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The afterglow of GRB 050709 and the nature of the short-hard γ-ray bursts.

Authors :
Fox, D. B.
Frail, D. A.
Price, P. A.
Kulkarni, S. R.
Berger, E.
Piran, T.
Soderberg, A. M.
Cenko, S. B.
Cameron, P. B.
Gal-Yam, A.
Kasliwal, M. M.
Moon, D.-S.
Harrison, F. A.
Nakar, E.
Schmidt, B. P.
Penprase, B.
Chevalier, R. A.
Kumar, P.
Roth, K.
Watson, D.
Source :
Nature; 10/6/2005, Vol. 437 Issue 7060, p845-850, 6p, 1 Color Photograph, 2 Charts, 4 Graphs
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

The final chapter in the long-standing mystery of the γ-ray bursts (GRBs) centres on the origin of the short-hard class of bursts, which are suspected on theoretical grounds to result from the coalescence of neutron-star or black-hole binary systems. Numerous searches for the afterglows of short-hard bursts have been made, galvanized by the revolution in our understanding of long-duration GRBs that followed the discovery in 1997 of their broadband (X-ray, optical and radio) afterglow emission. Here we present the discovery of the X-ray afterglow of a short-hard burst, GRB 050709, whose accurate position allows us to associate it unambiguously with a star-forming galaxy at redshift z = 0.160, and whose optical lightcurve definitively excludes a supernova association. Together with results from three other recent short-hard bursts, this suggests that short-hard bursts release much less energy than the long-duration GRBs. Models requiring young stellar populations, such as magnetars and collapsars, are ruled out, while coalescing degenerate binaries remain the most promising progenitor candidates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
437
Issue :
7060
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18506906
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature04189