305 results on '"Pizzichini, G"'
Search Results
2. Spectral Lag Relations in GRB Pulses Detected with HETE-2
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Arimoto, M., Kawai, N., Asano, K., Hurley, K., Suzuki, M., Nakagawa, Y. E., Shimokawabe, T., Pazmino, N. V., Sato, R., Matsuoka, M., Yoshida, A., Tamagawa, T., Shirasaki, Y., Sugita, S., Takahashi, I., Atteia, J. -L., Pelangeon, A., Vanderspek, R., Graziani, C., Prigozhin, G., Villasenor, J., Jernigan, J. G., Crew, G. B., Sakamoto, T., Ricker, G. R., Woosley, S. E., Butler, N., Levine, A., Doty, J. P., Donaghy, T. Q., Lamb, D. Q., Fenimore, E., Galassi, M., Boer, M., Dezalay, J. -P., Olive, J. -F., Braga, J., Manchanda, R., and Pizzichini, G.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Using a pulse-fit method, we investigate the spectral lags between the traditional gamma-ray band (50-400 keV) and the X-ray band (6-25 keV) for 8 GRBs with known redshifts (GRB 010921, GRB 020124, GRB 020127, GRB 021211, GRB 030528, GRB 040924, GRB 041006, GRB 050408) detected with the WXM and FREGATE instruments aboard the HETE-2 satellite. We find several relations for the individual GRB pulses between the spectral lag and other observables, such as the luminosity, pulse duration, and peak energy (Epeak). The obtained results are consistent with those for BATSE, indicating that the BATSE correlations are still valid at lower energies (6-25 keV). Furthermore, we find that the photon energy dependence for the spectral lags can reconcile the simple curvature effect model. We discuss the implication of these results from various points of view., Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted for the publication in PASJ (minor corrections)
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- 2010
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3. Properties of Gamma Ray Bursts at different redshifts
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Pizzichini, G., Maiorano, E., Genghini, M., and Munz, F.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
GRBs are now detected up to z = 8.26 . We try to find differences, in their restframe properties, which could be related either to distance or to observing conditions., Comment: 6 pages 2009 Fermi Symposium eConf Proceedings C091122
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- 2009
4. Intrinsic properties of a complete sample of HETE-2 gamma-ray bursts. A measure of the GRB rate in the Local Universe
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Pélangeon, A., Atteia, J. -L., Nakagawa, Y. E., Hurley, K., Yoshida, A., Vanderspek, R., Suzuki, M., Kawai, N., Pizzichini, G., Boër, M., Braga, J., Crew, G., Donaghy, T. Q., Dezalay, J. P., Doty, J., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Graziani, C., Jernigan, J. G., Lamb, D. Q., Levine, A., Manchanda, J., Martel, F., Matsuoka, M., Olive, J. -F., Prigozhin, G., Ricker, G. R., Sakamoto, T., Shirasaki, Y., Sugita, S., Takagishi, K., Tamagawa, T., Villasenor, J., Woosley, S. E., and Yamauchi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Aims: Taking advantage of the forthcoming Catalog of the HETE-2 mission, the aim of this paper is to evaluate the main properties of HETE-2 GRBs - the E_peak, the T_90 and the E_iso - in their source frames and to derive their unbiased distribution. Methods: We first construct a complete sample containing all the bursts localized by the WXM on-board HETE-2, which are selected with a uniform criterion and whose observed parameters can be constrained. We then derive the intrinsic E_peak, T_90 and E_iso distributions using their redshift when it is available, or their pseudo-redshift otherwise. We finally compute the number of GRB (N_Vmax) within the visibility volume (V_max) of each GRB, in order to derive a weight for each detected burst accounting both for the detection significance and the star formation history of the universe. Results: The unbiased distributions obtained clearly show the predominence of X-ray flashes (XRFs) in the global GRB population. We also derive the rate of local GRBs: R0^H2 > 11 Gpc-3 yr-1, which is intermediate between the local rate obtained by considering only the high-luminosity bursts (~1 Gpc-3 yr-1) and that obtained by including the low-luminosity bursts (>200 Gpc-3 yr-1)., Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables (editor version: 15 pages, 14 figures, tables 2 and 3 only available in electronic form at http://www.aanda.org)
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- 2008
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5. Photometry and spectroscopy of GRB 060526: A detailed study of the afterglow and host galaxy of a z=3.2 gamma-ray burst
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Thöne, C. C., Kann, D. A., Jóhannesson, G., Selj, J. H., Jaunsen, A. O., Fynbo, J. P. U., Akerlof, C. W., Baliyan, K. S., Bartolini, C., Bikmaev, I. F., Bloom, J. S., Burenin, R. A., Cobb, B. E., Covino, S., Curran, P. A., Dahle, H., Ferrero, A., Foley, S., French, J., Fruchter, A. S., Ganesh, S., Graham, J. F., Greco, G., Guarnieri, A., Hanlon, L., Hjorth, J., Ibrahimov, M., Israel, G. L., Jakobsson, P., Jelínek, M., Jensen, B. L., Jørgensen, U. G., Khamitov, I. M., Koch, T. S., Levan, A. J., Malesani, D., Masetti, N., Meehan, S., Melady, G., Nanni, D., Näränen, J., Pakstiene, E., Pavlinsky, M. N., Perley, D. A., Piccioni, A., Pizzichini, G., Pozanenko, A., Roming, P. W. A., Rujopakarn, W., Rumyantsev, V., Rykoff, E. S., Sharapov, D., Starr, D., Sunyaev, R. A., Swan, H., Tanvir, N. R., Terra, F., Vreeswijk, P. M., Wilson, A. C., Yost, S. A., and Yuan, F.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Aims: With this paper we want to investigate the highly variable afterglow light curve and environment of gamma-ray burst (GRB) 060526 at $z=3.221$. Methods: We present one of the largest photometric datasets ever obtained for a GRB afterglow, consisting of multi-color photometric data from the ultraviolet to the near infrared. The data set contains 412 data points in total to which we add additional data from the literature. Furthermore, we present low-resolution high signal-to-noise spectra of the afterglow. The afterglow light curve is modeled with both an analytical model using broken power law fits and with a broad-band numerical model which includes energy injections. The absorption lines detected in the spectra are used to derive column densities using a multi-ion single-component curve-of-growth analysis from which we derive the metallicity of the host of GRB 060526. Results: The temporal behaviour of the afterglow follows a double broken power law with breaks at $t=0.090\pm0.005$ and $t=2.401\pm0.061$ days. It shows deviations from the smooth set of power laws that can be modeled by additional energy injections from the central engine, although some significant microvariability remains. The broadband spectral-energy distribution of the afterglow shows no significant extinction along the line of sight. The metallicity derived from \ion{S}{II} and \ion{Fe}{II} of [S/H] = --0.57 $\pm$0.25 and [Fe/H] = --1.09$\pm$0.24 is relatively high for a galaxy at that redshift but comparable to the metallicity of other GRB hosts at similar redshifts. At the position of the afterglow, no host is detected to F775W(AB) = 28.5 mag with the HST, implying an absolute magnitude of the host M(1500 \AA{})$>$--18.3 mag which is fainter than most long-duration hosts, although the GRB may be associated with a faint galaxy at a distance of 11 kpc., Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures, A&A, in press, three additional authors, additional minor changes after second referee report
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- 2008
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6. Discovery of a New X-Ray Burst/Millisecond Accreting Pulsar HETE J1900.1-2455
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Suzuki, M., Kawai, N., Tamagawa, T., Yoshida, A., Nakagawa, Y. E., Tanaka, K., Shirasaki, Y., Matsuoka, M., Ricker, G. R., Vanderspek, R., Butler, N., Lamb, D. Q., Graziani, C., Pizzichini, G., Sato, R., Arimoto, M., Kotoku, J., Maetou, M., and Yamauchi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A class of low-mass X-ray binary sources are known to be both X-ray burst sources and millisecond pulsars at the same time. A new source of this class was discovered by High Energy Transient Explorer 2 (HETE-2) on 14 June 2005 as a source of type-I X-ray bursts, which was named HETE J1900.1-2455. Five X-ray bursts from HETE J1900.1-2455 were observed during the summer of 2005. The time resolved spectral analysis of these bursts have revealed that their spectra are consistent with the blackbody radiation throughout the bursts. The bursts show the indication of radius expansion. The bolometric flux remains almost constant during the photospheric radius expansion while blackbody temperature dropped during the same period. Assuming that the flux reached to the Eddington limit on a standard 1.4 solar mass neutron star with a helium atmosphere, we estimate the distance to the source to be $\sim$ 4 kpc., Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures
