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CEA Explosões Cósmicas (Bursts) de Raios Gama Novidades 2004/2005 Nova Física no Espaço 2005 João Braga – INPE eventos recentes e implicações para os modelos de GRBs SWIFT e perspectivas 09/10/2000 17/10/2002 20/11/2004 Recent GRBs burst CEA satélite 031203 Integral 040511 HETE-2 040701X HETE-2 040924 HETE-2 041006 HETE-2 041219 Integral/Swift 041223 Swift SGR 1806-20 Geotail, Mars Odyssey, RHESSI, Wind, Swift 050124 AG X AG óptico AG rádio z X X X 0.105 X(?) Associated to SN 2003lw Bright long GRB X X Obs. 0.215 XRF (very soft GRB) X 0.859 First AG seen for a short (soft) burst X 0.716 Bump similar to SN1998bw X X X Swift X X 050126 Swift X X 050215B Swift X X X (VLA) Long (9 min) and bright burst First bona-fide Swift burst Giant flare from SGR 1806-20 (short burst) CEA GRB 031203 Discovered by Integral (T ~ 30s) on Dec. 3, 2003 Optical and NIR (~9hs after) show faint AG superimposed to host galaxy at z=0.1055 Rebrightening detected in all bands peaking at 18 rest-frame days, resembling light curve of SN 1998bw Spectra taken close to maximum show extremely broad features as in SN 1998bw SN 2004lw Strong support to GRB/energetic Ic SN (“hypernova”) association (after GRB 030329/SN 2003dh) Reminder: CEA GRB 030329 (Discovered by HETE-2, Vanderspek et al. 2003) • GRB030329 is among the brightest 1% of bursts ever seen • typical long burst (~25s), fluence of 1.6 x 10-4 erg cm-2 E,iso ≈ 1.3 x 1052 erg • optical AG had magnitude ~12 after 1.5 h (more than 3 mag brighter than GRB 990123 and GRB 021004) • optical AG observed by an unprecedented number of telescopes (65) • GRB030329 was the nearest “cosmological” GRB, at z = 0.17 (obtained 16h after the burst by the VLT and 8h later by Keck) • ~ 10 days after the GRB, the spectral signature of an energetic Type Ic supernova emerged (SN 2003dh). z = 0.1675 probability of detecting a GRB this close by is ~1/3000 => unlikely that HETE-2 or Swift will see another such event CEA Optical light curve of SN 2003dh Spectrum of SN 2003dh CEA Stanek et al. (2003) Spectrum of SN 2003lw CEA Malesani et al. (2004) CEA Type Ic SNe SN2003lw absence of broad H lines Type I weak or absent Si II 6150 not Ia or Ib unusually broad features and blended lines remarkably similar to SN1998bw very large expansion velocities – similar to SN1998bw (~ 23000 km/s @ 10 days) SN2003lw is yet another case of a hypernova, albeit much less energetic than SN2003dh GRB 031203 may be a cosmic analogue of GRB 980425: sub-energetic GRBs with faint afterglows CEA In 29 GRB/XRF with measured redshifts Evidence for SN connection for GRBs 18 have light curve bumps photometric evidence for SNe 4 cases have spectroscopic evidence for a SN SNR W49B: GRB in the Milky Way @ 12 kpc? (Chandra) Barrel-shaped nebula with bright IR rings and a bar of intense X-ray emission X-rays flare out at hot caps surrounded by IR emission Jets produced in the SN collided with a cloud of gas and dust ? GRB 041006 CEA Discovered by HETE-2 Position available 42 s after the burst Light curve and spectrum very similar to GRB 030329, but 20 times fainter OT absorption lines: z=0.716 Jet break tb at 0.14 days (earliest known) Deep optical photometry over 65 days shows bump well fitted by SN1998bw corrected light curve another hypernova (Stanek et al. 2004) CEA GRB 041006 SN 1998bw light curve corrected for z=0.716 reminder CEA Soft Gamma Ray Repeaters SGR Burst of March 5th, 1979 (SGR 0526-66) SNR N49 in LMC (~10,000 ys) SOFT GAMMA RAY REPEATERS bursts repeat in random timescales (normally hundreds of times) (4, maybe 5 objects known) soft spectra (E 100 keV) short duration (~100 ms) Galactic “distribution”, associated with SNRs possibly associated with magnetars and AXPs Soft Gamma Ray Repeaters CEA SGR reminder CEA GRB duration distribution reminder CEA Progenitors Short GRBs - Possibilities: associated with mergers of compact objects SGRs in external galaxies phase transition to strange stars CEA Giant flare from SGR 1806-20 SGRs are thought to be magnetars: neutron stars with observable emissions (up to 100 keV) powered by magnetic dissipation Giant flare from SGR 1806-20 detected on December 27, 2004 6 380s long, ~10 brighter than typical GRBs (emission followed by hard X-ray tail modulated by the period of the neutron star – 7.56s) energy greatly exceeds previous