Literature DB >> 33442041

Rapid spectral variability of a giant flare from a magnetar in NGC 253.

O J Roberts1, P Veres2, M G Baring3, M S Briggs4,5, C Kouveliotou6,7, E Bissaldi8,9, G Younes6,7, S I Chastain6,7, J J DeLaunay10, D Huppenkothen11, A Tohuvavohu12, P N Bhat4,5, E Göğüş13, A J van der Horst6,7, J A Kennea14, D Kocevski15, J D Linford16, S Guiriec6,7,17, R Hamburg4,5, C A Wilson-Hodge15, E Burns18.   

Abstract

Magnetars are neutron stars with extremely strong magnetic fields (1013 to 1015 gauss)1,2, which episodically emit X-ray bursts approximately 100 milliseconds long and with energies of 1040 to 1041 erg. Occasionally, they also produce extremely bright and energetic giant flares, which begin with a short (roughly 0.2 seconds), intense flash, followed by fainter, longer-lasting emission that is modulated by the spin period of the magnetar3,4 (typically 2 to 12 seconds). Over the past 40 years, only three such flares have been observed in our local group of galaxies3-6, and in all cases the extreme intensity of the flares caused the detectors to saturate. It has been proposed that extragalactic giant flares are probably a subset7-11 of short γ-ray bursts, given that the sensitivity of current instrumentation prevents us from detecting the pulsating tail, whereas the initial bright flash is readily observable out to distances of around 10 to 20 million parsecs. Here we report X-ray and γ-ray observations of the γ-ray burst GRB 200415A, which has a rapid onset, very fast time variability, flat spectra and substantial sub-millisecond spectral evolution. These attributes match well with those expected for a giant flare from an extragalactic magnetar12, given that GRB 200415A is directionally associated13 with the galaxy NGC 253 (roughly 3.5 million parsecs away). The detection of three-megaelectronvolt photons provides evidence for the relativistic motion of the emitting plasma. Radiation from such rapidly moving gas around a rotating magnetar may have generated the rapid spectral evolution that we observe.

Year:  2021        PMID: 33442041     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-03077-8

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


  2 in total

1.  A giant gamma-ray flare from the magnetar SGR 1806-20.

Authors:  D M Palmer; S Barthelmy; N Gehrels; R M Kippen; T Cayton; C Kouveliotou; D Eichler; R A M J Wijers; P M Woods; J Granot; Y E Lyubarsky; E Ramirez-Ruiz; L Barbier; M Chester; J Cummings; E E Fenimore; M H Finger; B M Gaensler; D Hullinger; H Krimm; C B Markwardt; J A Nousek; A Parsons; S Patel; T Sakamoto; G Sato; M Suzuki; J Tueller
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2005-04-28       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  An origin in the local Universe for some short gamma-ray bursts.

Authors:  N R Tanvir; R Chapman; A J Levan; R S Priddey
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2005-12-15       Impact factor: 49.962

  2 in total
  1 in total

1.  Very-high-frequency oscillations in the main peak of a magnetar giant flare.

Authors:  A J Castro-Tirado; N Østgaard; E Göǧüş; C Sánchez-Gil; J Pascual-Granado; V Reglero; A Mezentsev; M Gabler; M Marisaldi; T Neubert; C Budtz-Jørgensen; A Lindanger; D Sarria; I Kuvvetli; P Cerdá-Durán; J Navarro-González; J A Font; B-B Zhang; N Lund; C A Oxborrow; S Brandt; M D Caballero-García; I M Carrasco-García; A Castellón; M A Castro Tirado; F Christiansen; C J Eyles; E Fernández-García; G Genov; S Guziy; Y-D Hu; A Nicuesa Guelbenzu; S B Pandey; Z-K Peng; C Pérez Del Pulgar; A J Reina Terol; E Rodríguez; R Sánchez-Ramírez; T Sun; K Ullaland; S Yang
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2021-12-22       Impact factor: 49.962

  1 in total

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