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- 2006
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7. X-ray Flashes or soft Gamma-ray Bursts? The case of the likely distant XRF 040912
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Stratta, G., Basa, S., Butler, N., Atteia, J. L., Gendre, B., Pelangeon, A., Malacrino, F., Mellier, Y., Kann, D. A., Klose, S., Zeh, A., Masetti, N., Palazzi, E., Gorosabel, J., Castro-Tirado, A. J., Postigo, A. de Ugarte, Jelinek, M., Cepa, J., Castaneda, H., Martinez-Delgado, D., Boer, M., Braga, J., Crew, G., Donaghy, T. Q., Dezalay, J. -P., Doty, J., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Graziani, C., Jernigan, J. G., Kawai, N., Lamb, D. Q., Levine, A., Manchanda, J., Martel, F., Matsuoka, M., Nakagawa, Y., Olive, J. -F., Pizzichini, G., Prigozhin, G., Ricker, G., Sakamoto, T., Shirasaki, Y., Sugita, S., Suzuki, M., Takagishi, K., Tamagawa, T., Vanderspek, R., Villasenor, J., Woosley, S. E., Yamauchi, M., and Yoshida, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In this work, we present a multi-wavelength study of XRF 040912, aimed at measuring its distance scale and the intrinsic burst properties. We performed a detailed spectral and temporal analysis of both the prompt and the afterglow emission and we estimated the distance scale of the likely host galaxy. We then used the currently available sample of XRFs with known distance to discuss the connection between XRFs and classical Gamma-ray Bursts (GRBs). We found that the prompt emission properties unambiguously identify this burst as an XRF, with an observed peak energy of E_p=17+/-13 keV and a burst fluence ratio S(2-30keV)/S(30-400keV)>1. A non-fading optical source with R~24 mag and with an apparently extended morphology is spatially consistent with the X-ray afterglow, likely the host galaxy. XRF 040912 is a very dark burst since no afterglow optical counterpart is detected down to R>25 mag (3 sigma limiting magnitude) at 13.6 hours after the burst. The host galaxy spectrum detected from 3800A to 10000A, shows a single emission line at 9552A. The lack of any other strong emission lines blue-ward of the detected one and the absence of the Ly alpha cut-off down to 3800A are consistent with the hypothesis of the [OII] line at redshift z=1.563+/-0.001. The intrinsic spectral properties rank this XRF among the soft GRBs in the E_peak-E_iso diagram. Similar results were obtained for most XRFs at known redshift. Only XRF 060218 and XRF 020903 represent a good example of instrinsic XRF(i-XRF) and are possibly associated with a different progenitor population. This scenario may calls for a new definition of XRFs., Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2006
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8. HETE-2 Localizations and Observations of Four Short Gamma-Ray Bursts: GRBs 010326B, 040802, 051211 and 060121
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Donaghy, T. Q., Lamb, D. Q., Sakamoto, T., Norris, J. P., Nakagawa, Y., Villasenor, J., Atteia, J. -L., Vanderspek, R., Graziani, C., Kawai, N., Ricker, G. R., Crew, G. B., Doty, J., Prigozhin, G., Jernigan, J. G., Shirasaki, Y., Suzuki, M., Butler, N., Hurley, K., Tamagawa, T., Yoshida, A., Matsuoka, M., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Boer, M., Dezalay, J. -P., Olive, J. -F., Levine, A., Martel, F., Morgan, E., Sato, R., Woosley, S. E., Braga, J., Manchanda, R., Pizzichini, G., Takagishi, K., and Yamauchi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Here we report the localizations and properties of four short-duration GRBs localized by the High Energy Transient Explorer 2 satellite (HETE-2): GRBs 010326B, 040802, 051211 and 060121, all of which were detected by the French Gamma Telescope (Fregate) and localized with the Wide-field X-ray Monitor (WXM) and/or Soft X-ray Camera (SXC) instruments. We discuss eight possible criteria for determining whether these GRBs are "short population bursts" (SPBs) or "long population bursts" (LPBs). These criteria are (1) duration, (2) pulse widths, (3) spectral hardness, (4) spectral lag, (5) energy Egamma radiated in gamma rays (or equivalently, the kinetic energy E_KE of the GRB jet), (6) existence of a long, soft bump following the burst, (7) location of the burst in the host galaxy, and (8) type of host galaxy. In particular, we have developed a likelihood method for determining the probability that a burst is an SPB or a LPB on the basis of its T90 duration alone. A striking feature of the resulting probability distribution is that the T90 duration at which a burst has an equal probability of being a SPB or a LPB is T90 = 5 s, not T90 = 2 s, as is often used. All four short-duration bursts discussed in detail in this paper have T90 durations in the Fregate 30-400 keV energy band of 1.90, 2.31, 4.25, and 1.97 sec, respectively, yielding probabilities P(S|T90) = 0.97, 0.91, 0.60, and 0.95 that these bursts are SPBs on the basis of their T90 durations alone. All four bursts also have spectral lags consistent with zero. These results provide strong evidence that all four GRBs are SPBs (abstract continues)., Comment: 60 pages, 19 figures, submitted to ApJ; added new references and corrected typos
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- 2006
9. Study of time lags in HETE-2 Gamma-Ray Bursts with redshift: search for astrophysical effects and Quantum Gravity signature
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Bolmont, J., Atteia, J. -L., Jacholkowska, A., Piron, F., and Pizzichini, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The study of time lags between spikes in Gamma-Ray Burst light curves in different energy bands as a function of redshift may lead to the detection of effects due to Quantum Gravity. We present an analysis of 15 Gamma-Ray Bursts with measured redshift, detected by the HETE-2 mission in order to measure time lags related to astrophysical effects and search for Quantum Gravity signature in the framework of an extra-dimension string model. The wavelet transform method is used both for de-noising the light curves and for the detection of sharp transitions. The use of photon tagged data allows us to consider various energy ranges and to evaluate systematic effects due to selections and cuts. The analysis of maxima and minima of the light curves leads to no significant Quantum Gravity effect. A lower limit at 95% Confidence Level on the Quantum Gravity scale parameter of 2x10**15 GeV is set., Comment: 34 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to ApJ
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- 2006
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10. Discovery of the short gamma-ray burst GRB 050709
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Villasenor, J. S., Lamb, D. Q., Ricker, G. R., Atteia, J. -L., Kawai, N., Butler, N., Nakagawa, Y., Jernigan, J. G., Boer, M., Crew, G. B., Donaghy, T. Q., Doty, J., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Graziani, C., Hurley, K., Levine, A., Martel, F., Matsuoka, M., Olive, J. -F., Prigozhin, G., Sakamoto, T., Shirasaki, Y., Suzuki, M., Tamagawa, T., Vanderspek, R., Woosley, S. E., Yoshida, A., Braga, J., Manchanda, R., Pizzichini, G., Takagishi, K., and Yamauchi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRBs) fall into two classes: short-hard and long-soft bursts. The latter are now known to have X-ray and optical afterglows, to occur at cosmological distances in star-forming galaxies, and to be associated with the explosion of massive stars. In contrast, the distance scale, the energy scale, and the progenitors of short bursts have remained a mystery. Here we report the discovery of a short-hard burst whose accurate localization has led to follow-up observations that have identified the X-ray afterglow and (for the first time) the optical afterglow of a short-hard burst. These, in turn, have led to identification of the host galaxy of the burst as a late-type galaxy at z=0.16 showing that at least some short-hard bursts occur at cosmological distances in the outskirts of galaxies, and are likely to be due to the merging of compact binaries., Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to Nature
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- 2005
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11. Two years of INTEGRAL monitoring of the Soft Gamma-Ray Repeater SGR 1806-20: from quiescence to frenzy
