Title: Gamma-Ray Bursts
1Gamma-Ray Bursts
2Short and Long GRBs
- Short GRBs (T90 lt 2s)
- Tend to be spectrally harder i.e. have a higher
proportion of high-energy ?-rays relative to
low-energy ?-rays
Long
Short
- Long GRBs (Tgt 2s)
- Tend to be spectrally softer i.e. have a higher
proportion of low-energy ?-rays relative to
high-energy ?-rays - Originate from the collapse of massive stars
3 How are GRBs detected?
Pandey et al 2006
4Tools of the Trade
5INTEGRAL GRBs
- INTEGRAL has detected 62 GRBs since launch in
- October 2002 up to January 2009
- 3 short GRBs
- 2 INTEGRAL GRB catalogues published
- (Foley et al. AA, 2008 Vianello et al. AA
2009) - 4 INTEGRAL GRBs have confirmed redshifts
Posters by Meehan et al. and Topinka et al.
GRB031203 z 0.1055 GRB050223 z
0.584 GRB050502a z 3.79 GRB050525a z 0.606
6Afterglow Statistics for INTEGRAL and Other
Missions (up to Feb. 2009)
BeppoSAX HETE-2 INTEGRAL Swift
GRBs 55 79 62 396
X-ray 31 19 22 339
Optical 17 30 20 206
Radio 11 8 8 24
7IBIS Sensitivity to Faint GRBs
Band et al. 2008
8GRB 041219a
McBreen et al. 2006
- Extremely intense burst
- Peak flux of 43 photons/cm2/s (20 keV 8 MeV)
- Emission up to a few MeV
- Good candidate for polarisation analysis
- Background events selected from a 240s interval
occurring before GRB
SPI HK light curve of GRB 041219a (20 keV 8 MeV)
9Compton Scatter
- Photon with energy h? scattered by free electron,
results in change of photon energy and momentum - Between 300keV a few MeV, Compton is dominant
for most elements
f
?
h?0
Ge (32)
h?1
10Polarisation Simulations for GRB 041219a
- Compared real data to simulated polarised and
unpolarised data to obtain polarisation fraction - Used spectral parameters (Band model) from real
data to generate 100 polarised events
Image of coded mask (yellow) detectors (blue)
taken from simulations
11Polarisation with SPI
SPI can measure polarisation through multiple
events in its 19 detectors
120
60
0
180
Absence of detectors 2 17 removes 22 of pair
possibilities
240
300
12GRB041219a Results
Time Directions Polarisation Angle (deg)
12 sec 6 9653 6019
12 sec 3 9640 6012
Weighted mean of all results 60 at 2 s level
McGlynn et al AA 2007 and are in agreement with
Kalemci et al ApJ 2007
13IBIS Polarisation of GRB041219a
Gotz et al. 2009
Agreement between IBIS and SPI (McGlynn et al.
2007) for brightest 12 s interval.
14Polarisation with GRAPE
Toma et al. 2009
Simulated events that can be detected by GRAPE in
the Synchrotron with ordered field (red
circles), Synchrotron with random field (green
filled circles) and Compton Drag (blue plus
signs) models.
15Photoelectric Absorption - Theory
- Photon absorbed by the material
- Energy is transferred to an electron
- Electron is emitted
- Differential cross-section for an electron
- emitted from the s-orbital of an atom in
- the non-relativistic limit
- (R. Bellazzini et al. 2003)
f azimuthal angle of the emitted electron
-gt the emission angles are modulated by the
polarisation
16Polarisation with LEP
Toma et al. 2009
Simulated events that can be detected by LEP in
the Synchrotron with ordered field (red
circles), Synchrotron with random field (green
filled circles) and Compton Drag (blue plus
signs) models.
17GRB 090423
z 8.2
Most distant object ever observed
Salvaterra et al. 2009
18(No Transcript)
19GRB 080319B
The extremely luminous afterglow of GRB 080319b
imaged by the Swift X-Ray Telescope (left) and
Optical/Ultraviolet Telescope (right). Peak
apparent magnitude of 5.8 farthest object
observable with naked eye.
20Composite Light curve of GRB 080319b
Racusin el at. Nature (2008)
21AGILE GRB090510
Delayed gamma-ray emission from a short GRB
Giuliani et al. 2009
22Fermi GRB090510
New quantum gravity limit MQG / MPlanck
several Much stronger than previous best limit
of this kind from GRB080916c
Abdo et al. 2009
23Fermi GRB 080916c
Abdo et al. 2009
GBM and LAT lightcurves for the gamma-ray
emission of GRB080916c z 4.35 Most energetic
GRB detected 9 x 1054 ergs isotropic energy G
gt 1100
24Fermi GRB 080916c
25Fermi GRB090902b
Abdo et al. 2009
z 1.822
26Fermi - GRB090902b
New power-law component at high and low energies
(Abdo et al. 2009)
27X-Ray Afterglows
Gehrels et al. 2009
28Canonical X-ray Afterglow
29Swift X-ray Optical Afterglows
X-ray and optical lightcurves of GRB afterglows
in the Swift era
Gehrels et al. 2009
30Types of Optical Afterglows
Panaitescu et al. 2008
31Formation of Long GRBs
Gehrels et al. 2009
32GRB-SN Connection
Modjaz et al. 2006
33GRBs without Supernovae
GRB060505
- Lightcurves of SN 1998bw
- (GRB980425), SN 2002ap and
- SN 2006aj (GRB060218)
- Plotted as they would have
- appeared at redshift of GRB060505
- (top) and GRB060614 (bottom).
- Afterglow detections in each case
- plotted in black
- Neither GRB associated with
- significant SN emission down to very
- faint limits
GRB060614
Fynbo et al. 2006
34GRB Host Galaxies
Gehrels et al. 2009
A selection of the host galaxies of long-duration
(top row) and short- duration (bottom row)
gamma-ray bursts as imaged by HST.
35Host Galaxy Metallicities
Gehrels et al. 2009
36GRB Offsets from Hosts
Projected physical offsets for short GRBs (black)
and long GRBs (gray). The top panel shows a
cumulative distribution, while the bottom panel
shows the differential distribution.
Fong et al. 2009
37Conclusions
- Swift continues to drive major advances in
Gamma-Ray Bursts including X-ray, Optical and
Radio afterglows - INTEGRAL has made major advances including
polarisation (GRBs and Crab) and the faintest
GRBs - Major advances with AGILE and Fermi measure the
GRB spectrum over 5 orders of magnitude in energy
at the same time - e.g. most luminous GRB
- QG limits
- Band Model new spectral features at high
energies - Band Model Power law component at high and
low energies - Need to plan and deliver new missions e.g. GRI,
GRIPS etc.
38References
- Book on GRBs written by G. Vedrenne and J.L.
Atteia (Springer) - Recent review by N. Gehrels, E. Ramirez-Ruiz and
D.B. Fox, Gamma-Ray Bursts in the Swift Era