Title: Gamma Ray Bursts
1 Gamma Ray Bursts
- S. R. Kulkarni
- California Institute of Technology
2Acknowledgements
- Alicia Soderberg
- Caltech/NRAO/Carnegie gang
- Berger, Cenko, Fox, Frail, Harrison, Price,
Schmidt - T. Sakamoto R. Yamazaki
3Quasars A Historical Analogy, I
- Astonished Impressed The immense power and
energy of quasars resulting from Schmidts
discovery of redshift. - Amused and Educated Relativistic effects such as
super-luminal motion were anticipated by Rees. - Ruthless Exploitation Ask not why quasars quase
but simply use them as light beacons to study the
IGM.
4Quasars A Historical Analogy, II
- Scintillation Interplanetary Scintillation
showed that quasars were compact - The Central Engine After three decades we have a
working model involving black holes - The Pesky Jets Questions remain
- FRI and FRII
- What is the difference between radio quiet and
radio loud AGN? - Unification The desire to unify various classes
of quasars drove much of quasar research.
5Unification Working Model
Jet
BLR
Torus
NLR
6AGN Empirical Classification
- Radio Luminosity
- Radio Loud
- Radio Quiet
- Optical Emission Lines
- Broad Emission Lines (Type 1)
- Narrow Emission Lines (Type 2)
- Roughy speaking these two may map to the type of
host galaxy and the type of black hole - What are the equivalent physical parameters for
GRBs?
7Outline
- GRB Phenomenon
- Long Duration GRBs
- Jets
- Energetics
- SN Connection
- Jets in nearby SNe?
- Where do we stand at unification?
8Two classes of GRBs
Short - Hard
Long - Soft
9Jets
- Decrease Total Energy (by beaming fraction)
- Increase the event rate (by inverse beaming
fraction)
10Light Curves provide Evidence for Collimation
t lt tjet high ?
log f
tjet
log t
t gt tjet low ?
log f
log t
tjet
Rhoads
11GRB Energetics Tiger becomes Lamb
Before the beaming correction
(isotropic)
After the beaming correction
(Frail et al.)
12Radio Light Curves at 8.5 GHz
Radio Afterglows Angular Size and Calorimetry
13and the latest .
- GRB 030329, 24 days after the burst
- VLBABonn at 22 GHz
- Marginally resolved at 0.08 milliarcsec
- In line with expectations from the fireball model
- superluminal expansion (5c)
0.45 x 0.18 mas
Taylor et al.
14GRB 980703 Non-relativistic Transition
15Complications
- Evidence for continued or additional injection of
energy - Evidence for additional components in the jet
(wide angle, low Gamma)
16Early Light Curves
Fox
17The second nearest GRB 030329 is peculiar
Puzzle A single fireball does not account for
radio X-ray emission
- A possible solution
- a narrow, ultra-relativistic jet with low energy
which produces X-ray optical - a wide, mildly relativistic jet carrying the bulk
of the energy and powering the radio
Berger et al in prep.
Berger et al. 2003
18Long Duration GRB-SN Connection
19 SN 1998bw/GRB 980425, a severely underluminous
GRB
E?1048 erg (isotropic)
Galama et al.
20 Mildly Relativistic Ejecta in SN 1998bw
E?1048 erg
Kulkarni et al
Mildly relativistic ejecta vastly exceeds
gamma-ray energy relese
21Direct Spectroscopic Evidence
MMT (Stanek et al)
VLT (Hjorth et al)
22X-ray Flashes
Heise
23XRF 020903 First redshift is low (z0.25)
Soderberg et al
Energy in the Explosion (Prompt) 1049 erg (low
compared to GRBs)
No evidence for off-axis model (optical flux
declines) However, evidence for mildly
relativistic ejecta from radio afterglow
24Collapsar Model
Woosley, Heger, MacFadyen
25GRB-SN Grand Unification
- All core collapse events are the same.