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Gotz, D., Mereghetti, S., Molkov, S., Hurley, K., Mirabel, I. F., Sunyaev, R., Weidenspointner, G., Brandt, S., Del Santo, M., Feroci, M., Gogus, E., von Kienlin, A., van der Klis, M., Kouveliotou, C., Lund, N., Pizzichini, G., Ubertini, P., Winkler, C., and Woods, P. M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
SGR 1806-20 has been observed for more than 2 years with the INTEGRAL satellite. In this period the source went from a quiescent state into a very active one culminating in a giant flare on December 27 2004. Here we report on the properties of all the short bursts detected with INTEGRAL before the giant flare. We derive their number-intensity distribution and confirm the hardness-intensity correlation for the bursts found by Gotz et al. (2004a). Our sample includes a very bright outburst that occurred on October 5 2004, during which over one hundred bursts were emitted in 10 minutes, involving an energy release of 3 x 1E42 erg. We present a detailed analysis of it and discuss our results in the framework of the magnetar model., Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, to appear in A&A main journal
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- 2005
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12. GRB 021004 modelled by multiple energy injections
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Postigo, A. de Ugarte, Castro-Tirado, A. J., Gorosabel, J., Jóhannesson, G., Bjornsson, G., Gudmundsson, E. H., Bremer, M., Pak, S., Tanvir, N., Cerón, J. M. Castro, Guzyi, S., Jelínek, M., Klose, S., Pérez-Ramírez, D., Aceituno, J., Bagatín, A. Campo, Covino, S., Cardiel, N., Fathkullin, T., Henden, A. A., Huferath, S., Kurata, Y., Malesani, D., Mannucci, F., Ruiz-Lapuente, P., Sokolov, V., Thiele, U., Wisotzki, L., Antonelli, L. A., Bartolini, C., Boattini, A., Guarnieri, A., Piccioni, A., Pizzichini, G., del Principe, M., di Paola, A., Fugazza, D., Ghisellini, G., Hunt, L., Konstantinova, T., Masetti, N., Palazzi, E., Pian, E., Stefanon, M., Testa, V., and Tristram, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
GRB 021004 is one of the best sampled gamma-ray bursts (GRB) to date, although the nature of its light curve is still being debated. Here we present a large amount (107) of new optical, near-infrared (NIR) and millimetre observations, ranging from 2 hours to more than a year after the burst. Fitting the multiband data to a model based on multiple energy injections suggests that at least 7 refreshed shocks took place during the evolution of the afterglow, implying a total energy release (collimated within an angle of 1.8 deg) of ~ 8x10^51 erg. Analysis of the late photometry reveals that the GRB 021004 host is a low extinction (Av ~ 0.1) starburst galaxy with M_B ~ -22.0., Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in A&Ax
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- 2005
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13. The E_{peak}^{rest} -E_{rad} correlation in GRBs in the BATSE catalog
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Pizzichini, G., Ferrero, P., Genghini, M., Gianotti, F., and Topinka, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The energy emission involved in a Gamma-Ray Burst evidently can be estimated only provided that we know the distance to the source. The same is true for the peak energy of the event in the source rest frame. Redshifts have been actually measured only for about 40 events. In order to check if it is possible to extend the $E_{peak}^{rest}$ - $E_{rad}$ relation originally found by \citet{Am02} to a larger number of events, we make use of the pseudo-redshift estimate proposed by \citet{Att03} and of the spectra published by \citet{Band93}. We thus obtain a completely independent set of events which indeed follows the same $E_{peak}^{rest}$ - $E_{rad}$ relation and confirms it., Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Advances in Space Research, proceedings of Cospar 2004, Paris
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- 2005
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14. HETE-2 Observation of two gamma-ray bursts at z > 3
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Atteia, J. -L., Kawai, N., Vanderspek, R., Pizzichini, G., Ricker, G. R., Barraud, C., Boer, M., Braga, J., Butler, N., Cline, T., Crew, G. B., Dezalay, J. -P., Donaghy, T. Q., Doty, J., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Graziani, C., Hurley, K., Jernigan, J. G., Lamb, D. Q., Levine, A., Manchanda, R., Martel, F., Matsuoka, M., Morgan, E., Nakagawa, Y., Olive, J. -F., Prigozhin, G., Sakamoto, T., Sato, R., Shirasaki, Y., Suzuki, M., Takagishi, K., Tamagawa, T., Torii, K., Villasenor, J., Woosley, S. E., Yamauchi, M., and Yoshida, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
GRB 020124 and GRB 030323 constitute half the sample of gamma-ray bursts with a measured redshift greater than 3. This paper presents the temporal and spectral properties of these two gamma-ray bursts detected and localized with HETE-2. While they have nearly identical redshifts (z=3.20 for GRB 020124, and z=3.37 for GRB 030323), these two GRBs span about an order of magnitude in fluence, thus sampling distinct regions of the GRB luminosity function. The properties of these two bursts are compared with those of the bulk of the GRB population detected by HETE-2. We also discuss the energetics of GRB 020124 and GRB 030323 and show that they are compatible with the Epeak - Eiso relation discovered by Amati et al. (2002). Finally, we compute the maximum redshifts at which these bursts could have been detected by HETE-2 and we address various issues connected with the detection and localization of high-z GRBs., Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2005
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15. GRB 040403: a faint X-ray rich Gamma-ray Burst discovered by INTEGRAL
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Mereghetti, S., Gotz, D., Andersen, M. I., Castro-Tirado, A., Frontera, F., Gorosabel, J., Hartmann, D. H., Hjorth, J., Hudec, R., Hurley, K., Pizzichini, G., Produit, N., Tarana, A., Topinka, M., Ubertini, P., and de Ugarte, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
GRB 040403 is one of the faintest gamma-ray bursts for which a rapid and accurate localization has been obtained. Here we report on the gamma-ray properties of this burst, based on observations with the IBIS instrument aboard INTEGRAL, and the results of searches for its optical afterglow. The steep spectrum (power law photon index = 1.9 in the 20-200 keV range) implies that GRB 040403 is most likely an X-ray rich burst. Our optical limit of R > 24.2 at 16.5 hours after the burst, indicates a rather faint afterglow, similar to those seen in other relatively soft and faint bursts., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics Letters
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- 2004
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16. Global Characteristics of X-Ray Flashes and X-Ray-Rich GRBs Observed by HETE-2
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Sakamoto, T., Lamb, D. Q., Graziani, C., Donaghy, T. Q., Suzuki, M., Ricker, G., Atteia, J-L., Kawai, N., Yoshida, A., Shirasaki, Y., Tamagawa, T., Torii, K., Matsuoka, M., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Doty, J., Vanderspek, R., Crew, G. B., Villasenor, J., Butler, N., Prigozhin, G., Jernigan, J. G., Barraud, C., Boer, M., Dezalay, J-P., Olive, J-F., Hurley, K., Levine, A., Monnelly, G., Martel, F., Morgan, E., Woosley, S. E., Cline, T., Braga, J., Manchanda, R., Pizzichini, G., Takagishi, K., and Yamauchi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe and discuss the global properties of 45 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) observed by HETE-2 during the first three years of its mission, focusing on the properties of X-Ray Flashes (XRFs) and X-ray-rich GRBs (XRRs). We find that the numbers of XRFs, XRRs, and GRBs are comparable. We find that the durations and the sky distributions of XRFs and XRRs are similar to those of GRBs. We also find that the spectral properties of XRFs and XRRs are similar to those of GRBs, except that the values of the peak energy $E^{\rm obs}_{\rm peak}$ of the burst spectrum in $\nu F_\nu$, the peak energy flux $\Fp$, and the energy fluence $S_E$ of XRFs are much smaller -- and those of XRRs are smaller -- than those of GRBs. Finally, we find that the distributions of all three kinds of bursts form a continuum in the [$S_E$(2-30 keV),$S_E$(30-400) keV]-plane, the [$S_E$(2-400 keV), $E_{\rm peak}$]-plane, and the [$F_{\rm peak}$(50-300 keV), $E_{\rm peak}$]-plane. These results provide strong evidence that all three kinds of bursts arise from the same phenomenon., Comment: 33 pages, 15 figures, submitted to ApJ
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- 2004
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17. High Energy Observations of XRF 030723: Evidence for an Off-axis Gamma-Ray Burst?
