160 research outputs found

    The Ep,i - Eiso correlation in GRBs: updated observational status, re-analysis and main implications

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    The correlation between the cosmological rest-frame nuFnu spectrum peak energy, Ep,i, and the isotropic equivalent radiated energy, Eiso, discovered by Amati et al. in 2002 and confirmed/extended by subsequent osbervations, is one of the most intriguing and debated observational evidences in Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRB) astrophysics. In this paper I provide an update and a re-analysis of the Ep,i - Eiso correlation basing on an updated sample consisting of 41 long GRBs/XRFs with firm estimates of z and observed peak energy, Ep,obs, 12 GRBs with uncertain valeus of z and/or Ep,obs, 2 short GRBs with firm estimates of z and Ep,obs and the peculiar sub-energetic events GRB980425/SN1998bw and GRB031203/SN2003lw. In addition to standard correlation analysis and power-law fitting, the data analysis here reported includes a modelization which accounts for sample variance. All 53 classical long GRBs and XRFs, including 11 Swift events with published spectral parameters and fluences, have Ep,i and Eiso values, or upper/lower limits, consistent with the correlation, which shows a chance probability as low as ~7x10{-15}, a slope of ~0.57 (~0.5 when fitting by accounting for sample variance) and an extra-Poissonian logarithmic dispersion of ~0.15, it extends over ~5 orders of magnitude in Eiso and ~3 orders of magnitude in Ep,i and holds from the closer to the higher z GRBs. I also discuss the main implications of the updated Ep,i - Eiso correlation for the models of the physics and geometry of GRB emission, its use for discriminating different classes and as a pseudo-z estimator, and the tests of possible selection effects with GRBs of unknown redshift.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS, main journa

    Cosmology with gamma-ray bursts: II Cosmography challenges and cosmological scenarios for the accelerated Universe

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    Context. Explaining the accelerated expansion of the Universe is one of the fundamental challenges in physics today. Cosmography provides information about the evolution of the universe derived from measured distances, assuming only that the space time ge- ometry is described by the Friedman-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker metric, and adopting an approach that effectively uses only Taylor expansions of basic observables. Aims. We perform a high-redshift analysis to constrain the cosmographic expansion up to the fifth order. It is based on the Union2 type Ia supernovae data set, the gamma-ray burst Hubble diagram, a data set of 28 independent measurements of the Hubble param- eter, baryon acoustic oscillations measurements from galaxy clustering and the Lyman-{\alpha} forest in the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS), and some Gaussian priors on h and {\Omega}M . Methods. We performed a statistical analysis and explored the probability distributions of the cosmographic parameters. By building up their regions of confidence, we maximized our likelihood function using the Markov chain Monte Carlo method. Results. Our high-redshift analysis confirms that the expansion of the Universe currently accelerates; the estimation of the jerk parameter indicates a possible deviation from the standard {\Lambda}CDM cosmological model. Moreover, we investigate implications of our results for the reconstruction of the dark energy equation of state (EOS) by comparing the standard technique of cosmography with an alternative approach based on generalized Pad\'e approximations of the same observables. Because these expansions converge better, is possible to improve the constraints on the cosmographic parameters and also on the dark matter EOS. Conclusions. The estimation of the jerk and the DE parameters indicates at 1{\sigma} a possible deviation from the {\Lambda}CDM cosmological model.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in A &

    An upscattering spectral formation model for the prompt emission of Gamma-Ray Bursts

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    We propose a model for the spectral formation of Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) prompt emission, where the phenomenological Band's function is usually applied to describe the GRB prompt emission. We suggest that the GRB prompt emission is mainly a result of two upscattering processes. The first process is the Comptonization of relatively cold soft photons of the star off electrons of a hot shell of plasma of temperature T_e of the order of 10^{9} K (or kT_e~100 keV) that moves sub-relativistically with the bulk velocity V_b substantially less than the speed of light c. In this phase, the Comptonization parameter Y is high and the interaction between a blackbody-like soft seed photon population and hot electrons leads to formation of a saturated Comptonization spectrum modified by the sub-relativistic bulk outflow. The second process is an upscattering of the previously Comptonized spectrum by the plasma outflow once it becomes relativistic. This process gives rise to the high-energy power-law component above the peak in the EF(E)-diagram where F(E) is the energy flux. The latter process can be described by a convolution of the Comptonized spectrum with a broken-power-law Green function. Possible physical scenarios for this second upscattering process are discussed. In the framework of our model, we give an interpretation of the Amati relation between the intrinsic spectral peak photon energy and radiated energy or luminosity, and we propose a possible explanation of the GRB temporal variability.Comment: 27 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa

