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An infrared flash contemporaneous with the?-rays of GRB 041219a.

Authors :
Blake, C. H.
Bloom, J. S.
Starr, D. L.
Falco, E. E.
Skrutskie, M.
Fenimore, E. E.
DuchĂȘne, G.
Szentgyorgyi, A.
Hornstein, S.
Prochaska, J. X.
McCabe, C.
Ghez, A.
Konopacky, Q.
Stapelfeldt, K.
Hurley, K.
Campbell, R.
Kassis, M.
Chaffee, F.
Gehrels, N.
Barthelmy, S.
Source :
Nature; 5/12/2005, Vol. 435 Issue 7039, p181-184, 4p
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

The explosion that results in a cosmic?-ray burst (GRB) is thought to produce emission from two physical processes: the central engine gives rise to the high-energy emission of the burst through internal shocking, and the subsequent interaction of the flow with the external environment produces long-wavelength afterglows. Although observations of afterglows continue to refine our understanding of GRB progenitors and relativistic shocks,?-ray observations alone have not yielded a clear picture of the origin of the prompt emission nor details of the central engine. Only one concurrent visible-light transient has been found and it was associated with emission from an external shock. Here we report the discovery of infrared emission contemporaneous with a GRB, beginning 7.2 minutes after the onset of GRB 041219a (ref. 8). We acquired 21 images during the active phase of the burst, yielding early multi-colour observations. Our analysis of the initial infrared pulse suggests an origin consistent with internal shocks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
435
Issue :
7039
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17013553
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03520