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Butler, N. R., Sakamoto, T., Suzuki, M., Kawai, N., Lamb, D. Q., Graziani, C., Donaghy, T. Q., Dullighan, A., Vanderspek, R., Crew, G. B., Ford, P., Ricker, G., Atteia, J-L., Yoshida, A., Shirasaki, Y., Tamagawa, T., Torii, K., Matsuoka, M., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Doty, J., Villasenor, J., Prigozhin, G., Jernigan, J. G., Barraud, C., Boer, M., Dezalay, J-P., Olive, J-F., Hurley, K., Levine, A., Martel, F., Morgan, E., Woosley, S. E., Cline, T., Braga, J., Manchanda, R., and Pizzichini, G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report High Energy Transient Explorer 2 (HETE-2) Wide Field X-ray Monitor/French Gamma Telescope observations of XRF030723 along with observations of the XRF afterglow made using the 6.5m Magellan Clay telescope and the Chandra X-ray Observatory. The observed peak energy E_pk_obs of the nu F_nu burst spectrum is found to lie within (or below) the WXM 2-25 keV passband at 98.5% confidence, and no counts are detected above 30 keV. Our best fit value is E_pk_obs=8.4+3.5/-3.4 keV. The ratio of X-ray to Gamma-ray flux for the burst follows a correlation found for GRBs observed with HETE-2, and the duration of the burst is similar to that typical of long-duration GRBs. If we require that the burst isotropic equivalent energy E_iso and E_pk_rest satisfy the relation discovered by Amati et al. (2002), a redshift of z=0.38+0.36/-0.18 can be determined, in agreement with constraints determined from optical observations. We are able to fit the X-ray afterglow spectrum and to measure its temporal fade. Although the best-fit fade is shallower than the concurrent fade in the optical, the spectral similarity between the two bands indicates that the X-ray fade may actually trace the optical fade. If this is the case, the late time rebrightening observed in the optical cannot be due to a supernova bump. We interpret the prompt and afterglow X-ray emission as arising from a jetted GRB observed off-axis and possibly viewed through a complex circumburst medium due to a progenitor wind., Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, to appear in ApJ
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- 2004
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18. The INTEGRAL view of the Soft Gamma-ray Repeater SGR 1806-20
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Gotz, D., Mereghetti, S., Mirabel, I. F., Hurley, K., Brandt, S., Lund, N., Ubertini, P., Del Santo, M., Costa, E., Feroci, M., Castro-Tirado, A., Gimenez, A., Atteia, J. -L., Boer, M., Cline, T., Frontera, F., Pizzichini, G., von Kienlin, A., Gougus, E., Kouveliotou, C., Finger, M., Thompson, C., Pedersen, H., and van der Klis, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results obtained by INTEGRAL on the Soft-Gamma Ray Repeater SGR 1806-20. In particular we report on the temporal and spectral properties of the bursts detected during a moderately active period of the source in September and October 2003 and on the search for quiescent emission., Comment: To appear in the proceedings (ESA-SP) of the 5th INTEGRAL Workshop, "The INTEGRAL UNIVERSE", Munich, 16-20 February 2004
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- 2004
19. Time-resolved X-ray spectral modeling of an intermediate burst from SGR1900+14 observed by HETE-2/FREGATE and WXM
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Olive, J. -F., Hurley, K., Sakamoto, T., Atteia, J. -L., Crew, G., Ricker, G., Pizzichini, G., Barraud, C., and Kawai, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detailed analysis of a 3.5 s long burst from SGR1900+14 which occurred on 2001 July 2. The 2-150 keV time-integrated energy spectrum is well described by the sum of two blackbodies whose temperatures are approximately 4.3 and 9.8 keV. The time-resolved energy spectra are similarly well fit by the sum of two blackbodies. The higher temperature blackbody evolves with time in a manner consistent with a shrinking emitting surface. The interpretation of these results in the context of the magnetar model suggests that the two blackbody fit is an approximation of an absorbed, multi-temperature spectrum expected on theoretical grounds rather than a physical description of the emission. If this is indeed the case, our data provide further evidence for a strong magnetic field, and indicate that the entire neutron was radiating during most of the burst duration., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2004
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20. HETE Observations of the Gamma-Ray Burst GRB030329: Evidence for an Underlying Soft X-ray Component
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Vanderspek, R., Sakamoto, T., Barraud, C., Tamagawa, T., Graziani, C., Suzuki, M., Shirasaki, Y., Prigozhin, G., Villasenor, J., Jernigan, J. G., Crew, G. B., Atteia, J. -L., Hurley, K., Kawai, N., Lamb, D. Q., Ricker, G. R., Woosley, S. E., Butler, N., Doty, J. P., Dullighan, A., Donaghy, T. Q., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Pizzichini, G., Matsuoka, M ., Takagishi, K., Torii, K., Yoshida, A., Boer, M., Dezalay, J. -P., Olive, J. -F., Braga, J., and Manchanda, R.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
An exceptionally intense gamma-ray burst, GRB030329, was detected and localized by the instruments on board the High Energy Transient Explorer satellite (HETE) at 11:37:14 UT on 29 March 2003. The burst consisted of two \~10s pulses of roughly equal brightness and an X-ray tail lasting >100s. The energy fluence in the 30-400 keV energy band was 1.08e-4 erg/cm2, making GRB030329 one of the brightest GRBs ever detected. Communication of a 2 arcmin error box 73 minutes after the burst allowed the rapid detection of a counterpart in the optical, X-ray, radio and the ensuing discovery of a supernova with most unusual characteristics. Analyses of the burst lightcurves reveal the presence of a distinct, bright, soft X-ray component underlying the main GRB: the 2-10 keV fluence of this component is ~7e-6 erg/cm2. The main pulses of GRB030329 were preceded by two soft, faint, non-thermal bumps. We present details of the HETE observations of GRB030329., Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, to be published in ApJ 617, no. 2 (10 December 2004). Referee comments have been incorporated; results of improved spectral analysis are included
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- 2004
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21. Highlights of the HETE-2 Mission
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Lamb, D. Q., Ricker, G. R., Atteia, J. -L., Barraud, C., Boer, M., Braga, J., Butler, N., Cline, T., Crew, G. B., Dezalay, J. -P., Donaghy, T. Q., Doty, J. P., Dullighan, A., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Graziani, C., Hurley, K., Jernigan, J. G., Kawai, N., Levine, A., Manchanda, R., Matsuoka, M., Martel, F., Monnelly, G., Morgan, E., Olive, J. -F., Pizzichini, G., Prigozhin, G., Sakamoto, T., Shirasaki, Y., Suzuki, M., Takagishi, K., Tamagawa, T., Torii, K., Vanderspek, R., Vedrenne, G., Villasenor, J., Woosley, S. E., Yamauchi, M., and Yoshida, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The HETE-2 mission has been highly productive. It has observed more than 250 GRBs so far. It is currently localizing 25 - 30 GRBs per year, and has localized 43 GRBs to date. Twenty-one of these localizations have led to the detection of X-ray, optical, or radio afterglows, and as of now, 11 of the bursts with afterglows have redshift determinations. HETE-2 has also observed more than 45 bursts from soft gamma-ray repeaters, and more than 700 X-ray bursts. HETE-2 has confirmed the connection between GRBs and Type Ic supernovae, a singular achievement and certainly one of the scientific highlights of the mission so far. It has provided evidence that the isotropic-equivalent energies and luminosities of GRBs may be correlated with redshift; such a correlation would imply that GRBs and their progenitors evolve strongly with redshift. Both of these results have profound implications for the nature of GRB progenitors and for the use of GRBs as a probe of cosmology and the early universe. HETE-2 has placed severe constraints on any X-ray or optical afterglow of a short GRB. It has made it possible to explore the previously unknown behavior optical afterglows at very early times, and has opened up the era of high-resolution spectroscopy of GRB optical afterglows. It is also solving the mystery of "optically dark" GRBs, and revealing the nature of X-ray flashes (XRFs)., Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, to appear in proc. 2nd VERITAS Symposium on TeV Astrophysics, Chicago, Illinois; revised text, added refs
