399 research outputs found
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
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
PKS 0537-286, carrying the information of the environment of SMBHs in the early Universe
We present the results of a multifrequency campaign on the high-redshift (z =
3.1) blazar PKS 0537-286. The source was observed at different epochs from 2006
to 2008 with INTEGRAL and Swift, and nearly simultaneously with ground-based
near-IR/optical telescopes. The SEDs are compatible with a model based on
synchrotron radiation and external inverse Compton scattering. The campaign
gives an insight into the physical environment of the blazar.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&
The redshift and afterglow of the extremely energetic gamma-ray burst GRB 080916C
The detection of GeV photons from gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) has important
consequences for the interpretation and modelling of these most-energetic
cosmological explosions. The full exploitation of the high-energy measurements
relies, however, on the accurate knowledge of the distance to the events. Here
we report on the discovery of the afterglow and subsequent redshift
determination of GRB 080916C, the first GRB detected by the Fermi Gamma-Ray
Space Telescope with high significance detection of photons at >0.1 GeV.
Observations were done with 7-channel imager GROND at the 2.2m MPI/ESO
telescope, the SIRIUS instrument at the Nagoya-SAAO 1.4m telescope in South
Africa, and the GMOS instrument at Gemini-S. The afterglow photometric redshift
of z=4.35+-0.15, based on simultaneous 7-filter observations with the Gamma-Ray
Optical and Near-infrared Detector (GROND), places GRB 080916C among the top 5%
most distant GRBs, and makes it the most energetic GRB known to date. The
detection of GeV photons from such a distant event is rather surprising.
The observed gamma-ray variability in the prompt emission together with the
redshift suggests a lower limit for the Lorentz factor of the
ultra-relativistic ejecta of Gamma > 1090. This value rivals any previous
measurements of Gamma in GRBs and strengthens the extreme nature of GRB
080916C.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures; subm. to A&
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
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A Photometric Redshift of z ~ 9.4 for GRB 090429B
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) serve as powerful probes of the early universe, with their luminous afterglows revealing the locations and physical properties of star-forming galaxies at the highest redshifts, and potentially locating first-generation (Population III) stars. Since GRB afterglows have intrinsically very simple spectra, they allow robust redshifts from low signal-to-noise spectroscopy, or photometry. Here we present a photometric redshift of z ~ 9.4 for the Swift detected GRB 090429B based on deep observations with Gemini-North, the Very Large Telescope, and the GRB Optical and Near-infrared Detector. Assuming a Small Magellanic Cloud dust law (which has been found in a majority of GRB sight lines), the 90% likelihood range for the redshift is 9.06 7. The non-detection of the host galaxy to deep limits (Y(AB) ~ 28, which would correspond roughly to 0.001L* at z = 1) in our late-time optical and infrared observations with the Hubble Space Telescope strongly supports the extreme-redshift origin of GRB 090429B, since we would expect to have detected any low-z galaxy, even if it were highly dusty. Finally, the energetics of GRB 090429B are comparable to those of other GRBs and suggest that its progenitor is not greatly different from those of lower redshift bursts
Gaia transients in galactic nuclei
The high spatial resolution and precise astrometry and photometry of the Gaia
mission should make it particularly apt at discovering and resolving transients
occurring in, or near, the centres of galaxies. Indeed, some nuclear transients
are reported by the Gaia Science Alerts (GSA) team, but not a single confirmed
Tidal Disruption Event has been published. In order to explore the sensitivity
of GSA, we performed an independent and systematic search for nuclear
transients using Gaia observations. Our transient search is driven from an
input galaxy catalogue (derived from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Release 12).
We present a candidate detection metric which is independent from the existing
GSA methodology, to see if Gaia Alerts are biased against the discovery of
nuclear transients, and in particular which steps may have an impact. Our
technique does require significant manual vetting of candidates, making
implementation in the GSA system impractical for daily operations, although it
could be run weekly, which for month-to-year long transients would make a
scientifically valuable addition. Our search yielded ~480 nuclear transients, 5
of which were alerted and published by GSA. The list of (in some cases ongoing)
transients includes candidates for events related to enhanced accretion onto a
super-massive black hole and TDEs. An implementation of the detection
methodology and criteria used in this paper as an extension of GSA could open
up the possibility for Gaia to fulfil the role as a main tool to find transient
nuclear activity as predicted in the literature.Comment: MNRAS accepted; full Table 2 attache
The dark GRB080207 in an extremely red host and the implications for GRBs in highly obscured environments
[Abridged] We present comprehensive X-ray, optical, near- and mid-infrared,
and sub-mm observations of GRB 080207 and its host galaxy. The afterglow was
undetected in the optical and near-IR, implying an optical to X-ray index <0.3,
identifying GRB 080207 as a dark burst. Swift X-ray observations show extreme
absorption in the host, which is confirmed by the unusually large optical
extinction found by modelling the X-ray to nIR afterglow spectral energy
distribution. Our Chandra observations obtained 8 days post-burst allow us to
place the afterglow on the sky to sub-arcsec accuracy, enabling us to pinpoint
an extremely red galaxy (ERO). Follow-up host observations with HST, Spitzer,
Gemini, Keck and the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) provide a photometric
redshift solution of z ~1.74 (+0.05,-0.06) (1 sigma), 1.56 < z < 2.08 at 2
sigma) for the ERO host, and suggest that it is a massive and morphologically
disturbed ultra-luminous infrared galaxy (ULIRG) system, with L_FIR ~ 2.4 x
10^12 L_solar. These results add to the growing evidence that GRBs originating
in very red hosts always show some evidence of dust extinction in their
afterglows (though the converse is not true -- some extinguished afterglows are
found in blue hosts). This indicates that a poorly constrained fraction of GRBs
occur in very dusty environments. By comparing the inferred stellar masses, and
estimates of the gas phase metallicity in both GRB hosts and sub-mm galaxies we
suggest that many GRB hosts, even at z>2 are at lower metallicity than the
sub-mm galaxy population, offering a likely explanation for the dearth of
sub-mm detected GRB hosts. However, we also show that the dark GRB hosts are
systematically more massive than those hosting optically bright events, perhaps
implying that previous host samples are severely biased by the exclusion of
dark events.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
GRB 080913 at Redshift 6.7
We report on the detection by Swift of GRB 080913, and subsequent optical/near-infrared follow-up observations by GROND, which led to the discovery of its optical/NIR afterglow and the recognition of its high-z nature via the detection of a spectral break between the i and z bands. Spectroscopy obtained at the ESO-VLT revealed a continuum extending down to λ = 9400 Å, and zero flux for 7500 Å\u3cλ\u3c 9400 Å, which we interpret as the onset of a Gunn–Peterson trough at z = 6.695± 0.025 (95.5% confidence level), making GRB 080913 the highest-redshift gamma-ray burst (GRB) to date, and more distant than the highest-redshift QSO. We note that many redshift indicators that are based on promptly available burst or afterglow properties have failed for GRB 080913. We report on our follow-up campaign and compare the properties of GRB 080913 with bursts at lower redshift. In particular, since the afterglow of this burst is fainter than typical for GRBs, we show that 2 m class telescopes can identify most high-redshift GRBs
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