Literature DB >> 31748725

Observation of inverse Compton emission from a long γ-ray burst.

P Veres1, P N Bhat1,2, M S Briggs1,2, W H Cleveland3, R Hamburg1,2, C M Hui4, B Mailyan1, R D Preece1,2, O J Roberts3, A von Kienlin5, C A Wilson-Hodge4, D Kocevski4, M Arimoto6, D Tak7,8, K Asano9, M Axelsson10,11, G Barbiellini12, E Bissaldi13,14, F Fana Dirirsa15, R Gill16, J Granot16, J McEnery7,8, N Omodei17,18, S Razzaque15, F Piron19, J L Racusin8, D J Thompson8, S Campana20, M G Bernardini20, N P M Kuin21, M H Siegel22, S B Cenko8,23, P O'Brien24, M Capalbi25, A Daì25, M De Pasquale26, J Gropp22, N Klingler22, J P Osborne24, M Perri27,28, R L C Starling24, G Tagliaferri20,25, A Tohuvavohu22, A Ursi29, M Tavani29,30,31, M Cardillo29, C Casentini29, G Piano29, Y Evangelista29, F Verrecchia27,28, C Pittori27,28, F Lucarelli27,28, A Bulgarelli28, N Parmiggiani28, G E Anderson32, J P Anderson33, G Bernardi34,35,36, J Bolmer5, M D Caballero-García37, I M Carrasco38, A Castellón39, N Castro Segura40, A J Castro-Tirado41,42, S V Cherukuri43, A M Cockeram44, P D'Avanzo20, A Di Dato45,46, R Diretse47, R P Fender48, E Fernández-García42, J P U Fynbo49,50, A S Fruchter51, J Greiner5, M Gromadzki52, K E Heintz53, I Heywood35,48, A J van der Horst54,55, Y-D Hu42,56, C Inserra57, L Izzo42,58, V Jaiswal43, P Jakobsson53, J Japelj59, E Kankare60, D A Kann42, C Kouveliotou54,55, S Klose61, A J Levan62, X Y Li63,64, S Lotti29, K Maguire65, D B Malesani49,50,58,66, I Manulis67, M Marongiu68,69, S Martin33,70, A Melandri20, M J Michałowski71, J C A Miller-Jones32, K Misra72,73, A Moin74, K P Mooley75,76, S Nasri74, M Nicholl77,78, A Noschese45, G Novara79,80, S B Pandey72, E Peretti68,81, C J Pérez Del Pulgar41, M A Pérez-Torres42,82, D A Perley44, L Piro29, F Ragosta46,83,84, L Resmi43, R Ricci34, A Rossi85, R Sánchez-Ramírez29, J Selsing50, S Schulze86, S J Smartt87, I A Smith88, V V Sokolov89, J Stevens90, N R Tanvir24, C C Thöne42, A Tiengo79,80,91, E Tremou92, E Troja8,93, A de Ugarte Postigo42,58, A F Valeev89, S D Vergani94, M Wieringa95, P A Woudt47, D Xu96, O Yaron67, D R Young87.   

Abstract

Long-duration γ-ray bursts (GRBs) originate from ultra-relativistic jets launched from the collapsing cores of dying massive stars. They are characterized by an initial phase of bright and highly variable radiation in the kiloelectronvolt-to-megaelectronvolt band, which is probably produced within the jet and lasts from milliseconds to minutes, known as the prompt emission1,2. Subsequently, the interaction of the jet with the surrounding medium generates shock waves that are responsible for the afterglow emission, which lasts from days to months and occurs over a broad energy range from the radio to the gigaelectronvolt bands1-6. The afterglow emission is generally well explained as synchrotron radiation emitted by electrons accelerated by the external shock7-9. Recently, intense long-lasting emission between 0.2 and 1 teraelectronvolts was observed from GRB 190114C10,11. Here we report multi-frequency observations of GRB 190114C, and study the evolution in time of the GRB emission across 17 orders of magnitude in energy, from 5 × 10-6 to 1012 electronvolts. We find that the broadband spectral energy distribution is double-peaked, with the teraelectronvolt emission constituting a distinct spectral component with power comparable to the synchrotron component. This component is associated with the afterglow and is satisfactorily explained by inverse Compton up-scattering of synchrotron photons by high-energy electrons. We find that the conditions required to account for the observed teraelectronvolt component are typical for GRBs, supporting the possibility that inverse Compton emission is commonly produced in GRBs.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31748725     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1754-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  1 in total

1.  Gamma-ray bursts.

Authors:  Neil Gehrels; Péter Mészáros
Journal:  Science       Date:  2012-08-24       Impact factor: 47.728

  1 in total
  1 in total

1.  Synergies of THESEUS with the large facilities of the 2030s and guest observer opportunities.

Authors:  P Rosati; S Basa; A W Blain; E Bozzo; M Branchesi; L Christensen; A Ferrara; A Gomboc; P T O'Brien; J P Osborne; A Rossi; F Schüssler; M Spurio; N Stergioulas; G Stratta; L Amati; S Casewell; R Ciolfi; G Ghirlanda; S Grimm; D Guetta; J Harms; E Le Floc'h; F Longo; M Maggiore; S Mereghetti; G Oganesyan; R Salvaterra; N R Tanvir; S Turriziani; S D Vergani; S Balman; J Caruana; M H Erkut; G Guidorzi; F Frontera; A Martin-Carrillo; S Paltani; D Porquet; O Sergijenko
Journal:  Exp Astron (Dordr)       Date:  2021-07-07       Impact factor: 2.012

  1 in total

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