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- 2003
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22. Scientific Highlights of the HETE-2 Mission
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Lamb, D. Q., Ricker, G. R., Atteia, J-L., Barraud, C., Boer, M., Braga, J., Butler, N., Cline, T., Crew, G. B., Dezalay, J. -P., Donaghy, T. Q., Doty, J. P., Dullighan, A., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Graziani, C., Hurley, K., Jernigan, J. G., Kawai, N., Levine, A., Manchanda, R., Matsuoka, M., Martel, F., Monnelly, G., Morgan, G., Olive, J. -F., Pizzichini, G., Prigozhin, G., Sakamoto, T., Shirasaki, Y., Suzuki, M., Takagishi, K., Tamagawa, T., Torii, K., Vanderspek, R., Vedrenne, G., Villasenor, J., Woosley, S. E., Yamauchi, M., and Yoshida, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The HETE-2 mission has been highly productive. It has observed more than 250 GRBs so far. It is currently localizing 25 - 30 GRBs per year, and has localized 43 GRBs to date. Twenty-one of these localizations have led to the detection of X-ray, optical, or radio afterglows, and as of now, 11 of the bursts with afterglows have known redshifts. HETE-2 has confirmed the connection between GRBs and Type Ic supernovae, a singular achievement and certainly one of the scientific highlights of the mission so far. It has provided evidence that the isotropic-equivalent energies and luminosities of GRBs are correlated with redshift, implying that GRBs and their progenitors evolve strongly with redshift. Both of these results have profound implications for the nature of GRB progenitors and for the use of GRBs as a probe of cosmology and the early universe. HETE-2 has placed severe constraints on any X-ray or optical afterglow of a short GRB. It is also solving the mystery of "optically dark' GRBs, and revealing the nature of X-ray flashes., Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, to appear in proc. "The Restless High-Energy Universe", Royal Tropical Institute, Amsterdam; revised text, added refs
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- 2003
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23. HETE-2 Observations of the Extremely Soft X-Ray Flash XRF 020903
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Sakamoto, T., Lamb, D. Q., Graziani, C., Donaghy, T. Q., Suzuki, M., Ricker, G., Atteia, J-L., Kawai, N., Yoshida, A., Shirasaki, Y., Tamagawa, T., Torii, K., Matsuoka, M., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Tavenner, T., Doty, J., Vanderspek, R., Crew, G. B., Villasenor, J., Butler, N., Prigozhin, G., Jernigan, J. G., Barraud, C., Boer, M., Dezalay, J-P., Olive, J-F., Hurley, K., Levine, A., Monnelly, G., Martel, F., Morgan, E., Woosley, S. E., Cline, T., Braga, J., Manchanda, R., Pizzichini, G., Takagishi, K., and Yamauchi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report HETE-2 WXM/FREGATE observations of the X-ray flash, XRF 020903. This event was extremely soft: the ratio log(S_X/S_gamma) = 0.7, where S_X and S_gamma are the fluences in the 2-30 and 30-400 keV energy bands, is the most extreme value observed so far by HETE-2. In addition, the spectrum has an observed peak energy E^{obs}_{peak} < 5.0 keV (99.7 % probability upper limit) and no photons were detected above ~10 keV. The burst is shorter at higher energies, which is similar to the behavior of long GRBs. We consider the possibility that the burst lies at very high redshift and that the low value of E^{obs}_{peak} is due to the cosmological redshift, and show that this is very unlikely. We find that the properties of XRF 020903 are consistent with the relation between the fluences S(7-30 keV) and S(30-400 keV) found by Barraud et al. for GRBs and X-ray-rich GRBs, and are consistent with the extension by a decade of the hardness-intensity correlation (Mallozzi et al. 1995) found by the same authors. Assuming that XRF 020903 lies at a redshift z = 0.25 as implied by the host galaxy of the candidate optical and radio afterglows of this burst, we find that the properties of XRF 020903 are consistent with an extension by a factor ~300 of the relation between the isotropic-equivalent energy E_iso and the peak E_peak of the nu F_nu spectrum (in the source frame of the burst) found by Amati et al. for GRBs. The results presented in this paper therefore provide evidence that XRFs, X-ray-rich GRBs, and GRBs form a continuum and are a single phenomenon. The results also impose strong constraints on models of XRFs and X-ray-rich GRBs., Comment: 32 pages, 12 figures, revised, accepted by ApJ
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- 2003
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24. Observation of GRB 030131 with the INTEGRAL satellite
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Gotz, D., Mereghetti, S., Hurley, K., Deluit, S., Feroci, M., Frontera, F., Fruchter, A., Gorosabel, J., Hartmann, D. H., Hjorth, J., Hudec, R., Mirabel, I. F., Pian, E., Pizzichini, G., Ubertini, P., and Winkler, C.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A long Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) was detected with the instruments on board the INTEGRAL satellite on January 31 2003. Although most of the GRB, which lasted $\sim$150 seconds, occurred during a satellite slew, the automatic software of the INTEGRAL Burst Alert System was able to detect it in near-real time. Here we report the results obtained with the IBIS instrument, which detected GRB 030131 in the 15 keV - 200 keV energy range, and ESO/VLT observations of its optical transient. The burst displays a complex time profile with numerous peaks. The peak spectrum can be described by a single power law with photon index $\Gamma\simeq$1.7 and has a flux of $\sim$2 photons cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$ in the 20-200 keV energy band. The high sensitivity of IBIS has made it possible for the first time to perform detailed time-resolved spectroscopy of a GRB with a fluence of 7$\times10^{-6}$ erg cm$^{-2}$ (20-200 keV)., Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 5 pages, 4 figures, latex
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- 2003
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25. HETE-2 Localization and Observation of the Bright, X-Ray-Rich Gamma-Ray Burst GRB021211
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Crew, G. B., Lamb, D. Q., Ricker, G. R., Atteia, J. -L., Kawai, N., Vanderspek, R., Villasenor, J., Doty, J., Prigozhin, G., Jernigan, J. G., Graziani, C., Shirasaki, Y., Sakamoto, T., Suzuki, M., Butler, N., Hurley, K., Tamagawa, T., Yoshida, A., Matsuoka, M., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Barraud, C., Boer, M., Dezalay, J. -P., Olive, J. -F., Levine, A., Monnelly, G., Martel, F., Morgan, E., Donaghy, T. Q., Torii, K., Woosley, S. E., Cline, T., Braga, J., Manchanda, R., Pizzichini, G., Takagishi, K., and Yamauchi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
A bright, x-ray-rich GRB was detected by HETE-2 at 11:18:34.03 UT on 11 Dec 2002. The WXM localization was to 14' and relayed to the GCN 22 s after the start of the burst. The ground SXC localization was within 2' of R.A. 08h 09m 00s, Dec 06d 44' 20" (J2000). GRB021211 consists of a single, FRED-like pulse with t90s of 2.3 s (85-400 keV) and 8.5 s (2-10 keV). The peak photon number and photon energy fluxes in the 2-400 keV band, are 34.0 +/- 1.8 ph cm^-2 s^-1 and 1.68 +/- 0.11 x 10^-6 erg cm^-2 s^-1, respectively. The energy fluences in the 2-30 keV and 30-400 kev energy bands are S_X = 1.36 +/- 0.05 x 10^-6 erg cm^-2 and S_gamma 2.17 +/- 0.15 x 10^-6 erg cm^-2, respectively. Thus GRB021211 is an X-ray-rich GRB (S_X/S_gamma = 0.63 > 0.32). The spectrum is well-fit by a Band function (alpha = -0.805, beta = -2.37, E_peak = 46.8 keV). The prompt localization allowed the detection of an optical afterglow for what would otherwise have been an ``optically dark'' GRB. GRB 021211 demonstrates that some fraction of burst afterglows are ``optically dark'' because their optical afterglows at times > 1 hr after the burst are very faint, and thus have often escaped detection. GRB 021211 shows that such ``optically dim'' bursts can have very bright afterglows at times < 20 min after the burst., Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, accepted by ApJ, abstract. condensed; revised
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- 2003
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26. Spectral analysis of 35 GRBs/XRFs observed with HETE-2/FREGATE
