126 research outputs found
Afterglow rebrightenings as a signature of a long-lasting central engine activity? The emblematic case of GRB 100814A
In the past few years the number of well-sampled optical to NIR light curves
of long Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) has greatly increased particularly due to
simultaneous multi-band imagers such as GROND. Combining these densely sampled
ground-based data sets with the Swift UVOT and XRT space observations unveils a
much more complex afterglow evolution than what was predicted by the most
commonly invoked theoretical models. GRB 100814A represents a remarkable
example of these interesting well-sampled events, showing a prominent late-time
rebrightening in the optical to NIR bands and a complex spectral evolution.
This represents a unique laboratory to test the different afterglow emission
models. Here we study the nature of the complex afterglow emission of GRB
100814A in the framework of different theoretical models. Moreover, we compare
the late-time chromatic rebrightening with those observed in other well-sampled
long GRBs. We analysed the optical and NIR observations obtained with the
seven-channel Gamma-Ray burst Optical and Near-infrared Detector at the 2.2 m
MPG/ESO telescope together with the X-ray and UV data detected by the
instruments onboard the Swift observatory. The broad-band afterglow evolution,
achieved by constructing multi-instrument light curves and spectral energy
distributions, will be discussed in the framework of different theoretical
models. We find that the standard models that describe the broad-band afterglow
emission within the external shock scenario fail to describe the complex
evolution of GRB 100814A, and therefore more complex scenarios must be invoked.
[abridged]Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables; Astronomy & Astrophysics, in pres
Another short-burst host galaxy with an optically obscured high star formation rate: The case of GRB 071227
We report on radio continuum observations of the host galaxy of the short
gamma-ray burst 071227 (z=0.381) with the Australia Telescope Compact Array
(ATCA). We detect the galaxy in the 5.5 GHz band with an integrated flux
density of Fnu = 43 +/- 11 microJy, corresponding to an unobscured
star-formation rate (SFR) of about 24 Msun/yr, forty times higher than what was
found from optical emission lines. Among the ~30 well-identified and studied
host galaxies of short bursts this is the third case where the host is found to
undergo an episode of intense star formation. This suggests that a fraction of
all short-burst progenitors hosted in star-forming galaxies could be physically
related to recent star formation activity, implying a relatively short merger
time scale.Comment: 6 pages, ApJ, accepted for publicatio
VLT/MUSE and ATCA Observations of the Host Galaxy of the Short GRB 080905A at z = 0.122
Short-GRB progenitors could come in various flavors, depending on the nature of the merging compact stellar objects (including a stellar-mass black hole or not) or depending on their ages (millions or billions of years). At a redshift of z = 0.122, the nearly face-on spiral host of the short GRB 080905A is one of the closest short-GRB host galaxies identified so far. This made it a preferred target to explore spatially resolved star formation and to investigate the afterglow position in the context of its star formation structures. We used VLT/MUSE integral-field unit observations, supplemented by ATCA 5.5/9.0 GHz radio-continuum measurements and publicly available HST data, to study the star formation activity in the GRB 080905A host galaxy. The MUSE observations reveal that the entire host is characterized by strong line emission. Using the Hα line flux, we measure for the entire galaxy an SFR of about 1.6 M ⊙ yr-1, consistent with its non-detection by ATCA. Several individual star-forming regions are scattered across the host. The most luminous region has a Hα luminosity that is nearly four times as high as the luminosity of the Tarantula nebula in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Even though star-forming activity can be traced as close to about 3 kpc (in projection) distance to the GRB explosion site, stellar population synthesis calculations show that none of the Hα-bright star-forming regions is a likely birthplace of the short-GRB progenitor
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
Multiwavelength analysis of three SNe associated with GRBs observed by GROND
After the discovery of the first connection between GRBs and SNe almost two
decades ago, tens of SN-like rebrightenings have been discovered and about
seven solid associations have been spectroscopically confirmed to date. Using
GROND optical/NIR data and Swift X-ray/UV data, we estimate the intrinsic
extinction, luminosity, and evolution of three SN rebrightenings in GRB
afterglow light curves at z~0.5. The SNe 2008hw, 2009nz, and 2010ma exhibit
0.80, 1.15, and 1.78 times the optical (r band) luminosity of SN 1998bw,
respectively. While SN 2009nz evolves similarly to SN 1998bw, SNe 2008hw and
2010ma show earlier peak times. The quasi-bolometric light curves were
corrected for the contribution of the NIR bands using data available in the
literature and blackbody fits. The large luminosity of SN 2010ma (1.4x10^43
erg/s) is confirmed, while SNe 2008hw and 2009nz reached a peak luminosity
closer to SN 1998bw. Physical parameters of the SN explosions, such as
synthesised nickel mass, ejecta mass, and kinetic energy, are estimated using
Arnett's analytic approach, which resulted in nickel masses of around 0.4-0.5
Msun. By means of the a very comprehensive data set, we found that the
luminosity and the nickel mass of SNe 2008hw, 2009nz, and 2010ma resembles
those of other known GRB-associated SNe. This findings strengthens previous
claims of GRB-SNe being brighter than type-Ic SNe unaccompanied by GRBs.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysics, abstract abridge