- GRBs are explosions viewed on axis
- XRFs are explosions viewed off axis
- GRB 980425 is an off-axis GRB
- In all cases, underlying SNe
-
Lamb,
Nakamura, Yamazaki - In favor
- Simplicity
- Peak energy-luminosity correlation
26SN-GRB Meek Diversity
- GRBs are not standard explosions (energy, opening
angle) - XRFs are not GRBs viewed sideways and likely
lower energy explosions - SN 1998bw is an engine driven SN but with a weak
engine - In most core collapses the influence of engines
is likely to be small or subtle. - In favor
- The existence of sub-energetic events (e.g.
031203, SN 1998bw). - No evidence for early rise in the afterglow
Kulkarni, Soderberg, Sakamoto
27Putting it altogether Engine
Soderberg
28SUMMARY Peak SN magnitudes
(Soderberg et al. 2005b)
29Do nearby core collapse SNe have strong jets that
materially affect the explosion?
30VLA ATCA Program
- Radio emission traces both relativistic and
mildly relativistic ejecta (cf SN 1998bw) - Relativistic aberration is less of an issue for
mildly relativistic ejecta - Motivated by 1998bw we began a program of
monitoring all known nearby Ib/c - Monitored SNe from day to a year
Soderberg thesis
31Radio Light-curves of Cosmic Explosions Ibc
Survey 11 detections 73 upper limits No GRBs or
98bws lt 1.2 GRB/SN
c.f. 1 beaming fraction for GRBs 5
hypernova rate
32 Explosion Energies of Local Ibc GRBs
2003L 2003bg
Conclusion SN 1998bw-like events are rare
33Was GRB 980425 an off-axis event?
- Six years of radio monitoring No evidence for
off-axis jet. - Off-axis jet (if present) requires a very low
mass rate A 0.03, not consistent with
inferred density
(Soderberg, Frail, Wieringa 2004)
34Progenitors of Ibc SNe A Hot Result
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36Progenitor of SN 2004gt (Ic SN)
Mv gt -5.5
Gal-Yam
37Summary Cosmological GRBs
- Long duration GRBs are highly collimated
explosions and possess central engines which
drive the explosion - Searches with good sensitivity have almost always
found associated SNe of type Ib/c (or at least
not of Type II) - Not all associated SNe are bright (-19 mag)
- XRFs are likely simply low energy explosions
(relative to cosmological GRBs but comparble to
low energy GRBs)
38Summary Nearest Events
- There is growing evidence of underenergetic GRBs
(e.g. 980425, 030329, 031203) with engines
releasing a mix of ejecta - ultra-relativistic (? gt100),
- relativistic(? gt10)
- mildly relativistic (? gt2) ejecta
- Some of these events are dominated by mildly
relativistic ejecta (GRB 030329). Some are X-ray
Flashes (I.e. dominated by X-ray and not
gamma-ray emission).
39GRBs as 2-parameter Explosions
- GRBs clearly manifest an essentially spherical
explosions (supernova) and narrow jets (few to
tens of degrees) - There is wide variation in properties of both
components. - There is little evidence for universal jet or
universal supernova model.
40Nearest Ib/c SNe
- Other than SN 1998bw we have not identified a
single similar example - No strong emission (indicative) is seen in any of
the nearly one hundred local Ib/c SNe on
timescales of days to years. - Significant variation in peak optical emission as
well as spectro-velocity peculiarities (e.g
2003jd, Mazzali et al)
41Open Issues
- What accounts for the variation in opening angles
of GRB jets? - Do jets play a significant role in exploding
typical core collapse events? - Attractive hypothesis but little evidence (so
far) - Alternate explanations must be sought for
variation in optical diversity. - Are short hard bursts strongly jetted?
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43GRB050509b Short Hard Burst
- Rapidly fading X-ray afterglow (Gehrels et al)
- No optical/radio afterglow
- Seen against z0.22 cluster
44GRB 050509b Constraining an associated moderate
nova
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