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Barraud, C., Olive, J-F., Lestrade, J. P., Atteia, J-L., Hurley, K., Ricker, G., Lamb, D. Q., Kawai, N., Boer, M., Dezalay, J-P., Pizzichini, G., Vanderspek, R., Crew, G., Doty, J., Monelly, G., Villasenor, J., Butler, N., Levine, A., Yoshida, A., Shirasaki, Y., Sakamoto, T., Tamagawa, T., Torii, K., Matsuoka, M., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Tavenner, T., Donaghy, T. Q., Graziani, C., and Jernigan, J. G.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a spectral analysis of 35 GRBs detected with the HETE-2 gamma-ray detectors (the FREGATE instrument) in the energy range 7-400 keV. The GRB sample analyzed is made of GRBs localized with the Wide Field X-ray Monitor onboard HETE-2 or with the GRB Interplanetary Network. We derive the spectral parameters of the time-integrated spectra, and present the distribution of the low-energy photon index, alpha, and of the peak energy, e_peak . We then discuss the existence and nature of the recently discovered X-Ray Flashes and their relationship with classical GRBs., Comment: 14 pages, 43 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics
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- 2002
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27. HETE-2 Localization and Observations of the Short, Hard Gamma-Ray Burst GRB020531
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Lamb, D. Q., Ricker, G. R., Atteia, J. -L., Hurley, K., Kawai, N., Shirasaki, Y., Sakamoto, T., Tamagawa, T., Graziani, C., Olive, J. -F., Yoshida, A., Matsuoka, M., Torii, K., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Tavenner, T., Donaghy, T. Q., Boer, M., Dezalay, J. -P., Vanderspek, R., Crew, G., Doty, J., Monnelly, G., Villasenor, J., Butler, N., Jernigan, J. G., Levine, A., Martel, F., Morgan, E., Prigozhin, G., Woosley, S. E., Cline, T., Mitrofanov, I., Anfimov, D., Kozyrev, A., Litvak, M., Sanin, A., Boynton, W., Fellows, C., Harshman, K., Shinohara, C., Starr, R., Braga, J., Manchanda, R., Pizzichini, G., Takagishi, K., and Yamauchi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The {\it HETE-2} (hereafter \HETE) French Gamma Telescope (FREGATE) and the Wide-field X-ray Monitor (WXM) instruments detected a short ($t_{50} = 360$ msec in the FREGATE 85-300 keV energy band), hard gamma-ray burst (GRB) that occurred at 1578.72 SOD (00:26:18.72 UT) on 31 May 2002. The WXM flight localization software produced a valid location in spacecraft (relative) coordinates. However, since no on-board real-time star camera aspect was available, an absolute localization could not be disseminated. A preliminary localization was reported as a GCN Position Notice at 01:54:22 UT, 88 min after the burst. Further ground analysis produced a refined localization, which can be expressed as a 90% confidence rectangle that is 67 arcminutes in RA and 43 arcminutes in Dec (90% confidence region), centered at RA = +15$^{\rm h}$ 14$^{\rm m}$ 45$^{\rm s}$, Dec = -19$^\circ$ 21\arcmin 35\arcsec (J2000). An IPN localization of the burst was disseminated 18 hours after the GRB (Hurley et al. 2002b). A refined IPN localization was disseminated $\approx$ 5 days after the burst. This hexagonal-shaped localization error region is centered on RA = 15$^{\rm h}$ 15$^{\rm m}$ 03.57$^{\rm s}$, -19$^\circ$ 24\arcmin 51.00\arcsec (J2000), and has an area of $\approx$ 22 square arcminutes (99.7% confidence region). The prompt localization of this short, hard GRB by \HETE and the anti-Sun pointing of the \HETE instruments, coupled with the refinement of the localization by the IPN, has made possible rapid follow-up observations of the burst at radio, optical, and X-ray wavelengths., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures. Submitted to ApJ
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- 2002
28. GRB010921: Localization and Observations by the HETE Satellite
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Ricker, G., Hurley, K., Lamb, D., Woosley, S., Atteia, J-L, Kawai, N., Vanderspek, R., Crew, G., Doty, J., Villasenor, J., Prigozhin, G., Monnelly, G., Butler, N., Matsuoka, M., Shirasaki, Y., Tamagawa, T., Torii, K., Sakamoto, T., Yoshida, A., Fenimore, E., Galassi, M., Tavenner, T., Donaghy, T., Graziani, C., Boer, M., Dezalay, J-P, Niel, M., Olive, J-F, Vedrenne, G., Cline, T., Jernigan, J. G., Levine, A., Martel, F., Morgan, E., Braga, J., Manchanda, R., Pizzichini, G., Takagishi, K., and Yamauchi, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
On September 21 at 18950.56 SOD (05:15:50.56) UT the FREGATE gamma-ray instrument on the High Energy Transient Explorer (HETE) detected a bright gamma-ray burst (GRB). The burst was also seen by the X-detector on the WXM X-ray instrument and was therefore well-localized in the X direction; however, the burst was outside the fully-coded field-of-view of the WXM Y-detector, and therefore information on the Y direction of the burst was limited. Cross-correlation of the HETE and Ulysses time histories yielded an Interplanetary Network (IPN) annulus that crosses the HETE error strip at a ~45 degree angle. The intersection of the HETE error strip and the IPN annulus produces a diamond-shaped error region for the location of the burst having an area of 310 square arcminutes. Based on the FREGATE and WXM light curves, the duration of the burst is characterized by a t90 = 18.4 s in the WXM 4 - 25 keV energy range, and 23.8 s and 21.8 s in the FREGATE 6 - 40 and 32 - 400 keV energy ranges, respectively. The fluence of the burst in these same energy ranges is 4.8 10^{-6}, 5.5 10^{-6}, and 11.4 10^{-6} erg cm^{-2}, respectively. Subsequent optical and radio observations by ground-based observers have identified the afterglow of GRB010921 and determined an apparent redshift of z = 0.450., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. To be submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letters
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- 2002
29. Colors and luminosities of the optical afterglows of the gamma-ray bursts
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Šimon, V., Hudec, R., Pizzichini, G., and Masetti, N.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Results of the study of the color indices and luminosities of 17 optical afterglows (OAs) of GRBs are presented. We show that the color variations during the decline of OAs (except for GRB000131) are relatively small during t-T_0 < 10 days and allow a comparison among them, even for the less densely sampled OAs. The colors in the observer frame, corrected for the Galactic reddening, concentrate at (V-R)_0 = 0.40 +- 0.13, (R-I)_0 = 0.46 +- 0.18, (B-V)_0 = 0.47 +- 0.17. The color evolution of the OAs is negligible although their brightness declines by several magnitudes during the considered time interval. Such a strong concentration of the color indices also suggests that the intrinsic reddening (inside their host galaxies) must be quite similar and relatively small for all these events. The absolute brightness of OAs in the observer frame, corrected for the host galaxy, lies within M_(R_0) = -26.5 to -22.2 for (t-T_0)_rest = 0.25 days. This spread of M_(R_0) is not significantly influenced by the shifts of lambda, caused by the different redshift z of the respective OAs. The general decline rate of the OA sample considered here seems to be independent of the absolute optical brightness of the OA, measured at some t-T_0 identical for all OAs, and the light curves of all events are almost parallel, when corrected for the redshift-induced time dilation., Comment: 11 pages, 2 tables, 7 figures; to be published on Astronomy & Astrophysics
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- 2001
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30. BeppoSAX spectrum of GRB971214: evidence of a substantial energy output during afterglow