    Cosmology with gamma-ray bursts: I. The Hubble diagram through the calibrated Ep,iE_{\rm p,i} - EisoE_{\rm iso} correlation

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    Gamma-ray bursts are the most energetic explosions in the Universe. They are detectable up to very high redshifts, therefore can be used to study the expansion rate of the Universe and to investigate the observational properties of dark energy, provided that empirical correlations between spectral and intensity properties are appropriately calibrated. We used the type Ia supernova luminosity distances to calibrate the correlation between the peak photon energy, Ep,iE_{p, i}, and the isotropic equivalent radiated energy, Eiso E_{iso} in GRBs. With this correlation, we tested the reliability of applying GRBs to measure cosmological parameters and to obtain indications on the basic properties and evolution of dark energy. Using 162 GRBs with measured redshifts and spectra, we applied a local regression technique to calibrate the Ep,iE_{p, i}-EisoE_{iso} correlation against the type Ia SN data to build a calibrated GRB Hubble diagram. We tested the possible redshift dependence of the correlation and its effect on the Hubble diagram. Finally, we used the GRB Hubble diagram to investigate the dark energy EOS. For this, we focused on the so-called Chevalier-Polarski-Linder (CPL) parametrization of the dark energy EOS and implemented the Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) method to efficiently sample the space of cosmological parameters. Our analysis shows once more that the Ep,iE_{p, i}-EisoE_{iso} correlation has no significant redshift dependence. Therefore the high-redshift GRBs can be used as a cosmological tool to determine the basic cosmological parameters and to test different models of dark energy in the redshift region (z3z\geqslant 3), which is unexplored by the SNIa and baryonic acoustic oscillations data. Our updated calibrated Hubble diagram of GRBs provides some marginal indication (at 1σ1\sigma level) of an evolving dark energy EOS.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure

    Update on the GRB universal scaling EX,iso_{\rm{X,iso}}-Eγ,iso_{\rm{\gamma,iso}}-Epk_{\rm{pk}} with ten years of SwiftSwift data

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    From a comprehensive statistical analysis of SwiftSwift X-ray light-curves of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) collected from December 2004 to the end of 2010, we found a three-parameter correlation between the isotropic energy emitted in the rest frame 1-104^4 keV energy band during the prompt emission (Eγ,iso_{\rm{\gamma,iso}}), the rest frame peak of the prompt emission energy spectrum (Epk_{\rm{pk}}), and the X-ray energy emitted in the rest frame 0.3-30 keV observed energy band (EX,iso_{\rm{X,iso}}), computed excluding the contribution of the flares. In this paper, we update this correlation with the data collected until June 2014, expanding the sample size with \sim35% more objects, where the number of short GRBs doubled. With this larger sample we confirm the existence of a universal correlation that connects the prompt and afterglow properties of long and short GRBs. We show that this correlation does not depend on the X-ray light-curve morphology and that further analysis is necessary to firmly exclude possible biases derived by redshift measurements. In addition we discuss about the behavior of the peculiar objects as ultra-long GRBs and we propose the existence of an intermediate group between long and short GRBs. Interestingly, two GRBs with uncertain classification fall into this category. Finally, we discuss the physics underlying this correlation, in the contest of the efficiency of conversion of the prompt γ\gamma-ray emission energy into the kinetic energy of the afterglow, the photosferic model, and the cannonball model.Comment: 11 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    INVESTIGATING THE Ep, i –Eiso CORRELATION

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    The correlation between the spectral peak photon energy, Ep, and the radiated energy or luminosity (i.e., the “Amati relation” and other correlations derived from it) is one of the central and most debated topics in GRB astrophysics, with implications for physics and the geometry of prompt emission, the identification and understanding of various classes of GRBs (short/long, XRFs,sub-energetic), and GRB cosmology. Fermi is exceptionally suited to provide, also in conjunction with Swift observations, a significant step forward in this field of research. Indeed, one of the main goals of Fermi/GBM is to make accurate measurements of Ep, by exploiting its unprecedented broad energy band from ~8 keV to ~30MeV; in addition, for a small fraction of GRBs, the LAT can extend the spectral measurements up to the GeV energy range, thus allowing a reliable estimate of the bolometric radiated energy/luminosity. We provide a review, an update and a discussion of the impact of Fermi observations in the investigation, understanding and testing of the Ep,i –Eiso (“Amati”) relation

