gamma-ray bursts

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Gamma-Ray Bursts • Energy problem and beaming * • Mergers versus collapsars • GRB host galaxies and locations within galaxy • Supernova connection • Fireball model * • Swift • Afterglows of short bursts

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Gamma-Ray Bursts. Energy problem and beaming * Mergers versus collapsars GRB host galaxies and locations within galaxy Supernova connection Fireball model * Swift Afterglows of short bursts. Energy Problem. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Gamma-Ray Bursts

• Energy problem and beaming *

• Mergers versus collapsars

• GRB host galaxies and locations within galaxy

• Supernova connection

• Fireball model *

• Swift

• Afterglows of short bursts

Page 2: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Energy Problem• GRB 990123 required a total energy, if

isotropic, of 3.41054 erg = 1.9 M c2.• GRB energy source is almost certainly

gravitational – need few M collapsed into region not more than 100 km across.

• Energy density U = T4/c T ~ 1012 K kT ~ 100 MeV This is high enough to produce e+e- pairs.

Page 3: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Fireball• Consider pure energy confined within a sphere,

describe with E, R, T (Goodman 1986)• Radius of sphere R = (3E/11T4)1/3 • Optical depth from center to edge

• Edge of sphere (photosphere) will expand at a speed close to c as long as kT > mec2

• If baryons are added, most energy goes into accelerating baryons to ~ E/Mc2

3/53/1

5115

4

MeV 1erg 10104

kTERkTT

T

Page 4: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Fireball• Optical depth from center to edge for burst which varies over time scale t with a

sepctrum such that a fraction fp of the photon pairs can pair produce.

• Very high optical depth is inconsistent with non-thermal spectrum at high energies2

5011

ms 10erg 1010

TEf p

Page 5: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Relativistic outflow

• In a relativistic outflow, the observed photon energy is a factor (= Lorentz factor of bulk motion) higher than the photon energy in the rest frame. For a spectrum with an energy index this reduces the number of photon pairs above the electron-positron threshold by –2

• Also the size of the emitting area can be larger by a factor 2

• Need ~ 100 to solve the problem.

222

221

cRtctvtctcv

Page 6: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Evidence for JetAfterglow of GRB 990123 shows a break

Page 7: Gamma-Ray Bursts

/1Observer

Beaming

Because of relativistic motion, radiation is beamed with an opening angle ~ 1/

Therefore, observer can see only a limited piece of an expanding shell

Page 8: Gamma-Ray Bursts

1

RArea visible to an observer = (R)2

1At Late time:

1

1At Early time:

R Area visible to an observer = (R/)2

= jet angle

Page 9: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Monochromatic Jet Break

Page 10: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Jet Breaks• Jet opening angle is related to time at which

break in light curve occurs

• Beaming fraction is determined by jet opening angle = 1 – cos 2/2

• Energy required is reduced by a factor 2/2

Page 11: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Frail et al. 2001

Jet Energy

Page 12: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Burst Models

• Collapsing WDs• Stars Accreting on AGN• White Holes• Cosmic Strings• Black Hole Accretion Disks

I) Binary Mergers II) Collapsing Stars

Page 13: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Mergers

Binaries must evolve before merger and binaries have non-zero speeds due to kicks in compact object formation.

Thus, GRBs can occur in outskirts of or even far from host galaxy.

Page 14: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Massive Star Collapse

Beamed Explosion, accompanying supernova-like explosion, GRBs should be associated with young, massive stars.

Page 15: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Holland 2001

Host Galaxies

Hosts are similar to star-forming galaxies at similar redshifts.

High star formation rates.

Page 16: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Location of GRB within Host

Page 17: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Distribution Follows StellarDistribution

The environments of GRBs show higher gas densities, higher metallicities, and higher dust content than random locations in host galaxies.

Suggests that GRBs occur in star forming regions.

Location of GRB within

Host

Page 18: Gamma-Ray Bursts

GRB Locations

• GRB hosts are star-forming galaxies• GRBs trace the stellar distribution (in distance

from galaxy center)• GRBs occur in dense environments (probably

star forming regions)

• Suggests collapsar model over merger model

Page 19: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Supernova connectionSN 1998bw was found in the 8’ error circle of GRB 980425 in observations made 2.5 days after the burst.A slowly decaying X-ray source was subsequently found in the same galaxy (z = 0.0085) and identified with the GRB.However, the GRB was very underluminous and the SN was very usual with parculiar line emission (no H, no He, no Si at 615 nm. Radio emission a few days after GRB indicated relativistic outflow with energy ~ 31050 erg.Thought to be oddball GRB and SN.

Page 20: Gamma-Ray Bursts

GRB030329 and SN 2003dh

Clear spectroscopic signature of a SN, broad emission lines, found after decay of afterglow of GRB030329.“Smoking gun” linking GRBs and SNe.

Page 21: Gamma-Ray Bursts

SN 2003dh versus SN 1998bw

Page 22: Gamma-Ray Bursts

SN Bumps

Page 23: Gamma-Ray Bursts

GRB - Supernova

Only a tiny fraction of SN are observed to be GRBs

Page 24: Gamma-Ray Bursts

GRB 060218 = SN 2006aj

Page 25: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Fireball Model

Initial event accelerates baryons in bulk

Later on, internal shocks re-accelerate particles produce GRB

Even later, external shocks produce afterglow

Page 26: Gamma-Ray Bursts

GRB 990123GRB 990123

990123 reached 9th magnitude for a few moments!First optical GRB afterglow detected simultaneously

Page 27: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Internal-External Shock Model

Afterglow3

External ShocksInternal Shocks

GRB

cm1014R cm1016R

ISMCentral Engine

Page 28: Gamma-Ray Bursts

3. Baryonic mass content of the jet ~ 2x10-7 6x10-6 Mo

Burst (as Jet) Properties

Baryon mass is ~ 10-5 M

Jet opening angle means that we observe only one of each 1000 GRBs in the Universe, most are pointed away.

The means that GRB rate is about 1% of SN rate.

Page 29: Gamma-Ray Bursts

SwiftBAT – CZT detector with 5200 cm2 area sensitive in 15-150 keV band.

Coded aperture imaging of 1.4 steradian field with 4 arcmin resolution suing 32768 pixels.

After detecting a burst, Swift autonomously repoints bringing the burst into view of the XRT and UVOT, often within 90 seconds.

XRT – focusing X-ray telescope in 0.5-6 keV band, 2.5 arcsecond source location accuracy.

UVOT – focusing UV/optical telescope.

Page 30: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Swift Results• Launched in 2004.

• Detects about 100 bursts/year

• More afterglow detections than all previous satellites combined

• GRB with redshift of z = 6.29

• Average redshift = 2.7 compared to pre-Swift <z> = 1.2

• Expect 40 GRB with z > 5 and 4 with z > 8.

Page 31: Gamma-Ray Bursts

Afterglow of short GRB

GRB 050509b associated with elliptical galaxy.

HETE-II GRB 050724 also associated with elliptical.