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Fiume, D. Dal, Amati, L., Antonelli, L. A., Fiore, F., Muller, J. M., Parmar, A., Masetti, N., Pian, E., Costa, E., Frontera, F., Piro, L., Heise, J., Butler, R. C., Coletta, A., Feroci, M., Giommi, P., Nicastro, L., Orlandini, M., Palazzi, E., Pizzichini, G., and Tavani, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We report the X/gamma-ray spectrum of GRB971214 and of its afterglow. The afterglow was measured few hours after the main event and for an elapsed time of more than two days. The measure of this GRB and afterglow is relevant due to its extreme, cosmological distance (z=3.42). The prompt event shows a hard photon spectrum, consistent with a broken power law with photon indices Gamma_X~0.1 below ~20 keV and Gamma_g~1.3 above 60 keV. The afterglow spectrum, measured with the MECS and LECS BeppoSAX telescopes, is consistent with a power law with spectral photon index Gamma=1.6. Within the statistical accuracy of our measure no spectral evolution is detected during the observation of the afterglow. When integrated during the time span covered by BeppoSAX observations, the power in the afterglow emission, even with very conservative assumptions, is at least comparable with the power in the main event. The IR-to-X rays broad band spectrum is also presented, collecting data from the literature and adding them to the BeppoSAX measure. It shows that the predictions from synchrotron emission models is qualitatively confirmed. The BeppoSAX measurement of the X and gamma ray spectrum of this GRB/afterglow is discussed in the framework of current theoretical models., Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures. To be published in Astronomy and Astrophysics. Uses aa, epsf and times LaTeX macros
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- 2000
31. Gamma-Ray Burst 980329 and its X-Ray Afterglow
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Zand, J. J. M. in 't, Amati, L., Antonelli, L. A., Butler, R. C., Castro-Tirado, A. J., Coletta, A., Costa, E., Feroci, M., Frontera, F., Heise, J., Molendi, S., Nicastro, L., Owens, A., Palazzi, E., Pian, E., Piro, L., Pizzichini, G., Smith, M. J. S., and Tavani, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
GRB 980329 is the brightest gamma-ray burst detected so far with the Wide Field Cameras aboard BeppoSAX, both in gamma-rays and X-rays. With respect to its fluence (2.6 X 10**-5 erg/s/cm**2 in 50 to 300 keV) it would be in the top 4% of gamma-ray bursts in the 4B catalog (Meegan et al. 1998). The time-averaged burst spectrum from 2 to 20 and 70 to 650 keV can be well described by the empirical model of Band et al. (1993). The resulting photon index above the break energy is exceptionally hard at -1.32 +/- 0.03. An X-ray afterglow was detected with the narrow-field instruments aboard BeppoSAX 7 h after the event within the error box as determined with the Wide Field Cameras. Its peak flux is (1.4 +/- 0.2) X 10**-12 erg/s/cm**2 (2 to 10 keV). The afterglow decayed according to a power law function with an index of -1.35 +/- 0.03. GRB 980329 is characterized by being bright and hard, and lacking strong spectral evolution., Comment: 13 pages with 3 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Lett
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- 1998
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32. Broad band X-ray spectral properties of Gamma-ray bursts with BeppoSAX
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Frontera, F., Amati, L., Costa, E., Feroci, M., Muller, J. M., Pizzichini, G., Cinti, M. N., Fiume, D. Dal, Heise, J., Nicastro, L., Orlandini, M., Palazzi, E., and Zand, J. in 't
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In about one year, five gamma-ray bursts were simultaneously observed with the Wide Field Cameras and Gamma Ray Burst Monitor aboard the BeppoSAX satellite. From some of them X-ray afterglow emission has been clearly detected with the same satellite. In order to understand how GRB emission is related to the X-ray afterglow, we are performing a systematic study of the spectral properties of these events. We report here preliminary results of this study., Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. To appear in the Proceedings of the 4th Huntsville Gamma-ray Burst Symposium
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- 1997
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33. Spectral Properties of the Prompt X-ray emission and Afterglow from the Gamma-Ray Burst of 28 February 1997
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Frontera, F., Costa, E., Piro, L., Muller, J. M., Amati, L., Feroci, M., Fiore, F., Pizzichini, G., Tavani, M., Castro-Tirado, A., Cusumano, G., Fiume, D. Dal, Heise, J., Hurley, K., Nicastro, L., Orlandini, M., Owens, A., Palazzi, E., Parmar, A. N., Zand, J. in 't, and Zavattini, G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report high-energy spectral data of the prompt emission of GRB970228 and its X-ray afterglow. We establish that the nature of the X-ray afterglow emission is non-thermal and similar to the later portion of GRB970228. Our data can be used to discriminate different emission models of GRB afterglows. While cooling of excited compact objects can be ruled out, fireball models are constrained in the physics of the radiation emission processes and their evolution., Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures Accepted for publication in ApJ Letters
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- 1997
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34. The first X-ray localization of a gamma-ray burst by BeppoSAX and its fast spectral evolution
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Piro, L., Heise, J., Jager, R., Costa, E., Frontera, F., Feroci, M., Muller, J. M., Amati, L., Cinti, M. N., Fiume, D. Dal, Nicastro, L., Orlandini, M., and Pizzichini, G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper we present the observations performed by the BeppoSAX Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor (GRBM) and Wide Field Cameras (WFC) of GB960720. We derive a precise localization (3 arcmin radius) and fast broad band (2-700 keV) spectral evolution of the event. A search in the catalogues at all wavelengths in the error box yields a unique outstanding source: the bright radio quasar 4C 49.29. Although the probability of finding such a source by chance is very low (0.0002), the absence of similar counterparts in other small error boxes suggests a chance occurrence. We also find that the duration-energy relationship for bursts previously observed above 25keV (Fenimore et al. 1995) extends down to 1.5 keV. This result suggests that the same radiation mechanism is operating from X-rays to gamma-rays and is in agreement with radiative cooling by synchotron emission. A fast evolution of the spectrum is found, in which the ratio of X- to gamma-ray intensities varies over three orders of magnitude. Furthermore, the spectrum in the initial phase of the event betrays the presence of an optically thick source rapidly evolving in a thin configuration.No other class of sources in the universe shows such a fast and extreme evolution. These results pose new and tighter constraints on theoretical models for gamma-ray bursts., Comment: 5 pages, LaTeX, 5 postscript figures; A&A, Accepted 15 July 1997, updated reference Costa 1997b
- Published
- 1997
35. Discovery of the short γ-ray burst GRB 050709
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Villasenor, J. S., Lamb, D. Q., Ricker, G. R., Atteia, J.-L., Kawai, N., Butler, N., Nakagawa, Y., Jernigan, J. G., Boer, M., Crew, G. B., Donaghy, T. Q., Doty, J., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Graziani, C., Hurley, K., Levine, A., Martel, F., Matsuoka, M., Olive, J.-F., Prigozhin, G., Sakamoto, T., Shirasaki, Y., Suzuki, M., Tamagawa, T., Vanderspek, R., Woosley, S. E., Yoshida, A., Braga, J., Manchanda, R., Pizzichini, G., Takagishi, K., and Yamauchi, M.
- Published
- 2005
36. Scientific highlights of the HETE-2 mission
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Lamb, D.Q, Ricker, G.R, Atteia, J.-L, Barraud, C, Boer, M, Braga, J, Butler, N, Cline, T, Crew, G.B, Dezalay, J.-P, Donaghy, T.Q, Doty, J.P, Dullighan, A, Fenimore, E.E, Galassi, M, Graziani, C, Hurley, K, Jernigan, J.G, Kawai, N, Levine, A, Manchanda, R, Matsuoka, M, Martel, F, Monnelly, G, Morgan, E, Olive, J.-F, Pizzichini, G, Prigozhin, G, Sakamoto, T, Shirasaki, Y, Suzuki, M, Takagishi, K, Tamagawa, T, Torii, K, Vanderspek, R, Vedrenne, G, Villasenor, J, Woosley, S.E, Yamauchi, M, and Yoshida, A
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- 2004
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37. Optical identification of X- and gamma-ray sources: the use of existing data
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Pizzichini, G. and Cristallo, M. R.
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- 1992
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38. X-ray observations of gamma-ray burst sources
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Boer, Michel, Gottardi, M., Hurley, K., and Pizzichini, G.
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- 1990
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39. Computer identification of celestial objects and its problems: the case of optical identification of X-ray sources
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Pizzichini, G. and Rebecchi, S.
