events. Thereby, a seemingly non-negligible fraction of these hosts are globally dust-enshrouded, extremely red galaxies. This suggests that at least a fraction of GRB afterglows trace a subpopulation of massive starburst galaxies, which are markedly different from the main body of the GRB host galaxy population, namely the blue, subluminous, compact galaxies
A photometric redshift of for the \agile GRB 080514B
Aims: The AGILE gamma-ray burst GRB 080514B is the first burst with detected
emission above 30 MeV and an optical afterglow. However, no spectroscopic
redshift for this burst is known.
Methods: We compiled ground-based photometric optical/NIR and millimeter data
from several observatories, including the multi-channel imager GROND, as well
as ultraviolet \swift UVOT and X-ray XRT observations. The spectral energy
distribution of the optical/NIR afterglow shows a sharp drop in the \swift UVOT
UV filters that can be utilized for the estimation of a redshift.
Results: Fitting the SED from the \swift UVOT band to the band, we
estimate a photometric redshift of , consistent with the
pseudo redshift reported by Pelangeon & Atteia (2008) based on the gamma-ray
data.
Conclusions: The afterglow properties of GRB 080514B do not differ from those
exhibited by the global sample of long bursts, supporting the view that
afterglow properties are basically independent of prompt emission properties.Comment: submitted to A&A letter
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