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
The Fast Evolution of SN 2010bh Associated with XRF 100316D
The first observational evidence of a connection between supernovae (SNe) and gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) was found about a decade ago. Since then, only half a dozen spectroscopically confirmed associations have been discovered and XRF 1003160 associated with the type-Ic SN 20lObh is among the latest. Aims. We constrain the progenitor radius, the host-galaxy extinction, and the physical parameters of the explosion of XRF l00316D/SN 20lObh at z 0.059. We study the SN brightness and colours in the context of GRB-SNe. Methods. We began observations with the Gamma-Ray burst Optical and Near-infrared Detector (GROND) 12 hours after the GRB trigger and continued until 80 days after the burst. GROND provided excellent photometric data in six filter bands covering a wavelength range from approximately 350 to 1800 nm, significantly expanding the pre-existing data set for this event. Combining GROND and Swift data, the early broad-band spectral energy distribution (SED) is modelled with a blackbody and afterglow component attenuated by dust and gas absorption. The temperature and radius evolution of the thermal component are analysed and combined with earlier measurements available from the literature. Templates of SN 1998bw are fitted to the SN itself to directly compare the lightcurve properties. Finally, a two-component parametrized model is fitted to the quasi-bolometric light curve. which delivers physical parameters of the explosion. Results. The best-fit models to the broad-band SEDs imply moderate reddening along the line of sight through the host galaxy (A(sub v.host = 1.2 +/- 0.1 mag). Furthermore, the parameters of the blackbody component reveal a cooling envelope at an apparent initial radius of 7 x 10(exp 11) cm, which is compatible with a dense wind surrounding a Wolf-Rayet star. A multicolor comparison shows that SN 2010bh is 60 - 70% as bright as SN 1998bw. Reaching maximum brightness at 8 - 9 days after the burst in the blue bands, SN 20lObh proves to be the most rapidly evolving GRB-SNe to date. Modelling of the quasi-bolometric light curve yields M(sub Ni) = 0.21 +/- 0.03 solar M and M(sub ej) = 2.6 +/- 0.2 solar M, typical of values within the GRB-SN population. The kinetic energy is E(sub k) = (2.4 +/- 0.7) x 10(exp 52) erg, which is making this SN the second most energetic GRB-SN after SN 1998bw. Conclusions. This supernova has one of the earliest peaks ever recorded and thereafter fades more rapidly than other GRB-SNe, hypernovae, or typical type-Ic SNe. This could be explained by a thin envelope expanding at very high velocities, which is therefore unable to retain the gamma-rays that would prolong the duration of the SN event
GRB 091029: At the limit of the fireball scenario
Using high-quality, broad-band afterglow data for GRB 091029, we test the
validity of the forward-shock model for gamma-ray burst afterglows. We used
multi-wavelength (NIR to X-ray) follow-up observations obtained with the GROND,
BOOTES-3/YA and Stardome optical ground-based telescopes, and the UVOT and the
XRT onboard the Swift satellite. To explain the almost totally decoupled light
curves in the X-ray and optical/NIR domains, a two-component outflow is
proposed. Several models are tested, including continuous energy injection,
components with different electron energy indices and components in two
different stages of spectral evolution. Only the last model can explain both
the decoupled light curves with asynchronous peaks and the peculiar SED
evolution. However, this model has so many unknown free parameters that we are
unable to reliably confirm or disprove its validity, making the afterglow of
GRB 091029 difficult to explain in the framework of the simplest fireball
model.Comment: Accepted to A&
GROND coverage of the main peak of Gamma-Ray Burst 130925A
Prompt or early optical emission in gamma-ray bursts is notoriously difficult
to measure, and observations of the dozen cases show a large variety of
properties. Yet, such early emission promises to help us achieve a better
understanding of the GRB emission process(es).
We performed dedicated observations of the ultra-long duration (T90 about
7000 s) GRB 130925A in the optical/near-infrared with the 7-channel "Gamma-Ray
Burst Optical and Near-infrared Detector" (GROND) at the 2.2m MPG/ESO
telescope. We detect an optical/NIR flare with an amplitude of nearly 2 mag
which is delayed with respect to the keV--MeV prompt emission by about 300--400
s. The decay time of this flare is shorter than the duration of the flare (500
s) or its delay.
While we cannot offer a straightforward explanation, we discuss the
implications of the flare properties and suggest ways toward understanding it.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publ. in A&
A quiescent galaxy at the position of the long GRB 050219A
Long-duration gamma-ray bursts (LGRBs) are produced by the collapse of very
massive stars. Due to the short lifetime of their progenitors, LGRBs pinpoint
star-forming galaxies. We present here a multi-band search for the host galaxy
of the long dark GRB 050219A within the enhanced Swift/XRT error circle. We
used spectroscopic observations acquired with VLT/X-shooter to determine the
redshift and star-formation rate of the putative host galaxy. We compared the
results with the optical/IR spectral energy distribution obtained with
different facilities. Surprisingly, the host galaxy is a old and quiescent
early-type galaxy at z = 0.211 characterised by an unprecedentedly low specific
star-formation rate. It is the first LGRB host to be also an early-type
post-starburst galaxy. This is further evidence that GRBs can explode in all
kind of galaxies, with the only requirement being an episode of star-formation.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, 3 tables; accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
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