471 research outputs found

    Luminosity Functions of Gamma-Ray Burst Afterglows

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    Aims: Use the standard fireball model to create virtual populations of gamma-ray burst afterglows and study their luminosity functions. Methods: We randomly vary the parameters of the standard fireball model to create virtual populations of afterglows. We use the luminosity of each burst at an observer's time of 1 day to create a luminosity function and compare our results with available observational data to assess the internal consistency of the standard fireball model. Results: We show that the luminosity functions can be described by a function similar to a log normal distribution with an exponential cutoff. The function parameters are frequency dependent but not very dependent on the model parameter distributions used to create the virtual populations. Comparison with observations shows that while there is good general agreement with the data, it is difficult to explain simultaneously the X-ray and optical data. Possible reasons for this are discussed and the most likely one is that the standard fireball model is incomplete and that decoupling of the X-ray and optical emission mechanism may be needed.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in A&

    Energy Injection Episodes in Gamma Ray Bursts: The Light Curves and Polarization Properties of GRB 021004

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    Several GRB afterglow light curves deviate strongly from the power law decay observed in most bursts. We show that these variations can be accounted for by including refreshed shocks in the standard fireball model previously used to interpret the overall afterglow behavior. As an example we consider GRB 021004 that exhibited strong light curve variations and has a reasonably well time-resolved polarimetry. We show that the light curves in the R-band, X-rays and in the radio can be accounted for by four energy injection episodes in addition to the initial event. The polarization variations are shown to be a consequence of the injections.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. To appear in ApJ

    Energy injection episodes in GRBs: The case of GRB 021004

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    A number of GRB afterglow light curves deviate substantially from the power law decay observed in most bursts. These variations can be accounted for by including refreshed shocks in the standard fireball model previously used to interpret the overall afterglow behavior. We show that the light curves of GRB 021004 can be accounted for by four energy injection episodes in addition to the initial event. The polarization variations are shown to be a consequence of the injections

    The Steady-State Multi-TeV Diffuse Gamma-Ray Emission Predicted with GALPROP and Prospects for the Cherenkov Telescope Array

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    Cosmic Rays (CRs) interact with the diffuse gas, radiation, and magnetic fields in the interstellar medium (ISM) to produce electromagnetic emissions that are a significant component of the all-sky flux across a broad wavelength range. The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) has measured these emissions at GeV γ\gamma-ray energies with high statistics. Meanwhile, the High-Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.) telescope array has observed large-scale Galactic diffuse emission in the TeV γ\gamma-ray energy range. The emissions observed at GeV and TeV energies are connected by the common origin of the CR particles injected by the sources, but the energy dependence of the mixture from the general ISM (true `diffuse'), those emanating from the relatively nearby interstellar space about the sources, and the sources themselves, is not well understood. In this paper, we investigate predictions of the broadband emissions using the GALPROP code over a grid of steady-state 3D models that include variations over CR sources, and other ISM target distributions. We compare, in particular, the model predictions in the VHE (\geq100 GeV) γ\gamma-ray range with the H.E.S.S. Galactic plane survey (HGPS) after carefully subtracting emission from catalogued γ\gamma-ray sources. Accounting for the unresolved source contribution, and the systematic uncertainty of the HGPS, we find that the GALPROP model predictions agree with lower estimates for the HGPS source-subtracted diffuse flux. We discuss the implications of the modelling results for interpretation of data from the next generation Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA).Comment: 14 pages, 12 figures, Accepted in MNRA

    Multi-wavelength constraints on cosmic-ray leptons in the Galaxy

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    Cosmic rays (CRs) interact with the gas, the radiation field and the magnetic field in the Milky Way, producing diffuse emission from radio to gamma rays. Observations of this diffuse emission and comparison with detailed predictions are powerful tools to unveil the CR properties and to study CR propagation. We present various GALPROP CR propagation scenarios based on current CR measurements. The predicted synchrotron emission is compared to radio surveys, and synchrotron temperature maps from WMAP and Planck, while the predicted interstellar gamma-ray emission is compared to Fermi-LAT observations. We show how multi-wavelength observations of the Galactic diffuse emission can be used to help constrain the CR lepton spectrum and propagation. Finally we discuss how radio and microwave data could be used in understanding the diffuse Galactic gamma-ray emission observed with Fermi-LAT, especially at low energies.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures; in Proceedings of the 34th International Cosmic Ray Conference (ICRC 2015), The Hague (The Netherlands); Oral contributio

    Geology of Tindfjallajökull volcano, Iceland

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    The geology of Tindfjallajökull volcano, southern Iceland, is presented as a 1:50,000 scale map. Field mapping was carried out with a focus on indicators of past environments. A broad stratocone of interbedded fragmental rocks and lavas was constructed during Tindfjallajökull’s early development. This stratocone has been dissected by glacial erosion and overlain by a variety of mafic to silicic volcanic landforms. Eruption of silicic magma, which probably occurred subglacially, constructed a thick pile of breccia and lava lobes in the summit area. Mafic to intermediate flank eruptions continued through to the end of the last glacial period, producing lavas, hyaloclastite-dominated units and tuyas that preserve evidence of volcano-ice interactions. The Thórsmörk Ignimbrite, a regionally important chronostratigraphic marker, is present on the SE flank of the volcano. The geological mapping of Tindfjallajökull gives insights into the evolution of stratovolcanoes in glaciated regions and the influence of ice in their development

    Galactic PeVatrons and helping to find them: effects of galactic absorption on the observed spectra of very high energy gamma-ray sources

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    Identification of the cosmic-ray (CR) “PeVatrons,” which are sources capable of accelerating particles to ∼1015  eV energies and higher, may lead to resolving the long-standing question of the origin of the spectral feature in the all-particle CR spectrum known as the “knee.” Because CRs with these energies are deflected by interstellar magnetic fields identification of individual sources and determination of their spectral characteristics is more likely via very high energy γ-ray emissions, which provide the necessary directional information. However, pair production on the interstellar radiation field (ISRF) and cosmic microwave background (CMB) leads to steepening of the high energy tails of γ-ray spectra, and should be corrected for to enable true properties of the spectrum at the source to be recovered. Employing recently developed three-dimensional ISRF models this paper quantifies the pair-absorption effect on spectra for sources in the Galactic center (GC) direction at 8.5 and 23.5 kpc distances, with the latter corresponding to the far side of the Galactic stellar disc where it is expected that discrimination of spectral features >10  TeV is possible by the forthcoming Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA). The estimates made suggest spectral cutoffs could be underestimated by factors of a few in the energy range so far sampled by TeV γ-ray telescopes. As an example to illustrate this, the recent HESS measurements of diffuse γ-ray emissions possibly associated with injection of CRs nearby Sgr A* are ISRF corrected, and estimates of the spectral cutoff are reevaluated. It is found that it could be higher by up to a factor of ∼2, indicating that these emissions may be consistent with a CR accelerator with a spectral cutoff of at least 1 PeV at the 95% confidence level.T.A. Porter, G. P. Rowell, G. Jóhannesson, and I.V. Moskalenk
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