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- 1990
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40. Observations of Gamma-Ray Bursts by HETE-2
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Kawai, N, Matsuoka, M, Yoshida, A, Shirasaki, Y, Ricker, G, Doty, J, Vanderspek, R, Crew, G, Villasenor, J, Atteia, J.-L, Fenimore, E. E, Galassi, M, Lamb, D. Q, Graziani, C, Hurley, K, Jernigan, J. G, Woosley, S, Martel, F, Monnelly, G, Prigozhin, G, Olive, J.-F, Dezalay, J.P, Boer, M, Pizzichini, G, and Cline, T
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The High Energy Transient Explorer 2 (HETE-2), launched in October 2000, is currently localizing gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) at a rate of approximately 20/yr, many in real time. As of August 2003, HETE-2 had localized 43 GRBs; 16 localizations had led to the detection of an X-ray, optical, or radio afterglows. The prompt position notification of HETE-2 enabled probing the nature of so-called "dark bursts" for which no optical afterglows were found despite of accurate localizations. In some cases, the optical afterglow was found to be intrinsically faint , and its flux declined rapidly. In another case, the optical emission was likely to be extinguished by the dust in the vicinity of the GRB source. The bright afterglows of GRB021004 and GRB030329 were observed in unprecedented details by telescopes around the world. Strong evidence for the association of long GRBs with the core-collapse supernovae was found. HETE-2 has localized almost as many X-ray rich GRBs as classical GRBs. The nature of the X-ray rich GRBs and X-ray flashes have been studied systematically with HETE-2, and they are found to have many properties in common with the classical GRBs, suggesting that they are a single phenomenon.
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- 2004
41. Perspectives of observing the color indices of optical afterglows of gamma-ray bursts with ESA Gaia
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Šimon V., Hudec R., and Pizzichini G.
- Subjects
Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics::Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Methods and techniques ,observational [Methods] ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Surveys ,data analysis [Methods] ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astronomical instrumentation ,general [Gamma-ray burst] ,general [Radiation mechanisms] - Abstract
© 2017, Springer Science+Business Media B.V. We propose a strategy for detecting and analyzing optical afterglows (OAs) of long gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) without the need to obtain their light curves. This approach is useful for the Gaia satellite, which provides sampled optical ultra-low-dispersion spectroscopic observations of the sky. For this purpose, we show that most OAs of long GRBs display specific values of some of their color indices, representing synchrotron emission of the jet. They are stable in time during the event. These indices, which can be determined from the spectra, are very similar for the ensemble of OAs with redshift z < 3.5 and display a strong clustering in some color-color diagrams. These indices also enable to constrain the properties of the local interstellar medium of GRBs. The long-lasting mapping of the sky with the Gaia instruments also gives us a hope to search for the so-called orphan afterglows, which, according to some authors, can be considerably more numerous than OAs of the observed GRBs. We also show how to resolve OAs from other transients in the Gaia data. The color indices and the properties of the quiescent sources (host galaxies of OAs detectable later by the large ground-based telescopes at the co-ordinates of the OA determined by Gaia) would tell us which one, among transients detected by Gaia, is a GRB OA.
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- 2017
42. New constraints on neutron star models of gamma-ray bursts. II - X-ray observations of three gamma-ray burst error boxes
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Boer, M, Hurley, K, Pizzichini, G, and Gottardi, M
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Exosat observations are presented for 3 gamma-ray-burst error boxes, one of which may be associated with an optical flash. No point sources were detected at the 3-sigma level. A comparison with Einstein data (Pizzichini et al., 1986) is made for the March 5b, 1979 source. The data are interpreted in the framework of neutron star models and derive upper limits for the neutron star surface temperatures, accretion rates, and surface densities of an accretion disk. Apart from the March 5b, 1979 source, consistency is found with each model.
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- 1991
43. N49: The Site of a Gamma-Ray Burst. Preliminary Results from X-Ray Observations.
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Pizzichini, G., Cline, T. L., Desai, U. D., Teegarden, B. J., Evans, W. D., Fenimore, E. E., Klebesadel, R. W., Laros, J. G., Hurley, K., Niel, M., Vedrenne, G., Danziger, John, editor, and Gorenstein, Paul, editor
- Published
- 1983
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44. X-Ray and Optical Observations of the November 19, 1978 Gamma-Ray Burst Source Region
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Pizzichini, G., Danziger, J., Grosbøl, P., Tarenghi, M., Cline, T. L., Desai, U. D., Mushotzky, R., Teegarden, B. J., Evans, W. D., Klebesadel, R. W., Laros, J. G., Barat, C., Hurley, K., Niel, M., Vedrenne, G., Estulin, I. V., Mersov, G., Zenchenko, V., Kurt, V., and Andresen, R. D., editor
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- 1981
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45. On anisotropy of solar hard X-ray emission
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Pizzichini, G., Spizzichino, A., and Vespignani, G. R.
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- 1974
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46. Detection of pseudo gamma-ray bursts of long duration
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Frontera, F., Fuligni, F., Morelli, E., Pizzichini, G., and Ventura, G.
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- 1981
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47. On the spectra of gamma-ray bursts
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Pizzichini, G.
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- 1984
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48. A New Kind of Gamma Ray Burst?
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Pizzichini, G., primary
- Published
- 1981
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49. Global Characteristics of X-Ray Flashes and X-Ray-Rich GRBs Observed by HETE-2
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Takanori Sakamoto, Lamb, Don Q., Carlo Graziani, Donaghy, T. Q., Motoko Suzuki, Ricker, George R., Atteia, J. L., Nobuyuki Kawai, Yoshida, A., Yuji Shirasaki, Toru Tamagawa, Ken'ichi Torii, Matsuoka, M., Fenimore, E. E., Galassi, M., Doty, John P., Roland Vanderspek, Geoffrey Crew, Villasenor, J., Butler, N., Prigozhin, Gregory Y., Jernigan, J. G., Barraud, C., Michel Boer, Dezalay, J. P., J-F, Olive, Kevin Hurley, Levine, A. M., Monnelly, G., Martel, F., Morgan, Eric R., Woosley, Stanford E., Cline, T. L., José Braga, Manchanda, R. K., Pizzichini, G., Takagishi, K., Makoto Yamauchi, Observatoire de Haute-Provence (OHP), Institut Pythéas (OSU PYTHEAS), Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD), Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Aix Marseille Université (AMU)-Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and Beaussier, Catherine
- Subjects
[PHYS.ASTR.CO]Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph]/Cosmology and Extra-Galactic Astrophysics [astro-ph.CO] ,[PHYS.ASTR.CO] Physics [physics]/Astrophysics [astro-ph]/Cosmology and Extra-Galactic Astrophysics [astro-ph.CO] ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe and discuss the global properties of 45 gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) observed by HETE-2 during the first three years of its mission, focusing on the properties of X-Ray Flashes (XRFs) and X-ray-rich GRBs (XRRs). We find that the numbers of XRFs, XRRs, and GRBs are comparable. We find that the durations and the sky distributions of XRFs and XRRs are similar to those of GRBs. We also find that the spectral properties of XRFs and XRRs are similar to those of GRBs, except that the values of the peak energy $E^{\rm obs}_{\rm peak}$ of the burst spectrum in $\nu F_\nu$, the peak energy flux $\Fp$, and the energy fluence $S_E$ of XRFs are much smaller -- and those of XRRs are smaller -- than those of GRBs. Finally, we find that the distributions of all three kinds of bursts form a continuum in the [$S_E$(2-30 keV),$S_E$(30-400) keV]-plane, the [$S_E$(2-400 keV), $E_{\rm peak}$]-plane, and the [$F_{\rm peak}$(50-300 keV), $E_{\rm peak}$]-plane. These results provide strong evidence that all three kinds of bursts arise from the same phenomenon., Comment: 33 pages, 15 figures, submitted to ApJ
- Published
- 2005
50. Optical Follow-up Observations of GRBs at the Klet' Observatory
- Author
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Polcar, J, Hudec, R., Topinka, M., Masetti, N., and Pizzichini, G.
- Published
- 2003
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