1,897 research outputs found

    The Signature of Single-Degenerate Accretion Induced Collapse

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    The accretion induced collapse (AIC) of a white dwarf to a neutron star has long been suggested as a natural theoretical outcome in stellar evolution, but there has never been a direct detection of such an event. This is not surprising since the small amount of radioactive nickel synthesized (103M\sim10^{-3}\,M_\odot) implies a relatively dim optical transient. Here we argue that a particularly strong signature of an AIC would occur for an oxygen-neon-magnesium (ONeMg) white dwarf accreting from a star that is experiencing Roche-lobe overflow as it becomes a red giant. In such cases, the 1050erg\sim10^{50}\,{\rm erg} explosion from the AIC collides with and shock-heats the surface of the extended companion, creating an X-ray flash lasting 1hr\sim1\,{\rm hr} followed by an optical signature that peaks at an absolute magnitude of 16\sim -16 to 18-18 and lasts for a few days to a week. These events would be especially striking in old stellar environments where hydrogen-rich supernova-like, transients would not normally be expected. Although the rate of such events is not currently known, we describe observing strategies that could be utilized with high cadence surveys that should either detect these events or place strong constraints on their rates.Comment: Revised version accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal, 5 pages, 2 figure

    XRF 050406 late-time flattening: an inverse Compton component?

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    We investigate for possible evidence of inverse Compton (IC) emission in the X-ray afterglow of XRF 050406. In the framework of the standard fireball model, we show how the late-time flattening observed in the X-ray light curve between \~10^{4} s and ~10^{6} s can be explained in a synchrotron-plus-IC scenario, when the IC peak frequency crosses the X-ray band. We thus conclude that the appearance of an IC component above the synchrotron one at late times successfully accounts for these X-ray observations.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in A&A. Version accepted by A&A, minor changes in the title, contents and conclusions unchanged, language corrections include

    Testing density profile in Gamma-Ray Burst

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    The GRB afterglow evolution strictly depends on the properties of the external medium in which the fireball expands. Studying afterglow emission, we tried to constrain the nature of the medium. We studied afterglow evolution either in a homogeneous external medium and in a wind ejected by the GRB progenitor (probably a Wolf-Rayet Star) during the final phases of its life. We also extended this analysis to a medium characterized by a discontinuous density profile. Such discontinuities can be due to a variable activity of wind emission by massive star progenitors or to the interaction of the wind with the external medium. We numerically integrated the equations of the Standard Fireball Model, and applied it to GRB011121 and XRF011030, two events detected by the BeppoSAX satellite. These two objects show a late X-ray burst (reburst) at about few hundred seconds after the main pulse. We tried to explain the reburst as the onset of the external shock and we found that it can be successfully explained under this assumption if the fireball is expanding in a thick shell

    Redshift determination in the X-ray band of gamma-ray bursts

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    If gamma-ray bursts originate in dense stellar forming regions, the interstellar material can imprint detectable absorption features on the observed X-ray spectrum. Such features can be detected by existing and planned X-ray satellites, as long as the X-ray afterglow is observed after a few minutes from the burst. If the column density of the interstellar material exceeds ~10^{23} cm^{-2} there exists the possibility to detect the K_alpha fluorescent iron line, which should be visible for more than one year, long after the X-ray afterglow continuum has faded away. Detection of these X-ray features will make possible the determination of the redshift of gamma-ray bursts even when their optical afterglow is severely dimmed by extinction.Comment: 15 pages with 5 figures. Submitted to Ap

    Fireballs Loading and the Blast Wave Model of Gamma Ray Bursts

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    A simple function for the spectral power P(ϵ,t)νL(ν)P(\epsilon,t) \equiv \nu L(\nu) is proposed to model, with 9 parameters, the spectral and temporal evolution of the observed nonthermal synchrotron power flux from GRBs in the blast wave model. Here ϵ=hν/\epsilon = h\nu/me_ec2^2 is the observed dimensionless photon energy and tt is the observing time. Assumptions and an issue of lack of self-consistency are spelled out. The spectra are found to be most sensitive to the baryon loading, expressed in terms of the initial bulk Lorentz factor Γ0\Gamma_0, and an equipartition term qq which is assumed to be constant in time and independent of Γ0\Gamma_0. Expressions are given for the peak spectral power Pp(t)=P(ϵp,t)P_p(t) = P(\epsilon_p,t) at the photon energy ϵ=ϵp(t)\epsilon = \epsilon_p(t) of the spectral power peak. A general rule is that the total fireball particle kinetic energy E0Π0tdE_0 \sim \Pi_0 t_d, where tdΓ08/3t_d \propto \Gamma_0^{-8/3} is the deceleration time scale and Π0P(ϵp,td)Γ08/3\Pi_0 \equiv P(\epsilon_p,t_d) \propto \Gamma_0^{8/3} is the maximum measured bolometric power output in radiation, during which it is carried primarily by photons with energy E0=ϵp(td)qΓ04{\cal E}_0 = \epsilon_p(t_d) \propto q\Gamma_0^4.Comment: 26 pages, including 4 figures, uses epsf.sty, rotate.sty; submitted to ApJ; revised version with extended introduction, redrawn figures, and correction

    A search for x-ray counterparts of gamma-ray bursts with the ROSAT PSPC

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    We search for faint X-ray bursts with duration 10--300 seconds in the ROSAT PSPC pointed observations with a total exposure of 1.6e7 seconds. We do not detect any events shorter than ~100s, i.e. those that could be related to the classic gamma-ray bursts. At the same time, we detect a number of long flares with durations of several hundred seconds. Most, but not all, of the long flares are associated with stars. If even a small number of those long flares, that cannot identified with stars, are X-ray afterglows of GRB, the number of X-ray afterglows greatly exceeds the number of BATSE GRB. This would imply that the beaming factor of gamma-rays from the burst should be >100. The non-detection of any short bursts in our data constrains the GRB counts at the fluences 1--2.5 orders of magnitude below the BATSE limit. The constrained burst counts are consistent with the extrapolation of the BATSE log N - log S relation. Finally, our results do not confirm a reality of short X-ray flashes found in the Einstein IPC data by Gotthelf, Hamilton and Helfand.Comment: Accepted to ApJ Letters. 4 pages with 3 figures, LaTeX2

    BATSE Observations of Gamma-Ray Burst Tails

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    I discuss in this paper the phenomenon of post-burst emission in BATSE gamma-ray bursts at energies traditionally associated with prompt emission. By summing the background-subtracted signals from hundreds of bursts, I find that tails out to hundreds of seconds after the trigger may be a common feature of long events (duration greater than 2s), and perhaps of the shorter bursts at a lower and shorter-lived level. The tail component appears independent of both the duration (within the long GRB sample) and brightness of the prompt burst emission, and may be softer. Some individual bursts have visible tails at gamma-ray energies and the spectrum in at least a few cases is different from that of the prompt emission.Comment: 33 Pages from LaTex including 7 figures, with aastex. To appear in Astrophysical Journa
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