2 research outputs found
Low-frequency View of GW170817/GRB 170817A with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope
The short gamma-ray burst (GRB) 170817A was the first GRB associated with a gravitational-wave event. Due
to the exceptionally low luminosity of the prompt γ-ray and the afterglow emission, the origin of both radiation
components is highly debated. The most discussed models for the burst and the afterglow include a regular
GRB jet seen off-axis and the emission from the cocoon encompassing a “choked” jet. Here, we report low
radio frequency observations at 610 and 1390 MHz obtained with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope. Our
observations span a range of ∼7 to ∼152 days after the burst. The afterglow started to emerge at these low
frequencies about 60 days after the burst. The 1390 MHz light curve barely evolved between 60 and 150 days,
but its evolution is also marginally consistent with an Fν ∝ t
0.8 rise seen in higher frequencies. We model
the radio data and archival X-ray, optical, and high-frequency radio data with models of top-hat and Gaussian
structured GRB jets. We performed a Markov Chain Monte Carlo analysis of the structured-jet parameter
space. Though highly degenerate, useful bounds on the posterior probability distributions can be obtained.
Our bounds of the viewing angle are consistent with that inferred from the gravitational-wave signal. We
estimate the energy budget in prompt emission to be an order of magnitude lower than that in the afterglow
blast wave
The Properties of GRB 120923A at a Spectroscopic Redshift of z approximate to 7.8
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are powerful probes of early stars and galaxies, during and potentially even before the
era of reionization. Although the number of GRBs identified at z ~> 6 remains small, they provide a unique window
on typical star-forming galaxies at that time, and thus are complementary to deep field observations. We report the
identification of the optical drop-out afterglow of Swift GRB 120923A in near-infrared Gemini-North imaging, and
derive a redshift of z = 7.84 +0.06 -0.12
from Very Large Telescope/X-shooter spectroscopy. At this redshift the peak
15–150 keV luminosity of the burst was 3.2 × 10^52 erg s^−1
, and in this sense it was a rather typical long-duration
GRB in terms of rest frame luminosity. This burst was close to the Swift/Burst Alert Telescope detection threshold,
and the X-ray and near-infrared afterglow were also faint. We present ground- and space-based follow-up
observations spanning from X-ray to radio, and find that a standard external shock model with a constant-density
circumburst environment of density n ≈ 4 × 10^−2 cm^−3 gives a good fit to the data. The near-infrared light curve
exhibits a sharp break at t ≈ 3.4 days in the observer frame which, if interpreted as being due to a jet, corresponds
to an opening angle of θjet ≈ 5° . The beaming-corrected γ-ray energy is then Eγ ≈ 2 x 10^50 erg, while the
beaming-corrected kinetic energy is lower, EK ≈ 10^49 erg, suggesting that GRB 120923A was a comparatively low
kinetic energy event. We discuss the implications of this event for our understanding of the high-redshift
population of GRBs and their identification