    INVESTIGATING THE Ep, i –Eiso CORRELATION

    Get PDF
    The correlation between the spectral peak photon energy, Ep, and the radiated energy or luminosity (i.e., the “Amati relation” and other correlations derived from it) is one of the central and most debated topics in GRB astrophysics, with implications for physics and the geometry of prompt emission, the identification and understanding of various classes of GRBs (short/long, XRFs,sub-energetic), and GRB cosmology. Fermi is exceptionally suited to provide, also in conjunction with Swift observations, a significant step forward in this field of research. Indeed, one of the main goals of Fermi/GBM is to make accurate measurements of Ep, by exploiting its unprecedented broad energy band from ~8 keV to ~30MeV; in addition, for a small fraction of GRBs, the LAT can extend the spectral measurements up to the GeV energy range, thus allowing a reliable estimate of the bolometric radiated energy/luminosity. We provide a review, an update and a discussion of the impact of Fermi observations in the investigation, understanding and testing of the Ep,i –Eiso (“Amati”) relation

    New measurements of Ωm\Omega_m from gamma-ray bursts

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    Context: Data from cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB), baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO), and supernovae Ia (SNe-Ia) support a constant dark energy equation of state with w01w_0 \sim -1. Measuring the evolution of ww along the redshift is one of the most demanding challenges for observational cosmology. Aims: We discuss the existence of a close relation for GRBs, named Combo-relation, based on characteristic parameters of GRB phenomenology such as the prompt intrinsic peak energy Ep,iE_{p,i}, the X-ray afterglow, the initial luminosity of the shallow phase L0L_0, the rest-frame duration τ\tau of the shallow phase, and the index of the late power-law decay αX\alpha_X. We use it to measure Ωm\Omega_m and the evolution of the dark energy equation of state. We also propose a new calibration method for the same relation, which reduces the dependence on SNe Ia systematics. Methods: We have selected a sample of GRBs with 1) a measured redshift zz; 2) a determined intrinsic prompt peak energy Ep,iE_{p,i}, and 3) a good coverage (0.3-10) keV afterglow light curves. The fitting technique of the rest.frame (0.3-10) keV luminosity light curves represents the core of the Combo-relation. We separate the early steep decay, considered a part of the prompt emission, from the X-ray afterglow additional component. Data with the largest positive residual, identified as flares, are automatically eliminated until the p-value of the fit becomes greater than 0.3. Results: We strongly minimize the dependency of the Combo-GRB calibration on SNe Ia. We also measure a small extra-Poissonian scatter of the Combo-relation, which allows us to infer from GRBs alone ΩM=0.290.15+0.23\Omega_M =0.29^{+0.23}_{-0.15} (1σ\sigma) for the Λ\LambdaCDM cosmological model, and ΩM=0.400.16+0.22\Omega_M =0.40^{+0.22}_{-0.16}, w0=1.430.66+0.78w_0 = -1.43^{+0.78}_{-0.66} for the flat-Universe variable equation of state case.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A. Truncated abstract tex

    Time delays between Fermi LAT and GBM light curves of GRBs

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    Most Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) detected by the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope exhibit a delay of up to about 10 seconds between the trigger time of the hard X-ray signal as measured by the Fermi GBM and the onset of the MeV-GeV counterpart detected by the LAT. This delay may hint at important physics, whether it is due to the intrinsic variability of the inner engine or it is related to quantum dispersion effects in the velocity of light propagation from the sources to the observer. It is critical to have a proper assessment of how these time delays affect the overall properties of the light curves. We cross-correlated the 5 brightest GRBs of the 1st Fermi LAT Catalog by means of the continuous correlation function (CCF) and of the Discrete Correlation Function (DCF). A maximum in the DCF suggests the presence of a time lag between the curves, whose value and uncertainty are estimated through a Gaussian fitting of the DCF profile and light curve simulation via a Monte Carlo approach. The cross-correlation of the observed LAT and GBM light curves yields time lags that are mostly similar to those reported in the literature, but they are formally consistent with zero. The cross-correlation of the simulated light curves yields smaller errors on the time lags and more than one time lag for GRBs 090902B and 090926A; for all 5 GRBs, the time lags are significantly different from zero and consistent with those reported in the literature, when only the secondary maxima are considered for those two GRBs. The DCF method evidences the presence of time lags between the LAT and GBM light curves and underlines their complexity. While this suggests that the delays should be ascribed to intrinsic physical mechanisms, more sensitivity and larger statistics are needed to assess whether time lags are universally present in the early GRB emission and which dynamical time scales they trace.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
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