| Literature DB >> 17183315 |
N Gehrels1, J P Norris, S D Barthelmy, J Granot, Y Kaneko, C Kouveliotou, C B Markwardt, P Mészáros, E Nakar, J A Nousek, P T O'Brien, M Page, D M Palmer, A M Parsons, P W A Roming, T Sakamoto, C L Sarazin, P Schady, M Stamatikos, S E Woosley.
Abstract
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are known to come in two duration classes, separated at approximately 2 s. Long-duration bursts originate from star-forming regions in galaxies, have accompanying supernovae when these are near enough to observe and are probably caused by massive-star collapsars. Recent observations show that short-duration bursts originate in regions within their host galaxies that have lower star-formation rates, consistent with binary neutron star or neutron star-black hole mergers. Moreover, although their hosts are predominantly nearby galaxies, no supernovae have been so far associated with short-duration GRBs. Here we report that the bright, nearby GRB 060614 does not fit into either class. Its approximately 102-s duration groups it with long-duration GRBs, while its temporal lag and peak luminosity fall entirely within the short-duration GRB subclass. Moreover, very deep optical observations exclude an accompanying supernova, similar to short-duration GRBs. This combination of a long-duration event without an accompanying supernova poses a challenge to both the collapsar and the merging-neutron-star interpretations and opens the door to a new GRB classification scheme that straddles both long- and short-duration bursts.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17183315 DOI: 10.1038/nature05376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962