bepposax observations of grbs: 10 yrs after filippo frontera physics department, university of...

23
BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen Meeting on “Supernova 1987A: 20 Years After”, February 19 - 23, 2007

Upload: stewart-wilkinson

Post on 08-Jan-2018

224 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

By following-up the 1’ NFI error box: first discovery of a GRB optical counterpart GRB970228, Van Paradijs et al., Nature, 1997 Frontera et al., A&A, 2008

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after

Filippo FronteraPhysics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy

andINAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy

Aspen Meeting on “Supernova 1987A: 20 Years After”, February 19 - 23, 2007

Page 2: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

28 February 1997 The first discovery of an X-ray afterglow

with BeppoSAX

Costa, Frontera, Heise et al., Nature, 1997, Frontera, Costa, Piro et al., ApJL, 1998

GRB970228

Page 3: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

By following-up the 1’ NFI error box: first discovery of a GRB optical counterpart

GRB970228, Van Paradijs et al., Nature, 1997

Frontera et al. , A&A, 2008

Page 4: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Metzger et al., Nature, 1997

First GRB redshift measurement:

GRB 970508

Page 5: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

• Narrow Field X-ray telescopes (0.1-10 keV) a factor 100 better sensitivity than direct viewing detectors;

• GRBM (~all sky, 0.5 ms time resolution, 40-700 keV) GRB automatic trigger.

• WFCs (20x20 deg FOV, 2-28 keV) X-ray accurate localization (~5 arcmin).

• Well designed ground segment and motivated GRB team:• Prompt determination

of GRB coordinates;• Prompt follow-up (few

hrs).

Why BeppoSAX?

Page 6: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

An account 10 yrs after GRB980227 1082 GRBs detected with the GRBM (a catalog is

being published);

51 detected with WFCs +GRBM (our golden sample)

Of them 37 followed-up with BSAX/NFIs;

86% showed X-ray afterglow >10-13 erg/cm2 s; 40% showed optical afterglow; 30% showed radio afterglow;

Most of them are famous, e.g., GRB 980425.

Page 7: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

BSAX/GRBM catalog of GRBs 1 Format

Log N – log P

Page 8: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Some of the catalog derived properties Fluence distribution

Peak flux distributionQuiescent times

Hardness

Page 9: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Some topical results from the BeppoSAX GRBs

Discovery of decreasing NH during the prompt emission (for various GRBs, outstanding 000528);

Discovery of transient absorption features during the prompt emission (GRB 990705, GRB011211). A new evidence (971227) under evaluation;

Ep-Eiso relationship (Amati et al. 2002);

Page 10: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Decreasing NH from GRB000528

Model: photo-ionization of the local CBM by GRB photons (Lazzati & Perna 2002);

Consistency with the presence of an overdense molecular cloud (n~4.5 x105 cm-3) shell-like at a distance from 5.6x1016 to 1.8x1017 cm.

Frontera et al. 2004

Page 11: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Transient absorption features 990705 011211

Amati et al. 2000Frontera et al. 2004

• Common property: feature visible only during the rise of the event.

A

B

C

D

Page 12: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Transient absorption features (cont.d)

Both features consistent with resonant scattering of GRB photons off H-like Fe + Co;

For 990705, red-shifted line (z ~ 0.86, vs. 0.835) and thermal velocities of the material;

For 011211 (z=2.14), blue-shifted line, (v ≈ 0.7c) high outflowing velocities of the absorbing medium.

In both cases, CMB environment typical of a SN explosion site (Fe-rich).

990705

011211

Amatiet al.2000

Fronteraet al.2004

Page 13: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

E’p-Eiso relation: an introduction

High dispersion of the gamma-ray energy released Eiso assuming isotropy;

Much lower dispersion when Eiso is collimation corrected (Eγ) , assuming a jet emission (Frail 2001).

<log(Eiso)> = 53 = 0.9

Amati 2006

Page 14: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

E’p vs. Eiso relation

• Found with time averaged spectra of 12 GRBs with known z.

• Now confirmed by many long (HETE2, SWIFT) GRBs and XRFs of known z.

• Outliers: 980425, 031203 (?), short GRBs.

E’p,i = kEiso(0.52+/-0.06)

Amati et al. 2006

Amati et al. 2002

Page 15: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Applications of the E’p-Eiso relation: Study of the fireball properties (e.g., baryon load), Radiation production mechanisms (internal, external shocks) Test of the prompt emission mechanisms (e.g., synchrotron vs. thermal emission); Emission geometry (jet vs. spherical) and its structure (uniform vs. structured jets; e.g., Lamb et al. 2005); XRF-GRB unification models; Viewing angle effects. Zhang &

Meszaros 2002

Page 16: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Other application of the Ep-Eiso correlation: Estimate of pseudo-redshifts; Derivation of a similar relation between E’p and Eγ (Ghirlanda et al. 2004). Ep-Eγ proposed for the estimate of cosmological parameters.

Nava et al. 2006

Page 17: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Debate: Some authors (e.g., Band & Preece 2005) claim that a high fraction of BATSE events (unknown z) is inconsistent with the correlation. However Ghirlanda et al. (2005) find the opposite result. Campana et al. (2007) find that the Swift GRBs weaken the Ep-Eγ correlation, while Ghirlanda et al. (2007) claim the contrary.

Campana et al. 2007 Ghirlanda et al. 2007

Page 18: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

In order to definitely establish validity and/or applicability of the Ep-Eiso (or Ep-Eγ) correlation:

it is crucial to understand the underlying physics

Page 19: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Further investigation of the Ep vs. Eiso relation

Given the evolution of the GRB spectra: Is this relation still valid

within single GRBs? Do all GRB show the same

correlation slope? In which of the GRB phases

(Rise, Peak, Decay) does it show lower spread?

Effect of collimation correction

…………….

Analysis in progress.

Frontera et al. 2000

Page 20: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Test of the E’p-Liso/E’p-Lγ relation at the GRB peak (GRBs with time breaks)

Evidence of a lower spread assuming a jetted emission and a WIND-like environment.

Lγ (1052 erg/s)

ISM α ~ 0.32

WIND α ~ 0..60Liso (1052 erg/s)

E’p

keVE’p

keVIsotropic α ~ 0.26

Page 21: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Test of the E’p-Liso/E’p-Lγ relation during the GRB decay (GRBs with time breaks)

High spread, at low luminosities, mainly assuming a jetted emission.

Lγ (1052 erg/s)

ISM

WIND

α ~ 0.59

α ~ 0.72

Liso (1052 erg/s)

E’p

keV

E’p

keV

Lγ (1052 erg/s)

E’p

keV

α ~ 0.46

Page 22: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Conclusions• BeppoSAX, after having opened a new era in the

GRB astronomy, has continued to provide key results for the understanding of the GRB physics and for possible application of GRBs as cosmic rulers.

• Swift is providing key results for the understanding of the GRB afterglow, but, given the BAT narrow bandwidth, is limited for Ep / Eiso measurement.

• New missions are required to extend the results obtained by BeppoSAX during the prompt emission (e.g., LOBSTER-ISS, ECLAIRS, EDGE).

Page 23: BeppoSAX Observations of GRBs: 10 yrs after Filippo Frontera Physics Department, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy and INAF/IASF, Bologna, Italy Aspen

Thanks