events initial (200 ms) spike has blackbody spectrum, characteristic of relativistic pair/photon outflow observed light curve is well explained by emission from relativistic expanding fireballs, like GRBs (Yamazaki et al., astro-ph 0502320) rapidly fading after 600 ms emission from relativistic jet extreme energy suggests catastrophic instability involving global crust failure and magnetic reconnection, perhaps with significant large-scale untwisting of the magnetosphere (new physics !!) from a great distance this event would appear to be a short-hard GRB ! (Hurley et al. 2005, subm. Nature) CEA Giant flare from SGR 1806-20 Terasawa et al. 2005 (Nature, subm.) Yamazaki et al. 2005 (Nature, subm.) CEA GRB models Observations favor the collapsar model collapsar: high mass WR star, high rotation, make black hole 1% of supernovae are collapsars Maybe 1 GRB/galaxy/10.000 years CEA The fireball model CEA The fireball model Complex light curves are due to internal shocks caused by velocity variations – blobs with different s Turbulent magnetic fields build up behind the shocks synchrotron power-law radiation spectrum Compton scattering to GeV range Jetted fireball: fireball can be significantly collimated if progenitor is a massive star with rapid rotation escape route along the rotation axis jet formation alleviate energy requirements higher burst rates CEA GRBs as a probe for cosmology Earliest massive stars form at z ≈ 20 GRBs may mark the moment of “first light” (end of the “dark ages”, from z=1100) indeed, some calculations (Lamb & Reichart 2000) suggest that 10-40% of GRBs may lie at z > 5 GRBs have -ray luminosities 10 billion times greater than the associated SNe and host galaxies GRBs are easily detectable out to z ≈ 20 HETE-2 has shown that Liso and Eiso are correlated with z GRBS evolve with redshift: bursts at z=5 are ~1000 times more luminous than at z=0 ! CEA GRBs as a probe for cosmology Strong correlation found: 2/3 obs Epeak Epeak (1+z) E (Guirlanda, Ghisellini & Lazzati 2004) Epeak is the peak of the F spectrum E is the collimation-corrected GRB energy: E = (1 – cos j ) E,iso Underlying physical reason is not known, but the radiation process (and photon energy) should be related to the energy content The correlation makes GRBs important cosmological tools, because they probe redshifts not accessible by Ia SNe CEA Rapid slewing satellite for transient astronomy Launched on Nov. 20, 2004 (2-year mission) Detailed X-ray, UV/optical AG observations from 1 min to days after the burst Instruments: 1. 15-150 keV burst detector (BAT) with 1-4 arcmin position; triggers autonomous spacecraft slews 2. narrow-field X-ray telescope (XRT), spectroscopy from 0.2 to 10 keV with 5 arcsec positions 3. narrow-field UV/optical telescope, 170-600 nm, 0.3 arcsec positions, optical finding-charts Redshift determination for most bursts 1 mCrab hard X-ray survey CEA What to expect in the coming years Early afterglows will be carefully studied the missing link between the prompt emission and the afterglow will be identified; The jet configuration will be identified universal structured jet model could be validated by future data; With accumulation of a large sample of spectral information and redshifts for GRB/XRF with Swift, we will know a lot more about the site(s) and mechanism(s) for the prompt emission; Detection of GRB afterglows with z > 6 may provide a unique way to probe the primordial star formation, massive IMF, early IGM, and chemical enrichment at the end of the cosmic reionization era. (Djorgovski et al. 2003); With Swift, we should get ~120 GRBs to produce Hubble diagrams free of all effects of dust extinction and out to redshifts impossible to reach by any other method (Schaefer 2003). CEA Open questions What is the exact nature of the central engine? Why does it work so intermittently, ejecting blobs with large contrast in their bulk Lorentz factors? What is the radiation mechanism of the prompt emission? What is the jet angle? If between 2o and 20o, the energy can vary by ~500 (~1050 – 1052 erg) What is the efficiency of converting bulk motion into radiation? CEA “For theorists who may wish to enter this broad and growing field, I should point out that there are a considerable number of combinations, for example, comets of antimatter falling onto white holes, not yet claimed.” M. Ruderman