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The afterglow and elliptical host galaxy of the short gamma-ray burst GRB 050724.

Authors :
Berger E
Price PA
Cenko SB
Gal-Yam A
Soderberg AM
Kasliwal M
Leonard DC
Cameron PB
Frail DA
Kulkarni SR
Murphy DC
Krzeminski W
Piran T
Lee BL
Roth KC
Moon DS
Fox DB
Harrison FA
Persson SE
Schmidt BP
Penprase BE
Rich J
Peterson BA
Cowie LL
Source :
Nature [Nature] 2005 Dec 15; Vol. 438 (7070), pp. 988-90.
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

Despite a rich phenomenology, gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are divided into two classes based on their duration and spectral hardness--the long-soft and the short-hard bursts. The discovery of afterglow emission from long GRBs was a watershed event, pinpointing their origin to star-forming galaxies, and hence the death of massive stars, and indicating an energy release of about 10(51) erg. While theoretical arguments suggest that short GRBs are produced in the coalescence of binary compact objects (neutron stars or black holes), the progenitors, energetics and environments of these events remain elusive despite recent localizations. Here we report the discovery of the first radio afterglow from the short burst GRB 050724, which unambiguously associates it with an elliptical galaxy at a redshift z = 0.257. We show that the burst is powered by the same relativistic fireball mechanism as long GRBs, with the ejecta possibly collimated in jets, but that the total energy release is 10-1,000 times smaller. More importantly, the nature of the host galaxy demonstrates that short GRBs arise from an old (> 1 Gyr) stellar population, strengthening earlier suggestions and providing support for coalescing compact object binaries as the progenitors.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1476-4687
Volume :
438
Issue :
7070
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
16355217
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature04238